stumbling bowlegged through the last subway car, loose-fit black rags bandaging frail limbs, face twisted in a permanent scowl, matted grey hair jutting from a flaky scalp, she jangles her paper cup of coins each flail of the arm a sharp crescendo; I flinch.
She extends her hand with a gaze that says: pity me; I cannot look. I don’t want anything to stir in me, my own pain is already too heavy,
but --
here they are: spoiled thoughts wafting over me like the waves of her robust stench: warmth between my thighs, tattoos bounding up thick muscular arms that aim at me in such earnest that my disillusionment melts away, and I am paralyzed by the lure of pheromones and the smell of skin which doesn’t quite leave you after you leave him.
And then truth clangs hard in my chest:
but her bones are made of steel! So who am I to look away? Maybe if something were to crash into me, I’d pulverize into dust.