Love That Hustle :: [OPEN]
Nov 23, 2013 14:57:38 GMT -5
Post by L△LIA on Nov 23, 2013 14:57:38 GMT -5
[bg=FF4E5A][atrb=border,0,true][atrb=cellSpacing,0,true][atrb=cellPadding,0,true][atrb=width,400,true][atrb=style,width: 400px; background-image: url(http://i39.tinypic.com/26044.png); background-repeat: no-repeat; padding-left:40px; padding-right:40px; padding-top:40px; border-left:1px solid #000000; border-right:1px solid #000000; border-top:1px solid #000000; -moz-border-radius-topright: 25px; border-radius-topright: 25px; -moz-border-radius-topleft: 25px; border-radius-topleft: 25px;opacity: 1;] They call me Baby like I don't got a name. That's fine by me — I'm stripped down enough here that it'd start to feel personal if gasps of Iggy were on their lips at the same time they're taking such close looks at me. Still, I hear that raw edge in their voices as they holler up at me from the crowd, the stage lights scorching my skin until it's glittering like the fake diamonds and sequins stitched to the nothingness of my costume. Right now I am hips and thighs, with a crown of feathers and not much else. The club is packed, more for the booze than my performance, but a girl like me knows how to steal attention from a few dull glasses of whiskey and gin. Bending forward, I touch the floor and hear a glass shatter, grinning as I pull myself back up to follow the demanding rhythm of the music. It's not that I love the way they look at me with dropped jaws and strangled sounds growling in their throats, but sometimes a moment like this makes me feel powerful enough to take on the world instead of just drudging through the days. A heartkiller face and the kind of curves that cause car wrecks are my lone redemption — if not for that, no one would bother with me. Piss-poor orphaned daughters of crackheads with even less pride than education don't ever get to pull themselves out of the gutter unless they manage to find a hand willing to help them up in exchange for letting that handhold turn scandalous. The Ferry Man may not have wanted me for himself, but a man is a man and he couldn't look at me without seeing the only thing I really had to offer, no matter what words fell out of my mouth. I'd just kicked off from the community home — sixteen, unemployed, and nowhere to go — and walked into this club of his with the brazen desperation of someone with nothing to lose, begging for a job. Bar tending, bathroom scrubbing, shining his goddamn shoes... I told him I'd do anything. "Anything?" "Anything." When he put me on stage and told me to dance, I thought he was crazy. Before he cleaned me up and had the other girls make me over with a little mascara and lipstick, I'd never known I was pretty. Living like I had, I'd always been too ragged and dirty to see it, but a shady dealer like him is used to gleaning value from filth and after two years of this work, I know how to see myself that way too. When the music ends, I blow a kiss to my adoring audience of booze-hounds and underworld darlings, pulling the plume of feathers from my hair and handing them off to one of the other dancers as I descend the stage steps and take a walk through the crowd. Baby, you done so good, they say, just like my failure of a mother used to as she laid back while I scrubbed motel floors to earn money to support her meth habit. Baby, you're a star. Baby, stop for a second and gimme a smile. One of the other girls is in the spotlight now, but that doesn't stop them from looking at me as I slip through the smoke and shadows toward the bar. Grabbing a bottle of top shelf whiskey and making my way to the booths where the high rollers get their hustle on, I can already feel the eyes of the La Torre girl prowling for a glimpse of me. Regulars around here, like her, don't bother cat calling me for attention, knowing it's expected that I make the rounds to chit chat and top off their drinks. Keep 'em happy, because that's what keeps them — and their money — coming back. I'm halfway to the VIP section when a hand reaches out to stop me, fingerprints burning their mark into my skin. A stranger copping a feel in a writhing mass of bodies at a bar is nothing unusual, so I don't know why I let a little nothing-touch like this give me pause when I have more important people to attend to. There's just this urge within me to own somebody tonight and so I turn to see who has volunteered to play that game with me. This time I won't even have to touch my toes to make a jaw drop in my honor, I just let my red-painted mouth hitch up with a smile. "Sweetness, I've got some people waiting for me who value this whiskey more than your life, so I hope whatever you've got to say is worth that gamble." |