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Death by Water

Page 48

by Alessandro Manzetti


  She screams, and then my steel shot closes her mouth and her blue eyes.

  We go south, toward the sea, who can clean everything, erase everything.

  But her body re-emerges, it floats. I know what to do…

  The adhesive tape, the citrons as ballast tied to her legs, around her waist.

  It takes more than thirty citrons to make her go down,

  so that no one could bring her back.

  “Your new home, sweetie, three meters underwater. Yellow looks good on you.”

  What else can you do when a son of a bitch

  steals the only Venus you’ve found in the last forty years of frost,

  out of the blue.

  I dive into the water, I know where to look: one meter, two meters, my lungs are bursting. I can’t see anything; the moon’s neon doesn’t reach me. I follow the citrons that continue to float upward; I make my way to the seabed. I touch the sand with my fingers. Forty seconds, I can’t hold on much longer. I found something: the bones of Sara’s skeletal leg. Her flesh is becoming mush, and the citrons, detached from her body, rise like missiles to the surface. I cling to these horrid remains with my fingernails. I get a good grip on her shoulder blades and I can slide horizontally toward her head. Sixty seconds, I don’t have much time. I find Sara; with the last of my strength I kiss her passionately.

  “Honey, do you want to take a ride?”

  Her mouth is empty, a meatless hole with ivory battlements. Then something soft twists around my tongue.

  “Are you alive?”

  The moray eel with its steel-colored eyes slips down my throat, quickly slides down flopping wildly, and bites my heart.

  SCAPE-GOATS

  by Clive Barker

  It wasn’t a real island the tide had carried us onto; it was a lifeless mound of stones. Calling a hunchbacked shit-pile like this an island is flattery. Islands are oases in the sea: green and abundant. This is a forsaken place: no seals in the water around it, no birds in the air above it. I can think of no use for a place like this, except that you could say of it: I saw the heart of nothing, and survived.

  “It’s not on any of the charts,” said Ray, poring over the map of the Inner Hebrides, his nail at the spot where he’d calculated that we should be. It was, as he’d said, an empty space on the map, just pale blue sea without the merest speck to sign the existence of this rock. It wasn’t just the seals and the birds that ignored it, then; the chart makers had too. There were one or two arrows in the vicinity of Ray’s finger, marking the currents that should have been taking us north: tiny red darts on a paper ocean. The rest, like the world outside, was deserted.

  Jonathan was jubilant, of course, once he discovered that the place wasn’t even to be found on the map; he seemed to feel instantly exonerated. The blame for our being here wasn’t his any longer; it was the map makers’. He wasn’t going to be held responsible for our being beached if the mound wasn’t even marked on the charts. The apologetic expression he’d worn since our unscheduled arrival was replaced with a look of self-satisfaction.

  “You can’t avoid a place that doesn’t exist, can you?” he crowed. “I mean, can you?”

  “You could have used the eyes God gave you,” Ray flung back at him; but Jonathan wasn’t about to be cowed by reasonable criticism.

  “It was so sudden, Raymond,” he said. “I mean, in this mist I didn’t have a chance. It was on top of us before I knew it.”

  It had been sudden, no two ways about that. I’d been in the galley preparing breakfast, which had become my responsibility since neither Angela nor Jonathan showed any enthusiasm for the task, when the hull of the Emmanuelle grated on shingle, then ploughed her way, juddering, up onto the stony beach. There was a moment’s silence: then the shouting began. I climbed up out of the galley to find Jonathan standing on deck, grinning sheepishly and waving his arms around to semaphore his innocence.

  “Before you ask,” he said, “I don’t know how it happened. One minute we were just coasting along—”

  “Oh, Jesus Christ All-fucking Mighty.” Ray was clambering out of the cabin, hauling a pair of jeans on as he did so, and looking much the worse for a night in a bunk with Angela. I’d had the questionable honor of listening to her orgasms all night; she was certainly demanding. Jonathan began his defense speech again from the beginning: “Before you ask—” but Ray silenced him with a few choice insults. I retreated into the confines of the galley while the argument raged on deck. It gave me no small satisfaction to hear Jonathan slanged; I even hoped Ray would lose his cool enough to bloody that perfect hook nose.

  The galley was a slop bucket. The breakfast I’d been preparing was all over the floor and I left it there, the yolks of the eggs, the gammon and the French toasts all congealing in pools of spilled fat. It was Jonathan’s fault; let him clear it up. I poured myself a glass of grapefruit juice, waited until the recriminations died down, and went back up.

  It was barely two hours after dawn, and the mist that had shrouded this island from Jonathan’s view still covered the sun. If today was anything like the week that we’d had so far, by noon the deck would be too hot to step on barefoot, but now, with the mist still thick, I felt cold wearing just the bottom of my bikini. It didn’t matter much, sailing amongst the islands, what you wore. There was no one to see you. I’d got the best all-over tan I’d ever had. But this morning the chill drove me back below to find a sweater. There was no wind: the cold was coming up out of the sea. It’s still night down there, I thought, just a few yards off the beach; limitless night.

  I pulled on a sweater, and went back on deck. The maps were out, and Ray was bending over them. His bare back was peeling from an excess of sun, and I could see the bald patch he tried to hide in his dirty yellow curls. Jonathan was staring at the beach and stroking his nose.

  “Christ, what a place,” I said.

  He glanced at me, trying a smile. He had this illusion, poor Jonathan, that his face could charm a tortoise out of its shell, and to be fair to him there were a few women who melted if he so much as looked at them. I wasn’t one of them, and it irritated him. I’d always thought his Jewish good looks too bland to be beautiful. My indifference was a red rag to him.

  A voice, sleepy and pouting, drifted up from below deck. Our Lady of the Bunk was awake at last: time to make her late entrance, coyly wrapping a towel around her nakedness as she emerged. Her face was puffed up with too much red wine, and her hair needed a comb through it. Still she turned on the radiance, eyes wide, Shirley Temple with cleavage.

  “What’s happening, Ray? Where are we?”

  Ray didn’t look up from his computations, which earned him a frown.

  “We’ve got a bloody awful navigator, that’s all,” he said.

  “I don’t even know what happened,” Jonathan protested, clearly hoping for a show of sympathy from Angela. None was forthcoming.

  “But where are we?” she asked again.

  “Good morning, Angela,” I said; I too was ignored.

  “Is it an island?” she said.

  “Of course it’s an island: I just don’t know which one yet,” Ray replied.

  “Perhaps it’s Barra,” she suggested.

  Ray pulled a face. “We’re nowhere near Barra,” he said. “If you’ll just let me retrace our steps—”

  Retrace our steps, in the sea? Just Ray’s Jesus fixation, I thought, looking back at the beach. It was impossible to guess how big the place was: the mist erased the landscape after a hundred yards.

  Perhaps somewhere in that gray wall there was human habitation.

  Ray, having located the blank spot on the map where we were supposedly stranded, climbed down onto the beach and took a critical look at the bow.

  More to be out of Angela’s way than anything else I climbed down to join him. The round stones of the beach were cold and slippery on the bare soles of my feet. Ray smoothed his palm down the side of the Emmanuelle, almost a caress, then crouched to look at the damage
to the bow.

  “I don’t think we’re holed,” he said, “but I can’t be sure.”

  “We’ll float off come high tide,” said Jonathan, posing on the bow, hands on hips, “no sweat,” he winked at me, “no sweat at all.”

  “Will we shit float off!” Ray snapped. “Take a look for yourself.”

  “Then we’ll get some help to haul us off.” Jonathan’s confidence was unscathed.

  “And you can damn well fetch someone, you asshole.”

  “Sure, why not? Give it an hour or so for the fog to shift and I’ll take a walk, find some help.”

  He sauntered away.

  “I’ll put on some coffee,” Angela volunteered.

  Knowing her, that’d take an hour to brew. There was time for a stroll.

  I started along the beach.

  “Don’t go too far, love,” Ray called.

  “No.”

  Love, he said. Easy word; he meant nothing by it.

  The sun was warmer now, and as I walked I stripped off the sweater. My bare breasts were already brown as two nuts, and, I thought, about as big. Still, you can’t have everything. At least I’d got two neurons in my head to rub together, which was more than could be said for Angela; she had tits like melons and a brain that’d shame a mule.

  The sun still wasn’t getting through the mist properly. It was filtering down on the island fitfully, and its light flattened everything out, draining the place of color or weight, reducing the sea and the rocks and the rubbish on the beach to one bleached-out gray, the color of over-boiled meat.

  After only a hundred yards something about the place began to depress me, so I turned back. On my right tiny, lisping waves crept up to the shore and collapsed with a weary slopping sound on the stones. No majestic rollers here: just the rhythmical slop, slop, slop of an exhausted tide.

  I hated the place already.

  Back at the boat, Ray was trying the radio, but for some reason all he could get was a blanket of white noise on every frequency. He cursed it awhile, then gave up. After half an hour, breakfast was served, though we had to make do with sardines, tinned mushrooms and the remains of the French toast. Angela served this feast with her usual aplomb, looking as though she was performing a second miracle with loaves and fishes. It was all but impossible to enjoy the food anyway; the air seemed to drain all the taste away.

  “Funny isn’t it—” began Jonathan.

  “Hilarious,” said Ray.

  “—there’s no foghorns. Mist, but no horns. Not even the sound of a motor; weird.”

  He was right. Total silence wrapped us up, a damp and smothering hush. Except for the apologetic slop of the waves and the sound of our voices, we might as well have been deaf.

  I sat at the stern and looked into the empty sea. It was still gray, but the sun was beginning to strike other colors in it now: a somber green, and, deeper, a hint of blue-purple. Below the boat I could see strands of kelp and Maiden’s Hair, toys to the tide, swaying. It looked inviting: and anything was better than the sour atmosphere on the Emmanuelle.

  “I’m going for a swim,” I said.

  “I wouldn’t, love,” Ray replied.

  “Why not?”

  “The current that threw us up here must be pretty strong, you don’t want to get caught in it.”

  “But the tide’s still coming in: I’d only be swept back to the beach.”

  “You don’t know what cross currents there are out there. Whirlpools even: they’re quite common. Suck you down in a flash.”

  I looked out to sea again. It looked harmless enough, but then I’d read that these were treacherous waters, and thought better of it.

  Angela had started a little sulking session because nobody had finished her immaculately prepared breakfast. Ray was playing up to it. He loved babying her, letting her play damn stupid games. It made me sick.

  I went below to do the washing up, tossing the slops out of the porthole into the sea. They didn’t sink immediately. They floated in an oily patch, half-eaten mushrooms and slivers of sardines bobbing around on the surface, as though someone had thrown up on the sea. Food for crabs, if any self-respecting crab condescended to live here.

  Jonathan joined me in the galley, obviously still feeling a little foolish, despite the bravado. He stood in the doorway, trying to catch my eye, while I pumped up some cold water into the bowl and halfheartedly rinsed the greasy plastic plates. All he wanted was to be told I didn’t think this was his fault, and yes, of course he was a kosher Adonis. I said nothing.

  “Do you mind if I lend a hand?” he said.

  “There’s not really room for two,” I told him, trying not to sound too dismissive. He flinched nevertheless: this whole episode had punctured his self-esteem more badly than I’d realized, despite his strutting around.

  “Look,” I said gently, “why don’t you go back on deck: take in the sun before it gets too hot?”

  “I feel like a shit,” he said.

  “It was an accident.”

  “An utter shit.”

  “Like you said, we’ll float off with the tide.”

  He moved out of the doorway and down into the galley; his proximity made me feel almost claustrophobic. His body was too large for the space: too tanned, too assertive.

  “I said there wasn’t any room, Jonathan.”

  He put his hand on the back of my neck, and instead of shrugging it off I let it stay there, gently massaging the muscles. I wanted to tell him to leave me alone, but the lassitude of the place seemed to have got into my system. His other hand was palm down on my belly, moving up to my breast. I was indifferent to these ministrations: if he wanted this he could have it.

  Above deck Angela was gasping in the middle of a giggling fit, almost choking on her hysteria. I could see her in my mind’s eye, throwing back her head, shaking her hair loose. Jonathan had unbuttoned his shorts, and had let them drop. The gift of his foreskin to God had been neatly made; his erection was so hygienic in its enthusiasm it seemed incapable of the least harm. I let his mouth stick to mine, let his tongue explore my gums, insistent as a dentist’s finger. He slid my bikini down far enough to get access, fumbled to position himself, then pressed in.

  Behind him, the stair creaked, and I looked over his shoulder in time to glimpse Ray, bending at the hatch and staring down at Jonathan’s buttocks and at the tangle of our arms. Did he see, I wondered, that I felt nothing; did he understand that I did this dispassionately, and could only have felt a twinge of desire if I substituted his head, his back, his cock for Jonathan’s? Soundlessly, he withdrew from the stairway; a moment passed, in which Jonathan said he loved me, then I heard Angela’s laughter begin again as Ray described what he’d just witnessed. Let the bitch think whatever she pleased: I didn’t care.

  Jonathan was still working at me with deliberate but uninspired strokes, a frown on his face like that of a schoolboy trying to solve some impossible equation. Discharge came without warning, signaled only by a tightening of his hold on my shoulders, and a deepening of his frown. His thrusts slowed and stopped; his eyes found mine for a flustered moment. I wanted to kiss him, but he’d lost all interest. He withdrew still hard, wincing. “I’m always sensitive when I’ve come,” he murmured, hauling his shorts up. “Was it good for you?”

  I nodded. It was laughable; the whole thing was laughable. Stuck in the middle of nowhere with this little boy of twenty-six, and Angela, and a man who didn’t care if I lived or died. But then perhaps neither did I. I thought, for no reason, of the slops on the sea, bobbing around, waiting for the next wave to catch them.

  Jonathan had already retreated up the stairs. I boiled up some coffee, standing staring out of the porthole and feeling his come dry to a corrugated pearliness on the inside of my thigh.

  Ray and Angela had gone by the time I’d brewed the coffee, off for a walk on the island apparently, looking for help.

  Jonathan was sitting in my place at the stern, gazing out at the mist. More to break th
e silence than anything I said:

  “I think it’s lifted a bit.”

  “Has it?”

  I put a mug of black coffee beside him.

  “Thanks.”

  “Where are the others?”

  “Exploring.”

  He looked round at me, confusion in his eyes. “I still feel like a shit.”

  I noticed the bottle of gin on the deck beside him.

  “Bit early for drinking, isn’t it?”

  “Want some?”

  “It’s not even eleven.”

  “Who cares?”

  He pointed out to sea. “Follow my finger,” he said.

  I leaned over his shoulder and did as he asked.

  “No, you’re not looking at the right place. Follow my finger—see it?”

  “Nothing.”

  “At the edge of the mist. It appears and disappears. There! Again!”

  I did see something in the water, twenty or thirty yards from the Emmanuelle’s stern. Brown-colored, wrinkled, turning over.

  “It’s a seal,” I said.

  “I don’t think so.”

  “The sun’s warming up the sea. They’re probably coming in to bask in the shallows.”

  “It doesn’t look like a seal. It rolls in a funny way—”

  “Maybe a piece of flotsam—”

  “Could be.”

  He swigged deeply from the bottle.

  “Leave some for tonight.”

  “Yes, mother.”

  We sat in silence for a few minutes. Just the waves on the beach. Slop. Slop. Slop.

  Once in a while the seal, or whatever it was, broke surface, rolled, and disappeared again.

  Another hour, I thought, and the tide will begin to turn. Float us off this little afterthought of creation.

  “Hey!” Angela’s voice, from a distance. “Hey, you guys!”

  You guys, she called us.

  Jonathan stood up, hand up to his face against the glare of sunlit rock. It was much brighter now: and getting hotter all the time.

  “She’s waving to us,” he said, uninterested.

  “Let her wave.”

 

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