The Stallion (1996) (29 page)

Read The Stallion (1996) Online

Authors: Harold Robbins

Tags: #Thriller

BOOK: The Stallion (1996)
12.61Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
2

The Perino children had become accustomed to the idea that their father was not an ordinary man who kept ordinary hours. For that matter, most of their friends’ fathers were out of the ordinary, too. Backcountry Greenwich was not a neighborhood of men and women who worked nine to five.

John, who was almost thirteen, attended a private day school for boys. Anna was in a day school for girls. Morris, who was eight, was doing well and was happy in the nearby elementary school, where his sister Valerie was also enrolled. In the middle of a weekday, only two-year-old Mary was apt to be at home; and many afternoons she was playing at parks or walking on the beach with the au pair.

As she’d said she should, Cindy began to spend more time in VKP Galleries.

Marcus Lincicombe had come to exert a powerful new influence on the business. He had convinced Cindy that they should rent the second floor of the building that housed the gallery, install spiral steel staircases, and expand the scope of the gallery by acquiring new lines of art. Glass cases in one of the upstairs rooms displayed netsuke. Two other rooms displayed eighteenth-and nineteenth-century English genre paintings: horses especially but also barnyard and cottage scenes and scenes of squires hunting.

“You don’t much like them, and I don’t much like them,” Marcus said to Cindy and Dietz, “but a significant segment of the public likes them—significant in the sense that they have the money to buy them. You see them in Greenwich homes, don’t you? You see them in Park Avenue apartments. The well-to-do feel comfortable with nice, sleek horses and the like. They are
art,
and everyone can recognize what they are. Besides, they’re more than a hundred years old.”

“They’re boring,” said Cindy.

“Now, now. Your tastes in art, Cindy, are so eclectic that I am sure you confuse most of the guests who come to your home. Most people don’t want to be confused, and they don’t want to be challenged.”

He was right. The traditional paintings of hounds and horses sold well.

An exhibit of works of the American Leica school—that is, more paintings as photographically realistic as Amanda Finch’s—didn’t sell as well.

Amanda’s work continued to sell. It became apparent as the years passed that her appeal was in the straightforward eroticism of her realistic nudes. She hired more teenage models, always with their parents’ consent and almost always with a parent present when she painted. She hired a boy of sixteen and his sister who was twelve and painted them together in wholly innocent scenes of nude brother and sister playing innocent games like checkers and Monopoly. With no explanation as to why a preadolescent girl and an adolescent boy were playing board games naked, the paintings inspired speculation and sold quickly and for high prices. Cindy understood that Amanda had developed a sense of what sold. She painted what sold, and if that was abandoning artistic freedom for money, Amanda did not mind. She was mildly sensational, and she accepted that.

Occasionally Marcus came out to Greenwich. He visited the house only rarely, more often walking up from the railroad station to Amanda’s apartment and studio, where Cindy came and joined the two of them. They went to lunch. Three times Cindy and Marcus returned from lunch to spend an hour or so in Amanda’s bedroom. Much more often, Cindy took the train to the city, spent time at VKP Galleries, routinely had lunch with Marcus, often with Dietz or an artist joining them, then sometimes spent a midafternoon hour in Marcus’s apartment.

It was all but inconceivable, Cindy told herself, that a woman married to Angelo Perino could give herself to Marcus Lincicombe. Angelo was everything that Marcus was not. Except that Angelo was absent too often. Marcus was
there.
He had time. He
took
time.

He rarely saw her children, but he asked about them, and he was patient with her stories of their sayings and doings. He convinced her he was interested—and maybe he was. He was poised in the presence of Angelo and tried to ask him cogent but nonprying questions about XB.

Cindy’s only objection to him was his ever-present pipe. When they were in a place where he could light up, she asked him to brush his teeth before they drew close together. The stink of his tobacco clung to his clothes and even to his skin. Only after they had showered was he free of it.

He was an ingratiating lover. He seemed to wonder if he were capable of satisfying, and labored to prove he could—prove to himself perhaps as much as to her. Though he was a small man, he was well hung. He was knowledgeable. He mounted her like a stallion, but he made small adjustments in his posture and hers, to penetrate as deeply as possible and vary the sensations as much as he could.

Because she had stopped taking the pill, they used condoms.

3

In the fall of 1985 the restyled Stallion was delivered to the dealers. It was lower. It was sleeker. Cindy did not protest having to drive one for a few weeks. It was a little more powerful than the earlier model. Virtually every one sold was air-conditioned, and it needed more power to run the compressor without needing downshifting on hills. It was an immediate success.

Trade publications and even general-interest magazines ran articles on the plant in which the Stallion was built. Dealers reported that some buyers at least were attracted to the car because they had heard it was built to high quality standards in the most modern of automated factories.

The new Stallion was also called another major success for Angelo Perino.

1986
4

Everyone who knew thirteen-year-old John Perino called him a handsome boy because he was tall and muscular, with dark hair and dark eyes. He played lacrosse and tennis and had already won ribbons and a trophy for swimming. Girls took an interest in him, and he was beginning to receive telephone calls, some of which would drag out for an hour as a girl or several girls giggled on the other end of the line. He received invitations to parties. Some of the parties turned out to be kissing parties.

Sondra Mead was fifteen in the spring, and her parents promised her a grown-up birthday party—a party where parents would not be present to supervise. They exacted a promise that the kids would not drink, but apart from that they were free to party as they wished.

The Meads lived on an estate. They had converted a fieldstone building that had once been a carriage house into a party house. Sondra’s parents used it for that purpose themselves. It had a pool table and a Ping-Pong table, as well as a table with a roulette wheel and a bar that could be locked.

Sondra, who was usually called Buffy, invited John Perino to her party. He was not her date; she invited several other boys; but when he accepted her invitation, she announced her triumph to her classmates at Greenwich Academy—

“Guess who’s coming!
John Perino!?

“Oooh!”

The party began at seven. Cindy intended to stop by at ten to drive John home, but Sondra’s mother said she was driving another teenager home who lived near the Perinos, so she’d be glad to drop John off.

He wore a maroon cashmere sweater over an open-collar white shirt, with charcoal gray slacks. He carried the present Cindy had bought for the girl: a silk neck scarf.

John was not shy. He had poise. When he handed Buffy her present and she kissed him, he was not flustered.

None of these teenagers were shy or felt uncomfortable about being with members of the opposite sex. The girls and boys did not retreat to opposite sides of the room and titter. They chatted together, and shortly they began to dance. Buffy sought out John and waited for him to ask her to dance. He did.

She was a newly matured girl: blond and softly, strikingly beautiful. She was taller than some of the boys at the party, though not taller than John. Her figure was filled out, perhaps as much as it ever would be, which set her apart from most of the girls. She wore a little pink lipstick. Her blond hair hung smoothly around her shoulders.

“Hey, Perino,” said one of the boys as he and a girl danced close to John and Buffy. “You sticked me at practice Tuesday.”

“Sorry, Ken. I didn’t mean to. I apologized at the time.”

“You’re sure it was an accident?”

“If I ever do it intentionally, you won’t stay on your feet,” said John.

Buffy squeezed John. “You!” she laughed.

In spite of Buffy’s promise that no liquor would be drunk at her birthday party, it was available. One of the boys generated a huge laugh among the other boys when they went in the bathroom and gingerly untied a condom bound to his leg. Poured into two glasses, it contained more than half a pint of vodka.

Vodka was the liquor of choice, because it would not be on the young people’s breath when they went home. Besides the half pint delivered in the stretched condom, other half pints arrived in flasks and other concealable bottles. The liquor went into Cokes and ginger ale. A little of it was tossed back straight.

John had never tried it before but, of course, was not going to refuse. Ken made sure his Coke got an especially heavy shot of vodka.

None of them refused it. None got drunk—they had not smuggled in enough to do that—but an hour after the party began every one was gently happy.

Some of the boys began a chant—“Tit-ies, tit-ies, tit-ies!”

It was a game. The boys went down to the cellar of the
carriage house, where lawn tools were now stored. The girls took off their sweaters, blouses, and bras. Each boy in turn was blindfolded and allowed to fumble his way up the stairs and into the game room. There one of the girls took his hand and led him to each of the others. He was allowed to feel the bare breasts of each girl and say who he thought she was.

All the boys identified Buffy. She was the most fully developed. John identified her, and she kissed him on the cheek. She was the only girl he identified. Some of the other boys had played this game before and had a sense of what some of the girls were like. Others went steady and knew very well the feel of their own girl’s breasts. Everyone laughed as each boy guessed.

Then another chant, this one from the girls. “Peck-er, peck-er, peck-er!”

The girls trooped to the cellar. The boys took off their pants and undershorts and stood around the pool table. Each blindfolded girl circled the table, giggling as she handled shafts and scrotums, blushing as she spoke a name.

Buffy lifted John’s erect shaft in her left hand and ran the fingers of her right hand over it. “This is John,” she whispered. All the boys applauded. She kissed him on the mouth before she returned to the cellar.

In the kitchen a little later, where they poured tiny amounts of vodka into their Cokes, she took his hand in hers and said, “I knew it was you. Okay. I’ve touched it. Now I want to see it.”

5

Buffy could not contain her excitement. On the telephone the next morning, she told all to her friend Linda Falstaff.

“Oh, God! You won’t
believe!
’”

“Are you telling me you…?”

“Jesus! Yes! And, hey! It was perfect! It was, like, more than I ever imagined! Oh, God, Lin!
Jesus!”

“How
could
you? I mean … the necessary privacy?”

“Luck is how. Goddamned luck! Hey! You ‘n’ me went to see
Prizzi’s Honor
last week. I touted it to my father and mother—hey, never dreaming that would get to be important. But I knew when it let out. I knew they wouldn’t be home before a quarter after eleven. And the moms and dads picked the kids up about ten. Your mom—”

“Old prompt-and-conscientious picked me up on the dot of ten.”

“Right. By a quarter after, nobody was left but John and me and Muffy. Mom had said she’d drive Muffy home, ‘cause her folks were in New York for a play last night. She was gonna drive John home, too. So we had an hour to—”

“But what’d Muffy do, sit and watch?”

“We poured her all the vodka that was left. She had a pack of smokes. She sat on the bench outside and drank and smoked. Besides giving us our privacy, she was our watchdog, just in case. Talk about a friend.”

“So what’d you guys do?”

“Well … you know. What we wanted to do.”

“Buffy Mead, if you don’t tell me every detail, we’re not friends anymore. We’ve had a deal for a long time. Right? The first one would tell the other one every last detail, so the other one would have the benefit of the experience. So it turns out—”

“Okay!
You couldn’t
keep
me from telling you.”

“So. So how’d it go?”

“I’m gonna admit something. I mean … faced with it, I mean really, I kinda chickened. And, hey! So did he. We both said, we don’t really
have
to. He said I didn’t have to. I asked him if he really wanted to, and he said yes. Well … that’d have made me a cockteaser, if I’d backed down. So I said, hey—and we did it.”

“Stop there and I’ll kill you!”

“Well … okay, we had to take off our clothes, of course. And we did that. And then we kissed. And he played a little bit with my boobies. But … you won’t believe this … he was kind of soft. I mean, it wasn’t the way it was when I grabbed it during the game. I was glad. He was a little afraid, the way I was. So I took it in my hands and rubbed
it against my belly, and it got big and hard again, right off.”

“I’ve touched them in the game. Would you believe I’ve never
seen
one?”

“Lin, the thing is
beautiful
! I mean, it’s the total symbol of male power! We tried it on the couch. Not enough room. So I climbed up on the pool table, and he climbed up on the pool table, and … well … you know.”

“Yes, I know. But tell me!”

“Well … Lin … it’s not as easy as you might think. I spread my legs, and he got on top of me and started to shove himself in, and … well, it wasn’t easy. I was too tight for him. And then he went limp again. I used my hands to get him up, and he tried again. It … okay, I got up and bent down on him and spit on him, to make him slipperier. Then it worked. Then he got in. And then … God, Lin, it was heaven! I mean, he shoved it in
so hard
and
so deep!”

Other books

Midnight Dolphin by James Carmody
The Modern Fae's Guide to Surviving Humanity by Joshua Palmatier, Patricia Bray
The Last One by Tawdra Kandle
Suckerpunch by David Hernandez
The Light and the Dark by Shishkin, Mikhail
The Erotic Dark by Nina Lane
Love, Me by Tiffany White
The Book Club by Maureen Mullis
Dreaming of Antigone by Robin Bridges
Camp Forget-Me-Not by J. K. Rock