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Stone Age
by Feech
for Jason Lehrer
The cold arms of my statue, in the line of
trees and tall shrubs just off this fairly
well-traveled Boston sidewalk, almost begin to
warm me. Sure, it's probably my own warmth
radiating back at me, but there's no telling for
certain-sure what Cristobal can do. I wait in the
arms for him, and wonder idly, then fervently,
then idly again when he will be back.
I don't know how Cristobal does it, anyway.
I don't know how he leaves, and sometimes I wish I
could do it. The grey stone bends at the elbows
of the seated figure, a figure easily three times
my size. The statue and the sidewalk could almost
be the same color, separated at the figure's
pedestal by a strip of green; it's cold but
there's no snow and the grass is failing to die.
Either that, or it's dead and failing to brown.
The colors smear and shift a little before my eyes
compared to the way they appeared before my SCABS,
but I can still make them out. I put a lot of
thick lines and certain shadows in my work, now,
with my chalks. I used to be more subtle, but
maybe it's best to be bolder with outdoor art
anyway.
My statue is silvered, ornamented with tiny,
nearly square chunks in its torso and limbs; the
sidewalk here is plain cement. The motes of
reflective surface show difference between the
identical greys.
It's cold. I think sometimes that the statue
is colder than the air around it. I asked
Cristobal, once, how it was that he came to this
patch of foliage in this specific spot in the
city. He answered me about as vaguely as I answer
people when they want to know how I choose my
blocks of sidewalk for my pictures. You would
think I would bring in more money if I had some
sort of plan, but I don't. I never did. I just
started drawing more and more and staking out my
spots each day by instinct, and I was back at it
the same way the summer after I got SCABS.
I guess he can move, but he doesn't like it.
Most people I know can move, but they can't move
like Cristobal. It's hard to say whether I would
give up what I have now, cobby and nearsighted as
it is, just to be able to do what he does. I
could change; who knows what this virus can do.
But so far I'm stuck in this rather dumpy body and
Cristobal is stuck in his, even though he managed
to make himself get here with some sort of walk
and force of will.
I sigh. Why doesn't he know I'm here? I
asked him that, too, once, and he only shrugged
and halfway explained that when he's gone, he's
gone. I wish I could do that. I still wonder,
though, if he can see me and just doesn't want to
do anything about it. I'd like to think he
wouldn't leave me sitting here in my own Japanese
fox coat, shivering and moping, even if he did
have something else in the neighborhood to see.
I thought fur was supposed to be the ultimate
in cold-weather garb. I guess it is, in a way,
but I still appreciate my jacket and if I were a
real raccoon dog, in the wild somewhere, then I
doubt that I'd be curled up in the exposed lap of
a stone statue. Cristobal's got the right idea.
Just be cold, all cold. Then you never need to
get warm.
Jasper's is warm. The five of us take up a
four-person table, having scooted one more chair
over for Regan. He doesn't need a whole chair, I
always say, but the only other place to put him
would be on someone's lap, which he rebels at, or
on the table, which the rest of us balk at. Every
night that we're not doing anything else we're
here playing poker, but for some reason we have
designated Thursday as the "Dogs Playing Poker
Night." We had a drink and a sort of meeting,
whereat we decided that Monday is too depressing,
Friday is too apt to be busy, Saturday sees us in
a packed bar too crowded for playing cards, and
Wednesday, Tuesday and Sunday were either already
full up at night in terms of some members' work,
or too close to Monday. We ended on Thursday, and
since then we've nearly always met on Thursday,
but we come here so often in the evening anyway
that it doesn't seem to mean anything but that we
have a name. It makes us feel official, somehow,
or maybe wanted-- to know that the other guys, and
one gal, cared enough about each of us that we all
set a night to play poker together.
One of us, the woman, is not a dog, but
neither is she a woman any longer. Years back she
changed into a red-rose bush. I met her after she
moved to my side of the city; she works at home on
her computer and she likes me. We've talked
enough that she can understand my voice; usually
it takes a long time, she said, but with me it was
quick-- a couple months-- and I like to stop by
her building when I can. She joined our group.
Her name is Beth Sara. I usually sit next to her
and make sure that she gets a full translation of
all the chatting that goes on around the table;
the others don't have to write down everything
they say for her, that way, and she just keeps the
pad right in front of me and writes her responses,
which I relay.
Hector is not really a dog, either, but we
made him an honorary one on account of the ears.
Come think of it, maybe my status as a raccoon
dog-- I call myself "Japanese fox" when I want to
sound like I'm something a little special-- but
then I wouldn't want to perk the ears of any
furriers, either, except I'm probably not all that
luxuriant in the coat department-- makes me not as
legitimate a dog as Regan and Lars. Regan is the
Pomeranian, and Lars is the African hunting dog.
Regan is only a couple feet tall standing on his
hind feet, Lars is almost as tall as Hector but
slim and sort of womanish with patches over his
eyes that make him look startled. I always tell
him he's supposed to look menacing, one of us with
a mask really ought to look menacing, but I just
look rounded and cartoonish, Regan is just plain
cute (don't tell him that) and Lars has that
distant, puzzled expression.
Nobody really calls Hector "Hector" anymore,
I guess, not since Christmas a couple years back
when Lars started calling him "Elvis." We had
called him a "hound dog" for a long length of time
and one night at a Jasper's party Lars was sort of
blankly listening to the live band and they did
"Hound Dog." Lars has a high, real quiet voice
and he mentioned quietly something about Elvis,
and said we should call Hector "Elvis" for the
ears, and nobody listens to Lars but for some
reason we did then. I think when Beth Sara joined
us it took something like four months before
anyone mentioned that Hector is the big
rabbit-guy's real name.
Elvis just sits there with his frown like a
Klingon off that old show, and his heavy ears with
their velvet almost touching the edge of the table.
He's the biggest of us, and the deepest voiced.
He says we make him nervous, but I doubt it.
Anyway, he's been to "Dogs Playing Poker Night" as
regularly as the rest of us. The rest of us are
mottled and masked, not much to look at, but on
one side of me is deep layered limbs of leaves and
crimson blossoms, and on the other side is this
huge white-furred smooth-coated guy with a bay
shading over his forehead and reddish round spots
all around the parts you can see above his
clothes.
"God, I hate poker," grumbles Elvis. "You
all should leave me alone to my table and a
drink."
Elvis almost always wins something. We play
for snacks. Beth Sara's are always appropriate to
adding to her potting soil. I figure that's fair.
"Feh. You always win something."
"I hate poker. It's bad for my character."
Regan laughs. It bubbles out of him and
makes his face-hairs seem to fizz like foam on a
beer. "Cut it out, cut it out. Play."
Elvis grumbles something, and a crowd at
another table shouts and shrieks out laughing.
There are a lot of brands of beer going around
tonight. It's almost hard to keep my brain on the
flavor of the actual one that's going over my
tongue. I twitch my ear at Regan's laughing, and
look at my poker hand. Beth Sara doesn't give me
a tap to question me, so I know she knows pretty
well what's being said. It may be that she's
picking up a little bit of the other voices. She
says that Lars is difficult, but Regan has a good,
cutting voice that is easy for her to make out.
She "hears" through the vibrations of her being
when people speak. We don't know why exactly she
was so able to pick up on my meanings. She just
was. She says I have a knack for keeping my tone
clear even when I'm speaking at very different
volumes. I don't know. I have kind of a scratchy
voice, I believe.
"I have a good hand," I mention. I'm not
bluffing. I just mention something randomly every
time, so they'll never know whether I'm bluffing
or not, and this time what I mentioned randomly
happens to be true. It took me forever to figure
out that technique; it's the only way I can
downplay my own body's scent that comes up with
bluffing or a good hand. Poor Lars never wins
anything. He's still not too good at the
scent-masking. I figure he'll get the hang of it,
one of these times.
"I fold," writes Beth Sara on her yellow
legal pad in the black vinyl folder.
"That was formal," I tell her. "You could
have signaled."
The rose shrugs. This appears as a
noncommittal rising and falling of her limbs and a
slight rustling of her foliage. I squint at her,
something she probably can't see, but either way I
guess she's onto me. The others aren't; they
assume I'm bluffing.
"He's bluffing," Regan informs Elvis and
Lars, who have already decided that anyway. "I'll
see your popcorn and raise you a
'Chick-n-Cheez-Choo'."
Elvis raises one heavy, reddish brow. "You
_have_ a 'Chick-n-Cheez-Choo'?"
"Not _on_ me."
I translate for Beth Sara during the exchange
and ponder what life would be like if my poker
hand were different. I make an alternate history
based on poker hands, and begin to addle my own
mind when I attempt to consider an alternate
reality for each possible hand I might have. It
doesn't matter, I guess. But who knows. The
snacks I win or lose might decide the future of
all mankind. Or womankind, or dogkind.
I'm glad my paws came out of it with fingers
on them. Regan and Lars have limited dexterity.
I can't make all that much as a street artist, and
of course it's seasonal anyway, but I would have
to find something else to do with myself if I
couldn't slap on a hat and a jacket and take up my
case of chalks and go out. I need my black metal
case and a reason to kneel on the sidewalk. It's
not so easy to think of other vocations that would
make that feel right. At least, when I've tried
to think of some, none seem to fit _me_.
"I hope you weren't planning to have me
believe you _did_ have one on you," warns Elvis.
"I'd have smelled it."
"Well, sheyah, what kind of a dog do you
think I am? I said I don't have it on me. I'm
adding it to the pot. I have four; they're back
at my pad."
Elvis seems to think that over, then mumbles
something about corn snack chips and adds a coupon
to the small pile in the middle of the table.
Over the table are our hands and paws, making
shadows in the white-glimmering rings of
condensation, holding large-print cards so we can
all have a clue what's going on. Above that hangs
the vapor of beer, meeting in the middle like a
pie of five different flavors, and then over that
are our faces and the light from the conical
hanging lamps. Regan's face has a constant,
unintentional smirk. I know mine has a sort of
soft look to it. The rose focuses a good amount
of surface area on the cards she fans out in her
thorned limb, and even though Elvis surveys the
whole room at once with eyes on the side of his
head I always get the distinct impression that he
is staring directly, penetratingly, at me. Lars
has confided that the lop's face does that to him,
too.
I don't have anything else that I want to
part with to add to the pot, so I write out a
promise to buy the winner (who may be me, anyway,
I think) a burger here at Jasper's. It briefly
crosses my mind that I could offer a packet or two
of the dozen "Valomilk" cups I hid back at my
studio apartment, but I dismiss that. You just
never know when a convenience store will stop
carrying those. And I feel safe eating them: the
quality of chocolate is so bad, I don't even get
nauseous. Wish I could eat some decent chocolate
now and then, but you take what you can get.
"Aw, come on, Tony," Regan pipes, his little
wolf-sable brow furrowing tightly. "One of your
'Valomilk's. Come on. You know I can't get 'em
where I live."
"One of you is going to die of theobromine
poisoning," Lars says as if it doesn't matter.
"Oh--" Regan scoffs and waves his most
doglike paw, his left, dismissively. "And you
could get hit by a car tonight. Far as I know, I
could be dead of ancient age in ten years."
He's right. We all could. Well, all except
the rose. Beth Sara could live to be a hundred...
On the other hand, there are the SCABS people who
turn into things with lifespans of just a few
years or so and still live to be middle-aged or
older. And some live normal lifespans. So who's
to say? I suppose there are those who don't make
it to the lifespan of the species they become.
It's an odd thing, is SCABS. I came out on what I
suppose is the lucky end, but that's looking at it
from where I am now. I'm alive, I can see, I can
walk, I can draw and play cards. I have a good
voice for speaking to roses and have a friend who
looks like she'll be around for as long as I will
and longer, and another who may be around longer
even than Beth Sara. What does it look like from
next week, or even tomorrow night? Won't know
'til I get there. It could be bad, very bad.
Still, I'm not adding any "Valomilk"s to the pot.
No way.
I shake my head.
"Toooony", whines Regan, but I snap at the
air in front of me and he raises one side of his
lip, then laughs and we go on playing.
Outside is chilly, and dark, at least
symbolically, around the edges. I don't know if
my frequented parts of Boston are truly dark,
anymore. I imagine they were black-dark in years
past, before the street lamps went up that show my
and Regan's brushy tails in bristly, chilled
outline, and gleam off the sea-green middle veins of
Beth Sara's leaves. "Are you sure you're not too
cold?" I ask her, folding my short arms in front
of me and shaking my head to adjust to the outdoor
air.
Beth Sara nods, which I can tell by her
taking a conveniently visible blossom and bobbing
it slowly in front of me. I know she can tell
where I am by vibration; the glaring streetlights
are all she could see in a scene of
light-black-dark grey like this.
I wonder if it's really darker than I think
it is, and it's the SCABS that's changed my eyes,
not the city that's changed. I suppose that's
possible. I know it's changed my eyesight in a
lot of ways. I wonder idly whether I would trade
my projected human lifespan for Beth Sara's
rosebush lifespan, if I couldn't see except in
large, black and white print with her
photosensors. Probably not. I get an idea of
something I can do for her, and plan to myself to
do it while the weather is still fine for
sidewalk-chalking.
Lars walks ahead and out of sight, the end of
his tail trailing loosely, one wave back at us to
let us know he's not stalking off in a huff. The
only way you can tell the difference is that wave;
Lars's huffs aren't very demonstrative.
Regan bumps up against my knee by accident,
then growls at me as if his klutziness was my
fault.
"Right," I say, "Like it was my fault. Get
your own city, Pipsqueak."
"Hey! My city and my sidewalk, you walking
furfarm! I was just kidding around!"
I grab him up by the scruff of the neck, just
over his coat-collar, and hold him in front of my
face before I'm sure what to do with him. "Yow!"
he shrieks, knowing better than to struggle.
"Come on, Tony, this is undignified."
I put him down slowly. "I didn't start it."
"You told me to get my own city. Get your own."
I sniff. "That wasn't what started it."
He barges into me, flat-pawed against my
hips. Beth Sara, who knows we are in her way and
unpredictably active, holds up her yellow legal
pad as if to write something in it, but then just
holds still. She had been moving herself along
the sidewalk on one side of me, with several
branches supporting the pot she always wears and
several more acting as feet of sorts, but now I
notice her limbs must feel chilled because she
puts the pot back down on the sidewalk. She can't
find her way home without me, at this hour and in
this confusing light. She should learn to do it
by feel, I think as I kick out lightly at the
high-pitched-snarling Regan. Then she wouldn't
have to rely on little old me.
"Get off! Damn Pomeranian."
"Make me, Asshole."
I consider grabbing him again, but before
I've thought about it I'm down on all fours and
making stabs at him with my raccoonish black
muzzle. He raises his ruff even further than
usual and yips, leaping around me in maddening
circles. Finally I get hold of his thigh,
something he didn't expect, and he squirms around
and bites the tip of my nose.
"Ow!" I let go, and Regan gives me one more
nip on the jeans-cuff for good measure, I suppose.
"Fine, knock it off."
"Knocking it off." The Pom-morph stands back
to his two feet or so of height and brushes his
elbows ceremoniously. I rub the end of my nose.
I don't like what I'm feeling. I've got to see
Cristobal.
"Come on."
"Walk me to my stop, both of you, or I might
get mugged." Regan doesn't seem to notice that
I'm panting a little strangely. That's fine with
me. That's the last thing I need-- anyone else
knowing. It's time I told Cristobal, though. For
all I know, he's been in my head. I mean, what
all can he do when he ghosts out of his body like that?
"Or dognapped," I say, hoping to sound
natural. The twitching in my pants is subsiding.
I'm glad most of Boston is dark, or at least
pretends to be; I'm glad no one can ever be sure
of what they're seeing.
"Ha ha."
"Beth Sara?" I turn to the understandably
impatient rose. "All right if we walk Regan to
his stop? Are you too cold?"
"Let's, that's fine," she writes on her pad,
and we walk, I holding "hands" with her (cautious
of the curved thorns); I hope she can't tell that
it's almost a balancing measure against my own
feelings just a moment ago. What's sad is that I
couldn't really care either way about Regan.
Cristobal will tell me that I need to admit what I
want and go get it, but then he's never been in
this situation. Plenty of _other_ situations,
sure, but not _this_ situation. Or is that just
my excuse for pushing it to the back of my brain
all the time? No one would understand because no
one is me.
I glance over at Beth Sara, and notice for
about the gajillionth time how pretty she is.
I've told her so, before. But I know what that
means: it means I have nothing to lose by telling
her. I wonder whether I keep my comments to
myself concerning the guys because they would
really be as pissed as I say they would, or
because I have something to lose. As if I have
anything to offer, really. Any one of them could
take my place in the group any time, if I cycled
out of death or apathy and someone new cycled in.
I don't suppose Beth Sara would get along with
them so well or so quickly, but the more time we
spend as a group the more she can make out of
their individual voices. So much for the
"Japanese fox."
I try again to recall just how much of an
inkling, if any, there was before I got the
Martian Flu. I want to say, none. None at all.
I suppose that's not fair. I never really had a
reason to be exposed to situations like this
before SCABS. It could have come with the
territory, or it might not have at all. Fuck. I
don't want to drop Regan off anywhere. I don't
want to walk with him that long.
We step along briskly enough so that we keep
our skins warming our furs from the insides out
and I practically run off as soon as Regan is
deposited at his stop. Beth Sara is concerned,
then. But I explain about the "fight" and she
accepts that I may be just mad at him. I shrug.
It's a handy excuse. Sometimes a little too
handy. I could get used to the "pissed-off"
version of life.
I walk Beth Sara all the way up the three
flights of stairs and linger at the door, asking
whether she might need anything, chatting about
the night. She's almost as safe as Cristobal.
She's ultimately feminine, despite being two sexes
in one, and he's almost no sex at all.
I stifle an urge to tap out some song's rhythm on the opposite arm of the one I sit curled in. I place my fingers on it, between my hoisted, shod feet, but I think the tune in my head and don't do it. It doesn't seem right to tap rhythms on someone's skin when they're not there. Damnit, though, he could hurry his ethereal ass back here. I'm cold. I think the "Valomilk" in my jacket pocket is freezing. That's one thing about my statue, and Cristobal himself. I only have to share what I want to. There's not much point in being polite about food to a chunk of stone.
Something Lars did once made me wonder, and
then it got to be sort of a dangerous mental habit
to wonder about anyone I came into contact with.
I say dangerous because it makes me dwell on it
more, and I probably behave differently around
people and attribute things to them based on my
own hopeful assumptions-- which wouldn't be bad
except that at the same time that I'm hopeful, I'm
also mortally offended. How _dare_ they tempt me!
How _dare_ they be normal, nice people and then do
that _one thing_, say that _one thing_. It makes
me wonder how obvious I am, all over again.
Truth be known, my brain sneaks into the
fretting pattern, that's probably why I have to
fight it back around Regan so much. Of the men,
he's one I would vote "Most Likely to be
Straight". Safest of the safe. He probably
doesn't notice my reactions at all. But that
doesn't stop me from worrying.
It's sunny, almost warm, but not the kind of
warm that could fool you about the season if you
were plunked down in it from some other time of
year. Beth Sara should be out on her balcony in
about fifteen minutes, and about then I should be
done. I feel sort of performance-nervous,
worrying that she'll show before I'm ready for
her, worried that she won't think it's anything
special. I had to buy some special equipment for
this; I don't usually work in black and white. I
just wanted to show her what she looks like, at
least as best I can do it on the pavement in front
of her home.
There she is. I can hear the somewhat flimsy
sliding window-door pushed aside, and she points
the whole front half of her foliage down at the
sidewalk, looking for me as usual at this time
(for lunch on a Tuesday). Damn, I'm almost done,
but I-- I don't know why I'm worrying, no one but
me would know whether I'm done or not. But there
she is, and this is it. I scrape out a few more
lines, but really I'm just toying with a finished
product. I squint up and wave. She can see my
shape against the grey, and waves back. She is
still for a long time, surface area focused, and I
know she is seeing and thinking. I have some sort
of sense, at times like this, as to just how long
I want the audience to be looking before they say
something. Not long enough means it's nice, but
not great, and too long means that they're trying
to work up anything complimentary to say at all.
Beth Sara gazes, rose-fashion, for a long time,
but my internal warning signals have not yet gone
off before she wraps several limbs around the
balcony rail and lowers herself in my direction.
"Use the fire escape, for crying out loud, if
you're coming down that way at all!"
Beth Sara does one of her shrugs, writes
something on her legal pad, and hangs down as far
as she can reach before tossing it carefully to
me. I fumble it, of course, and have to make a
show of shaking my head and muttering at my own
clumsiness while slowly picking it up and
smoothing the sheets. She has written: "I will be
ten minutes late for lunch-- I have to spend that
long looking at your drawing."
I blush under my fur, and shuffle around
trying to think of what to say. Beth Sara
rearranges herself on the balcony and takes up her
looking stance. It's probably pretty good to look
at from up there, I admit to myself. I sit down
on the cool sidewalk and wait. I feel ashamed,
yet I'm glowing at the same time. I'm not sure
why. I just wanted to do something for her.
(You never do anything for Cris), a voice in
my head says, but I quash it. I begin picking at
the inevitable chalk traces in my fur, so I can't
hear myself thinking.
After Beth Sara is done looking, she comes
down the stairs and we link up and stroll to a
nice lunch place. It's one of the last few nice
days for feeding the ducks, so we go to the place
where we can buy feed in a red hopper over one of
the bridges. A few people stop by the drawing of
the huge, black-and-white rose before I leave, and
admire it lavishly and tell me I would have had
more of an audience over on such-and-so street. I
nod, and wrinkle my lips up and thank them, but
explain that it's for a friend. They look at me
like I'm a little crazy. I get that even when I
have money in my tin. It's worse when someone
with such a vocation _purposely_ avoids the
passerby. Ah well, the ducks look at us strangely
too. Everyone's a critic, one way or another.
Cristobal's arm moves under me, and I almost
startle before I remember that that's what I was
waiting for in the first place. "Gah! You're
back. You could have said something."
"Sorry." The voice grates out of the
mouthless throat area of this person-shaped stone,
like the deepest sound stones could make if they
rubbed against one another. Sometimes there are
tones in it that remind me of my chalk on the
sidewalk, just edge-whispering-tones. "I was
resettling in. You know how that goes."
"I do _not_ know how that goes," I snap,
patience dissipating with the heat from my body.
I've been waiting enough. "Damnit, Cris. You're
the one who goes gallivanting all over the
neighborhood bodyless like that and I don't even
know how you do it."
"I tried to teach you." There may or may not
be a note of apology in that.
"Well I guess I'm just stupid. Point being,
I _don't_ know what it's like. I have _no idea_.
I just figure it must be better than sticking in
the same old mortal lump of a self all the time."
Cristobal stretches one arm, as if he needs
to for comfort, only I know it's his version of a
sigh. "You want _this_ body, I suppose."
I don't know what to say to that. I wonder
if it would make any difference. It could all be
in my mind, and would that change if I lived in a
different body? Against my will, before I have
time to think about it, the sensation of tears
pressing against the insides of my eyelids leaves
me hunkered tightly down in the crook of his arm
and breathing in little huffs that he is just
going to know are something like crying.
Cristobal doesn't say anything, though. The
wind finds its way into my ear and, grateful for
the distraction, I shake in irritation and the
threatening tears are gone. I wonder where they
go when I don't use them. Cris doesn't have any,
of course. Logically, I suppose, I never made
any, but their threat made them real, and somehow
they must have gone somewhere. This puts me back
on thoughts of death, and Cristobal ghosting
around Boston, and again I have to keep from
crying.
"You're cold." Accusing someone else can be
a safe way to avert emotional suspicion. I know
I'm doing it and I do it anyway.
He replies mildly. "The weather is cold."
"Feh. You're always cold. That's all there
is to you."
Pause. "I'm hurt, Tony. You know that's not
true."
I grumble to make it sound like I'm replying,
but really there are no words. I hide this fact
by muffling my voice into the stone groove of his
bare, always bare chest.
"It gets hot and I get hot, and then you
complain about that."
"That's true," I concede reluctantly.
He does something he has never done before--
he raises the hand opposite my face and cups his
palm over my forehead, as if smoothing away a
cowlick of fur or maybe checking for fever.
"What's wrong."
"Well, everything. I guess you know that.
You're Mister All-Knowing."
"I am not. It's just a little release from
sitting. It's hard for me to move this hunk of
rock by myself, for any length of time, anyway.
Be nice, Tony. Tell me what's wrong. I've tried
to see in your head, but you have to tell me."
"Well I'm glad there's _one_ place you can't
get. How do you _do_ that?"
"There are lots of places I can't get. I
have to be in the frame of mind where I'm sort of
lost and wandering anyway. How long have you
waited here?"
I consider ranting at him about the chill and
the wait, but it doesn't seem worth it. I brush
his chest idly with a paw. "Doesn't matter."
He nods. "I tend to come back sometime."
"Yeah."
We wait for some time. Footsteps go past on
the sidewalk, but I don't look at the source; I
only catch a glimpse of edges of long coats. They
remind me of Lars' tail. Suddenly I stiffen, and
for one eternal moment I am dead certain that
there is nothing I can ever say to Cristobal. It
is always and forever impossible for me to be
honest. I can shove it to the back of my head and
it will be gone forever. It's easy, for that
moment, forever easy, I am in the process of
locking it down, but then he prompts, "So."
No, I don't want to. I'm just-- "So," he
repeats. "So. Talk to me."
"I--"
Oh, great. Now he'll know for sure that it's
something private, something dark, because I
paused. I think I just lost all control of the
situation here. My mind can't decide between
feeling trapped in the statue's indestructible lap
or feeling held and comforted.
"Mm-hm." Cristobal has all the time in the
world. For some reason, it frightens me. I could
be old and dead before he ever sees any wear and
tear, but what does that mean if he turns out to
be more fragile than we think he is? What would I
do if he left me? If Beth Sara died in a frost,
or if Cristobal cracked down the middle in the
same frost? Could he use his power, even if it is
just a little power, to find another body or live
in the pieces? Oh God, for some reason just that
one single imagining of his statue breaking down
the middle scares me more fully than any fear I
have for myself or Beth Sara. I don't want to say
anything. I wonder if holding perfectly still
will stop the damage from happening.
"Cristobal, I don't think I really want to
talk to you, because if I do I am going to-- oh,
you know, get into an argument with you and
then--"
"I don't mind if you cry."
"You don't?" It's said before I realize it's
even reached my mouth. I shift uncomfortably in
his bent arm.
"What's wrong?"
I hesitate, but it's too late now for the
thoughts to sink into that eternity that I was
sure was so safe, just a minute ago. Damn
eternity anyway. It's as fleeting as my chalk
pictures. Damn.
I can't make myself talk, where before I was
spouting things without thinking about them.
Eventually I reach up to his "mouth", the false
lips and shadowing that don't lead into anything
real except stone. It's quite cold, and I press
my palm onto it and hold it there. He talks
around me, using only his throat area.
"What are you doing?"
"Warming you up."
He nods, not too abruptly. I don't
understand him. He doesn't seem to question much
of anything, not like I do.
"Cris."
"Mm-hm."
It's quiet here. There aren't many birds in
the area today, not many people. I wonder what
the plants are thinking, and how long it will be
before the sidewalk will have to be torn up and
replaced. I try to wonder how Beth Sara is doing,
but the wondering isn't coming. I gauge the
warmth of Cristobal's stone under my raccoon-dog
hand.
"Sh." I was going to say more, but I only
finish one syllable. I'm good at procrastinating.
Cristobal is quiet and still, knowing me as
he does. I shift again, moving over a little on
his leg, and he changes its shape just slightly,
attempting to accommodate me. I thank him
silently. I wonder about asking if he got that
message, telepathically, but I don't decide to go
through with it.
Instead I say: "Cristobal, were you man,
woman, other?"
"Other." He chuckles with that, so I know
it's not true.
"Come on."
"Does it matter?"
I think about that. "No. I guess not. But
you're male now."
"If you can call it that."
I nod. His face in the section covered by my
hand is getting warmer. I feel that the air in
the street is getting colder, but that could be
because of my inaction.
"Tony."
"What." I cringe. He's getting close.
"Maybe... I won't ask."
I sigh heavily. "You might as well."
"It's just, I was toying with the notion,
bizarre as it may be, of asking you why your hand
is warming up my 'mouth'."
"'S your right to ask."
"I know. So I'm asking."
I shrink down further into his lap. "I
suppose I was thinking of kissing you."
"Tony."
"What?"
"If you're lonely, it's not me you want.
You're right, it's too damn cold out here. And
hot in the summer. You're not being practical."
"You're right, I'm not." I hitch myself up
on his grey stone leg, take away my hand and kiss
him in a way I never thought I'd kiss anybody. I
think it over even while I'm doing so. It's not
half bad. It feels rather nice, actually. I lean
onto his chest, half-standing, and break off the
kiss and stare at nothing, off down the street.
"Who says you have to be practical, I guess.
I just thought I would point that out, being as
you're always complaining about the temperature."
"Yeah." I inwardly compare the taste of
Cristobal to the taste of accidentally ingested
chalk, and Cristobal comes out on top. "Sorry
about that."
"You're not okay. You have something to talk
about."
"I'll get to it."
"It has to do with the kiss, I'm guessing."
I shrug. "Most likely."
"You will notice that I did not protest
concerning said kiss."
I nod, mock-absently. "I'll notice."
"Just clarifying that."
It occurs to me that I come here as often as
I can, almost every day, and almost every day
Cristobal holds me. It seems like it should feel
strange, but it doesn't. It's not near the
frightening effect of warm men in bars. Maybe it
means something, maybe it doesn't. The more I
think about it, the more I think it does. I just
didn't notice because the only way to get close
and talk to him the way I like to is to be held.
I'm so good at not seeing, I can do things in
front of my own nose without realizing.
"Have a 'Valomilk'?"
"Bah. No. If I could eat those, I could eat
far better chocolate."
"Count yourself lucky." I peel off the cold
wrapper and start chewing on the frozen, chipping
milk chocolate and so-called marshmallow.
Cristobal hugs me a little closer as if it
might make a difference against the air, and I
guess it does, a little, when my body heats up to
regulate the surface of the stone. I don't know
whether I detect a note of impishness in the stone
voice when he says, "Oh, I do." I peer up at the
light grey face, and he may have changed his stone
lips to a wider smile; it's hard to say from where I sit.
"Problem?" asks Cristobal.
The candy in combination with my fur makes it
difficult to talk and eat at the same time, so I
just shake my head. The air gets colder, and
then, inexplicably, it seems to get warmer. I
know this effect. Now, if I get up, the air on
the sidewalk will seem unbearably chilled.
"You can just stay with me, then," Cris
mentions. I realize, without much surprise, that
he must be unwittingly reading my thoughts.
I nod to him. Sounds good to me.