I went to bed and she was the last thing on my mind. In fact she had been all that had been on my mind since I sat down in the Cherry Room; a dive bar for down and outers who can only afford to perv on girls who charge a dollar a dance and five for a private. I stayed only for one dance as I needed my other three for a scotch and soda.
I reluctantly sat down at the bar and slid my three dollars over and received no change. My only other solitary note lay crumpled in my pocket and I knew it wouldn't be long before I handed that over too. Over to some poor harlot trying to make ends meet, same as me. Only she has a pair of tits for men to grope and for an extra four they'd have the chance to suck on them as she'd yank at their bits until they gave her a tip and left with it joining the other stains on her dirty blouse. I sat with my scotch and soda and shut the fuck up and waited for some pussy to shake it for my dollar.
Her name was April May. I didn't know if that was her real name but I could hazard a guess. She looked like an Amanda or a Jane – a small time girl who had moved to the city and for whom it had all gone horribly wrong. This was the American Dream in action.
The spot hit the stage and I turned to face it so I'd get my full dollars' worth. An old guy by the stage announced her name over the tannoy, though if he would have spoken it everyone in the bar would have heard it was that dead in there.
Cheap, kitch burlesque music that seemed to come from an 80s ghetto blaster filtered into the room as unwelcome as the closing time bell meagrely played out as her soundtrack. I sat with my scotch and water and a pitiful erection as I looked into the light fantastic. She sauntered onto the stage in an unconfident wobble as her heels rode inches too high for her frame. Her calves were far from lean or muscular but the heels gave them sufficient tone as the harsh lighting spread the shadow of her legs long across the stage behind her.
Her skirt was short but she had the presence of mind to wear one all the same which wiggled and shimmied as she threw her hips about. Her stomach was rippled and a spare tyre moved around ungracefully, but her breasts were only loosely pushed up and joyously moved and danced around with her. Her arms were long and accentuated by the lighting, with her fingertips splayed out in the light, reaching high and far as if to claw out of this nightmare.
Her face was shadowed but I knew it was her. It was no accident, no mistake. I could almost make out the tears as they fell and glistened against the rays that kept her in the spotlight. Her eyes dull and lifeless and looked out but saw no audience, no future, no past. If I looked on for a decade I'd see no sign of life. I didn't look for her; I looked at her tits which was the only redeeming thing about her and only mildly so at that.
When the music stopped I sat back at the bar and finished up my drink before the next girl came on. I heard the clicking of cheap heels edge near me and the sounds of dimes and quarters being dropped into an empty can. I finished up the dregs of ice in my glass and pulled myself from my chair and as I did I was met face to face with her: April May. She was young; too young to be in here, too young for these bastards and motherfuckers to be festering on her, too young and too pure to have her head sunk in this river of shit. Her eyes shone vacancy, I could see no life there, I tried as I stumbled and fell into them as a means to save myself from my own ends.
I placed my crumpled dollar in her can and she moved on. I turned to face her but she was gone, and I was forgotten. I looked her up and down and smelt for a scent of her which was not forthcoming. Any smell I would have greeted: her rancid perfume, the vile stench of her cunt or her dogged breath. But nothing. I dug my hands deep in my pockets and walked out of there back out into the cold night air and blew a fog from my breath as I paced away from there with the blood dripping from my hands.
I lay awake and alone on my bed in my run down room which I over paid for with cockroaches for company and overpaid bills piling up on the table. I looked up to the cracked ceiling which seemed to come down low to touch the tip of my nose. The dripping of the tap from the sink echoed out and filled the room with a deafening blow like Hiroshima as it hit the limescale white steel of the sink.
It mattered not. I looked up and saw only her, heard only the distant muffle of her eyes and how they would only cry out to me, if only they knew what I knew.