I am all in white, dancing with a tanned skin man. We spin and my
feet, strapped into high-heeled shoes, know all of the steps. We weave
in and out of other tanned skin men and their white-skirted partners.
The song ends, I see the light shinning on his face; the light which has
reflected off of the sweat of my skin covered bones. We are all working on
our disappearing acts. I go to the bathroom to practice mine, a woman
lends me a mirror, and the white powder races to my brain, through my arms
and legs. I leave, watching her get ready to start disappearing.
It’s morning, South America has left and I lay shivering under blankets thinking
of my dream and of the night before.
The room was too warm and the air was filled with smoke. Someone cracked
a window, the flow of smoke from the faces around me took no heed to the
freedom it was being offered. Girls are sitting on the floor, boys
being chosen for each of them, passing a handle of tequila back and forth.
Their faces are flushed, they are laughing and throwing their bodies on the
boys and each other like they aren’t made of skin and bones, like they are
made of something careless and carefree.
I was sitting next to a boy and his girlfriend. He must have been talking
about how he feels fat, because she was saying how glad she was to be able
to sit on his lap and now feel like she was going to break his bones.
As we watched the girls and boys pair up, he told me about when he lived
in South America. He doesn’t smoke any more. He doesn’t do drugs
any more either. He grabbed the tequila and drinks it straight out
of the bottle, “But, I do still drink.” We all laughed. “I used
to weigh 130 pounds, I weigh 170 now.” He told me more about the drugs, about
his life. I told him that he must have been disgustingly thin.
He looked away, “I really miss being emaciated.” His girlfriend laughed
at him, like it is their old joke. He didn’t smile until she threw
her arms around him, and he had turned to face her. There was a girl
sitting across the room, talking to some other boy. She was telling
him about her stay in the hospital, the nuthouse, when she was sick, how
she is sick, how she doesn’t remember how to eat. Her bones poked through
the fabric of her clothes, her eyes looked heavy and broken. I looked
back at to the boy and his girlfriend, he looked over at me and all I could
think was, I can understand that.