#the abject
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dirtgh0ul · 1 month ago
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october’s This is Not a Video theme is THE ABJECT
as always, all types of submissions are welcome! message me with questions
submissions are due OCTOBER 28th
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gothicpsychovampirewannabe · 3 months ago
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this is such a good fucking scene.
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bellemorte79 · 1 year ago
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The Abject in A Song of Ice and Fire and Game of Thrones.
The abject status of Tyrion Lannister in his relationship with his father and sister (Cersei and Tywin).
His physical appearance is frequently used by his family to belittle and humiliate him. Tywin, in particular, is disdainful of Tyrion's physical disability and sees him as a stain on the Lannister family's reputation and his own personal curse.  He blames him for the death of his mother in childbirth, even though Tyrion is the only one that is completely blameless.  He did not ask to be brought into the world.  In one scene in A Clash of Kings, Tywin tells Tyrion, "You are an ill-made, spiteful little creature full of envy, lust, and low cunning." This shows how Tyrion's abject status is linked to his physical deformity, as well as his position within the Lannister family.
Cersei also uses Tyrion's abject status to undermine him, portraying him as weak and powerless. In A Storm of Swords, Cersei says of Tyrion, "He is a dwarf, a stunted twisted little monkey who's no fit consort for a queen." Cersei's use of animalistic language here further emphasizes Tyrion's abject status, as she portrays him as subhuman and less than fully human by representing him as a monkey.  This is similar to her father’s treatment of Tyrion in calling him a “creature.”  
Despite his family's efforts to marginalize and exclude him, Tyrion is a character who refuses to be defined by his abject status. He is highly intelligent and resourceful, and often uses his wit and cunning to outmaneuver his enemies. In A Clash of Kings, and on the show Game of Thrones in the Battle of the Blackwater, for example, he manages to repel an attack on King's Landing by using a hidden cache of wildfire to destroy a large portion of Stannis Baratheon's fleet.
By representing Tyrion as abject, Martin is able to highlight the often cruel and arbitrary nature of social hierarchies. Tyrion's exclusion from society is not based on anything he has done, but rather on factors outside of his control, such as his physical appearance and his family background. This serves as a critique of the unjust nature of social systems and the way in which they marginalize and exclude certain groups of people.
By portraying Tyrion as both abject and heroic, Martin is able to challenge the dominant narratives of heroism and villainy in fantasy literature. Instead of being a typical hero who embodies strength and perfection, Tyrion is a flawed and vulnerable character who is forced to navigate a hostile world in order to survive. Through his character, Martin is able to explore the complexities of power, politics, and identity, and to challenge readers' assumptions about what it means to be a hero or a villain.
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Further Reading:
Young, J. R. (2021). Useful little men: George R. R. Martin's dwarfs as grotesque realists. Mythlore, 39(137), 77-95,77A
Felluga, D. (2011) "Modules on Kristeva: On the Abject." Introductory Guide to Critical Theory.  Purdue U.
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turquoisewaves07 · 3 months ago
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who up referencing Bataille in the YouTube comment section
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vvaerae · 1 year ago
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 "As a gay man, the rat is not my enemy, but my comrade in objection."
In Defense of Rats by James Greig
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sickfreaksirkay · 3 months ago
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one time my english teacher told me hyde from jekyll and hyde is gay because he beats a man to death with a walking stick and a walking stick is a phallic object so that scene was actually just gay sex and i think that’s what caused me to be the way i am about literature now
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bacchuschucklefuck · 5 months ago
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doing chibi is a good design exercise bc it forces u to think on shapes n essential details, essentially thumbnailing ur designs. its also a terrible design exercise bc it ends up looking cute no matter what
#dimension 20#fantasy high#riz gukgak#very specifically class swap bard!riz#fh class quangle#mm. I may need tags for all the asides Ive been doing lmao#riz's canon design is so coherent and thematically clean that I genuinely struggle to keep up...#bard!riz's whole thing is working out his identity through abject fear so it kiiiinda makes sense that hes got a different thing going#on every year I guess? like lmao the directive I go into each of these designs with changes vastly#freshman bard!riz has to look extremely nonthreatening. and also make you wanna pick him up and chuck him at a wall#annoyingly inoffensive. slides off your memory pretty much immediately. a void of an experience#crucially Does Not Show Teeth While Smiling#sophomore year bard!riz I have been keeping the like. cameraman direction for#I want him to be swimming in clothes a little bit... he kinda lands at like. 80s/90s shlocky horror protag too which I do like#bc what is season 2 to riz if not a horror story lmao#junior year bard!riz I want to be somewhere between clark kent and tintin#the journalist aesthetics is not so clear and easy to build as the detective or spy aesthetics...#but also I just. really like boy journalist lmao this is the BD blood speaking again#and! I actually do draw his hair differently than in my canon junior year riz stuff. its a bit shorter here so it doesn't#obscure as much of his face#its so funny actually going from drawing canon stuff to class swap esp. with riz bc he's smiling SO much here#and it's 100% trained like its crucial for u guys to know he is equally if not more fucked up as a bard#barely anybody can wrangle him in canon it's already been mostly him keeping himself on track. imagine if he actually learned how to act#mmm. I think these designs are still gonna soft change as I draw them. thats fine we have fun#drawing sophomore year bard!riz for those comiclets was fun as hell. I think on this factor alone I call it a success lol
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wolfythewitch · 8 months ago
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I USED TO PRAY FOR TIMES LIKE THIS
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demaparbat-hp · 4 months ago
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Kiyoshi AU - sharing kisses in their makeup?? They'd get so embarrassed cause the makeup leaves evidence. And I feel like Ursa would totally tease them (mostly Zuko cause he's too tease) but also think they're too adorable
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They weren't made for subtlety
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s-aint-elmo · 7 months ago
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girl who has suffered more than alll-mer
(ID in alt text)
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ceilidho · 2 months ago
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you could do some crazy horror scifi with Gaz.....like guy that seems so friendly and helpful and caring and on top of everything to make sure you and the crew are safe....until you realize he has ulterior motives :((
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erinwantstowrite · 22 days ago
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It would be so interesting for a Peter Parker in MLB because from what I remember there is no Spider Miraculous and interestingly enough if there was, since Peter is literally part spider, would it chose him as its wielder? What would the main heroes reactions be to find another hero who Marinette did not give (depending on the season) a miraculous to?
my favorite running gag with aus for Peter is people expecting him to get his powers the way that would fit the universe and people being freaked out when he has his normal origin
example, for a one piece au:
"Oh you ate the spider-spider fruit?"
"huh? no, i got bit by a spider"
"????"
so in this case it would be extremely funny if marinette thought he had one of the miraculous that were destroyed and she tries to figure him out but is mortified to learn that no. he is not wielding a miraculous at all, he is literally now part spider. in their world, that would be horrifying because "what do you MEAN you got BITTEN BY A RADIOACTIVE SPIDER?"
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pparacxosm · 1 month ago
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dearly beloved
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(tashi duncan x fem!childhood best friend!reader x patrick zweig; artashi wedding; nonlinear narrative; tw infidelity but then wrong fandom; tw obsessive dysfunctional relationships but then wrong fandom; tw patheticism but then wrong blog; oakland!tashi truthers i’m sorry; florida!tashi truthers ((if there be any)) you’re welcome ! ; uno mentioned twice for some reason; unromantic romance; callow sapphic pining; tw nascent menstruation; y2k teenage girlhood; it’s always patrick zweig at the scene of the crime; ((the crime is unrequited devotion)); tw a little bit of body shaming kind of; but then general tw for excessively derogatory banter; sorrow shared is sorrow doubled; cake shared is just good cake; tw atlanta™)
‘Love is awful. It’s awful. It’s painful. It’s frightening. It makes you doubt yourself, judge yourself, distance yourself from the other people in your life. It makes you selfish. It makes you creepy, makes you obsessed with your hair, makes you cruel, makes you say and do things you never thought you would do. It’s all any of us want, and it’s hell when we get there.
So no wonder it’s something we don’t want to do on our own.
I was taught if we’re born with love then life is about choosing the right place to put it. People talk about that a lot, feeling right, when it feels right it’s easy. But I’m not sure that’s true. It takes strength to know what’s right. And love isn’t something that weak people do. Being a romantic takes a hell of a lot of hope. I think what they mean is, when you find somebody that you love, it feels like hope.’
The Priest, ‘Fleabag’ (2016—2019) Episode 2.6
It strikes you that Tashi Duncan has always had a strange way of talking about her own wedding, as if the whole event is a starstrewn chrysalis. Something transformative, that will make of her an airborne creature, carried off by the lightness of her being.
She looks fucking beautiful, of course.
Sleek and exacting, draped in silk crêpe de Chine, like a white bullet. Tashi Duncan, the bride. Heavenborne starshine, all wrapped in tender clouds, just as she should be.
But then you’ve always thought so.
When she rehearses her aisle walk, golden gazelle legs glissading her across the hotel room carpet, she speaks of herself as if she were a rare and fragile insect.
She says, “I feel my bones changing,” her hands on either arm of the makeup chair you’re in.
You sniff, eyes flicking over every part of her. She is so close, bent over you, but she’s blurred at her edges on account of your gushing tears. You’re weeping. “Your bones?” you all but wail, face twisting in sorrow as the tears sluice harder.
Your left eyelash dangles wetly halfway off your eyelid.
You’re melting like a fucking witch, because her dress reveal came before the setting spray, and now your palms are soused in foundation. You keep wiping your face to keep from bemiring the butteryellow satin of your bridesmaids gown.
You weep more than Pam, as Tashi floats around the room.
She is radiant as sunlight on water.
Tre and Tevin holler, spirited, scattering around the room in all directions, like a great empire has collapsed. Okay, Tashi! they whistle, We see you!
And you weep and weep.
And now, her amber knee, faint scar, peeks from the slit in her silken, sweeping skirt and knocks against yours.
Her arms are lithe and lustrous and they bracket you within the amalgamated cloud of her meticulously curated Big Day fragrance. She floods your body.
She’s nodding softly. She is haloed by bloodwarm morninglight. You feel too pathetic to even be looking at her. You feel worse, even, when her delicate fingers coast poetic down your arms, and she takes your hands into hers.
“Hey,” she says softly. Squeezes your fingers. The flesh of her soft and fragrant as rosepetals. Her smile unfurls like a star going nova. “You’re crying so much,” she laughs.
“Of course, I’m crying,” you choke out, a watery gasp wafting her gorgeous face. “Pauline hates me.”
Tashi spares a glance over your shoulder, where her makeup artist is leaning against an ornate dresser, chewing the edge of her thumb and seeming generally engrossed with her phone.
“Oh, honey,” Tashi’s manicured thumbs caress tender circles over your knuckles. Then clicking her teeth softly, “You are making her do her job twice.”
“Oh God,” you sob, your head dropping heavily onto the crushed velvet cushion of the chairback. “Don’t get married.”
Tashi's smile turns soft and commiserating.
“Babe.”
“T.”
Tashi places your hands gently in your lap. She swivels your chair so you’re facing the vanity mirror.
The sight of yourself festers your misery like rotting flesh. You look like a smeared oil painting. Your lashes clump like eldritch spiders. Your face is smeared and swollen and gleaming wet. Your lower lip trembles.
Tashi glows behind you in a tragic pastiche of a solar eclipse.
“I can’t do this,” you blather past the clot in your throat. Mucus bubbles from your nostrils and trickles to your mouth. You swipe at it. You sniff again. “I’m gonna mess up your wedding.”
Tashi’s warm, slender fingers trace your collarbones. In college, you used to give each other lymphatic drainage massages.
“You’re gonna make my wedding.”
This makes you tear up again, in earnest.
The tissue of your nose is raw and sore. You moan a broken lament. Her thumbs drift in gentle ellipses along the slope of your shoulders. Her warmth seeps into you.
“Do you remember what you said to me,” Tashi asks, “When I got engaged?”
You swallow, coughing around a flower of phlegm. She leans down, resting her cheek against the top of your head. Her hair spills over your shoulders in velvet sunbeams.
You blink at her reflection. Her eyes wash you in tender flame.
“‘Dear God, please, no’?”
It is staggering, at thirteen, to stand over a limp, bloodstrewn body.
You are traipsing through the halls, summoned by weeping, and, when you peek into the loo, the dense miasma of sweat and antiseptic is pervaded with something stannic and fetid.
Tashi Duncan, splayed across the tile of the corner stall, clutches her tummy with death’s desperation. The athletic uniform of Blue Vista High garbs these young girls in floaty skirts of daisy white, which Tashi now thinks is fascinatingly deplorable.
Unfamiliar and unprepared, her eyes gleam with tears. Her heart pummels in her chest to the same faraway thunk, thunk rhythm of the tennis balls striking the clay courts outside.
The world seems to have turned against her. Her clothes are drenched red, and her body is betraying her. Tashi, twentyone months your senior, is a late bloomer. Here is her inaugural encounter with the inevitability of womanhood.
So, you encounter this horror film tableau. Tashi Duncan, bloodstrewn and splayed. You don’t feel nausea or concern or anything. You’re thirteen. You’re mildly reproachful, if anything.
“Um,” you say, a bit too loudly, “I have a tampon. If you want?”
“I want to play tennis.” She writhes. “My match is in twenty minutes.”
You swing your backpack off your shoulder, clutching it in front of you and digging clumsily into the front pocket. “Well, you need a tampon.”
“I’ve never…” She seems halfcoherent. You don’t have great faith in her ability to sweep across a court. But she catches the tampon with an easy agility when you toss it over.
There’s an odd, blithe immediacy to girlhood. You drop to your knees and play gynae. You introduce yourselves somewhere there. Your hair’s pretty; Where did you get those pins on your bag?; Do you think Mr Cleven’s kind of cute? Yeah, no, me neither; Is it in yet?
“Aw, what?” you whine at her insistence you disrobe and give her your clothes, “For how long?”
“Like,” she gestures frenetically with her hand, “Twenty minutes.”
You hum, ambivalent, but doff your skirt. And they get anal about you guys jumbling formal uniforms with athletic uniforms, so she takes your shirt, too, and you wear hers, the navy nylon collared tee with the Blue Vista crest stitched to the breast.
You sit pantless on the toilet seat, reading her Princess Diaries paperback.
She wins her game, apparently.
Her mom drives you home. She brings a fleecy pair of Tashi’s Powerpuff Girls pyjama bottoms, which fall past your ankles. Says, call me Pam, honey, when you say, thank you, Mrs Duncan.
You keep her shirt, and her pants, and you still smell her womb.
She hits you up on AIM that night.
Mr Cleven is cute, she sends. He looks like Dawson Leery.
Then, But he’s THE WORST !!!!!!
And then, TLC or Destiny’s Child?
And things go from there.
When Christine McVie starts crooning for mercy, you think you’ve officially had your fill.
You have taken bridesmaid, like you took best friend before that, like you will one day take doting aunty to their gilded brood.
At times, it feels like there is no limit to what you can take.
But the very concept of a First Dance feels like a vaudeville satire portending a dire omen. You refuse to dance into hell—you just can’t do it. And you can’t watch them squeeze your heart to bloodpulp between their flush, swaying bodies.
Though you suppose that may be symbolic. Beginning as the end.
Hot red spilled upon her white regalia. Will she still let you splay and clothe her? Or does such proprietary now fall within the purview of his husbandly duties? All set to ‘Say You Love Me’.
You take it all. On the chin, lying down. You take it. You take four consecutive champagne flutes to the gut. You take deep breaths. You take yourself out of the girdling throng of devoted onlookers as the music starts. You take no prisoners. You take your leave.
You are weeping again.
You try to catch your tears as they fall. You think you owe Pauline that much.
The veranda is lit by scattered amber lanterns and the weeping moon. Each stone pillar stands sentinel to the maelstrom of revelry within. Things are hushed, here, but so much colder. You miss her warm fingertips against your skin. You miss everything. Shadows stretch across the tiled floor in languorous arcs.
You smell the sea.
You find a dark corner and sink into it, bracing yourself on the balustrade as you crouch to your haunches. Your body aches with the force of your suppressed sobs. Your shoulders tremble and your heart mewls with anguish.
You miss the sound of footsteps, so the voice does surprise you.
“One wedding that’s a funeral.”
You laugh, sort of. Damp and congested. You try to daub the tears away. “Ha,” you sniff, “Yeah, no, I—“
You stop.
It doesn’t seem the least bit real.
Let’s leave aside the fact that he’s The Ex Boyfriend. He shouldn’t even exist in this fucking stratosphere anymore. And that’s why he seems elusive, ghostly, even now. Emerging from the shadows like a demonic apparition.
You know Art and Tashi don’t really talk about it. They have a peace to protect. You cannot say the same of yourself.
Because in the unbroken silence of your dreams, there is a whistle. A sharp, clear necklace of sound, tightening around your throat, tugging forward. And even earlier, at the ceremony. A malevolent spirit in the room seemed to say, I won’t be ignored. And here he fucking is.
A horrid little laugh builds up in your throat, until you can’t keep it down any longer.
You laugh. It comes out like a savage chortle. Patrick stills, five feet away from you. His eyes are sad, a little surprised, and, yes, repelled.
Repelled by you and your laugh.
Suddenly, all you feel is helpless anger. You’re angrier than you’ve ever been, angrier than when they were together, angrier than when Art swooped in to take his stillwarm seat, angrier than all those times you had to be quiet and eat humble pie. You’re furious that the woman you love has jettisoned her last name, like a shorn chrysalis. And you’re livid that you have to deal with this asshole, this piece of shit pretty boy you’d thought you’d seen the last of, who is standing in front of you, on this moonlit veranda, trying to share in your mourning. He’s fucking insane.
So you say it, out loud, but not too loud, because you don’t want to make a scene. You certainly don’t want Tashi to see him.
“You’re insane,” you scoff, gaze vast and glossy with shock, “You’re fuckin’ insane, I knew it! I knew you were fuckin’ insane! I told her you were fuckin’ insane.”
You’re surprised at the viciousness in your voice. The blue in his eyes has become washedout, almost white. You can see tiny red capillaries blooming around the iris in the dark.
To his credit, Patrick has never left you hanging in your ferocity.
His brows are hoisted in defense. He gestures wildly into the reception hall, “I’m fuckin’ insane? He’s fuckin’ insane! And he’s marrying her!”
He’s all big words and movements like this is fucking Seinfeld.
You upheave yourself to a tremulous stand. “You’re both fucking insane,” you say darkly, though, at the moment, you feel a bit deranged.
Your vehemence startles him a little. Something imperceptible changes in his mien. Like he’s standing straighter. His eyes shine like glass. You’re bizarrely reminded of those National Geographic documentaries where lions size each other up before a fight.
But then his shoulders slump, and he nods, and you are almost incredulous at his patheticism. “Okay,” he breathes. He seems tiny. “You look nice.”
You blink, shifting.
You clear your throat. “Thank you. You don’t.”
And he doesn’t. He’s wearing a T-shirt and athletic shorts. And he looks vaguely showered for once, but there’s still something faintly noxious in the air he emanates.
“Yeah, well,” he shrugs, “I wasn’t gonna dress up for a wedding I wasn’t invited to.” A pause. “That’d be weird.”
For a moment, you are sure you tripped on a rock out here, and cracked your skull open on a pillar, and all of this is a stage play happening in the most masochistic corner of your mind. You have never been so disbelieving of his inanity.
“Oh, yeah, that’d be weird!” you say, eyes still wide and marginally manic. “That’d be crazy, for sure. If you dressed up for the wedding you weren’t invited to.”
He fills in the blank there—always could, for his part—that he’s shown up to the wedding. He gives a feeble chuckle. He looks awkward, really, which is… fucking something.
“When are they gonna cut the cake?” His voice is small and tentative like a child’s.
“You’re not getting any, you cow.”
He looks sincerely wounded at that, his eyes casting downward, and it borders on pitiful. But the sympathy stirred feels like a small lashing, like punishment for your lack of decorum. There is something contemptuous in that pitifulness.
You know an athlete’s body is his wound.
But you can’t bring yourself to say sorry.
You just lower your hackles with a visible exhale, which he seems to recognise as safe treadspace.
“Why are you crying?” he asks.
You snort. “Why are you here?”
He connects those dots, too, the perceptive bastard.
He clears his throat, hands in his pockets, rolls back and forth on his feet.
He stares at the ground. “You gotta say a speech?”
“Yeah, but I probably won’t.”
The ocean rushes. Luther Vandross thumps faintly from beyond. First dance is over, apparently.
Patrick peers up at you, like he’s debating saying what he’ll say next.
“Wanna go get a drink?”
Tashi jumps on the balls of her feet. Her waifishness is often a screen hiding an impressive amount of energy. PE is competition in its purest form. Every time she manages to wrest the ball from the opposing team she feels invincible. She is invincible. She dribbles the ball quickly, ponytail swishing in the air as she runs towards the goalpost.
From the corner of her eye she registers movement. She’s always hyperaware of her surroundings. That’s why she notices you sitting down in the stands, two other little girls (in the way that a year—which is all the time sundering you two—can feel like a decade when you’re fourteen) on either side of you.
One of your friends doles out UNO cards, and it is clear it is the other who had suggested this place of loitering, because she has her gaze trained conspicuously on a boy in Tashi’s class.
Tashi pivots. Makes a pointed throw. The ball goes past the goalkeeper into the net. Her team cheers. She checks to see if you have borne witness, but you are too busy stewing over your dealt cards.
She runs over to you. You look up when you hear her barrelling up the steps of the bleachers with a haste that makes them shudder.
She slides in between you and Vidya, who is unperturbed on account of her intently watching Anshu Morya pretend two basketballs are his tits and siring great gales of laughter from his audience of other fourteen year old boys.
Tashi slips a lanky arm around your shoulder.
“Hey, you,” she says, “Why didn’t you come say hi?”
You feel weird and diminutive and caught in a weird way, because Essence is looking upon her from your other side as though she is a seraph who has descended and deigned to grace you with her presence.
(Essence is in under13’s tennis, where it is wildly regarded that the girls who do under14’s tennis are the coolest people ever).
“Uh,” you drawl dumbly.
“You’re my friend now,” she squeezes your arm, pulling you closer to her side, “You have to say hi.”
Tashi seems to preen beneath the attention of these little girls, with a poise remarkably incongruous for fourteen. It feels a stark juxtaposition to the girl you’d seen, wailing, wet, and splayed in her own nascent womanhood.
You’ll come to think this a lot. Tashi Duncan, the impenetrable infanta. She tries not to show any inkling of vulnerability, if she can help it.
That’s why you always remember. You’re always recalling that blood.
And so part of you that is purely little girl thinks, I saw her first.
Even though Adidas singled her out as showing great promise. Even if Patrick Zweig won her number, and Art Donaldson, in some primevally spurning way, will have her as his bride. It was you who saw her, truly saw her, for the first time. Weeping in her own carmine deluge in a girl’s bathroom stall at Blue Vista High.
And, if you saw her first, shouldn’t you get to keep her?
You cannot bear to see her be wed.
What you’d really said, when she told you she was engaged, was a frayed and hollowed: Congratulations.
Dear God, please, no came later. It came clawing rotten from your throat like the undead, while you curled in on yourself yourself like a woman wounded, in the dark, beneath your covers.
“Dear God, please, no,” you’d whispered, lachrymose.
Your first dream, as it were, takes place on the shore of Virginia Key Beach, twenty minutes south of your neighbourhood in Allapattah.
It doesn’t look real, though.
It’s more like a film set.
That could be due to the fact that you haven’t been home in a year or due to the fact that Tashi is there, and she hasn’t been home in longer.
But you know it’s Florida because the air’s so thin and friable in California. Like the sun hasn’t fully seeped through. You know it’s summer because there’s crickets chirping in the trees behind you.
It’s dark, but the moon is bright, and, without looking, you know Tashi is just behind you, sitting on a rock halfsubmerged in the water. You’re sitting in the water right by her. You can feel her presence on your arm as you lean back. You guys are stripped to your bras and panties, like you always were. Her hair is curly.
There might have been more happening; you have a vague impression that there was talking at some point in this dream, but the details fade in the minutes after waking up. What you do retain is distressing. 
You are saying something when you are suddenly supine, and you see that Tashi is atop you, straddling you, though you cannot necessarily feel any weight of her. She doesn’t even feel warm. Her skin against you isn’t a temperature, it’s a sensation. Buzzing, like the vague shock of an electric socket.
“Hi,” she says, her voice low. 
And you’re about to say something, and then you are silenced. You wake up soon after your lips meet.
The dream haunts you for a week, until you go to a party and find a boy and kiss him instead.
The dream is not a revelation, not by a long shot, but you had thought they were a thing of girlhood. And, too, you thought Tashi was impenetrable to such things as your little desires. You’d thought, for a wretched moment, that you could be normal about a beautiful girl.
And you’re usually better at controlling yourself.
You usually can go about your day without suddenly remembering the image of Tashi leaning in.
When you do find a boy that Saturday—a short, slight, facetious glasseswearer named Noel, who prides himself on being a silent, occasionally witty observer the same way you do—you talk with him and laugh with him and kiss him and feel the world right itself. Nothing has changed, and nothing will change, if you can just get a fucking grip.
You go another few weeks without incident, until there’s another dream.
A few others.
Tashi chalks up your odd behavior to anything from exam season to homesickness. You let her.
No one knows about these dreams, with one exception.
Patrick Zweig figures you out embarrassingly quick.
All it takes is one night on the town, the three of you. A couple hours watching you replenish and rotate her moscow mules and vodka sodas and ace pineapples with a surgeon’s precision. Like forecasting weather. And he feels sure enough in his conclusions to corner you as you’re emerging from the putrid bathroom of the dive bar and say, “You got it bad for Tashi, don’t you, kid?”
You are on the drunk side of tipsy, at this point, and you blink a few times before you remember to zip your fly and respond.
All you come up with, for your part, is a weak, “Sorry?”
Patrick smiles. It doesn’t seem particularly mean, but you don’t presume to know him well enough to bet on it.
“I’m just saying,” Patrick says slowly. “Seems like you like her an awful lot. Kid.”
Your gaze goes bonehard. You don’t like him. You don’t like that you can smell his nausea-siring wintry cologne. You cannot conceptualise the scent, but it can’t be natural. He is so pretentious, he probably has it shipped from Marseille or somewhere.
He’s cracked open your ribs and plucked a raw nerve, just to watch you writhe. And there’s that obnoxious little smile, only half his mouth. Though not outright hostile, it’s not friendly.
You open your mouth. But you are so furious, you’re unable to speak. What’s more infuriating, Patrick patiently waits for you to find your words.
“Well,” you say, steadying your feet like you’re prepared to brawl this guy, “What are you gonna do about it?”
“Not a goddamn thing.”
And you must look surprised, because Patrick laughs.
“May these be the worst of our days.”
The pub is a dive, just a short stumble from the wedding venue. The air is dense with the acerbic musk of piss and spirits, danker than the worst of times. It’s a visceral contrast to the beauty of the union, and it’s one of which you both feel deserving.
You sit on a slightly cracked stool at the mucky wooden bar. You nurse a beer, and a broken heart, and Pat is on his third scotch in as many minutes. The bartender keeps giving him these nervous glances.
He gurgles out a pfft as he tips his glass to you, “Yeah, and the best of theirs.”
You regard the middle distance with a sort of weary disgust. A miserable guilt. You know what he’s portending. It’s all downhill from here. But you cannot deny that these are not unkind heights from which to fall. Garlanded by intricate golden sconces casting pristine white marble awash with warmth and love. You two cannot wish them ill in a way that even means anything.
“Fuck, they’re so happy,” you moan, “We suck.”
You feel your lungs grow achy. You are drowning in selfpity and selfpity’s lesser endearing cousin, envy. Patrick seems to bear it better. He releases a noise. A laugh maybe; a bitter, bloodaddled thing.
“Hey, I think the one of us wearing the bridesmaids dress places significantly lower on the Ultimately Fucked Over scale.”
He spins his glass around on the sticky tabletop. The scraping sound makes you envision ground bonematter.
“This colour wouldn’t suit you,” you mumble, swinging your beer idly by its neck.
Patrick’s brows seem to knit at this.
“Yes it would,” he grumbles.
“I always hated you.”
He quirks a brow, looking at you askance.
“I don’t think that’s true.”
You make a face. “It is.” Your eyes close for a moment, as though envisaging which set of words would spurn him best. “And he’s better for her than you.”
Patrick’s mouth parts into a slackened smirk. He laughs again. “And you think you’re better for her than both of us.”
“Yes, I do.”
“Always the bridesmaid…” he singsongs.
You feel your skin heat with something sore and cloying.
“Oh fuck you.” Your eyes roll as well as they are able without you getting vertigo. “I fucked her last.”
His smile grows like a burgeoning parasite. His head is still hung between his shoulders, but he peers up at you through the dark veil of his lashes.
He tongues the inside of his cheek like he’s suppressing laughter, like he now thinks it wouldn’t be kind. “No kidding.”
You frown at this, at his amusement.
“What, you don’t think I fucked her?”
Patrick shrugs. Hums vaguely.
“Wow.”
“Not in, like, a homophobic way, or—“
“Wow.”
He snorts.
“I’m sorry.”
You shake your head. “You’re not.” You swig a mouthful of beer, relishing faintly in the acrid aftertaste. “And I’m not either. Fucked her after you broke up, licked you clean out her pussy, you’re nothing.” You stand up and close the distance between you, stumbling into him, your forehead thunking against his as you draw the word out childishly. Nothingggg-uh.
He chuckles noiselessly. “Oh yeah?”
You straighten clumsily, leaning back, but you’re still stood between his open legs, and you brace your hand against his thigh. “Yeah,” you say.
Patrick narrows his eyes at you. He inhales a breath with an air of the long since victorious.
He gives it a moment before he says it. You’re lifting your bottle to the seam of your lips.
“I fucked her two months ago.”
You slam the green glass against the bartop, eyes wide as canyons as you turn to look at him, your forgone sip dribbling down your chin. “What?” you enunciate sharply.
He leans back in his chair, raising his hands as if shirking blame. But something wicked gleams in his eyes.
You scoff. “Bull. Shit.”
He tilts his head to the side, resting an elbow against the bar, his gaze flickering between your face and the beer trickling down your neck.
He shrugs. Hums.
Your eyes search his face frenetically. Your fingers claw into the flesh of his thigh. “He doesn’t know?”
Now, something like guilt manages to sniff him out. He glances off obliquely, his throat working around a swallow. His expression is hard to discern. Swimming between guilt and a strange sort of defiance.
“Wow,” you drawl protractedly. You’re almost impressed. “You’re an ass. You said that because you wanted to make me feel bad, you wanted to one up me, like you get points for fucking her—“
“A game that you started, by the way.”
“Hey.” You lean into his space again, finding his eyes with a sniper’s determination. “Hey. You’re a piece of shit.”
His jaw works against his skin.
“Uh-huh.”
“No, you are. You are, and you know it.” Your nails embed themselves in his thigh, your other hand coming to place a finger in the hollow of his chest. “Because no matter what,” your voice is low and gravelly now, “You’re done. You’re out. I’m in.”
You lean back to look him over, as though admiring your work, but he only wears a plaintive, resigned sort of smile.
“You think that’s better?”
His voice is so soft as to seep like smoke down your spine. Your nails unearth themselves from his skin. You have not drawn blood, but morning bruises would not startle him.
A long few moments pass.
“This is what you do now, you’re all profound?” you murmur.
He shrugs, a rueful simper on his mouth. “Eh,” he hums dismissively.
You sigh. Remove your hands from him and stumble back onto your stool.
“You’d look like shit in this dress,” you say, at length.
“Maybe.”
You tip your beer into your mouth, even though it has run dry.
There’s a bit of a moue on your face. You trace the sticky outlines on the tabletop, focusing intently on the grooves. “I look amazing in this dress.”
“You’d look amazing out of it.”
Your brows furrow. You look up at him. “Dude, what?”
Patrick blinks. He seems genuinely surprised.
“Aren’t we gonna…?”
“No, what? Why would you—?”
“Oh, I just—“
“What?” Your face is skewed confusedly.
“Because we—“
Your phone trembles against the bar.
“Hold on,” you say, and then, grin growing, “Darling Ms Duncan,” you croon melodically as you hoist the device to your cheek.
Her verdant meadow laughter on the other end. “Donaldson,” she chuckles. You can hear the vague commotion of the festivities ensconcing her.
You frown.
“Don’t hurt me, Starshine.”
“You missed your speech.”
You gasp, your voice going all light and airy the way it does when you’re feigning guilt. “What?” you drawl, “No…”
Tashi cottons on, and you can hear her teasing smile as she indulges you, “Oh,” she hums in fauxsympathy, “Oh, yeah, uh-huh.”
“No way,” you grouse softly, “I’m so sorry.”
“Come back before we cut the cake,” says Tashi, “Where are you, by the way?”
“Oh, I’m in a bar, you won’t believe who I ran into.”
“Who?”
Patrick steels to alertness in front of you, shaking his head in abject alarm.
You smile.
“Patrick Zweig. I think we’re gonna have sex tonight probably. Compound our sadness. It’ll be really pathetic.”
Patrick looks at you like you’ve walloped his puppy.
Tashi is silent on the other end. You know well the firm, seraphic way her face has set in anger.
“That’s not funny,” she says, and it occurs to you that, if what Patrick’s told you is true, then it really isn’t funny.
You bite your lip. “Oh.”
“That’s—“ she takes a breath; you can picture the heat wash off of her. She can be very purposeful with her emotions. “Hey, listen,” her voice has softened, “Please come back.”
“Okay, Ms Duncan.”
“Come back and eat the cake, you chose the cake.”
A simper slithers over your lips. “We chose the cake.” Your husband was somewhere sticking his prick in a green juice, you don’t add. “It’s kind of our cake, in a way.”
“Well,” Tashi hums, unconvinced, but you can hear her smile.
“Yeah, I’m coming, worry not, my dear. Save me a dance.”
You drop the phone.
Patrick is still looking at you like the apocalypse has been announced.
You roll your eyes.
“Put your dick down, she didn’t believe me,” you say. “Because you showing up to her wedding would be crazy.”
He chuckles dryly, but you do not miss the relief in his bones.
He cocks his head wryly, “Not really, considering…”
You stand up again, elbow leaning on the bar, your temple against your knuckles as you gape at him, sort of mystified. “You’re not bullshitting me,” you say, the corner of your open mouth quirking up incredulously, “Like actually.”
Patrick shrugs. “Yeah.”
“Where?”
“Atlanta.”
“Fuck!” You smack your hand down on the table, looking around as though to share in your disbelief with a makebelieve audience. “And since then, have you…? With anyone?”
“Dude, that was two months ago,” he says, like you’re a bit slow, or perhaps like he’s offended by the notion, “Yes.”
You click your tongue. “Ah, shit. You should’ve said no. Would’ve sucked you off, seen if I could taste her.”
Your hip ghosts absently against his spread open knee.
“You can still try,” he offers.
You shake your head, stifling a smile. “Nah.”
“God, we’re the worst.”
“You’re the worst.” You let your smile divulge itself.
“We should get married.”
“Fuck no.”
Patrick lets himself look putout by this, eyes going downcast. You’ve always thought his smile—really his whole face—looks vulnerable, like soft bread. He looks like the perfect sad boy, the victim rather than the perpetrator.  
“Oh,” says Patrick.
You hit him in the arm. “Don’t do that. You know it’d suck.”
“I don’t think so, actually,” he muses.
“What do we have in common? Like, sincerely. Besides her. You can’t build a marriage around a person who isn’t in the marriage.”
He makes a face as though to say this is an evidently incorrect statement. He gestures vaguely in the direction of Art and Tashi’s wedding venue.
That gets a laugh out of you.
“Oh, you pathetic asshole.” You steady yourself on his thigh again, this time with your fist. “No one has mentioned your name once today.”
You know it’s a low blow.
He returns your smile, though his is sad and weird again. They’ve all forgotten about me, it seems to say, Maybe you’ve forgotten about me, too.
Ugh, you think. Fucking Patrick who can’t stop being fucking neglected by everyone.
You clear your throat softly. “See? You don’t wanna marry me.”
Patrick lets out a depleted sigh, like he, too, is not so thrilled with the notion. And you’ve heard better proposal stories. He looks like a Labrador who’s figured out he has to go to the vet. He kicks the edge of the barstool with his sneaker.
“I do. I still do. That was fucked, but I still would.” He looks angry and lonely and resigned, and a little happy too, weirdly. “We should have one of those, ‘by the time we’re thirty—’”
“Thirty?”
“Fifty.”
You like how quickly he bends, in that moment. It has you picturing flower arrangements. But you narrow your eyes, a wry gleam to your smile.
“I think I’ll still have a shot, at fifty.”
“I won’t,” he says, with the smile of the recently condemned.
“I think you will, actually.” You regard him sort of pensively. And maybe it’s a bit clinical. “I think age is gonna humble you. And then you’ll be fifty and grey and, like, penitent. Plus fifty’s still virile, generally. And I’ve heard good things about your situation down there. Just—“
You push off the bar, your fist leaning down more heavily on his thigh as your other hand comes up to his forehead, as though checking his temperature, before sweeping upwards and pushing his hair back. You’re on your toes—further on your toes, considering the heels—assessing his hairline closely, your nose grazing his forehead and your hips certainly slotted between his.
Patrick makes an insincere attempt to push you off. “Hey, what—“
“Did your maternal grandfather have hair?”
He hesitates, “What, my mom’s dad?”
“Mhm.”
He feels that breath against his brow.
“To this day,” he shrugs, “But he’s an asshole.”
“That’s good news.” You lean back.
“That my gramps is an asshole?”
“No, the—“ You gesture to his hair again, “That’s how you know, I think. If you’ll bald. Is your maternal grandfather.”
“You think? Didn’t you do health science?”
“Didn’t you do fuck all and doesn’t everyone hate you?”
He seems unharmed, if enchanted, by this persistent claim.
He points again in the general direction of the wedding beyond the brick wall of the bar.
“They may hate me. You don’t hate me.”
You follow his finger like everything between you and that marble dance floor will collapse, and you will be given a clear view of that proprietary, knowing way Art Donaldson holds her as they dance.
You look back at him. “You really seem to believe that. It makes me concerned.”
“For me?”
“No, for myself. I don’t like that I’m putting out such false vibes.”
He is charmed by this verbiage.
He laughs, like he’s still unconvinced. “Okay.”
He holds it against you, of course.
He doesn’t do a goddamn thing, as promised, but he holds it against you.
Patrick doesn’t like the college parties, but he manages. He doesn’t like feeling like an interloper, really. Doesn’t like that Art and Tashi have this fully functional ecosphere in which he cannot take root—like he’s some sort of invasive strain of alien vegetation.
As soon as he can, Patrick excuses himself from the purgatory of social interaction with whichever set of strangers Tashi calls her friends. He extricates his arm from around her waist and catches your eye as he goes to stand, mimes taking a drink, and watches with relief as you narrow your eyes but push out of your chair and head toward the bar. You order four shots of something.
“You’re lasting longer than I thought,” he says as soon as he’s close enough to you. He takes one shot—vodka, he thinks as it slides down his throat—then another from the bar top. “You were making that face, though.”
You scowl up at him. You know exactly what he’s talking about. “I was not.”
Patrick snorts. “If that helps you sleep at night. I know I won’t be sleeping.”
He bites his lip and does a crude mimicry of delivering backshots with his pelvis, his hands holding an imaginary set of hips, and you suddenly feel beset with a strange nausea. You defeatedly slide toward him another one of those shots.
“What’s the point of her having you as a friend if you aren’t going to support us?”
“I bought you three fucking shots,” you say. You quickly throw the last one back before he can get at it, because, by now, you at least know Patrick well enough to know he’s nearly about to make a grab for it. 
He grins. “Kid, if Art had won that game, I’d make my pass at you ten times over.”
That’s enough to turn the nausea into chunder, and you quickly push past him and book it to the bathroom as it blooms up your throat.
You see your tendons as racketstrings, as you crouch over the toilet.
Taut and crossed over one another inextricably.
He’ll always have that over you, the tennis. You never had the tenacity for it. But it means he has a whole other way to upset her, too.
You take comfort in the fact that Tashi is quick to stand and take you into her arms when you reappear, halftorn, wrung out. She’s happy to take you back to your room, and nurse you for the night.
Patrick doesn’t begrudge. He’s fine to let you have your little pleasures. She’s still his, is the thing.
You’re confused about the Art Donaldson of it all.
He has a warmth in his eyes. And a mischief and a validation. He’s like Patrick, in that he watches—he watches very closely. But where Patrick has always seemed content, in this strange, visceral way, to take what he can get, Art feels like he’s waiting for… something. He’s sort of always fighting with Patrick, but they’re taking care of one another, strangely. He has this weird, symbiotic desire to know more about Tashi and Patrick’s relationship, which—well—you’d be canting to pass judgement.
Grey, grey skies out the windows of Tashi’s dorm room. It’s the most neutral space for you all. Bundled in jackets and hats on beer runs. Fingers freezing as you sit on the floor and play UNO, bumming and trading all of Patrick’s cigarettes because it’s all you can think to do. It rains all day. Patrick tucks his fingers under Tashi’s thigh, kisses the corner of her mouth.
Art has a cold, passes it on to Patrick, and now you’re all incubating it in this cloistered space that soon becomes littered with used tissues and cough drops and tornopen packets of TheraFlu.
Patrick is glad to help no one feel left out. He announces as much—I don’t want you guys to feel left out—with this quizzical simper, as Tashi places down a wild drawfour and declares blue. And maybe she’s doing something foul and saccharine like looking right into Pat’s eyes when she says that.
“I don’t think you have any blues,” says Art, sliding four cards from the deck, wearing his own quizzical simper. “I think you just want us to think you have blues, I think you’re playing smart.”
You can tell by the way Patrick grips his beer bottle that he thinks Art is flirting with her.
There seems to be an odd, prophetic thought you two share.
If the two of them—Tashi and Art—were to get married, they would have golden brown babies like Renaissance cherubs while you and he sat in the dark with the rest of the godless degenerate art.
So, in some way, perhaps, you’d seen it all coming.
When Patrick picks up the phone, shoves it between shoulder and ear, and takes the sorelyneeded, sweetyolkdripping, heavily hotsauced bagel sandwich out of his mouth so he can mumble, “Yeah?” he does not expect the first words across the receiver to be,
“Hey, you fuck. I have your shit.”
Patrick rolls his eyes and takes a large bite, craning over his open palm to keep egg and cheese off his Puma shirt. This is a time when brands like Puma still want Patrick Zweig wearing their shirts.
“Uh-huh,” he says.
“You know, this feels like Christmas. Do you know that? This feels like Christmas day for me. You think you’re this special boy who can have whatever he wants. You’re bullshit. The bell tolls for thee. Your ex, I should note, has bent over and spread her cheeks for me.”
And you feel a way, about the coarseness of your words, the fissures in your mouth. But this isn’t about demeaning Tashi. It’s about flaying him.
“Dude.”
“Her beautiful, soft, floralscented cheeks.”
Patrick hangs up on you, which feels like how you imagine the President feels after election day.
You wait for him to call back.
It’s less than a minute before your phone shudders. He puts you on speaker.
“Are you done?” he says.
“Dude,” you say, “Never ever. Never ever ever.”
“How much for shipping?”
“Fuck you, coward, you’re still in town.”
There’s a revolting, wet sort of noise as he chews. And it is between these chews that he says, “You want to see me, then? Make sure I’m miserable?”
“I don’t need to see you to make sure you’re miserable, your whole life is miserable,” you say.
Patrick chuckles, the sound garbled by his food. It’s not the noise that makes you recoil from the receiver. You are more disgusted at the prospect of him being fed. Okay, sure—you, in your sadism, have been picturing him gaunt and desolate on the floor. And perhaps you are unmoored by how coherent and gutful he sounds now.
It’s harder to hide sorrow in your eyes. Maybe you do just want to see his eyes, and make sure.
“You’re real classy, kid, I think I’ll miss you most of all,” he swallows. “Where d’you want to meet?”
When you return to the reception hall, the cake is still unsevered and the music has gone slow. Otis Redding, ‘These Arms of Mine’.
Tevin keeps a clammy hand on your midback, the other slackly holding your fingers up.
You’re blinking brine from your eyes and sniffing shallowly. Tev’s giving you a chary sort of look, slightly frowning. He clears his throat.
“If things don’t work out with Lainey, I could marry you.”
But he doesn’t sound too keen on the idea. Which you think is a bit comical, because you've smelled his room, and you've seen him in braces, so, ostensible case for grooming aside, even you're not so desperate.
Still, you squeeze his shoulder lightly through his blazer. You clear your throat, roll your eyes. You let this child sway you side to side, and think of yourself at seventeen, varnishing Tashi’s toenails and daubing them clean with mephitic acetone. Over and over. Trying every colour. One time, you forgot to open a window, and the fumes had you two flaked out on the carpet.
“That’s nice, Tevvy, how’s that promposal coming along?”
In the bar a dozen minutes off campus, you slide the sloppily taped Amazon box across the table.
A microcosm of his pathos condensed into 18 x 12 inches. Each item in isolation meaningless, but altogether painting an intimate lithograph of a man discarded. All tender and immiscible.
Jacket. Toothbrush. Edgefrayed leather wristband. An old iPod with cracked plastic. A pack of cigarettes, crushed and reformed. A small bottle of aftershave. A few crumpled receipts. Unbranded notebook. Expensive fountain pen he probably stole from the bank. A plastic cardholder and a wallet, both empty. A pack of gum.
It feels a bit stupid that Patrick should come all this way for a couple knickknacks. You could have just let him Venmo you for the shipping, and it may have hurt his pride all the same. But you take pleasure in knowing that he was hoping you wouldn’t be the one to meet him here.
“How’s Tashi?” he asks.
You give a small, malicious laugh.
The predictability dissolves none of the abject carnal rapture there.
Of course it’s why he came. He wants to know all about your (singular) dear Ms Duncan. He still has a glimmer of faith that she will change her mind. Even though you both know the girl well enough to know that’s not a thing she does too often.
If you hated him, you would tell him that Tashi is thriving. Healing like a child of God. She’s a new woman, never better, can’t wipe the smile off her face.
But maybe you don’t hate him that much after all.
���She’s a fucking wreck. Moping, crying in the lecture halls, shouting your name in the rain. It’s pathetic.”
A twinge of a smile crosses Patrick’s face, the petty bitch.
“You know I meant her knee,” he says, then takes a sip of his beer.
You cross your arms on the table, then retract them with a wince once you feel how sticky the wood is.
“I don’t know,” you say while rubbing some gunk off your elbow. “I don’t know that, Patrick. You know I think you’re a raging assface.”
Patrick raises his eyebrows. “Have you guys ever fucked?”
His faith, glimmer as it may, is not without its fractures. He has a needling, bonechewing suspicion that this may be the last time you two ever see one another, that you occupy the same orbit. So he thinks he’s allowed to ask.
You just glare at him in cold annoyance. Probably fantasising about smashing his beer bottle over his head. Patrick is familiar with the expression.
“Patrick, please don’t talk to me that way.” There’s violence in your voice that’s probably not just aggrieved feminism.
He knows you’re a woman mutilated about Tashi. He considers saying something even shittier, but what’s the point? You’re not a threat to him anymore. He’s out of the running.
“Fine. Have you guys ever made love?”
Before you can bite his head off, he raises his hands in defense.
“Not trying to be disrespectful, or suggest you have casual pussy and not committed long term lesbian relationship pussy. It’s just… if I figured it out.”
There’s a moment of quiet.
“And, y’know, if she’s single and clearly in a bad place, maybe it’s worth… taking advantage.”
You are at once shocked and maybe even appreciative of his forthright shittiness. It gives you slight confidence, despite yourself.
Call him oldfashioned—or, well, remarkably progressive—but he’s rooting for you kids.
You’re both the perfect combination of hot and insufferable. Stupid and insane.
He knows you weren’t lying; Tashi probably is a wreck. It sometimes makes his tongue go metallic, the thought of her rendered so still and helpless. Maybe it’s better he only got a glimpse of that anguish.
So he’s been ousted, that’s fine. That doesn’t mean you need to dump the baby out with the bathwater. He knows she needs someone.
You sigh. “I’m getting a drink.”
You stand and walk toward the bar. You return with the same beer he’s drinking. He wonders if you got it just because it’s the cheapest, or if you actually like it.
“We never did anything,” you say, picking at the moist label with your thumbnail. “Well. We did everything. But not that.”
Patrick nods. “There’s time.”
“She’s hurt.”
“She’d be lying down.”
She is lying down.
The sky goes gold in Allapattah.
You’re by her desk, looking over her colourcoded portfolios and notebooks and Stanford paraphernalia and assorted photos and inspirational posters. You smile amusedly as you trace your finger over a WINNER cheer banner and a Never Give up, Give 100% Instead! placard.
“Mom says stay over for dinner,” Tashi mumbles, rifling through a Teen People. “Should I ask for ‘Writing’s On The Wall’ or ‘Fanmail’ for my birthday?”
“Mmm...”
You pick up her Girl Scout badges, look them over.
“Put them back in the same order!” Tashi warns, unable to help herself. But she’s spent a lot of time sorting them.
You look up. You give her a blithe, nervous smile.
You shuffle to the bed and knee onto the mattress, collapsing into her. The two of you an interwreathed coalescence of tepid girlskin.
“I have ‘Fanmail’,” you mumble into the skin of her neck.
You hear Tev and Tre roughhousing like dogs in the living room.
She gets you alone in a small, ornate sidehall before the ceremony.
She slides her arms around your shoulders and hugs you tightly. Her skin is soft, balmy and fragrant as summertime honey. The flowery milk aroma of her hair imbues you.
“You remember Ozymandias?” she says, withdrawing and placing her palms upon your shoulders. There is a conspiratorial twinkle of glee in her eye.
“… The poem?” Your brows draw in with a vague scepticism.
Your throat is still fleshtender with the sobbing. Your eyes moist and caustic. But your makeup, for Pauline’s part, looks great. You’re determined to maintain your ramshackle semblance of civility for as long as possible.
Tashi kneads your skin. “Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!”
She clasps your shoulders and spins you around so your back is against her, and you stumble shakily to keep your strappy gold stilettos off her satiny white train. Her arms slink back around you, her thumb caressing the faint protrusion of your collarbone. You feel the sly grin on her lips as she creeps her fingers beneath your hair, sweeping it away and pressing her mouth softly against the gossamertender skin beneath your ear.
“That’s what I’m going for,” she whispers, making a flourishing sort of gesture with her hands in front of you, as if mapping the splay of a billboard. “A grand, glorious, eternal, and yet ultimately doomed endeavour. Something that stands tall and proud, resplendent and beautiful, but, in time, all turns to dust and fades into nothing but a vague memory.”
You shudder with laughter, the bare skin of her chest heated against that of your shoulderblade.
“What?” Tashi giggles softly against the shell of your ear.
“Nothing,” you grin, shaking your head.
You like, in fact, the tender morbidity of her words. That there is a melancholy in her hope. This union, like any, may well be ephemeral. Tashi Duncan, your romantic realist. You hope those are her vows. Wouldn't that throw the kid for a loop.
At the altar, you set your gaze heavenward, determined not to weep once more. This way, the sorrow has nowhere to fall but back within you. And so you do not even see her, as she flows down the aisle and embarks upon her ethereal odyssey.
You don’t think you’d have even been able to take it, anyway.
To bear witness to her metamorphosis under hallowed eaves.
But you feel it. The transience of power. Nothing beside remains.
Pam drives you two to Virginia Key Beach every Sunday after service at the COGIC. You are dithering, at first, about shucking off your clothing. The sea is such a vast, living thing. Nothing like a poky stall in the school bathroom. But, by week three, your Sunday best is sandstrewn, and you and Tashi are giggling things of cotton panties and training bras and seawater.
The waves feel giant and warm.
It fills your mouth and nostrils. The ocean envelops you. The water lifts you up. She mounts your back and drags you under. You laugh so hard you choke a bit, coughing up salt. She laughs even harder as she slaps your back unhelpfully. Her head is bent over yours, ducking to check that you’re okay, but she’s still simpering impishly. The next wave pulls you under and your lips brush against her lips, almost by accident.
You hear her small, hiccupy gasp.
You can feel the way her fingers scrabble against your shoulders. She sinks her little nails in. That Thursday, you had painted them blue.
You lie in a nest of towels afterwards, exhausted and depleted, like children after a bath.
You reach out with your hand and take a few of her wet curls between your fingers.
“When I’m tennis famous, I’m gonna marry Justin Timberlake,” she murmurs, resting her head on her arm, still panting.
“Can I be your flower girl?” you say, running your fingers through her hair.
You were a flower girl at your aunt’s wedding last Summer. You found the job so enchanting. All the doting gazes, the petals between your fingers. It doesn’t occur to you to want for more, at this time.
“You can be…” she mumbles, peeking at you over her arm. “Everything.”
It’s a strange, untenable idea, a thing not named. There are things you cannot be.
But you understand completely. “You too.”
“I wanna be a butterfly,” she hums to herself. “And fly away.”
Your lips twitch. “With Justin?”
Tashi’s face glows a little. “With you.”
Like all Floridian nights, the one of the wedding is humid. You can picture the way the feathery curls along Tashi’s hairline will start to rouse. You can picture, too, the way Art Donaldson’s stupid nose will caress that soft hair, how he will breathe her in. You don’t much want to picture anything beyond that.
There is so much moonlight to see by. It spills across Patrick’s skin in soft luminous beams.
The sand is damp between your bare toes, the satin of your dress growing wet beneath your bum. You are ensconced by a warm, saline squall.
The sea laves the shore like a hungry tongue.
The cake is a pistachio sponge, bedaubed with rosesuffused cream, the layers laden with a tart raspberry treacle, and the frangible ivory of white chocolate. You filch two slices, wrap them in monogrammed serviettes. A&T. Awful and tragic, he had joked bleakly as you clumsily took off your shoes on the foreshore. Agonising and traumatic, you’d offered. You went back and forth like this for a bit.
Patrick’s cigarette gilds his face in a copper glow. His eyes are trained pensively on swathes of sea foam.
Your phone garbles between your feet. Hums—bleary, melancholic—with Amy Winehouse.
And now, the final frame. Love is a losing game.
The cake is good. The cake is fucking amazing. You’d said that, at the tasting. Fuck, this is amazing, had been your honeyed moan. It was enough for Tashi to make the decision. You feel bad, now, lapping frosting off your fingers in her absence, your sugarcoated teeth.
Patrick blows the smoke away from you, disperses the acrid cloud with a fan of his hand. The wind will waft, though; sweep some of that fetor back to you. And all you do is breathe.
Selfprofessed, profound…
Patrick spares you a glance. Then does gawping a doubletake.
“Fuck, you’re not crying.” He sniffs deeply, his hand swiping roughly the wet skin of his cheek.
Your eyes widen.
“Oh, shit, did we start?”
He breathes a dilapidated, spitladen laugh, scrubbing harsh his cheeks with his fingers.
The heavy rivulets keep cascading. Washing his skin.
“Yeah!” he scoffs wetly, sweeping his wrist beneath his nose, sniffing again.
You stifle a rueful simper, wiping your fingers off on the napkin. “Ah, fuck, sorry.”
He gives another watery laugh.
“You’re a dick,” he grins.
And then you’re grinning too, though your brows quaver with concern, “No, oh my God, sorry! I cried a lot earlier.”
He’s shaking his head, freshets of tears still trickling down. “You’re an ass, I can’t believe—“
“I’ve never seen you cry,” you smile, something like wonder misting your eyes.
He chuckles, his cig singeing down, the smoke pirouetting upwards.
“No one has.”
You beam, but your shoulders tense with guilt. “Fuck!” you giggle, rumpling the serviette and resting it in the sand, shifting where you sit, and straightening as if centring yourself. “I’m sorry, I’ll do it now.”
“No, you won’t. You’re laughing.”
You laugh loudly, dropping your forehead to your hoisted knees.
“That’s closer than you think!” you say.
Patrick takes a deep, terminal drag of his cigarette—the ember coruscating violently—before extinguishing it in the sand beside him.
“Fuck,” he whispers, dipping his face into his shirt collar and using the fabric to swipe at his nostrils, snivelling more.
Then his shoulders fall. Elbows resting on his knees, hands falling slack between them.
The song starts up again.
For you I was aflame…
The ocean whispers soft susurrations against the beachfront.
You are struck, suddenly, by his silverveiled visage. Your gaze strokes the slope of his nose, the arch of his cheekbone. You are so enthralled by this wet gleam of his milky skin. There’s something about that; about his unencumbered tearflood and the faraway joy of the party.
Before you can stop yourself, you move in.
Your noses bump. There’s a moment where your teeth clack together and Patrick makes an annoyed noise, but it’s quickly replaced by something that sounds more like pleasure as he turns to fit his mouth against yours more easily.
You taste his tears and mouth and tongue. His hand comes to cradle the back of your neck. Your blotchy eyes flutter closed. You dig your fingers into the sand and close your fists around it. You taste the smoke and the cake and the oceanfront. It’s all a bit warm and desperate.
You think of the seaspray, the burgeoning goosebumps on your arms. You think of your mouth, mollified against his own, his hot spit on your gums, his tongue, hotter still, stroking yours. How he tips your head back so your jaw can fall further, so there is more of you available. You think of mouths. Of course, you think of Tashi’s mouth. Her smile in the mirror.
There’s a poignant tremor to Amy’s voice, as she sings,
Memories mar my mind.
And you are struck by this phrasing. And this is, perhaps, why and when the tears find you. And the sobs come soon after.
Patrick pulls away with a damp little noise.
“Oh my God.”
You’re weeping. Your shoulders start to tremble with spasmodic sobs, and you are bawling. Your face swims hot with a mire of tears and snot. He is not overtly repulsed. Well, you would not know for sure, because you cannot see him. But you feel him shift a little closer, and put a hand on your bare shoulder, his palm flushed and calloused. He gives you a few resigned pats.
“This is not what I wanted, for the record,” he says, unbothered by your head falling against his chest. “Because now I’m gonna feel like shit. Thinking, wow, was the kiss so shit that it made her cry like a baby?”
You lift your hands and cover your face, sobbing harder.
“Which,” Patrick continues, thumb caressing idly the sweat-tacky skin of your shoulder now, “I know that’s not it.”
A beat.
“Do you wanna tell me that’s not it?”
“That’s not it,” you blubber, smearing mucus off your lips.
You pull away from him dragging your hands down your face. When you look at him, you’re sure you look a sorry sight. Tender with despair, all messy, smeared, and febrile. You sniff shallowly.
“You were right,” you say weakly, “It’s not better.”
“What’s not better?” His voice, you note somewhere in the miasma of your sorrow, is uncharacteristically kind.
Your lip quivers, “I’ll have to be there when he puts a baby in her.” Your face has twisted in anguish and you are wailing once more, sobbing loud and earnest.
Patrick blinks at you, “Jesus.”
But he pulls you closer again. Turns your body, in fact, so you are leaning back into his raised lap and he is halfway cradling you like a baby. You weep into his shirt, painting it wet and viscid, and the scent of his awful cologne only makes you sadder.
“Oh my God,” Patrick says again, rubbing up and down your arm, and he sounds a bit amused, which is a little fair. “He might not,” he offers.
You snivel loudly and pull back, swallowing your sobs and casting him a disappointed glower.
“Yeah, ok. He probably will.”
You fall hard against his soaked front again, whimpering feebly. Patrick looks down at you.
“Hey, we can do that, too,” he offers now, in a pick-yourself-up sort of tone that juxtaposes so fiercely with the proposition he’s actually making, you nearly laugh. “We time it right, they can be the same age. Then we’ll put ours in the same school as theirs, and teach ours to just fuckin’ decimate the shit.”
And now you are laughing. You’re still teary and frail so it hurts all the same as a sob, but he can see you’re smiling, so he continues,
“Just everything. Fuckin’ grades, boom. Sports, boom. Instruments, boom. Our one’s gonna play two cellos, a piano, a guitar, and an oboe, all at the same time. He’ll use his fingers, toes, and dick,” says Patrick, and he sounds utterly sincere and emphatic, even as he’s sort of smirking now, because you’re laughing even harder. “And we’ll tell him to bully theirs, too. Every day just ‘oh you’re a piece of shit, you’re ugly, your parents’ marriage was doomed from the beginning’, and their fucker’ll be like ‘no I’m not’ and ‘fuck you’—”
You’re tickled, too, by the voice he puts on to imitate these fictitious children. How he talks all low and churlish like he’s instead caricaturing a worldweary pensioner.
“—and ‘I wish you weren’t so much cooler and better than me, and didn’t fuck my girlfriend, and my mom’.”
You make a face.
“Don’t make it weird.”
“Alright, fine. He won’t fuck her,” Patrick concedes, “That’d be fucking legendary if he did, though. But he won’t.”
You are, again, charmed by this, by how easily he yields. It makes you think of a nursery and fresh, boneless toes.
You rest your face on the wet of your weeping on his chest, and you feel a bit humiliated. But this isn’t so bad, as far as humiliations go.
“What if it’s a girl?” you croak, your words halfway muffled by where your cheek is squashed against him.
“Even better.”
“Where would we live? I don’t wanna go to New York, I don’t have the fortitude.”
The worst of your sobbing has waned to stillness, but he’s still rubbing your arm.
“We can shack up in the Midwest. Somewhere chill.” His leg starts shifting beneath you, and you think he wants another cigarette, but he doesn’t move. Instead, “Omaha?”
You shrug. You hated not being in Florida, but still. You shrug. “Sure. And what’ll you do? Coach? Or become like a blue collar fuckin’…” you trail off vaguely. “I can’t even picture it.”
“I always wanted to be a fireman.”
“That’s sexy.”
His laugh, when it sounds, echoes through his chest like there’s a cavern where his heart should be. Which you don’t think is such an unthinkable idea.
“Oh yeah?”
“Yeah,” you nod. You clear your throat. “Especially because you could die at any moment. So if we end up hating each other, I can just wait for you to die in a fire, and, that way, I don’t have to murder you. Then our kid doesn’t lose both parents at once.”
He pauses as if considering this. His leg shifts again. “Fuck,” he murmurs after a while.
“Sorry.”
“No, don’t ruin it.”
You clear your throat again. “And a dog,” you say.
“Fuck, yeah, a dog,” he says in his most New Yorkian fashion. Like a traveling salesman who needs you to look at this vacuum and do it quickly. It’s pretty funny. “It can eat theirs.”
You make a reproachful sort of noise. “Not everything has to be—“
“Okay, fine, yeah, just a dog,” he cedes again. The nursery, in your mind, is astralthemed. “Just a dog for the two of us. And our Nobel Prize winning child. I’ve always wanted one named Bagel.”
You think he can somehow hear your mildly scathing New York musings.
“A kid or a dog?”
“A dog.”
“We can name the dog Bagel,” you shrug, as though agreeing to dinner plans, and the tender pulse of a postweep migraine begins to encroach upon you, like the waxing sea. “Can we name the kid Bagel?”
“No.”
The song is still on loop.
Five story fire as you came…
You think of Patrick in sootscuffed bunker gear and a fireman’s helmet.
“Bagel Zweig,” you mumble wryly, your skull beginning to thump with the ache of your patheticism.
Patrick laughs. Lifts you off his knees, unceremoniously but not unkindly, and begins to rifle in his pockets for his Camel pack.
A sudden bout of cheering sounds from the reception, flashing taunting beams in purple hues. You wonder what the fuck they have to be so happy about. You sigh. Perhaps, too, did people cheer, at the mortal fall of Ozymandias. You think about that. That loss of power. That loss.
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kirbs-blurbs · 5 months ago
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Happy Taranza Tuesday 😤☝️Can I hear some noise from the fellow Sectonia fans?
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naivety · 5 months ago
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swinging by my neck from the family tree (youtube)
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goalies · 5 months ago
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gay people. on my screen.
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