Synaesthesia Magazine Sound | Page 16

on second chances and brimming with the knowledge that I’d survived my time on the streets. He’d work himself into an hysteria, fevered and sweating, capturing my angles—the pockets of light and dark he swore represented everything I hid inside. The things I didn’t want anybody to find. When he was done, he’d light a cigarillo, crack the window overlooking the back alley, and smash a kiss against my forehead. He leans into my space on the bed, wavering and waiting. “Do you want to sketch me?” I ask, knowing the charcoals will leave my features smudged and unfinished. He throws back the tequila again: one, two, and grins, his glassy eyes greedy now. “I want to carve you.” I press my lips against his cheek, tighten my muscles into the precipice of a peck, but don’t cross over. Offering him another shot, I tilt the bottle up and watch him swallow: one. “Don’t let anyone ever tell you you’re not beautiful,” he slurs, before slumping onto his nest of throw pillows. My silk dressing gown, the one adorned with handpainted tiger lilies and twittering robins, hangs over the chair by the vanity. I throw it over my shoulders and sweep down the hallway towards the studio. Sweat lines my brow as I chisel at the sculptures’ mouths, all of them created with a symmetrical smile. He doesn’t see that I’ve changed, that I don’t deserve him anymore. When he wakes he’ll find the statues and busts and likenesses mute, their mouths removed and shattered on the concrete floor. And he’ll find me naked and spent, draped over the camel back couch, waiting for him to mould me.