“Hi, sport,” he said. “This is the day.”
“I know that,” I said. I also had a pipe in my mouth. I was forcing myself to smoke it, but I had trouble keeping it alight, and the smoke burned my tongue.
“How’re you feeling?” Jerry asked.
“Terrific,” I said. “How about you?”
“I’m nervous,” he said.
“Don’t be nervous, Jerry.”
“This is one hell of a thing we’re trying to do,” he said. “I hope we pull it off.”
I went on polishing the windshield. I had never known Jerry to be nervous of anything before. It worried me a bit.
“I’m damn glad we’re not the first people ever to try it,” he said. “If no one had ever done it before, I don’t think I’d risk it.”
“I agree,” I said.
“What stops me being too nervous,” he said, “is the fact that your friend found it so fantastically easy.”
“My friend said it was a cinch,” I said. “But for Chris-sake, Jerry, don’t be nervous when the time comes. That would be disastrous.”
“Don’t worry,” he said. “But Jesus, it’s exciting, isn’t it?”
“It’s exciting all right,” I said.
“Listen,” he said. “We’d better go easy on the booze tonight.”
“Good idea,” I said. “See you at eight thirty.”
At half past eight, Samantha, Jerry, Mary, and I drove in Jerry’s car to Billy’s Steak House. The restaurant, despite its name, was high-class and expensive, and the girls had put on long dresses for the occasion. Samantha was wearing something green that didn’t start until it was halfway down her front, and I had never seen her looking lovelier. There were candles on our table. Samantha was seated opposite me and whenever she leaned forward with her face close to the flame, I could see that tiny crest of skin at the top centre of her lower lip. “Now,” she said as she accepted a menu from the waiter, “I wonder what I’m going to have tonight.”
Ho-ho-ho, I thought, that’s a good question.
Everything went fine in the restaurant and the girls enjoyed themselves. When we arrived back at Jerry’s house, it was eleven forty-five, and Samantha said, “Come in and have a nightcap.”
“Thanks,” I said, “but it’s a bit late. And the baby-sitter has to be driven home.” So Mary and I walked across to our house, and now, I told myself as I entered the front door, from now on the countdown begins. I must keep a clear head and forget nothing.
While Mary was paying the baby-sitter, I went to the fridge and found a piece of Canadian cheddar. I took a knife from the drawer and a strip of plaster from the cupboard. I stuck the plaster around the tip of the forefinger of my right hand and waited for Mary to turn around.
“I cut myself,” I said holding up the finger for her to see. “It’s nothing, but it was bleeding a bit.”
“I’d have thought you’d had enough to eat for the evening,” was all she said. But the plaster registered on her mind and my first little job had been done.
I drove the baby-sitter home and by the time I got back up to the bedroom it was round about midnight and Mary was already half asleep with her light out. I switched out the light on my side of the bed and went into the bathroom to undress. I pottered about in there for ten minutes or so and when I came out, Mary, as I had hoped, was well and truly sleeping. There seemed no point in getting into bed beside her. So I simply pulled back the covers a bit on my side to make it easier for Jerry, then with my slippers on, I went downstairs to the kitchen and switched on the electric kettle. It was now twelve seventeen. Forty-three minutes to go.
At twelve thirty-five, I went upstairs to check on Mary and the kids. Everyone was sound asleep.
At twelve fifty-five, five minutes before zero hour, I went up again for a final check. I went right up close to Mary’s bed and whispered her name. There was no answer. Good. That’s it! Let’s go!
I put a brown raincoat over my pyjamas. I switched off the kitchen light so that the whole house was in darkness. I put the front door lock on the latch. And then, feeling an enormous sense of exhilaration, I stepped silently out into the night.
There were no lamps on our street to lighten the darkness. There was no moon or even a star to be seen. It was a black black night, but the air was warm and there was a little breeze blowing from somewhere.
I headed for the gap in the hedge. When I got very close, I was able to make out the hedge itself and find the gap. I stopped there, waiting. Then I heard Jerry’s footsteps coming toward me.
“Hi, sport,” he whispered. “Everything okay?”
“All ready for you,” I whispered back.
He moved on. I heard his slippered feet padding softly over the grass as he went toward my house. I went toward his.
I opened Jerry’s front door. It was even darker inside than out. I closed the door carefully. I took off my rain-coat and hung it on the door knob. I removed my slippers and placed them against the wall by the door. I literally could not see my hands before my face. Everything had to be done by touch.
My goodness, I was glad Jerry had made me practise blindfold for so long. It wasn’t my feet that guided me now but my fingers. The fingers of one hand or another were never for a moment out of contact with something, a wall, the banister, a piece of furniture, a window-curtain. And I knew or thought I knew exactly where I was all the time. But it was an awesome eerie feeling trespassing on tiptoe through someone else’s house in the middle of the night. As I fingered my way up the stairs, I found myself thinking of the burglars who had broken into our front room last winter and stolen the television set. When the police came next morning, I pointed out to them an enormous turd lying in the snow outside the garage. “They nearly always do that,” one of the cops told me. “They can’t help it. They’re scared.’
I reached the top of the stairs. I crossed the landing with my right fingertips touching the wall all the time. I started down the corridor, but paused when my hand found the door of the first children’s room. The door was slightly open. I listened. I could hear young Robert Rainbow, aged eight, breathing evenly inside. I moved on. I found the door to the second children’s bedroom. This one belonged to Billy, aged six and Amanda, three. I stood listening. All was well.
The main bedroom was at the end of the corridor, about four yards on. I reached the door. Jerry had left it open, as planned. I went in. I stood absolutely still just inside the door, listening for any sign that Samantha might be awake. All was quiet. I felt my way around the wall until I reached Samantha’s side of the bed. Immediately, I knelt on the floor and found the plug connecting her bedside lamp. I drew it from its socket and laid it on the carpet. Good. Much safer now. I stood up. I couldn’t see Samantha, and at first I couldn’t hear anything either. I bent low over the bed. Ah yes, I could hear her breathing. Suddenly I caught a whiff of the heavy musky perfume she had been using that evening, and I felt the blood rushing to my groin. Quickly I tiptoed around the big bed, keeping two fingers in gentle contact with the edge of the bed the whole way.
All I had to do now was get in. I did so, but as I put my weight upon the mattress, the creaking of the springs underneath sounded as though someone was firing a rifle in the room. I lay motionless, holding my breath. I could hear my heart thumping away like an engine in my throat. Samantha was facing away from me. She didn’t move. I pulled the covers up over my chest and turned toward her. A female glow came out of her to me. Here we go, then! Now!
I slid a hand over and touched her body. Her nightdress was warm and silky. I rested the hand gently on her hips. Still she didn’t move. I waited a minute or so, then I allowed the hand that lay upon the hip to steal onward and go exploring. Slowly, deliberately, and very accurately, my fingers began the process of setting her on fire.
She stirred. She turned on to her back. Then she murmured sleepily, “Oh, dear... Oh, my goodness me... Good heavens, darling!”
I, of course, said nothing. I just kep
t on with the job.
A couple of minutes went by.
She was lying quite still.
Another minute passed. Then another. She didn’t move a muscle.
I began to wonder how much longer it would be before she caught alight.
I persevered.
But why the silence? Why this absolute and total immobility, this frozen posture?
Suddenly it came to me. I had forgotten completely about Jerry! I was so hotted up, I had forgotten all about his own personal routine! I was doing it my way, not his! His way was far more complex than mine. It was ridiculously elaborate. It was quite unnecessary. But it was what she was used to. And now she was noticing the difference and trying to figure out what on earth was going on.
But it was too late to change direction now. I must keep going.
I kept going. The woman beside me was like a coiled spring lying there. I could feel the tension under her skin. I began to sweat.
Suddenly, she uttered a queer little groan.
More ghastly thoughts rushed through my mind. Could she be ill? Was she having a heart attack? Ought I to get the hell out quick?
She groaned again, louder this time. Then all at once, she cried out, “Yes-yes-yes-yes-yes!” and like a bomb whose slow fuse had finally reached the dynamite, she exploded into life. She grabbed me in her arms and went for me with such incredible ferocity, I felt I was being set upon by a tiger.
Or should I say tigress?
I never dreamed a woman could do the things Samantha did to me then. She was a whirlwind, a dazzling frenzied whirlwind that tore me up by the roots and spun me around and carried me high into the heavens, to places I did not know existed.
I myself did not contribute. How could I? I was helpless. I was the palm-tree spinning in the heavens, the lamb in the claws of the tiger. It was as much as I could do to keep breathing.
Thrilling it was, all the same, to surrender to the hands of a violent woman, and for the next ten, twenty, thirty minutes – how would I know? – the storm raged on. But I have no intention here of regaling the reader with bizarre details. I do not approve of washing juicy linen in public. I am sorry, but there it is. I only hope that my reticence will not create too strong a sense of anticlimax. Certainly, there was nothing anti about my own climax, and in the final searing paroxysm I gave a shout which should have awakened the entire neighbourhood. Then I collapsed. I crumpled up like a drained wineskin.
Samantha, as though she had done no more than drink a glass of water, simply turned away from me and went right back to sleep.
Phew!
I lay still, recuperating slowly.
I had been right, you see, about that little thing on her lower lip, had I not?
Come to think of it, I had been right about more or less everything that had to do with this incredible escapade. What a triumph! I felt wonderfully relaxed and well-spent.
I wondered what time it was. My watch was not a luminous one. I’d better go. I crept out of bed. I felt my way, a trifle less cautiously this time, around the bed, out of the bedroom, along the corridor, down the stairs and into the hall of the house. I found my raincoat and slippers. I put them on. I had a lighter in the pocket of my raincoat. I used it and read the time. It was eight minutes before two. Later than I thought, I opened the front door and stepped out into the black night.
My thoughts now began to concentrate upon Jerry. Was he all right? Had he gotten away with it? I moved through the darkness toward the gap in the hedge.
“Hi, sport,” a voice whispered beside me.
“Jerry!”
“Everything okay?” Jerry asked.
“Fantastic,” I said. “Amazing. What about you?”
“Same with me,” he said. I caught the flash of his white teeth grinning at me in the dark. “We made it, Vic!” he whispered, touching my arm. “You were right! It worked! It was sensational!”
“See you tomorrow,” I whispered. “Go home.”
We moved apart. I went through the hedge and entered my house. Three minutes later, I was safely back in my own bed, and my own wife was sleeping soundly alongside me.
The next morning was Sunday. I was up at eight thirty and went downstairs in pyjamas and dressing-gown, as I always do on a Sunday, to make breakfast for the family. I had left Mary sleeping. The two boys, Victor, aged nine, and Wally, seven, were already down.
“Hi, daddy,” Wally said.
“I’ve got a great new breakfast,” I announced.
“What?” both boys said together. They had been into town and fetched the Sunday paper and were now reading the comics.
“We make some buttered toast and we spread orange marmalade on it,” I said. “Then we put strips of crisp bacon on top of the marmalade.”
“Bacon!” Victor said. “With orange marmalade!”
“I know. But you wait till you try it. It’s wonderful.”
I dished out the grapefruit juice and drank two glasses of it myself. I set another on the table for Mary when she came down. I switched on the electric kettle, put the bread in the toaster, and started to fry the bacon. At this point, Mary came into the kitchen. She had a flimsy peach-coloured chiffon thing over her nightdress.
“Good morning,” I said, watching her over my shoulder as I manipulated the frying-pan.
She did not answer. She went to her chair at the kitchen table and sat down. She started to sip her juice. She looked neither at me nor at the boys. I went on frying the bacon.
“Hi, mummy,” Wally said.
She didn’t answer this either.
The smell of the bacon fat was beginning to turn my stomach.
“I’d like some coffee,” Mary said, not looking around. Her voice was very odd.
“Coming right up,” I said. I pushed the frying-pan away from the heat and quickly made a cup of black instant coffee. I placed it before her.
“Boys,” she said, addressing the children, “would you please do your reading in the other room till breakfast is ready.”
“Us?” Victor said. “Why?”
“Because I say so.”
“Are we doing something wrong?” Wally asked.
“No, honey, you’re not. I just want to be left alone for a moment with daddy.”
I felt myself shrink inside my skin. I wanted to run. I wanted to rush out the front door and go running down the street and hide.
“Get yourself a coffee, Vic,” she said, “and sit down.” Her voice was quite flat. There was no anger in it. There was just nothing. And she still wouldn’t look at me. The boys went out, taking the comic section with them.
“Shut the door,” Mary said to them.
I put a spoonful of powdered coffee into my cup and poured boiling water over it. I added milk and sugar. The silence was shattering. I crossed over and sat down in my chair opposite her. It might just as well have been an electric chair, the way I was feeling.
“Listen, Vic,” she said, looking into her coffee cup. “I want to get this said before I lose my nerve and then I won’t be able to say it.”
“For heaven’s sake, what’s all the drama about?” I asked. “Has something happened?”
“Yes, Vic, it has.”
“What?”
Her face was pale and still and distant, unconscious of the kitchen around her.
“Come on, then, out with it,” I said bravely.
“You’re not going to like this very much,” she said, and her big blue haunted-looking eyes rested a moment on my face, then travelled away.
“What am I not going to like very much?” I said. The sheer terror of it all was beginning to stir my bowels. I felt the same way as those burglars the cops had told me about.
“You know I hate talking about love-making and all that sort of thing,” she said. “I’ve never once talked to you about it all the time we’ve been married.”
“That’s true,” I said.
She took a sip of her coffee, but she wasn’t tasting it. “The point is this,” s
he said. “I’ve never liked it. If you really want to know, I’ve hated it.”
“Hated what?” I asked.
“Sex,” she said. “Doing it.”
“Good Lord!” I said.
“It’s never given me even the slightest little bit of pleasure.”
This was shattering enough in itself, but the real cruncher was still to come, I felt sure of that.
“I’m sorry if that surprises you,” she added.
I couldn’t think of anything to say, so I kept quiet.
Her eyes rose again from the coffee cup and looked into mine, watchful, as if calculating something, then fell again. “I wasn’t ever going to tell you,” she said. “And I never would have if it hadn’t been for last night.”
I said very slowly, “What about last night?”
“Last night,” she said, “I suddenly found out what the whole crazy thing is all about.”
“You did?”
She looked full at me now, and her face was as open as a flower. “Yes,” she said. “I surely did.”
I didn’t move.
“Oh darling!” she cried, jumping up and rushing over and giving me an enormous kiss. “Thank you so much for last night! You were marvellous! And I was marvellous! We were both marvellous! Don’t look so embarrassed, my darling! You ought to be proud of yourself! You were fantastic! I love you! I do! I do!”
I just sat there.
She leaned close to me and put an arm around my shoulders. “And now,” she said softly, “now that you have... I don’t quite know how to say this... now that you have sort of discovered what it is I need, everything is going to be so marvellous from now on!”
I still sat there. She went slowly back to her chair. A big tear was running down one of her cheeks. I couldn’t think why.
“I was right to tell you, wasn’t I?” she said, smiling through her tears.
“Yes,” I said. “Oh, yes.” I stood up and went over to the cooker so that I wouldn’t be facing her. Through the kitchen window, I caught sight of Jerry crossing his garden with the Sunday paper under his arm. There was a lilt in his walk, a little prance of triumph in each pace he took, and when he reached the steps of his front porch, he ran up them two at a time.
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