My leather jacket had developed a lovely patina. The purple leather dye was still vivid in some places, but anywhere it rubbed and bent, the surface had worn off to reveal the black underneath it. It shape snapped onto my torso perfectly, giving me reassuring pressure all around but no squeeze anywhere. When I inhaled, I could feel it stretch around my rib cage. The leather parts that had stiffened with age seemed to give off a barely audible snarl like a scruffy terrier in its dreams. Not only had the jacket become part of me and my identity, but it had also collected memories: a gash over the pocket from jumping a concert fence in the desert as I slipped over and a bent wire caught me, a frozen, dark night on a sailboat where the salt waves crusted it around the neck, and the line from being bent harshly across the back when I had thrown the jacket onto the truckbed before I jump on top of both the truckbed and the jacket to cushion the bumps on the dirt road.
All that weathering from adventures looked to the people in the line like I merely had bought a trendy, distressed jacket from a Soho boutique, but it was real. We two had a bond like a cowboy and his horse has. I zipped the zipper down in front to reveal my cleavage. I reached in and under in my bra to lift them to the center to get that beautiful popping look of them pressed together. People gave me more attention that way. I leisurely let my look work its way to slowly pull the attention in like a gravity field. I know I'd get more and more little side looks. I touched up my lips in that popping pink that was really sparkling and vivid. That hue of colors resonated with the hue of my blue eyes. The two colors amplified each other very much.
Revealing the top of my boobs with that squeezed-together and fully round look was important. Since doing it, I got so much more attention. People no longer gave me a quick glimpse and continued on in a harried way, but I got their full attention. They try to put on smiles to impress me. I can see how the guys wipe off their minds whatever was there before to fully pay attention to me. They listen to my words and ideas. "Quiet! Dakota is talking!" are words that I started to love hearing. It was cute how the guys started posturing to shut up another guy to make me heard. And when I look away on purpose, I know exactly where their eyes have wandered because they can't control the corners of their lips from beaming a big smile.
I could feel how the conversations around me got a little more quiet because people lost their train of thought to look at me. I could tell the little ways in which people shifted their weight on their feet so that they could angle their bodies a little bit more towards me to make it easier to steal glances. The quiet, unspoken attention felt on my skin the way an infrared lamp bath feels: You can't tell when the light touching your skin, but your skin starts warming up. The same way, I relished the attention crawling all over my skin even from the directions that I could see like behind me. You dress up in tight jeans to stand in a concert line for a reason. You are being paraded and there to be seen, but you can't show that you are hunting that attention. It's fleeting like a bat if you look, they scurry to look the other way.
"You're so gorgeous, Sydney! Your abs are rock-hard. Are you still seeing that cute boxing trainer?" I asked my friend.
She turned to me to speak in her nervous, rushed tone that seems half delinquent, angst-ridden teenager (quick and weak) and half crazy woman with a machine gun (her Russian accent). "Oh, gosh! We both are killing it tonight! You mean Karl, the Norwegian dude, right! I'm done with him. I take Muy Thai boxing sessions with Phong. He's this 6' 5" dude with a giant tiger tattoo across his back. I mostly just go because he takes his shirt off after the warm-up and I love watching the tattoo on his back."
"I can't help..." sounded a male voice behind me. I perked up and got my defenses ready to shoot his annoyance down. "But hear you talking about Muy-Thai boxing. I love myself a good sparring session to start a Saturday. Lately, I've really been getting into clinch drills." I couldn't make my mind up. He looked a bit boring like he came from the office, but there was a little refinement in the way his jacket's button holes were stitched. He didn't seem ready to fold like a nervous loser. Some of the most famous people purposefully dressed down. You had to be careful judging people or you might miss out.
"Do you think that impresses me?" asked Sydney coldly. Oh good! I didn't have to deal with this.
"If I tried to impress you, I'd tell you about the lawsuit that I'm leading. If you've trained Muy Thai, you've fallen flat on your face so much and embarrassed yourself, you are kind of beyond the impressing game," replied the guy. He was a bit stately. However, he didn't fold under pressure. There wasn't the slightest twitch on his face from being coldly embraced by Sydney. His cheeks looked as jolly and ready for a night out as before. Maybe, he had cred. Damn! I was kind of curious about what kind of lawsuit he ran. Was he a multi-millionaire in private practice or a high-powered AG? Lawyers can be terribly boring and also can have extremely good verbal skills.
I didn't say anything. I simply reached for his collard and started grooming it. I felt the fabric to judge if it was a cheap one-hundred or a one-thousand-dollar shirt. I took my time. I could feel his chest growing with pride at the female attention that he was getting. I tapped his shoulders with a friendly tap. "You are a cute boy!" I told him. And then I coldly turned my back to him. He was going to find me in the venue and fetch me a drink.
We were getting near the front of the line. The all-black-clad bouncer was a hulking man made of a mix of muscle and fat. His head was shaven to stubble. The face was big, blotchy, and pasty with tiny black eyes. The sleeves on his black jacket were too large. And his hands didn't know what to do with themselves. He was Sven, a German emigrant with a vast knowledge of music.
"You are way too excited. This is not your night. Go home!" Sven told a group of three excited Indian men, who had been laughing at each other's jokes. Their faces turned blank as they were pushed aside from the line in disbelief.
"You've spent the entire time in the line on your phone. We don't like your kind here. Leave!" Sven told the hipster girl with a grandma crochet vest and a purse large enough to fit a shotgun.
"Why are you here tonight?" Sven asked us. He was known to interview customers to decide if we brought the right kind of music appreciation.