oughtn't to have mentioned it. He's having small success."
"I don't give a pig's rig. I talked to Diana this afternoon. We're forgetting it." "No, really?”
"Yeah. I just fuckin' told her, was all. No
sweat."
"How did she take it?"
"Well, it completely cracked her up. Course. But the fuck, you know? Hadda happen."
"I'm sorry to hear that, Andy."
"Relax."
"And tell me—what devilment are you planning now?"
"Nah . . ." Andy was about to shrug deprecatingly, but then his face cleared and became quizzical. "I . . ."
"You're feeling it, aren't you?"
"Yeah, I am, actually."
"It's quite impossible to describe, isn't it?"
"Yeah. It is."
56:
IT
started strangely
It
started strangely. Not with a rush or a jolt, but as if it had always been there. The rosewood of the kitchen table seemed to have faded into a weak pastel brown. The blue and yellow tiles on the ceiling had receded and blurred so that its pattern was no longer distinct. Even the plain white of the walls appeared to have become something more washy, more neutral. Color had begun to drain from the house.
Andy had just sat himself down on the sofa and poured himself a sextuple Benedictine when Roxeanne came into the sitting room. He banged down his drink and hurried toward her. Marvell and Skip got to their feet.
"Well?"
"Well what?"
"Did it happen?"
"Did what happen?"
Andy's shoulders went slack. "Okay, I asked you nice. Now did you fuck him or didn't you fuck him?"
"I didn't fuck him." Roxeanne nodded to Marvell and Skip. They moved toward the door. Skip was rolling up his right sleeve. Marvell's fingers toyed with his belt buckle.
Andy wheeled round. "What's . . . ?"
Waving Skip and Marvell on, Roxeanne said to Andy, "He
couldn't get a hard-on. And he threw up. It's not girls he likes."
"When we get in there," Marvell was telling Skip as they
left the room, "don't fuck around. Just get his fuckin' legs and—"
Andy gestured hesitantly at the closed door. He turned to Roxeanne. "What's going on?"
Roxeanne sat down. She looked hot and very angry indeed, but her voice remained calm, even rather piano. "I'm getting some theories about this house. There's no one in it knows how to fuck right." She sighed. "What they're going to do, Andy, is: Marvell's just going to screw him—okay—but Skip's gonna fist-fuck him first. Got it?"
"Fist-fu— You mean—right up the . . . ?"
Roxeanne placed her straight right hand on the inside crook of her left elbow. "Fist-fuck," she said.
"All that? Up the . . . right in his ... ?" Andy placed his arm obliquely across his stomach. It went from his hip bone to his solar plexus. He stared at Lucy and Diana. "But it can't. He's only little. It'll go right up to his— It'll fuck him all up."
Roxeanne reached for the liquor bottle. "Skip told me that after the initial tightness it goes all sort of hollow," she said matter-of-factly. "It all sort of ... gives, you know? It does no permanent damage. It's amazing what people can get away with these days."
Andy stared flinching at the door. A thin, insect scream had joined the sounds of violent struggle from above.
"That fat little fuck," said Roxeanne.
Marvell bent down to zip up his boot. "That bastard Archie," he said.
"Yeah," said Skip, pulling a T-shirt over his head. "What was he trying to pull?"
"Last time I go to that shiteater. He can't do that to me, he knows that. It'll finish him. Time to retire."
"Maybe," droned Skip as he buckled his belt, "maybe it was some kinda, like a joke. I mean, the other movies, they were okay."
"Maybe, fuck. It was a hundred, same as the rest. That cocksucker. Shirley Temple I want I go to the movie library."
Skip leaned in front of a suitcase. Suddenly he let out a roar of consternation and outrage. Marvell shivered. Then he remembered that the letter from Skip's father was safely in Quentin's keeping.
"What is it?”
"A motherfuckin'— Come here, Mar. Take a fuckin' look at that."
Marvell crossed the room, straightening the collar of his shirt. Skip motioned limply at the suitcase. Among a knot of tightly packed clothes was a spilt bottle of yellow nail varnish.
"At least it's colorless," said Marvell.
"How many, how many times? I fuckin'
told
her."
Marvell clicked his tongue. "Yeah, well don't tangle with her right now about it. I know Rox and I know when she's getting impatient."
Skip turned. "Yeah? Any ideas for next?"
"Some." Marvell drove his hands through his hair. "Some. How's the drug doing?"
"Kinda scary. I like it."
"C'mon. Let's go."
At the far end of the room, between the bed and the wardrobe, was a pile of blankets, sheets, and clothes. Inside it was a motionless lump. That was Whitehead.
57:
OLD D
reads
During the Americans' twenty-minute absence from the sitting room Celia joined in her husband's wholly successful attempt to restore calm to the room, to moderate Roxeanne's rebarba-tiveness to the odd aside, to reduce Andy's climbing temper to a rubble of imprecation. Nor was it Villiers' superb diplomatic skills alone that softened the atmosphere. The mood of the room was one of growing introspection, of cold solipsism, and things were passing them by.
Celia herself was having a good time. In gradual, succulent stages, she was re-experiencing all the joy and security of her recent months with Quentin-—the farcically beautiful Hamlet beside her—reliving each declension of the tender and exquisite deliverance his love had been. But it was also going, all this; she was falling away too—tumbling slowly from the present, the present that Quentin so notably adorned—falling away to the isolation and contingency of a life without him. Celia thought she saw something out of the corner of her eye. She swiveled to meet it but her mind kept slipping back to ... to
I
do
beach him straightaway but didn't get free used up The Mandarin best to be good friends told her grapefruit
:
what money could do and their bodies with bastards pricks shits eat a lot be alone and you're
Celia.
She turned to the man next to her on the sofa and he could have been anyone; he had lost the lineaments of Quentin Villiers. Even when he turned to her, meeting her troubled eyes with a smile that completely defined her thoughts and fears, she was unable to suppress a shiver.
Celia excused herself and climbed the stairs to her room, confused but unterrified. She had found the old strengths along with the old dreads. She closed the door behind her, reassured that all was quiet now above. The solidity of the familiar objects—her makeup, her shoes, his books, his hairdryer—steadied her further. The present was there all right, then, even if it was leaving her for a short time. What were those phrases she had heard? They weren't from her mind.
Celia shrugged, and smiled at the unmade bed, leaning over to kiss the aromatic pillow where her husband's face had recently lain. Then she noticed a slip of paper pinned to the headboard. Thinking that it was one of Quentin's aphorisms or epigrammatic love poems, she knelt on the bed to examine it. There was a crudely drawn arrow directing her under the blankets, and a caption reading:
Johnny's left it all down there.
Intending to make the bed anyway, Celia pulled off the quilt and exposed the bottom sheet. A wild noise gushed from her hanging mouth.
Keith awoke from a shallow, hurtful sleep. Sensing the shag of the blankets and the heat of the close darkness, he thought at first that he was in his room. He was, he noticed, in tears, and his nose was running freely, but then again he quite often woke up like that. As he snuggled closer to himself, wondering how much night there was to go, a sick wave of memory dragged over him.
Keith sat up, throwing off the sticking clothes. The light jogged his eyes—he was naked suddenly. A shaft of hollow-ness in his stomach burned the way to his numb backside. He looked down and saw that he had at some point ejaculated. This made him start crying again.
He hobbled and rocked round the room assembling his clothes. His puffed skin, at once babyish and corpse-like, dappled unhealthily in the swinging light. From time to time he fell over, or gasped in breathless grief. His madras shirt
was torn; the staples on his trouser seat had been wrenched apart and there was an irreparable split down the inside thigh. He got into their remains and grafted on his boiling boots. He thought what to do.
Keith's first, and only, instinct was to
hide.
"Hide," he said. He felt no self-pity about what had happened, none at all. He felt shame merely. What he wanted now was not to be seen. He would forgive them anything but their talk and their eyes.
He knew where to go. There could be nowhere else now. Keith opened the door and stood tensed in his ragged clothes. With alarming speed he darted down into the shadowy stairs.
58: everything
WILL B
e mad
Andy had been wondering on and off how much of a storm to kick up when Marvell and Skip finally reappeared, but as their absence continued the possibility of a fertile, visionary brawl was getting more and more abstract. In a curiously gentle manner of which he was only half aware, his body seemed to be melting, rendering down to a weaker and less robust version of himself. He kept staring gravely at Diana and Lucy as they sat conversing on the divan. He thought how pleasantly asexual they were in appearance, how talkative and inconsequential. What he wanted to do, really, was to go over and lie down in between them both. He wouldn't disturb them. For once in his life he just wanted not to be minded.
The door welled open. Skip and Marvell came into the room.
Andy made as if to stand up. "Okay— What have you done with him—you fuckers?"
Skip eased himself into the dining alcove while Marvell sauntered across and sat on the arm of Roxeanne's chair.
"Hey, you fuckin' fags . . ." Andy's mind jolted. All along the room had been silent, expectant—but no one was hearing him. With an appalling effort Andy sat up straight. "Marvell," dragged his voice, "you fuckin' little . . ."
"Hey," said Marvell lightly. "What's with Andy?"
"Andy," called Quentin from the end of the world, "what's happening to you?”
: "I . . ."
Andy fell from his seat. He was treading air in the middle of the room. He saw the french windows and moved numbly toward them. Hands jutted out to assist or prevent him, but he fought them away and burst through into the colorful night.
His mind was flashing with tremendous activity—not thought, not thought: the phrases in his brain had been there long before he had; they were ready made. For the last time he tried to shout but his mind kept slipping back, slipping back to ... to
come after me and don't go mad you're born just in time her distant eyes a long-ago Andy with no far-flung canceled sex but to hear the choppy water of the city's sleep with sick junkies on the lookout for warmth in a dark mattress land of crying grass and
Andy.
Some minutes later Andy was picking himself off the lawn. Cold tears had evaporated from his cheeks. He had been back. And to what? To nothing and a tickling heart.
"Bastards," he said. "Deaf, dumb, blind fucking bastards." He turned and began to stride back toward the house.
"Andy
..."
Andy spun toward the garage. It was an impossible sound, like an animal or a wounded baby.
"Andy."
It was inches away. Andy looked down suddenly—and saw him through the tiny window slot of his room, his face lit by a crack of wan upstairs light.