Deja pulled up a stool on the other side of Riley. “Well, kid. You’ve got two choices. You can sit here and cry into excellent hot chocolate, or you can let me teach you how to wing eyeliner so sharp it could cut a homophobe.”
“New stray?” Deja asked.
The late shift at The Rusty Spoon was always slow, which made it the perfect time for Marisol. She liked the quiet before the drag show crowd stumbled in, the way the jukebox’s low hum let her hear herself think. Tonight, she was polishing the same pint glass for the third time, her eyes fixed on the rain streaking the window. freeshemales tube
By midnight, Riley was perched on a cracked leather couch in the dressing room, watching Deja paint her face while Marisol lent them a clean hoodie. The bar filled with music and laughter. A lesbian couple slow-danced by the jukebox. A group of gay men argued loudly about which RuPaul’s Drag Race winner had the best finale lip sync. And in the corner, a young nonbinary kid who’d arrived with nothing clutched a warm mug and listened to two transgender women sing an old, off-key duet about survival. Deja pulled up a stool on the other side of Riley
“But we stayed,” Marisol said. “We threw brick after brick. We marched in the rain. We took care of our dead during AIDS when no one else would. And slowly, the tent got bigger.” You can sit here and cry into excellent
The back door opened. A tall Black woman in sequined heels and a silk robe strode in—Deja, the night’s headliner. She took one look at Riley, then at Marisol, and her face softened.
“Both is good,” Deja said.