by Jason Starr
“Can you turn the music down a little?” he asked. “It’s distracting me.”
Actually the music wasn’t distracting at all—nothing ever distracted him when he was in the zone—but he wanted Adam and Dana to be able to hear all of the sex noises loud and clear.
Back in bed, Johnny gave Marissa the full Johnny Long lovemaking treatment. He took his time with her, using all of the techniques he’d mastered over the years. He worshipped her body, paid attention to what turned her on and what didn’t. Finally, when she was practically begging for it, he went down on her. She was moaning softly at first, but when he really got into it, she lost control, probably forgetting where she was. He stayed down there for a long time, pleasuring her again and again.
When he was through with her, she was so blown away, so thoroughly satisfied, that it took her several minutes to recover, to be able to speak.
“My God,” she said. “That was amazing. I’ve never come like that before . . . ever.”
Maybe women always said things like this to men in bed, but in Johnny’s case they meant it.
“There’s more where that came from,” he said.
They had sex, and Johnny got her off in a way no guy ever had before. After all, what was his competition? She was only twenty-two years old. She’d probably been with, at most, ten guys in her life, and they were probably all immature, unskilled lovers like that dork Darren. Yeah, like that weasel really knew how to satisfy a woman. She’d never been with a real man before, a true Casanova, and she couldn’t get enough of him. As he built toward his own orgasm, he grunted louder and louder, until he was practically screaming, so Adam and Dana would have no doubt what was going on in their daughter’s bedroom.
Lying in bed with Marissa afterward, Johnny was waiting for her to fall asleep so he could shoot her, put his plan in motion, when she whispered, “I think I’m falling in love with you.”
Whenever Johnny heard that word, “love,” he wanted to laugh. Love was such bullshit. It was just a word that people said to each other because they thought they were supposed to say it, because they’d heard people in movies say it.
“Really?” Johnny said, playing along. “Don’t you think it’s too soon?”
“No,” she said. “I know how I feel. It’s different than it is with other guys.
I feel really attached to you.”
Wow, Johnny was impressed—with himself. He’d really pulled this thing off perfectly. It was one thing to pick up a woman at a bar and screw her— practically any guy could do that—but how many guys could get a random girl to say “I love you” in only a week?
“I feel the same way,” he said sincerely. “You do?” Her eyes got big.
“Yeah,” he said. “I mean, I know we haven’t known each other very long, but I feel a really strong connection with you. I didn’t think it was possible to fall in love with somebody so quickly.”
He didn’t know how he was able to say all of this without throwing up. She was so excited that she started kissing him and rolling around with him on the bed, saying things like “Oh my God” and “I’m so excited.” Johnny didn’t get it, how one word, “love,” made people so happy. Sometimes he felt like he was the last sane person on the planet.
Johnny was pretty excited himself, but not for the reasons Marissa thought. He was just getting off on this whole situation—getting a girl to say she was in love with him and then killing her and her parents, ending all of their stupid, meaningless lives; it just didn’t get any better than that. The only bummer was that very soon, within an hour or two at most, it was all going to end. He’d get away with the engagement ring, other jewelry, and whatever else he could carry out of the house, but he’d put so much work into this, getting Marissa to fall for him, getting her family to fall for him, that it felt like a waste not to get more. Johnny figured Adam Bloom had to be worth millions; the house alone had to be worth at least a couple of million. It seemed crazy to just walk away.
One thing about Marissa, she loved to talk, and she was so happy and “in love” that she wouldn’t shut up. She kept yapping away about all this boring stuff, about how she wasn’t sure what she wanted to do with her life, how she loved art but she wasn’t sure she wanted to work in a gallery, yadda, yadda, yadda. She’d been thinking about moving to Prague, but now that she’d met Xan she wasn’t so sure about that anymore. She was thinking of just applying to grad school if a job at a museum didn’t come through. Johnny acted like he was interested, occasionally giving her suggestions like “You should do whatever makes you happy” and “You have to follow your heart.”
“So what do you think of my parents?” Marissa asked. “I think they’re great,” Johnny said.
“Yeah, I don’t know,” she said. “I mean, they’re good people, and I love them, but it’s so hard to live here with them sometimes.”
He nodded, like he felt so sorry for her. Yeah, right.
“It was funny,” Marissa said, “when you talked about them being happy, because they’ve been so miserable lately, fighting all the time. I mean, it’s been pretty stressful, with the shooting and all the media attention, but they’re definitely not the world’s happiest couple.” Suddenly she looked like she had a big secret, and she said, “You won’t believe what I found out the other day.”
“What?” Johnny asked, looking across the room at his leather jacket, on the chair by the desk.
“My mom’s cheating on my father,” she whispered.
“Really?” Johnny said it like he was surprised. Actually, he’d spotted her right away as the type who played around, who was always looking. Johnny Long was never wrong about a woman, ever.
Marissa told him she’d heard through a friend that Dana was cheating on Adam with this guy Tony, some trainer at her gym. So she went for the jocks. That wasn’t very surprising to Johnny either. Cheating women always went for the opposite of what they had at home.
Marissa wanted to screw again, and Johnny thought, Jesus, what was it going to take to make this girl fall asleep? Another mind-blowing orgasm seemed to do the trick. Marissa was curled up into Johnny, her head resting on his chest, starting to doze. It was almost midnight, so Johnny figured Adam and Dana were probably in their bedroom, asleep or falling asleep.
When Marissa started snoring slightly, Johnny knew he could kill them all right now. Put one in Marissa’s head, then kill her parents; it could be all over in five minutes, ten tops. But if he killed them tonight all he’d get was the money and the jewelry in the house. He had a better idea—a way to get all of Adam Bloom’s money, plus his cars, his house, and everything else.
The only downside was he wouldn’t be able to kill them all tonight. No, to make this thing work he’d have to kill them off one by one.
DANA WAS in the bathroom, looking in the mirror, putting on moisturizing cream, when Adam came in and said, “Listen to them in there, it’s ridiculous.”
“It’s not that bad,” Dana said.
“Oh, come on,” Adam said. “This is just more of her acting out, and I find it extremely inappropriate and passive-aggressive.”
“I don’t think you’re being fair,” Dana said. “Really? So this is my fault?”
“It’s not her fault either. She isn’t making the noise, he is. What exactly is she doing wrong?”
Adam thought about this, then said, “What’s the matter with him anyway?
Why does he have to be so loud?”
“Maybe he thinks the walls are thicker than they are, or maybe he, I don’t know, can’t control himself. But I really think you’ve been too hard on her lately. You said you wanted to meet her boyfriends before you let them sleep over, and you met her boyfriend. What more can she do?”
“There are some things a father shouldn’t have to hear,” Adam said. “Just try to ignore it.”
“How can I ignore it when I feel like I’m in the room with them?”
Dana was rubbing cream into the deep wrinkles in her forehead, thinki
ng she might have to give in soon and get Botox.
“She’s a beautiful twenty-two-year-old girl,” she said. “You can’t stop her from having sex.”
“Oh, yes I can.”
“Oh, really? What’re you going to do, make her wear a chastity belt?”
“I don’t have to allow her to have sex in our house anymore, that’s what I can do.”
“Listen to you, allow her. So what do you want her to do, have sex in cars? In hotel rooms?”
Xan was grunting wildly.
“This is ridiculous,” Adam said and stormed out of the bathroom.
After Dana finished up with her moisturizing, she entered the bedroom, where Adam was pacing. They could still hear Xan’s grunting and moaning.
“I feel like knocking on her door.” “You can’t embarrass her like that.”
“So I’m just supposed to listen to this all night?”
“Sleep downstairs or turn on Jay Leno if you don’t want to hear it.” “Why should I have to drown out the noise of my daughter having sex?”
“In the morning, we’ll talk to her and ask her if she could talk to him about keeping it down from now on, but there’s nothing we can do about it tonight. I mean, it’s probably extremely awkward for her right now. What is she supposed to say to him? And I’m sure Xan isn’t aware of how loud he’s being, and after she talks to him about it everything’ll be fine. You like Xan a lot, don’t you?”
Adam stopped pacing, breathed deeply, as if he hated to admit it, then said, “Yeah, I think he’s a great guy.”
“Well, I like him, too,” Dana said. “I think he’s incredibly nice and charming and attractive, so I don’t think we should complain. She could do a lot worse.”
Dana noticed Adam was staring at her in an odd way, squinting, like he was trying to figure something out.
“What’s wrong?” she asked, and he said, “Nothing,” then turned on the TV to The Tonight Show, Leno doing his monologue. The TV didn’t drown out Xan completely, but it helped.
Adam sat at the foot of the bed, looking at the TV blankly. Dana, as she had several times during the past week or so, couldn’t help feeling paranoid. Whenever Adam seemed particularly distant or gave her a funny look or acted in any way unusual, she couldn’t help wondering if he’d somehow found out about her and Tony, or was at least suspicious.
“I just think it’s . . . interesting,” he said.
“What’s interesting?” Her heart was pounding.
“The way you described Xan. I haven’t heard you talk like that in a long time, calling another man attractive.”
“What’re you talking about?” Dana said, acting shocked, probably overdoing it. “I was just commenting about him, that’s all. He’s a good-looking guy. He looks a lot like Johnny Depp, don’t you think?”
“He was flirting with you a lot.”
“He was not.” She knew he had been; she just didn’t want to get into it. “Come on, it was so obvious.”
“I noticed he was paying attention to me, yes, but I wouldn’t call it flirting.
Come on, he’s Marissa’s boyfriend, for God’s sake.”
“I was just making an observation, that’s all, and wanted to let you know how it made me feel. It made me feel uncomfortable. It made me feel jealous.”
Adam was still in an annoying phase where he was constantly announcing his feelings, talking in I-statements. It was getting seriously wearing.
“I’m sorry you felt that way,” Dana said. Then, wanting to change the subject, she said, “I still don’t think you should be so hard on Marissa. You can’t give her rule after rule after rule. At some point you just have to back off and let her live her life.”
As if on cue, they could hear Xan in the other room, practically screaming. “I’m going out to take a walk,” Adam said and left the bedroom.
Dana got into bed and shut off the light. It was so strange for Adam to get jealous; she hoped that there wasn’t more to it, that he wasn’t catching on. She thought she’d been acting pretty normal lately, not nearly as depressed as she’d been after ending the fling with Tony, but maybe he’d picked up on something and was projecting it onto her. Oh, God, what was happening to her? She’d been listening to so much of his psychobabble lately that she was starting to think like him now.
Although Dana hadn’t spoken to Tony since the night she left his apartment, she’d been missing him a lot, and it was hard to not have any contact with him. He’d texted her several times and had called her and left messages on her cell, and a few times she almost gave in and called him back. Yes, things had been better with Adam lately, but she wasn’t sure what “better” meant anymore. Better than what? Better than when she’d been miserable? Maybe being in a marriage that’s slightly better than miserable was good enough for some women, but not her. She felt trapped with Adam, and the idea of staying in the same distant marriage, having the same fights over and over again for the rest of her life, seemed almost unbearable.
While she appreciated that Adam was making an effort to change, she didn’t feel like it was a serious, heartfelt effort. Did he take her out to a nice dinner, or maybe surprise her with a weekend getaway? No, he brought home a cheerleader’s costume. The psychologist, the so-called expert on marital conflict, tries to save his marriage by trying to encourage his wife to reenact a scene from Debbie Does Dallas? Was that really the best he could come up with? It was pathetic with a capital P. The irony was that, while she’d told him she felt ridiculous putting on the outfit, the truth was she felt uncomfortable putting it on for him. During her fling with Tony, she’d dressed up many times—as a schoolgirl, a maid, a stewardess, and, yes, even one time as a cheerleader—but somehow living out her sex fantasies with a young sex object like Tony seemed much more normal than doing it with her middle-aged psychologist husband. And it definitely wasn’t the magic pill that would resolve their marriage problems.
But the only alternative to staying with Adam was divorcing him and the thought of being single again was terrifying. She knew a few women in the neighborhood who’d recently gotten divorces, and they were all miserable and lonely. What was she going to do, start dating again? She didn’t remember how to date. Where did people meet nowadays anyway, on the Internet? What would she do, post some picture of herself, retouched, in the perfect light, where she looked ten years younger, only to see the guys’ disappointment and disgust when she met them? Her ego wouldn’t be able to handle that. She seemed to get new wrinkles every day, and there was no way she could compete with women in their twenties and thirties who’d be interested in the same men. Then, in a few years, when she was in her fifties, it would get even harder to find someone. If she got very lucky, if she got incredibly lucky, then someday, maybe five or ten years from now, when she was pushing sixty, she’d have a chance to settle for someone who—at best—would be exactly like Adam, a decent enough guy with some very annoying qualities. What was the point of going through all of that pain, probably chopping years off her life because of all the stress, for the outside chance of winding up exactly where she was right now?
Adam returned from his walk, or wherever he’d been, and got into bed. “Did they stop it in there?” he asked.
“Yes,” she said.
“Thank God,” he said and turned the other way and fell asleep without saying good night.
When Dana woke up, Adam wasn’t in bed with her. She went down to the kitchen and saw that he’d brewed coffee, but, as usual, he’d left barely one cup for her. And he was the one who called her passive-aggressive? He knew full well that she liked to have two or three cups in the morning.
Dana was scooping coffee into the coffeemaker when she heard someone enter the kitchen. She turned, ready to confront Adam, and saw Xan standing there. He was in the same jeans he’d been wearing last night and a plain white wife-beater. His hair was messy from sleep, but on him it looked almost stylized. She noticed how good-looking he was—somehow he was even more attractive with
morning scruff, like he could be an underwear model—and then she felt embarrassed because he was seeing her without her makeup.
“Sorry,” he said, smiling. “Hope I didn’t startle you.” “No,” she said. “I just, um, thought it was my husband.”
He looked at her the way he had last night, in that flirty way, kind of the way Tony looked at her sometimes, then said, “It’s a beautiful day today, isn’t it?”
There was innuendo in his voice, especially in the way he’d said “beautiful,” as if he wasn’t only calling the day beautiful but calling her beautiful as well. This seemed especially apparent because it wasn’t a particularly beautiful day. It was cloudy, a little chilly.
“Yes it is,” she said. “So is, um, Marissa up yet?”
“Oh yeah, she is,” he said. “She asked me if I could bring her up some coffee.” “It’s good timing then, isn’t it?” Dana said. “Should I make some for you,
too?”
“No thanks, I don’t drink coffee. I don’t need anything to get me going in the morning.”
He smiled at her in a slightly suggestive way. With any other guy—especially any other boyfriend of Marissa’s—Dana might’ve gotten offended, but somehow she didn’t feel that way about Xan. His flirtatiousness somehow seemed appropriate, within his character—and, yes, she couldn’t help feeling a little flattered by the attention. It felt good to feel sexy, even when it was early in the morning and she was wearing sweats and a baggy T-shirt.
While the coffee was brewing, Xan engaged her in small talk, asking her where she grew up and how she liked living in Forest Hills, and she liked the way he seemed interested in what she was saying, looking right at her and not seeming at all distracted like Adam always did when she was talking to him. She could see why Marissa liked him so much. Not only was he very attractive and intelligent and talented, he was sincere and seemed like a genuinely good person. He was the type of guy Dana could’ve easily fallen for twenty or thirty years ago.
Later, Xan was back upstairs with Marissa, and Dana was alone in the kitchen, having yogurt with bananas and raisins along with her coffee, when Adam entered the house through the back door, sweat dripping down his face. He’d obviously been out jogging.