Dyke
Dyke Robin Becker The word came after me, then hid each time I turned to look at it. It breathed in the hedge(树篱,障碍). I could hear it bite and snap the air. I feared the woman with slicked-back hair sitting on a bar stool, her back to the dance floor, a beer in her hands. Disco drove the word away but it came back: Bulldyke, Bulldagger. What did the word want with me, and why this dread(惧怕), this desire, this dangerous butch striding through Kenmore Square uncamouflaged? Dyke had a spike in it, a cleated surge. In leathers, the word leapt 18th century grillwork on the Boston Common and led the parade around the city, the slow, snaking, joyful, motorcade of a new millennium. First I had to hate her; then I had to hurt her; the rest of my life, I ate from her hand. |