The building had stood for a very long time. It was unlikely anyone knew  what it was originally used for. In the years of chaos and renewal, it  served many functions. Its current incarnation was that of a juke joint.
As  he stepped through the front door he was greeted by a wave of  industrial war beats with a melodic undertow. Multi-colored lights  strobed across his vision, making it difficult for his eyes to adjust to  the overall darkness of the club.
Next came the smells; liquore  and smoke. False fog and vinyl. Leather and lace. Perfumes and  hairspray. Pheromones and sweat. Sometimes, the familiar scents were of  comfort to him, a touchstone in the shifting of flashing light and  shadow. On other occasions, it was a stench, making him wonder if the  creatures the smells emanated from knew how to bathe.
"There's a cover, man," the doorman, a brain-damage case, who's voice was slurred by bad wiring and a few drinks, said.
His  eyes narrowed and something, which might have sounded like a growl,  rumbled in the back of his throat. He fished a few paper bills from his  pocket and all but threw them at doorman. Something that might have been  a greeting or goodbye came from his lips, but it was too inaudible to  tell.
Once inside, he purchased a beer. A mild intoxicant. Part  of him thought it was amazing that water and fermented grains could  produce the effect they did. It was a trivial thought, a distraction,  which occupied his mind until he turned his gaze on the crowd.
Vampire  children and death-rock kabuki dolls pranced and cavorted to the music.  Their movements reminiscent of a knotted ball of serpents in mating  season, or some long-lost and half-forgotten tribal shuffle. His eyes  would settle on one dancer, with somewhat interesting plumage, if for  only a heartbeat, before moving on to another.
He was looking for  something, but he wasn't sure what exactly. His coming to to the juke  joint had been done half on impulse. Sometimes, he joked, gods spoke to him. Disjointed whispers. Sometimes,  he rationalized, he was given riddles and puzzles to keep him  Holmes-like interested in the world around him.
It was one of  those disjointed whispers that brought him here. He knew he was looking  for something. Part of him wondered what it was or why he was there in  the first place, unless it was to alleviate a sense of boredom. He  reminded himself he was called to the establishment, as it were. It was  either that, or he was playing a nasty mindgame on himself.
Ooh, more please!
ReplyDeleteGlad you liked it. We'll see what happens, neh?
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