Sex Between, The

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by Randy Salem




  THE SEX BETWEEN

  BY

  Randy Salem

  The Sex Between

  By Randy Salem

  First published in 1962.

  All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce and redistribute this ebook or portions thereof in any form whatsoever. No part of this ebook may be copied, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means without the expressed written permission of the publisher.

  For information, contact:

  Digital Vintage Pulps

  An imprint of SRS Internet Publishing

  236 West Portal Avenue, #525

  San Francisco, CA 94127 USA.

  Visit us on the World Wide Web:

  www.vintage-pulp-ebooks.com

  ISBN: 978-1-936456-27-7

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are products of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  CHAPTER ONE

  Lee took a long drag on the cigarette and felt it burn between her fingers.

  Behind her, Maggie sighed and settled back against the chair. Lee heard the soft complaining of well-worn leather, the impatient click of a pencil against a notebook's spiral. Still she remained a moment longer at the window, watching a fat dachshund lift its leg beside a tree, then waddle down the street after a squishing pair of heels. The smell of spring rain was heavy on the night air.

  "You were in the middle of a sentence," Maggie prodded gently. "In view of your considerate endorsement of our campaign..."

  She heard the faintly mocking tone in Maggie's voice and knew without turning around that the girl would be sitting with her head tilted, a smile playing around the corners of her eyes. It was the way Maggie always looked when Lee got stuffy.

  "That smells," Lee said without checking Maggie's reaction. "Cross it out."

  The half-inch butt scorched her lips. Irritably she rubbed it out against the bricks and flicked it to the sidewalk. A mist like heavy dew clung to her hand and sleeve. She slammed down the window and turned back to the too warm room.

  "Would you like to try it again?" Maggie said quietly.

  Lee glanced at her out of the corner of one eye. Maggie was too kind to laugh. And too bright not to want to. They had been trying since before noon.

  "What have we got so far?"

  "Well, so far," Maggie said, flipping back through several pages, "we've agreed on the opening and the close. Dear Mr., Mrs., or Miss Blank comma and Sincerely, Lesley Van Tassel, Vice President, etc." She looked up and smiled. "Now all we have to do is fill in the middle."

  "Well, the hell with it," Lee said abruptly. She crossed in front of Maggie to a low walnut cabinet. "You want a drink?"

  "No thanks."

  She poured herself a triple scotch—straight—because she was too irritable and too tired to go all the way to the kitchen for ice. It had been a long day for both of them. Too long.

  Maggie's pencil began clicking again, matching the chattering of Lee's nerves. She carried the drink without tasting it to the desk that made an office of one end of the living room. In the old days, before the advent of Maggie, Lee had done most of her work here. If you could call it work. The good-will letters, the words of thanks, the occasional letter of apology, all the junk that no one else had the patience for. She felt about as necessary as a third thumb.

  "You know," Maggie said, her eyes sparkling, "if you'd just pretend we were selling gin, you could probably write this letter without thinking about it."

  Lee smiled wryly. To Maggie, who never touched anything more potent than ginger ale, everything was gin. "You've got a point," Lee agreed. "Besides, what the hell do I know about cocoa anyhow?"

  "I could make you some, if you'd like," Maggie said. "We've got about a case downstairs. Free Samples."

  Lee balanced the glass on the palm of her hand. I’ll tell you something," she said. "I once tried one of our Old Dutch Miniature Chocolates and I've been drinking hard stuff ever since, trying to rinse the taste out of my mouth."

  "I'm glad it serves some purpose," Maggie snapped. She pushed the notebook onto the edge of the desk and stood up. "It certainly isn't good for that lousy stomach of yours."

  Lee flushed, but let it pass. In the six months since Maggie had moved into her house and her life, the girl had been sounding more like a mother hen every day. Or, worse still, like a wife. About little things, like wearing a scarf when it was snowing or boots when it rained. But always something. Taking care of Lee as if Lee didn't have sense enough to take care of herself.

  Through the amber swirl at the bottom of her glass, Lee watched Maggie walk across to the typewriter and adjust a dust cover over the machine. It was damned aggravating that a girl with a behind like Maggie's should be such a nag—and yet, it was also a blessing in disguise.

  She set down the glass and leaned her own bony frame against her fists. "You had enough for today?"

  "No," Maggie said. "But it's close to midnight, in case you hadn't noticed."

  Lee had noticed, but not in a way she would mention to Maggie. She had noticed hours ago, in the way she could not make her eyes behave. The way she had kept looking at Maggie, all that warm, soft flesh squeezed into a crisp green cotton dress. The golden halo of her hair and the deep blue of her eyes that were blonder and bluer than Lee's own. Oh yes, Lee had noticed, and she had known that she should not have stayed home with Maggie tonight. She had not seen Helga since Wednesday and the pressure had been building.

  She snapped her thoughts back to the living room and Maggie, standing there waiting. "So it's almost midnight," Lee said sourly. "What would you like me to do about it?"

  Maggie raised an eyebrow and peered at her for a moment as though readying a barrage of answers. Then her face softened and she said, "Nothing, Lee. But we haven't eaten since lunch and frankly, I'm starved."

  The queasiness in Lee's own stomach had nothing to do with hunger. But she would eat nevertheless, to please Maggie, so that Maggie would not nag at her. And when they had eaten, she would send Maggie off to bed in her apartment on the top floor. And then she would go off to her own bed on the floor below and, if she were lucky, sleep. And maybe not even dream about Maggie... if she were real lucky.

  She followed Maggie down the spiral stairs to the dining room and on out to the kitchen. It was the one room in the house in which the Old Dutch trademark was apparent. Long and low, its beams smoke-blackened, its fireplace neatly trimmed with Dutch tiles, its white plaster walls spotless, it was Lee's one concession to her wooden-shoed ancestry. And the bane of Maggie's existence.

  "With all your money," Maggie said every other day, "you could at least put a modern stove in here."

  And always Lee said, "But I don't want a modern stove in here. It would ruin the feel."

  As a compromise, she had let Maggie move in a counter top four-burner, so they didn't have to stoke the big, black monster in the corner every time they wanted coffee. It had been a hard won point, but Maggie hadn't gloated. Maggie never did.

  Lee sat down at one end of the long oak table and watched Maggie move from the refrigerator to the counter, from the counter to the sink. Never before in her life had she been a soft touch for any woman. And it frightened her, in a way, that Maggie somehow managed to get exactly what she wanted. It told Lee things about herself that she would rather not know.

  "I've got a salad," Maggie said. "And some cold chicken. Or would you rather wait while I make something warm?"

  "That'll be fine," Lee said. "And coffee."

  Maggie tilted her head and smiled. "Of course coffee," she said. "Would I dare serve you a meal without?"

&nb
sp; Maggie's usual banter—innocent and well meant—yet Lee's nerves jumped with every word out of the girl's mouth.

  She picked up the fork Maggie had just set before her and turned it end over end on the table top. It wasn't fair that she keep taking her nerves out on Maggie. It wasn't Maggie's fault, after all, that...

  "I thought you had a date tonight," Maggie said suddenly.

  The fork slipped from Lee's limp fingers and clattered against the plate. She glanced up quickly and saw that Maggie had been watching her, sizing her up.

  "I cancelled it," Lee said crisply. "I wanted to get finished with that damned letter."

  "Maybe you shouldn't have," Maggie said gently. "We didn't get the letter done anyhow."

  Lee's stomach knotted into a ball of anger. Not so much with Maggie... she'd told Maggie the score right from the start, so that neither of them would have been to be embarrassed by an accidental discovery. And Maggie didn't give a good damn if she went to bed with kangaroos, so long as she came home happy. But she was angry with herself, for being transparent, for sitting there quivering in her shoes for Maggie to see.

  Roughly, she pushed her chair back from the table and stood up. "Skip the dinner," she said harshly. "I just lost my appetite."

  Without giving Maggie a chance to protest, she strode through the dining room and into the vestibule at the front of the house. In the closet she found a dirty trench coat and pulled it on over her jacket. For one second, she hesitated, looking down at the boots Maggie would yell at her for not wearing. Then she slammed the closet door and turned to leave the house.

  Maggie's fingers caught the edge of her sleeve. "Lee, what on earth have I done now?"

  Lee shook Maggie loose and shoved her hand into her pocket. "You haven't done anything," she said, hearing the tiredness in her own voice. "I just need to go out for a while."

  "But it's late. And it's raining," Maggie said plaintively. "Where are you going?"

  Lee sighed. "Just out," she said. "Where I don't have to listen to you telling me what a mess I am."

  Maggie's shoulders sagged a little, but her expression was calm. "Will you be back tonight?" she asked quietly. "Daddy'll be here early and you promised...

  “I’ll be here, if I'm here," Lee said curtly. "And if I'm not, I’ll be somewhere else. And if 'Daddy' doesn't like it, he can—" Without finishing the sentence, she wrenched open the front door and squeezed outside.

  She heard the door slam behind her and knew that she had finally managed to disturb Maggie's calm. She had been trying to for months, and she grinned with satisfaction, realizing that the air between them would clear a little.

  It had taken her an hour to find a parking space close to the house, and not even to appease Maggie by keeping her feet dry would she lose it. Besides the rain had long ago settled down to an all-night mist that made the city streets hazy and soft and, for a change, inviting. She knew that Maggie would be watching from the dining room window and she turned to wave at the small white face pressed against the pane. Then she set off crosstown, walking away from the car.

  Despite the trench coat, the April chill bit into her flesh and she jammed her hands into her pockets, hunching her shoulders against the cold. For just a moment, she considered calling Helga and spending the night forgetting that Maggie even existed. But Helga would already be in bed... alone maybe, but not necessarily. She didn't feel like taking the chance.

  She remembered a bar on Lexington in the Sixties that would do nicely for a couple of drinks—keep her out of the house long enough for Maggie to simmer down and maybe even go off to sleep. She turned the corner and headed south, listening to the squish of her shoes against the wet pavement.

  And all she could think of was Maggie... Maggie, who would be annoyed because she had wet feet.

  She had known Maggie De Groot since the girl was two months old. Since Uncle Andrew had brought the red-faced, bunting wrapped motherless baby to Grandmother Kate's. Lee had been just five then and Uncle Andrew had set the baby into her lap and told her to hold up the back of its head. Maggie was the first baby she had ever seen, an ugly little thing with pinkish fuzz all over its head. But even then the bawling baby had stopped crying when Lee held her, had drooled a little and fallen asleep. And in a way, it had been like that ever since.

  They had seen each other often when they were kids, being part of the immense, sprawling family that hover-around Grandmother Kate. Weekends and holidays and summers, they had been together, played together. And always Maggie had smiled when she looked at Lee Van Tassel. And Lee had smiled too.

  But then Lee's parents had died within months of each other and Lee, as the only direct descendant remaining, had been taken under Kate's iron wing. She had been sent to schools here, there and everywhere, picking up more than a liberal education. She had seen little of the family, except for Kate—and thought little enough about it, too.

  For Lee's personal interests had developed along lines she preferred not to flaunt in front of the family. And when finally, at twenty-one, she had finished school, she had refused to move back to Ravensway, Kate's estate. Kate had given her the house on East Sixty-eighth Street and wished her well.

  Lee had never fooled herself into thinking she was out of range of Kate's eagle eye. First she had been donated the vice presidency in the Van Tassel Corporation, a firm with nearly as many officers as Kate had relatives, a position with just enough responsibility to keep her in touch with the family circle. Then, four years later, Maggie had been dumped in her lap.

  She hadn't realized it was the same Maggie... until she smiled. She didn't look much bigger to Lee than she had wrapped in the damned bunting twenty years before. But she was beautiful now and shaped like no baby Lee had ever seen. Lee had smiled too, but not like in the old days. Maggie was a woman now and, as a woman, desirable.

  Kate said Maggie was there as a secretary and companion. But Lee knew that it was simply Kate's way of seeing that the girl was provided for. Uncle Andrew, though he meant well, hadn't the vaguest notion of what to do about a grown daughter. And Lee had given Maggie a home, a salary, and work enough to keep her busy. In the beginning, it had been fine. Maggie had stayed out of her way and she had stayed out of Maggie's. But before a month had gone by, Lee found herself coming home to supper in a kitchen she had never used. Found herself staying home evenings, to listen to music with Maggie or just to read the paper. And worry had begun to gnaw at her insides, like a worm in a rotten apple.

  For Lee, who had lived very happily for years on the love 'em and leave 'em plan, knew that she had been hooked…

  The bar was a small one, with soft lights and a juke box that played good music in a quiet voice. This late, the happy ones had already gone home, leaving a row of grim faces lining the oval bar. Lee added her own brooding face to the line-up and ordered a double scotch on the rocks.

  She hadn't come into the bar to cruise, just to get mildly high. But automatically, from a habit of many years, she let her gaze scan the scattering of lone drinkers.

  Nothing with nothing. She sighed, relieved in a way not to have been tempted. After a whole day of Maggie, it felt strangely peaceful to be alone. She sipped slowly at the drink, thinking still about Maggie and wishing to hell she could get the girl out of her mind.

  Not that she could... not for a minute. Even when she was with Helga, loving her, kissing her, it was Maggie... it was always Maggie. But you couldn't have a fling with a girl like Maggie. You had to fall in love with her, settle down with her, be faithful… all that crap. With Maggie, it wouldn't be for fun. It would be for keeps. And Lee couldn't play it that way. She knew herself too well—knew that after a couple of weeks, when she kissed any girl, she would be looking past her shoulder to see what else might walk on the scene.

  The what else, at the moment, proved to be very interesting. Lee's head snapped back on her neck and she was suddenly keenly alert and watchful. A prickle of tension teased the base of her spine.

  The
female who had just come out of the ladies' john was obviously no lady, but it didn't limit her appeal. Every eye in the place watched the rear view as she sidled across the room and raised herself onto a stool.

  From where she sat, Lee had a side view of the creature, which was almost as good as the rear. She looked the woman over slowly, taking time to get it all neatly stacked in her mind. She was Maggie's size, but Maggie's opposite in every other way, with an olive complexion dark, dark hair and eyes that could light a fire in a pile of wet leaves. The body, from what Lee could see of it, would know what to do with itself in anybody's bed.

  Lee took a long swallow of her neglected drink and calculated which of the bar flies the woman might chose. She saw her lean back slightly and cruise the bar, just as Lee herself had done only minutes before. The pickings were not good for a lady with profit on her mind. The dark eyes flicked from face to face, touched Lee's briefly, then moved to the man beside her.

  Lee smiled to herself and waited. She watched the woman raise her hand to light a cigarette and caught the glint of a diamond studded wedding band.

  Again the dark eyes went the rounds, more slowly this time, assessing each face and discarding it. Lee turned her head just enough to catch the woman's glance.

  The woman touched her fingers to her throat and glanced away. But it was not a movement that told Lee to get lost—it said many things, but that wasn't one of them.

  Lee waited till the woman had slipped into her coat and gone outside. Then she stood up and slapped a bill on the bar.

  The woman had moved only a few paces down the side street. Lee caught up to her and put her palm on the woman's elbow. "May I give you a lift?" she said quietly.

  "Which way are you going?" a deep voice answered.

  Lee laughed. "That's entirely up to you."

  The woman's laugh was as deep as her voice and lovely as her face. "In that case," she said, "it's only a few blocks. We can walk from here."

  Lee fell into step beside the woman, walking east listening to the click of the high heels, feeling the woman's compact smallness brushing lightly against her side. The faintest aura of perfume hovered around the woman's body, at the same time tempting and teasing the senses.

 

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