Dhalgren
by
Samuel R. Delany
* * * * *
ISBN-10: 0375706682
ISBN-13: 978-0375706684
Publisher: Vintage (May 15, 2001)
* * * * *
Prism, Mirror, Lens to wound the autumnal city.So howled out for the world to give him a name.The in-dark answered with wind.
All you know I know: careening astronauts and bank clerks glancing at the clock before lunch; actresses cowling at light-ringed mirrors and freight elevator operators grinding a thumbful of grease on a steel handle; student riots; know that dark women in bodegas shook their heads last week because in six months prices have risen outlandishly; how coffee tastes after you've held it in your mouth, cold, a whole minute.
A whole minute he squatted, pebbles clutched with his left foot (the bare one), listening to his breath sound tumble down the ledges.
Beyond a leafy arras, reflected moonlight flittered.
He rubbed his palms against denim. Where he was, was still. Somewhere else, wind whined. The leaves winked.
What had been wind was a motion in brush below. His hand went to the rock behind.
She stood up, two dozen feet down and away, wearing only shadows the moon dropped from the viney maple; moved, and the shadows moved on her.
Fear prickled one side where his shirt (two middle buttons gone) bellied with a breeze. Muscle made a band down the back of his jaw. Black hair tried to paw off what fear scored on his forehead.
She whispered something that was all breath, and 1
the wind came for the words and dusted away the meaning:
"Ahhhhh... " from her.
He forced out air: it was nearly a cough.
"... Hhhhhh... " from her again. And laughter; which had a dozen edges in it, a bright snarl under the moon. "...
hhhHHhhhh... " which had more sound in it than that, perhaps was his name, even. But the wind, wind...
She
stepped.
Motion rearranged the shadows, baring one breast There was a lozenge of light over one eye. Calf, and ankle were luminous before leaves. Down her lower leg was a scratch.
His hair tugged back from his forehead. He watched hers flung forward. She moved with her hair, stepping over leaves, toes spread on stone, in a tip-toe pause, to quit the darker shadows.
Crouched on rock, he pulled his hands up his thighs.
His hands were hideous.
She passed another, nearer tree. The moon flung gold coins at her breasts. Her brown aureoles were wide, her
nipples small. "You... ?" She said that, softly, three feet away, looking down; and he still could not make out her
expression for the leaf dappling; but her cheek bones were Orientally high. She was Oriental, he realized and waited for
another word, tuned for accent. (He could sort Chinese from Japanese. )
"You've come!" It was a musical Midwestern
Standard. "I didn't know if you'd come!" He voicing (a clear soprano, whispering... ) said that some what he'd thought
was shadow-movement might have fear: "You're here!" She dropped to her knees in a roar of foliage. Her thighs, hard
in front, softer (he could tell) on the sides-a column of darkness between them--were inches from his raveled knees.
She reached, two fingers extended, pushed back plaid wool, and touched his chest; ran her fingers down. He could hear his own crisp hair. Laughter raised her face to the moon. He leaned forward; the odor of lemons filled the breezeless gap. Her round face was compelling, her eyebrows un-Orientally heavy. He judged her over thirty, but the only lines were two small ones about her mouth.
He turned his mouth, open, to hers, and raised his hands to the sides of her head till her hair covered them.
The cartilages of her ears were hot curves on his palms. Her knees slipped in leaves; that made her blink and laugh again. Her breath was like noon and smelled of lemons...
He kissed her; she caught his wrists. The joined meat of their mouths came alive. The shape of her breasts, her hand half on his chest and half on wool, was lost with her weight against him.
Their fingers met and meshed at his belt; a gasp bubbled in their kiss (his heart was stuttering loudly), was blown away; then air on his thigh. They lay down.
With her fingertips she moved his cock head roughly in her rough hair while a muscle in her leg shook under his.
Suddenly he slid into her heat. He held her tightly around the shoulders when her movements were violent. One of her
fists stayed like a small rock over her breast. And there was a roaring, roaring: at the long, surprising come, leaves
hailed his side.
Later, on their sides, they made a warm place with their mingled breath. She whispered, "You're beautiful, I think." He laughed, without opening his lips. Closely, she looked at one of his eyes, looked at the other (he blinked), looked at his chin (behind his lips he closed his teeth so that his jaw moved), then at his forehead. (He liked her lemon smell.) "... beautiful!" she repeated.
Wondering was it true, he smiled.
She raised her hand into the warmth, with small white nails, moved one finger beside his nose, growled against his cheek.
He reached to take her wrist.
She asked, "Your hand... ?"
So he put it behind her shoulder to pull her nearer.
She twisted. "Is there something wrong with your... ?" He shook his head against her hair, damp, cool, licked it.
Behind him, the wind was cool. Below hair, her skin was hotter than his tongue. He brought his hands around into the heated cave between them. She pulled back. "Your hands-!"
Veins like earthworms wriggled in the hair. The skin was cement dry; his knuckles were thick with scabbed
callous. Blunt thumbs lay on the place between her breasts like toads. 3
She frowned, raised her knuckles toward his, stopped.
Under the moon on the sea of her, his fingers were knobbed peninsulas. Sunk on the promontory of each was a stripped-off, gnawed-back, chitinous wreck.
"You... ?" he began.
No, they were not deformed. But they were... ugly! She looked up. Blinking, her eyes glistened. "... do you know my ... ?" His voice hoarsened. "Who I... am?"
Her face was not subtle; but her smile, regretful and mostly in the place between her brow and her folded lids, confused.
"You," she said, full voice and formal (but the wind still blurred some overtone), "have a father." Her hip was warm against his belly. The air which he had thought mild till now was a blade to pry back his loins. "You have a mummer-!" That was his cheek against her mouth. But she turned her face away. "You are-" she placed her pale hand over his great one (Such big hands for a little ape of a guy, someone had kindly said. He remembered that) on her ribs-"beautiful. You've come from somewhere. You're going somewhere." She sighed.
"But..." He swallowed the things in his throat (he wasn't that little). "I've lost... something."
"Things have made you what you are," she recited "What you are will make you what you will become." "I want something back!" She reached behind her to pull him closer. The cold well between his belly and the small of her back collapsed. "What don't you have?" She looked over her shoulder at him: "How old are you?"
'Twenty-seven."
"You have the face of someone much younger." She giggled. "I thought you were... sixteen! You have the hands of someone much older-"
"And meaner?"
"-crueler than I think you are. Where were you born?"
"Upstate New York. You wouldn't know the town, I didn't stay there long."
"I probably wouldn't. You're a long way away. "I've been to Japan. And Australia." "You're educated?"
He laughed. His chest shook her shoulder. "One year 4
at Columbia. Almost another at a community college in Delaware. No degree."
"What year were you bora?"
"Nineteen forty-eight. I've been in Central America too. Mexico. I just came from Mexico and I-"
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