Where RiRi Waits
The incandescent lights hummed. It was a flat, mechanical buzz that lived right at the edge of hearing, the kind of noise you only noticed in the quiet moments. Ria noticed it now, staring at the grey cubicle wall, the cursor on her screen blinking in mocking rhythm. Just seventy-two hours ago, that blinking was the flash of a thousand strobes. The hum was the thunder of a massive speaker stack, the bass vibrating so deep it rattled her teeth and rearranged her organs. Seventy-two hours ago, she wasn't Ria. She was RiRi. "RiRi, wheel and come again!" her girls had screamed, pulling her into the center of the road. And she had “Back it up pon the speaker box!”. She had spun until the sky became a blur of twilight and palm trees, her beautiful feathered costume catching the last orange glow of the Trinidad sun. She had played mas for Carnival. She had been the life of the fete, the center of the wining circle, sweat and glitter mixing on her skin like a sacred oil. Now, th...