Chapter 11: Chapter 11 - The Dancer Beaten
Chapter 11 - The Dancer Beaten
Saturday setup ran different from weekday and Teo had learned to read the difference in the room's physics before the first set started. The crowd arrived earlier and denser, the bar moved twice as fast, the VIP corridor lit all the way from nine o'clock and the floor managers circulated with less patience in their rounds. Six Saturdays in, his feet knew the perimeter. He walked it without thinking about where his feet were going, which left his attention free for the room.
It was nine and an hour before peak. The warm-up DJ ran a set at lower volume, laying the foundation under conversation: dembow in the chest, bass from the floor speakers, nothing at full register yet. The stage was empty. At ten the dancers would come out, Briella's set first because she drew the early VIP crowd. Yari had explained the rotation to him without warmth and without expecting warmth back.
Back to the liquor shelf, near the main bar, he watched the door. Cami he had not seen backstage tonight, and he had not looked. That was a discipline he had been practicing, and he had been practicing it since Room 9 with approximately no success.
The summons came at nine-fifteen.
Ricky did this occasionally. Called the girls to the main floor before their shift started, a house meeting sort of thing, schedule changes or policy reminders. Teo had seen it once before. The girls came out in street clothes or partial costume, having their small conversations, adjusting earrings, the civilian version of the same women who would be onstage in forty-five minutes. During these he stood near the door. That was his assignment, and tonight he was at it.
Eight dancers filed out of the dressing room corridor. Without deciding to count them he counted: four in costume, three in street clothes, one wearing both, layered for whatever the hour turned out to need. Yari came out third. Her face was the blank she wore when she was performing having no face at all, which he had learned meant she had one and was choosing not to show it.
Cami came out sixth.
Stage makeup on and her street clothes: jeans and a dark hoodie, sneakers, her hair already done for the set but her body carrying the posture she carried outside the work. Her weight was on the back foot and she kept the small amount of space she always kept between herself and whoever was nearest. Watching her take a position at the room's edge, he looked away.
Ese, the floor manager, positioned himself near the stage access. Not at the door, which was Teo's spot, but near the stage. A specific position for a specific purpose, which Teo registered and did not immediately interpret.
The DJ let the track run out.
The room did not go silent. Bar conversations continued, a glass went down somewhere, the ventilation system kept its low hum. The music's absence was the event. The dembow stopping was the event. Teo's chest was used to the press of it, and now it registered the absence as a different kind of pressure, the pressure of space where something had been.
Ricky came from the office corridor.
His Saturday dress was the same as every Saturday: dark slacks, a button-down with the collar open, the watch on his left wrist that Teo had priced at three months of his take-home. He moved across the floor unhurried, because the floor was his, and he stopped at the center and did not raise his voice.
"Briella."
Out of the middle of the group she came. Fourteen months in the house. Yari had mentioned the number once on a Tuesday and Teo had filed it. Dominican, twenty-three, good at the early set because she still had the energy for it. She was professional and she knew the room.
She walked to where Ricky was standing, neither quickly nor slowly. Her face gave him nothing. Six weeks of reading this room and he could not read this one. Her hands were down at her sides.
Two feet from him she stopped. Her eyes went to the middle distance.
At the same measured volume Ricky spoke, which meant everyone on the floor could hear him clearly, which was the point.
"The house takes care of its people," he said. "That's the arrangement. Everybody here understands the arrangement." He paused, and the pause was not for effect and was not performed; the interval was simply what his delivery required. "Briella's been making arrangements that weren't part of the arrangement."
While he said this he was not looking at her. He was looking at the room.
"That creates instability. Instability costs everyone."
His eyes went to Ese.
Ese was a thick man, forty-one, seven years on Ricky's floor. He moved without drama. His hand went onto Briella's shoulder and she did not pull away from it. She stayed still under it.
The blow came open-handed across the cheek. The same hand came back in a controlled backswing and caught her lip. It was not wild. It was calibrated, an output produced without excess. The sound was flat and exact and Teo heard every component: the hand, the impact, the small compressed thing from Briella's throat that was not a cry. She did not fall.
She stood there. The red on her cheek was already rising. Her lip had opened and a thin bright thread of blood appeared on the lower one, and she brought her fingers up and pressed them against it without looking at Ricky, without looking at anyone.
She was standing.
Teo's hands were flat at his sides.
His post was the door, and this was the job, and this was the room. He had been in rooms close to this one before. He had not been in this specific room before.
His hands stayed flat.
The ventilation kept humming and the glasses stayed untouched behind the bar. Stage lights came warm-yellow off the rigs onto the empty stage.
He saw her at the corridor.
His eyes had gone to movement at the edge of his vision, and Cami was there. She was standing in the doorway between the corridor and the main floor, her hand on the frame, not stepping through, watching.
Her face was not doing what he would have expected a face to do.
There was no shock in it, no widening, no flinch, none of the small involuntary corrections a face made when a face was learning something new. Her jaw was set and her eyes were on Briella and the look on her was the look of a person watching a thing she had watched before. Something went through Teo for which he did not have a word, and he did not try to find one.
His eyes went back to the floor.
Briella was still standing. Her fingers were still at her lip. Ricky had turned back to the room and was speaking again at the same measured volume, explaining the corrective principle with the patience of having explained it before. The house takes care. The people stay. The arrangement protects everyone, including the individual who sometimes cannot see past the immediate.
Teo ran the logic and could not find a crack in it.
Cami had known this before she met him. He saw that now and could not unsee it.
His eyes went back to the corridor doorway.
Cami was gone.
Ricky found his eyes, not by searching for them. In the course of a sweep, Ricky's gaze arrived at Teo's position near the door and stayed for one measured second. The man was reading the read. Teo gave back nothing. He had learned to give back nothing in rooms where giving anything back was expensive, and the discipline held.
Ricky's eyes moved on, neither reassured nor concerned. The look was the one a man wore checking that the items in the room were in their correct positions. Teo was in his, and comfort had nothing to do with it.
The music came back.
It did not come back gradually. The DJ let the track drop and the dembow was back in the chest all at once: full volume, bass restored, the room's operational register resuming as if the interval had been an administrative parenthesis, which was exactly what it had been. The bar picked up. Conversations resumed. Two men at the bar laughed at something and picked up their drinks, and the room was the room again, the Saturday room at nine-thirty, an hour from peak, the same room it had been at nine-fifteen with a different piece of information inside it.
Briella walked back toward the dressing room corridor without hurrying. Her hand was still at her lip. She passed through the doorway and the door closed behind her and she was gone, and the room continued without a seam.
The office sat in the back, past the VIP corridor, past the storage room with its case stacks and its single overhead bulb. Ricky called him in at nine forty-five, a half-hour before peak, which meant closed-door business.
Teo sat in the chair across the desk. The desk was clean: two folders, a water glass, a phone face-down. The office smelled like nothing. No dembow in here. The insulation was good. With his feet pressed flat he could feel the bass through the floor, but he could not hear the music. The silence was the silence of his apartment at four in the morning: contained, pressurized, nothing bleeding in from the street.
Behind the desk Ricky sat. What had happened on the floor he did not bring up. He opened the first folder.
"The VIP rotation this weekend, Teo. Ese's moving between the floor and the corridor through peak. You've got the main entrance."
Flat against his thighs, Teo's hands stayed.
"Yes."
"Anything at the door, you call it in before you handle it, Teo. The play is calling it in."
"Yes."
"The entrance is the face of this house. You at the entrance, that's what a customer reads first. Steady at the door is a good night for the room." He closed the folder. "That composure you had on the floor tonight, Teo. That's the work."
There it was. Teo understood what Ricky was saying and understood that Ricky was not saying all of it. Neither of them acknowledged the other thing.
"Yes," Teo said.
Ricky opened the second folder, read something briefly, closed it. "Standard rotation otherwise, Teo. You're set."
"Yes."
"Good." He picked up the phone. The dismissal was complete and entirely without drama. Teo stood, pushed the chair back gently, and left the office.
The door closed behind him.
In the hallway past the VIP corridor, the dembow found him again. For a second he stood in it. The bass pressed into the chest and the room reassembled around its beat, the air warm and moving with the heat of bodies. His post was near the door, the face of the house, the correct position in the correct room.
He walked back to the floor.
The ten o'clock set started at nine fifty-eight, Ese counting down from the main stage and the dancers filing out in the rotation Teo knew by heart now, the order and the spacing, the two steps from the wings to the lights.
The dressing room door swung on its return as Cami passed through it. Her locker stood open in the half-second the door allowed him: a hoodie on the hook, her sneakers placed neatly at the base, laces tucked in. The door closed.
Cami was third in the rotation. She always came in third.
Near the main entrance he stood at his post, the correct position. Around him the room had reached its Saturday temperature: dense enough that moving through it required attention, warm enough that the ventilation was losing the argument, the air carrying the specific texture of a crowd that had been building toward this for an hour. Two men pushed past him toward the bar and he tracked them and released them. A group came through the door and he assessed them in the time it took them to step through: four men, mid-twenties, two of them scanning the room with the automatic scan of men in a new space, two of them already looking toward the stage. Standard Saturday. He let them through.
The change in the room came to him through his ears, not his eyes. His back was to the stage for the moment it took to deal with the group at the door. The crowd's attention had shifted, the men's voices moving from dispersed to focused, a room changing because something on the stage had pulled its eyes. The dembow organized the attention and the attention had just moved.
Cami was on stage.
He did not look.
His eyes stayed on the door. A woman in a group of four, laughing at something. A man alone, sober, scanning the room the wrong way. Teo tracked him for thirty seconds and let him go. The door, the entrance, the face of the house. Two more couples came in. A group of six took up the middle of the room and required maneuvering. The door he managed, the entrance he watched. The stage he did not look at.
His hands had been still the first night he saw her. She had told him about it later, in the car: You were just still. Her knee against his leg, the fogged corners of the windshield, and Room 9 twelve hours after, the lamp's cone, her saying his name in Spanish.
She had known what this house was before she ever sat in his car. About it she had been smarter than he was, and she always had been.
His hands were flat at his sides.
The dembow pressed into his chest at the room's full Saturday volume and somewhere in the middle of the floor a man shouted something appreciative toward the stage and the room agreed with him, the crowd's temperature spiking briefly, and Teo stood at the door and looked at the door and could not make himself look at the stage.
The post was his. The position was his. The composure was his, the same composure Ricky had named in the office with that flat precise voice, because composure was useful to Ricky and Ricky surveilled what was useful to him.
He stood in it.
Twenty minutes ran by, and his body knew the length. The dembow ran a track he had heard a hundred Saturdays and the crowd's heat lifted on the count he knew it would lift on and somewhere on the stage Cami was doing what she did and his eyes stayed on the door. A couple came through and he assessed them and released them. A single man came scanning and Teo tracked him until he settled at the bar. The bass kept doing what the bass did to the chest and his back kept knowing where the stage was without his eyes confirming it. Someone toward the front called out and the room answered him and the heat lifted again and Teo's hands stayed at his sides.
He did not turn.
Halfway through, a heel-strike came under the dembow, sharp and quick on the stage. He knew it was Cami's because of how she landed her weight. The sound he registered and he did not turn.
The track ran out. The rotation changed. The next dancer came on, and Cami went back through the corridor, back through the doorway, back into the space the door closed off.
His eyes went to the corridor doorway.
The door was closed.
The dembow ran its Saturday measure, the crowd at full temperature, the bar stacked three deep. He stayed near the entrance, doing the job. The rest of the night would run its administration and at two-fifteen Ese would run checkout at the podium and the fluorescents would come up and the music would cut and the room would be what it was under the night's infrastructure.
His eyes stayed on the door.
His hands were at his sides. The composure was the performance. The position was the correct one.
The stage he could not look at, and the reason he could not stop knowing.