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Authors: Henry Miller

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BOOK: Sexus
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I had just gotten it halfway in, Lola's back bent almost in half, and still talking about the messenger boys, when I heard Ulric and Mara stirring. I pulled away and picking up the phone I called a number at random. To my astonishment a woman's voice answered sleepily—“Is that you, dear? I've just been dreaming about you.” I said
Yes?
She went on, as if still half-asleep: “Do hurry home, won't you dear? I've been waiting and waiting. Tell me you love me . . .”

“I'll make it as quick as I can,
Maude,
”I said, in my own clear natural voice. “The messengers are on strike. I wish you'd call. . .”

“What's that?
What are you saying? What
is
this?” came the woman's startled voice.

“I said rush a few waybills
*
up to D.T. office and ask Costigan to . . .” The phone clicked.

The three of them were lying on the divan. I could smell them in the dark. “I hope you don't have to go,” said Ulric in a smothered voice. Lola was lying over him, her arms around his neck. I reached between her legs and caught hold of Ulric's pecker. I was on my knees, in a good position to tackle Lola from the rear should Mara suddenly decide to go to the lavatory. Lola raised herself a bit and sank down on
Ulric's prick with a savage grunt. Mara was tugging at me. We lay down on the floor beside the divan and went to it. In the midst of it the hall door opened, the light was suddenly switched on, and there stood Ulric's brother with a woman. They were a bit drunk and had apparently returned at an early hour to do a bit of quiet fucking on their own.

“Don't let
us
stop you,” said Ned, standing in the doorway inspecting the scene as if it were an everyday affair. Suddenly he pointed to his brother and shouted—“Holy Smokes! What's happened? You're bleeding!”

We all looked at Ulric's bleeding cock: from the navel down to his knees he was a mass of blood. It was rather embarrassing for Lola.

“I'm sorry,” she said, the blood dripping down her thighs. “I didn't think it would be so soon.”

“That's all right,” said Ulric. “What's a little blood between bouts?”

I went with him to the lavatory, pausing a moment on the way to be presented to his brother's girl. She was pretty far gone. I held out my mitt to shake hands and in reaching for it she accidentally made a pass for my prick. That made everybody feel a little easier.

“A great workout,” said Ulric, washing himself assiduously. “Do you think I might take another crack at it? I mean, there's no particular harm getting a little blood on the end of your cock, is there? I feel as though I'd like to have another go at it, what say?”

“It's good for the health,” I said cheerily. “Wish I could swap places with you.”

“I wouldn't be averse to that at all,” said he, sliding his tongue lecherously over his lower lip. “Do you think you can manage it?”

“Not tonight,” I said. “I'm going now. I've got to be fresh and spruce tomorrow.”

“Are you going to take Mara with you?”

“I sure am. Tell her to come in here a minute, will you?”

When Mara opened the door I was powdering my cock. We fell into a clutch at once.

“What about trying it in the tub?”

I turned the warm water on and threw in a bar of soap. I soaped her crotch with tingling fingers. By this time my prick was like an electric eel. The warm water felt delicious. I was chewing her lips, her ears, her hair. Her eyes sparkled as if she had been struck by a fistful of stars. Every part of her was smooth and satiny and her breasts were ready to burst. We got out and, letting her straddle me, I sat on the edge of the tub. We were dripping wet. I reached for a towel with one hand and dried her a bit down the front. We lay down on the bath mat and she slung her legs around my neck. I moved her around like one of those legless toys which illustrate the principle of gravity.

Two nights later I was in a depressed mood. I was lying on the couch in the dark, my thoughts shifting rapidly from Mara to the bloody, futile telegraph life. Maude had come over to say something to me and I had made the mistake of running my hand carelessly up her dress as she stood there complaining about something or other. She had walked off insulted. I hadn't been thinking about fucking her—I just did it naturally, like you'd stroke a cat. When she was awake you couldn't touch her that way. She never took a fuck on the wing, as it were. She thought fucking had something to do with love: carnal love, perhaps. A lot of water had passed under the bridge since the days when I first knew her, when I used to twirl her around on the end of my cock sitting on the piano stool. Now she acted like a cook preparing a difficult menu. She would make up her mind deliberately, letting me know in her sly, repressed way that the time had come for it. Maybe that's what she had come for a moment ago, though it was certainly odd the way she begged for it. Anyway I didn't give a fuck whether she wanted it or not. Suddenly, though, thinking of Stanley's words, I began to have a yen for her. “Get in your last licks,” I kept saying to myself. Well, maybe I'd go up and tackle her in her pseudo sleep. Spivak came to mind. He was watching me like a hawk the last few days. My hatred for the telegraph life was concentrated in my hatred for him. He was the bloody cosmococcus in person. Must polish him off somehow before they fire me. I kept thinking how I could lure him to a dark wharf and have some
obliging friend push him overboard. I thought of Stanley. Stanley would relish a job like that. . . .

How long was he going to keep me on tenterhooks? I wondered. And what form would it take, this abrupt deliverance? I could see Mara coming to meet me at the station. We'd start a new life together, righto! What sort of life I didn't dare think. Maybe Kronski would raise another three hundred dollars. And those millionaires she talked about, they ought to be good for something. I began thinking in thousands—a thousand for her old man, a thousand for traveling expenses, a thousand to tide us over for a few months. Once in Texas, or some God-forsaken place like that, I'd have more confidence. I'd stop off at newspaper offices with her—she always made a good impression—and I'd ask permission to write a little sketch. I'd walk in on businessmen and show them how to write their ads. In hotel lobbies I'd be sure to meet up with a friendly soul, someone who would give me a break. The country was so big, so many lonely people, so many generous souls ready to give, if only they met the right individual. I would be sincere and forthright. Say we get to Mississippi, some old ramshackle hotel. A man walks up to me out of the darkness and asks me how I feel. A guy just aching for a little chat. I'd introduce him to Mara. We'd saunter out arm in arm and stroll about in the moonlight, the trees strangled with lianas, the magnolias rotting on the floor of the earth, the air humid, sultry, making things rot—and men too. To him I'd be a fresh breeze from the North. I'd be honest, sincere, almost humble. Would put my cards on the table immediately. There you are, man, there's the situation. I love this place. I want to stay here all my life. That would scare him off a little, because you don't start talking that way to a Southerner straight off.
What's your game?
Then I'd speak up again, soft and distant, like a clarinet with a wet sponge plugging the bell. I'd give him a little melody out of the cold North, a sort of chill factory whistle on a frosty morning. Mister man, I don't like the cold. No sir! I want to do some honest work, anything to keep alive.
Can I talk straight?
You won't think I'm cracked, will you? It's lonely up there in the North. Yes sir, we go blue with fright and
loneliness. Live in little rooms, eat with knives and forks, carry watches, liver pills, bread crumbs, sausages. Don't know where we're at up there,
honest,
Mister. We're frightened to death we'll say something, something real. Don't sleep . . . not really. Thrash around all night praying for the world to end. We don't believe in anything: we hate everybody, we poison one another. Everything so tight and solid, everything riveted with cruel hot irons. Don't make a thing with our hands. Sell. Buy and sell. Buy and sell, that's all, Mister. . . .

I could visualize the old gentleman distinctly as he stood under a droopy tree mopping his feverish brow. He wouldn't run away from me, like others had. I wouldn't let him! I'd hold him spellbound—the whole night long, if I felt like it. Make him give us a cool wing in the big house near the bayou. The darkie would appear with a tray, serving mint juleps. We would be adopted.
“This is your home, son; stay as long as you like.”
No desire to play tricks on a man like that. No, if a man treated me that way I'd be faithful to him, to the bitter end. . . .

It was all so real I felt I had to tell Mara about it right away. I went to the kitchen and began a letter. “Dear Mara—All our problems are solved. . . .” I went on as though it were all clear and definitive. Mara looked different to me now. I saw myself standing under the big trees talking to her in a way that surprised me. We were walking arm in arm through the thick growths, conversing like human beings. There was a big yellow moon out and the dogs were yapping at our heels. It seemed to me we were married and the blood ran deep and still between us. She would be craving a pair of swans for the little lake in back of the house. No money talk, no neon lights, no chop suey. How wonderful just to breathe naturally, never to hurry, never get anywhere, never do anything important—except live! She thought so too. She had changed, Mara. Her body had grown fuller, heavier; she moved slowly, talked calmly, became silent for long periods, all so real and naturallike. Should she wander off by herself I felt certain she would come back unchanged, smelling sweeter, moving more sure-footedly. . . .

“Do you get it, Mara? Do you see how it will be?”

There I was, putting it all down so honestly, almost weeping with the sheer wonder of it, when I heard Maude paddling slipslop through the hall. I gathered the sheets together and folded them. I put my fist over them and waited for her to say something.

“Who are you writing to?” she asked—just as direct and sure as that.

“To someone I know,” I answered calmly.

“A woman, I suppose.”

“Yes, a woman. A girl, to be more exact.” I said it heavily, solemnly, still thick with the trance, the image of her under the big trees, the two swans floating aimlessly on the unruffled lake. If you want to know, I thought to myself, I will tell you. I don't see why I should lie any more. I don't hate you, as I once did. I wish you could love as I do—it would make it so much easier. I don't want to hurt you. I just want you to let me be.

“You're in love with her. You don't need to answer—I know it's so.”

“Yes, that's true—I
am
in love. I found someone I really love.”

“Maybe you'll treat her better than you did me.”

“I hope so,” I said, still calm, still hoping she'd hear me through to the end. “We never really loved each other, Maude, that's the truth, isn't it?”

“You never had any respect for me—as a human being,” she replied. “You insult me in front of your friends; you run around with other women; you don't even show any interest in your child.”

“Maude, I wish just for once that you wouldn't talk that way. I wish we could talk about it without bitterness.”

“You
can—because you're happy. You've found a new toy.”

“It isn't that, Maude. Listen, supposing all the things you say are true—what difference does it make
now?
Supposing we were on a boat and it was sinking . . .”

“I don't see why we have to suppose things. You're going
to take up with someone else and I'm going to be left with all the drudgery, all the responsibilities.”

“I know,” I said, looking at her with genuine tenderness. “I want you to try to forgive me for that—can you? What good would it do to stay? We wouldn't ever learn to love each other. Can't we part friends? I don't mean to leave you in the lurch. I'm going to try to do my share—I mean it.”

“That's easy to say. You're always promising things you can't fulfill. You'll forget us the moment you walk out of this house.
I know you.
I can't afford to be generous with you. You deceived me bitterly, from the very beginning. You've been selfish, utterly selfish. I never thought it possible for a human being to become so cruel, so callous, so thoroughly inhuman. Why, I hardly recognize you now. It's the first time you've acted like a . . .”

“Maude, it's cruel what I'm going to say, but I have to say it. I want you to understand something. Maybe I had to go through this with you in order to learn how to treat a woman. It isn't altogether my fault—fate had something to do with it too. You see, the moment I set eyes on her I knew . . .”

“Where did you meet her?” said Maude, her feminine curiosity suddenly getting the better of her.

“In a dance hall. She's a taxi girl. Sounds bad, I know. But if you saw her . . .”

“I don't want to see her. I don't want to hear anything more about her. I just wondered.” She gave me a quick pitying look. “And you think she's the woman who will make you happy?”

“You call her a woman—she's not, she's just a young girl.”

“So much the worse. Oh, what a fool you are!”

“Maude, it's not like you think, not at all. You mustn't judge, really. How can you pretend to know? And in any case I don't care. I've made up my mind.”

At this she hung her head. She looked indescribably sad and weary, like a human wreck hanging from a meathook. I looked down at the floor, unable to bear the sight of her face.

We sat like that a full few minutes, neither of us daring to look up. I heard a sniffle and as I looked up I saw her face
quivering with pain. She put her arms forward on the table and, weeping and sobbing, she flung her head down, pressing her face against the table. I had watched her weep many times but this was the most ghastly, unresisting sort of surrender. It unnerved me. I stood over her and put my hand on her shoulder. I tried to say something but the words stuck in my throat. Not knowing what to do I rubbed my hand over her hair, caressed it sadly, and distantly too, as though it were the head of a strange, wounded animal I had come upon in the dark.

BOOK: Sexus
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