Read Here Come the Dogs Online
Authors: Omar Musa
7
She,
a twist of pale smoke
between the criss-crossing lasers
and cursive of bodies.
She,
all hips and legs and curves,
floating, bending, popping
into an alphabet
of perfect b-girl control.
Me,
chewing my chain,
fixing my cap,
looking around,
but soon, fuck it,
I'm reacting
to her controlled explosions of movement.
Heaps of kids
haven't seen a b-boy before.
What kind of shit is that?
There used to be more solidarity between the elements,
b-boys performing between acts.
âI miss b-girling.'
âYeah. The atmosphere. The smell,' says Solomon.
âDeep Heat?'
âYeah. Someone working their arse off on a move and then nailing it at a battle.'
We're at a Thundamentals concert.
She wanted to go,
even though it was sold out.
She went along the line and eventually wrangled two tickets,
one for free.
She matches me drink for drink at the bar.
âPool? I'll kick your arse. I'm a real tomboy.'
Afterwards,
I tell her that I let her win.
She wants to talk about the race riots,
but that'll bring the mood down.
Word is that
a young boy is in a coma.
Still unclear what happened â
seemed like a free-for-all.
Scarlett guides me through the door
with one hand on the small of my back.
It feels weird.
âOi. Loverboy.'
Jimmy is in a new polo.
Rather than looking hurt,
as usual,
he seems chilled as.
âPity more good acts don't come through here, ay?'
Scarlett seems to cautiously like Jimmy.
He shouts to be heard over the music.
âDeadset bro, I swear when I look him in the eye â'
âHa.'
âYeah, yeah. When I look him in the eye,
it's like he understands my thoughts,
and I can understand him too.
I send him messages, mental pictures in my mind.
Saw a doco, right, where this chick could do it with big cats.
They can understand heaps, bro, even complex ideas.
Animals are way smarter than we give em credit for.
They just have different, um, different frames of reference, bro.
Like this thing I was watching, right â'
I haven't seen him so excited since the last Wu Tang album dropped.
They rib me about not looking after Mercury properly
and I laugh and buy a round.
A young black guy called Remi is warming up the stage
with a DJ and a drummer
and while it's sampled beats,
they sound fresh,
unlike anything else at the moment.
Rarely see a black dude in Aussie hip hop.
It's troubling, ay.
Scarlett notices, too.
It's her first time to an Aussie hip hop gig
and she is looking around between sips.
âSo many white people here. Not like this in Auckland.'
âYeah. Aussie hip hop is pretty bloody white. There's more women than
there used to be, but,' I say, a bit defensively.
âNot on stage.'
She once told me
that NZ has problems with racism, too,
but they can always point at Australia
and say, âAt least we're not as bad as them.'
When the dude finishes his set,
there is just the drunken chatter of the crowd.
Scarlett tells Jimmy a dirty joke
and he cracks up.
She has a bold, open-mouthed laugh
that shows her white teeth.
I'm observing her too closely to laugh
and she notices and whispers,
âScared of a little rude joke, Solomona?'
âNah, I think it's you I should be scared of.'
These Thundamental dudes put on a hectic live show,
bobbing and weaving
over a mess of leads.
Haven't seen them perform in ages.
Tuka has a skater/hippie swag,
bouncing one-footed
off speakers into the air.
Morgs is mean on the cuts.
Jeswon floats at the back of the stage,
coming forward for his verses,
attacking the beat with vicious sixteens.
Something in the water up in the Blue Mountains, ay?
The soundman is fucking the levels
but it doesn't matter.
The vibe's there.
They do their big love song, âSmiles Don't Lie'
and as the crowd sings along,
Scarlett and I kiss.
âAre we cheesy or what?' she says.
âYep,' I reply.
Jimmy waits for Scarlett to go to the toilet
then leans over.
âOi. Guess who I bumped into?'
âWho?'
âMy old man.'
I suddenly feel sober. âBullshit.'
âSerious.'
âThe fuck he want?'
âAll right, I didn't talk to him. I saw him outside work, sitting in the back of a ute.'
âThe back of a ute?'
âI think he wants to talk.'
âThe fuck for?'
âDunno. I reckon he wants to make amends.'
I know that look. Somehow wounded, somehow excited by the danger.
âIt doesn't make any sense. No one's seen the bloke in years,' I say.
âI know.'
â
Pssh.
If it is, we should beat the cunt senseless,' I say.
âYeah. That's what I reckon.'
âLet's do it. I'll come with ya.'
âNah, nah. I just wanna see what he says. I got it under control.'
I wrinkle my nose. âJust be careful, James.'
I can't concentrate on the rest of the show.
* * *
Scarlett's place doesn't have air-con.
Against the doorframe,
she takes my dick out of my jeans.
She squeezes it between thumb and forefinger
and a droplet appears.
She teases it with the tip of her tongue.
I try to hold her head but she keeps unfastening
my fingers from her hair,
undressing me with one hand.
Her back is covered with purple tatts,
stars and swordfish and coral reefs.
On her legs are scars,
razor marks at perfect intervals,
twelve per leg,
moon coloured.
She climbs on top of me
and guides me in.
She's not very wet.
We begin to move slowly
and she parts her legs to accept me deeper.
This room is so hot.
I touch her nipples,
long and dark and pierced.
With her right hand she holds my throat
and with the other she slowly begins
to slap me on the right cheek,
once every few seconds.
We're moving faster now and she's wetter.
She tightens her grip on my throat.
The slaps become harder
and more painful,
but with the same regularity â
each slap turns my head further to the left.
Something anchored deep in me rising.
My face is scalding.
Her teardrop tattoo becomes liquid,
runs down her face in a single trail,
falls onto my chest
and evaporates with a sizzle.
I'm losing my breath.
Now the pain on my cheeks
blade-sharp and my skin unbearably hot.
I'm holding her breasts tight.
When I come it is painful and explosive
and I lose breath completely.
Her eyes have been closed the whole time.
We're lying in bed,
not touching.
It's too hot.
And something's wrong.
âWhy did you buy the greyhound in the first place, Solomon?'
âDunno.' What's she driving at? âTo be honest, I wanted to show the boys that I could be responsible for something, look after something. Fucked it up.'
âAh, yeh. The boys.' She's staring straight up. I suddenly crave a cigarette and think about getting up when she speaks again. âDo you have any female friends?'
âCourse.'
âOnes you haven't slept with?'
â. . .'
âYour group of mates is a cock forest, Solomon. Admit it.'
âIt's not that bad. They've been my mates forever, what do you want me to do?'
We lie in silence.
Unlike with Georgie, I don't want to argue.
Then she says, âDon't you hate people who are all style over substance?'
She's been dropping shit like that all night since the concert.
I try to smile. âOuch.'
âI'm serious. If you don't contribute anything, anything at all, what's the point?'
I realise she's for real. âWhy do you keep seeing me, then?'
âBecause you're a good fuck.'
âJesus.' Whatever she's doing, it's working. I've never been more angry or turned on.
âWhat about companionship? Don't you think you need that?'
She laughs. âI don't need anything. Least of all from you.'
I want to make her take the words back.
She's loving it,
suddenly self-destructive.
âUsed to getting your way, aren't you Solomon?'
I stand up, shaking.
âSee you again soon? I'll call you,' she says.
âI'll think about it.' I want to hit her.
âI'll see you next week. Don't take yourself so seriously, Solomona.'
She's still smiling.
I leave,
thinking about Georgie,
lovely and safe and dependable.
Dependent.
8
On the TV:
âMr Crawford, we understand that you are in support of recent calls to change the Racial Discrimination Act. Don't you think, given the race riots in Shellfish Bay, that this is a rather inflammatory proposal?'
âOn the contrary, I think this is exactly the time to take another look at it. The mood of the electorate is one of understandable frustration. The Australian identity is being contested as we speak and I believe that one essential part of the Australian identity is being forthright and honest, something that political correctness has been white-anting for quite some time. Amending the Act is not, as some contend, a green light for prejudice; rather, it is a green light to express ourselves more fully as Australians.'
âMr Crawford, is there any truth to the claim that it was police brutality that started the riots?'
âAbsolutely none. It is merely the actions of a few thugs and should be condemned as such.'
âAnd do you have any more information on the young man injured in the riots?'
âHe remains in a critical condition. I grieve with his family and I am praying for his swift recovery.'
9
Jimmy slowly gets into bed and knows the hound will follow.
âGood boy.'
He tucks the pillow beneath his head and his eyes are aching from the twelve-hour shift. His inner thighs are chafed raw from the shabby material of his cheap suit â inexplicably, as he sits at a desk all day. He is so tired it feels as if the bed is radiating outwards around him, stretching like a desert. He feels something running towards him. Soon the hound bounds onto the blankets with him, lightly arranges itself â snuffle, pad, pad, snuffle â then twists into a ball with the motion of water spiralling down a drain. Jimmy rubs the dog behind its ears and Mercury Fire makes a sound of satisfaction, deeply reverberating in his throat, almost a purr. Then he yawns, and in the near darkness his teeth appear like some fine rock formation. His breath, the smell of dead meat, somehow pleases Jimmy. A warm-blooded, loyal, gentle being so close. Closer and more affectionate than Jimmy had ever been with a woman. The night is strangely cool. Jimmy draws the blankets around himself, moves so that their bodies can share some warmth, then falls asleep.
His bed stretches outwards
and becomes an enormous limestone plain.
He stands and begins to run.
Mercury Fire keeps pace with him,
running towards a body of water
in the distance.
With each step Jimmy can feel himself getting stronger
and he wonders if he is taking on
the animal's spirit.
The dog is saying,
âRun on, my friend, run on, run on, my master.'
When he reaches the water's edge,
he doesn't slow,
but leaps perfectly into it
and becomes at one with the lithe body of a river.
He swims and can hear the dog's voice,
encouraging him forward,
but he can no longer sense him at his side.
Jimmy swims deep down,
into a grotto
where there are thousands of voices
and golden lights.
He swims through a doorway
and finds himself standing at the back of a crowd,
completely dry.
Run DMC is performing
and through the drift of dry ice
he sees Jam Master Jay's gold ring
as he scratches on vinyl
as black as his leather jacket.
Jimmy pushes through the crowd to the front
and he is holding a pair of Adidas in the air,
waving them from side to side.
Jimmy is hauled onstage
and joined by Rakim, Ghostface Killah,
who pours him a tall glass of Hennessy,
and a young Jay-Z,
who hands him a mic.
Jimmy faces the crowd;
lights and mirror balls are floating like seraphs.
He starts rapping,
freestyling flawlessly, intricately,
catching whatever beat DJ Premier
(who is now behind the decks)
is spinning.
When he finishes,
someone takes the microphone from him.
It is Sin One,
standing almost seven-foot tall,
rapping a famous verse from âOrphan Slang'.
The crowd is on its feet
and Jimmy is leaping up and down,
his hair in his eyes.
He goes offstage
and is ushered down a hallway to a door
covered in dripping blue paint.
He opens the door
and it takes a moment
for his eyes to adjust
to a concentrated darkness.
When he closes the door behind him,
there is sudden silence.
He sees the figure of a naked woman at the window,
overlooking a big, broken city.
He cannot see her face.
Without turning,
she beckons to him with a sweet voice
and her body is gilded in moonlight.
He goes to her and she undresses him
and gently kisses his ears and neck and eyebrows.
It is Kayden Kross
and she is wearing no makeup.
She whispers secrets to him,
revealing her authentic, tender self
that nobody else has seen.
He kisses her eyelids
then she climbs on top of him,
but as she does,
her face changes
and starts scrolling through the faces of other women â
Hailee, Scarlett Snow, other pornstars.
Her pale belly is twitchy when he touches it.
Her ribs look like a pharaoh's headdress.
As she begins to move,
he looks down at his body
and sees that it is Solomon's.
Blonde hair falls in a wave around him,
drowning him,
and her lips become as big as the night
and swallow him whole
like a pill.
In the morning,
he is incredibly hungry.
No graff and music blogs to wake him up today:
the hunger alone
has made him alert and sharpened.
At McDonald's,
the cashier is talking about church.
Her eyes widen when he makes his order.
âAll for you?'
Two schoolkids
watch him eat three hash browns
and two servings of hotcakes.
âHey, kids. Ever seen a greyhound?'
âYeh.'
âLike em.'
âNah.'
âYou know they can reach up to seventy k's an hour? Crazy, huh?'
One shrugs,
One smiles.
As he leaves,
the cashier is talking about cleavage.
He feels light,
and stops to lick dew
from a blade of grass.
At work,
he is called into his boss's office.
âLook mate,
we've been monitoring your calls
and sad to say, you're not doing a good enough job.'
âYou firing me?' says Jimmy, hopefully.
âNo, no.'
âDidn't think so. Impossible to get fired from public service, ain't it?'
âI think you've got the wrong attitude, mate.'
Grey walls.
A spray can would change that.
With several callers,
he holds the phone away from his ear
and has to pinch himself so he doesn't scream.
Count. Breathe.
On his lunchbreak,
he sees a fabric shop.
Colourful beads, cloth.
He buys a piece of felt
and keeps it in his pocket
as he answers calls,
stroking it from time to time
to remind himself of Mercury Fire's ears.
As he walks from work
to the bus interchange,
he sees a protest in the centre of the City.
There are signs with Damien Crawford's
smiling face crossed out.
A handsome Aboriginal man in a suit
is speaking into a megaphone.
Jimmy walks past.
As he leaves the City on his bus,
he sees a man sitting on top of a street sign,
dressed immaculately with a scarf
around the lower part of his face,
watching him.