"Flesh And Blood" - читать интересную книгу автора (Kellerman Jonathan)CHAPTER 2THE SECOND TIME she was twenty minutes late, hurried into the office muttering what might have been an apology. Same getup, different color scheme: black tank top, sunburn pink shorts, lips coarsened by bright red paste. Same precarious sandals and cheap little purse. She reeked of tobacco and a rose-heavy perfume. Her cheeks were flushed, and her hair was mussed. She took a long time settling in the chair, finally said, “Got hung up.” “You and your friends?” “Yeah.” Hair flip. “Sorry.” “Hung up where?” “Around… the pier.” “Santa Monica?” I said. “We like the beach.” She massaged one bare, bronze shoulder. “Nice sunny day,” I said, smiling. “Classes must have let out early.” Sudden, bright laughter tumbled from between the crimson lips. “Right.” “School’s a drag, huh?” “School would have to be on “No interest in any subject?” I said. “Nutrition – love that garlic bread. Is today when we talk about sex?” That caught me off guard. “I don’t recall our scheduling that.” “ “By your parents?” “Yeah.” “Why?” “It’s mostly Lyle’s idea. He’s positive I’m doing the dirty, gonna get pregnant, stick him with a ‘little nigger grandkid.’ Like if I “Sometimes talking to an outsider can be safer.” “Maybe for some people,” she said. “But explain me this: When you’re young everyone’s always knocking into your head never talk to She ran a fingernail under the seal of the pack, slit it open, played with the foil flap. “What bullshit.” “Maybe they’re hoping eventually you won’t consider me a stranger.” “They can hope all they want.” Low, tight laugh. “Hey, I’m not trying to be rude, it’s just coming out that way – Sorry, you seem like a nice guy. It’s just that I shouldn’t have to “What are they punishing you for, Lauren?” “They say it’s my attitude,” she said, “but you know what I think? I think they’re jealous.” “Of what?” “My happiness.” “You’re happy and they’re not.” “They’re making themselves out to be all… in control. Especially Last week she’d talked about spitting out secrets. The emetic approach to insight. “So,” I said, “your parents aren’t happy, they’re taking it out on you, and I’m the weapon.” “They’re stuck where they are and I’m cool, free, enjoying my life, and that bugs them. Soon as I get my own money, I’m out of there, bye-bye, Lyle and Jane.” “Do you have a plan to get money?” She shrugged. “I’ll figure something out – I’m not talking right now. I’m not impractical, I know even McDonald’s won’t hire me without “Did you try to work at McDonald’s?” Nod. “I wanted my own money. But “Why won’t your grades come up?” I said. “’Cause I don’t want them to.” “So it’s a few more years of this.” Her eyes shifted. “I’ll figure something out – Listen, forget sex. I don’t want to talk to you about it. Or anything else. No offense, but I just don’t want to spill my guts.” “Okay.” “Okay, great.” She shot to her feet. “See you next week.” Ten minutes to go. I said, “No way you can stick it out?” “Are you going to tell them I split early?” “No, but-” “Thanks,” she said. “No, I really “It’s only ten minutes.” “Ten minutes too long.” “Give it a chance, Lauren. We don’t have to talk about your problems.” “What, then?” “Tell me about your interests.” “I’m interested in the beach,” she said. “Okay? I’m interested in freedom – which is exactly what I need right now. Next week I’ll be good – I mean it.” “I’ve gotta get out of here.” “Sure,” I said. “Take care.” Big smile. Hair flip. “You’re a doll.” Swinging the purse like a slingshot, she hurried out. I caught up with her in the waiting room, just as she whipped out her lighter. Jamming the cigarette in her mouth, she shoved at the door. I watched her trot down the hall, a girl in a hurry, haloed by a cloud of smoke. I thought about her a few times – the image of self-destructive escape. Then that faded too. Six years later I was invited to a bachelor party the weekend before Halloween. A forty-five-year-old radiation oncologist at Western Pediatrics was getting married to an O.R. nurse, and a consortium of hospital physicians and administrators had rented the presidential suite of the Beverly Monarch Hotel for the send-off. Steaks, ribs, buffalo wings, assorted fried and grilled stuff on the buffet. Iced tubs of beer, serve-yourself bar, Cuban cigars, gooey desserts. My contact with the honoree – a mumbling loner lacking in social skills – had been a few stiff, unproductive discussions about patient care, and I wondered why I’d been included in the festivities. Perhaps every face helped. There was no shortage of faces when I arrived late. The suite was vast, a string of mood-lit, black-carpeted rooms packed with sweaty men. Penthouse level – no doubt a great view – but the drapes were drawn and the air felt heavy. Suit jackets and neckties were heaped on a sofa near the door under a hand-lettered sign that said, GET CASUAL! I made my way through testosterone guffaws, random backslapping, blue cigar fog, the strained glee of boozy toasts. A crowd swarmed the food. I finally got close enough to redeem a skewer of teriyaki beef and a Grolsch. Belched cheers and scattered applause from the next room drew me to a larger throng. I drifted over, found scores of eyes trained forward on the hundred-inch projection TV the hotel provided for presidents. Skin flicks flashing larger than life. Bodies squishing and squirming and slapping in time to an asthmatic sax score. The men around me gaped and pretended to be casual. I wandered away, got more food, stood to the side, chewing and wondering what the hell I was doing there, why I just didn’t wipe my mouth and leave. A pathologist I knew sauntered by with a whiskey in his hand. “Hey,” he said, eyeing the screen. “Aren’t you the guy who’s supposed to explain why we do this?” “You’ve obviously mistaken me for an anthropologist.” He chuckled. “More like paleontologist. I’ll bet cavemen painted dirty pictures. How about we videotape this and show it at Grand Rounds?” “Better yet,” I said, “at the next gala fund-raiser.” “Right. Ten-inch cocks and wet pussies – better have oxygen ready for Mrs. Prince and all the other biddies.” A roar from the wide-screen crowd made both our heads swivel. Then a sharp peal – flatware on glass, shouts for quiet, and the vocal buzz faded out, isolating the A thickset, ruddy man holding a nearly full beer mug – a financial officer named Beckwith – stepped into the space between the two front rooms. His eyeglasses had slid down his meaty nose, and when he righted them beer splashed and foamed on the carpet. “Go, Jim!” someone shouted. “Get a neuro workup, Jim!” “That’s why pencil pushers can’t be surgeons!” Beckwith staggered a bit and grinned. “Here, here, gentlemen – and I Cheers, hoots, nudges, bottoms up. “ Beckwith rubbed his eyes and his nose, gave a one-armed salute, splashed more beer. “Since all of us are such serious, no-nonsense citizens – since we’d never dream of abandoning God and spouses and country and moral obligation except for the No sign of the groom. Beckwith cupped his hands into a megaphone. “Paging Dr. Deathray! Dr. Deathray to center stage, Chants of Then: Thunderous ovation as the crowd rippled and Phil Harnsberger, clutching a martini glass, was expelled from its midst and shoved next to Beckwith. Balding and normally pallid, with a pink-red mustache demeaning his upper lip, the radiotherapist was flushed incandescent. His smile was a paranoid smear, and he seemed on the verge of tipping over. He had on a black T-shirt so grossly oversized that it skirted past the knees of his slacks. A yellow cartoon silk-screened across the front portrayed a hefty, leering bride gripping a leash that tethered a pint-sized groom prostrate before a hanging judge and looming scaffold. A bold legend protested: I Dint Kill No One, Yer Honor, So Why the Life Sentence? Beckwith slapped Harnsberger on the back. Harnsberger flinched and tried to down some martini. Most of the liquid ended up on his chin, and he wiped himself with his sleeve. “Sterile procedure!” someone shouted. “Call the fucking JCAH!” “Fucking germ culture – stat!” Beckwith slapped Harnsberger again. Harnsberger labored at smiling. “Hey, Phil, hey, old guy – and I Whoops from the crowd. Harnsberger smiled but hung his head. “Phil,” said Beckwith, “you may be pathetic, but Silence. “Termina Harnsberger muttered, “Sure, Jim-” “You know what?” said Beckwith. “You love me.” Beckwith backed away. “Not so fast, Lone Ranger!” To the crowd: “Don’t ask, don’t tell is okay for those fruits in the Navy, but maybe someone should inform the Harnsberger flushed. Wild laughter. Beckwith closed back in on his target, going nose to nose. “Seriously, Phil, you’re “Oh, yes, absolutely-” Beckwith reached around and delivered yet another backslap, hard enough to cause Harnsberger to drop the martini glass. Beckwith crushed the glass underfoot, ground the shards into the carpet. “Like the Jews say, mazel tav – happy batch-day, Phil. Sure hope you’re enjoying your last meal – er, last rites. Grub to your satisfaction?” Harnsberger nodded. “Get enough to drink?” “Yes-” “’Cause none of us want you pissed off and beaming that Shouts of agreement. Harnsberger simpered. Beckwith said, “That’s also why none of us want to be around when you get the bill!” Momentary panic in Harnsberger’s eyes. Beckwith slapped him again. “Scared you there, huh, boy? Nah, don’t get your co- Peals of merriment. Beckwith took hold of Harnsberger’s arm. “And now, for the pièce de résistance, Phil. Pieces. So to speak – Sure you’ve eaten enough?” “I’m sure, Jim.” “Well…” Beckwith grinned. “Maybe not.” He flourished an arm. Nothing happened for a moment; then the lights dimmed and music surged from behind the giant TV. Warp-speed disco beat, louder than the porn score. The crowd parted, and two women in long black trench coats pranced into the clearing. As Beckwith slipped from view they positioned themselves on either side of Harnsberger. Young women – tall, shapely, coltish, stepping high on spiked heels. Wide-smiling – tossing the smiles as if dispensing candy – they rotated their hips, thrust their pelvises, made the exaggerated moves of trained dancers. Long mass of coal black hair on one girl. Her partner’s coif was white-blond, boy-short, gel-spiked. Synchronized butt shakes as they flanked Harnsberger, rubbed his neck, kissed his cheek, bumped his hips. A pair of tongues flicked the radiotherapist’s ears, now crimson. His face was polluted with arousal and fear. The girls stomped and shouted, stroked their crotches, pretended to go for Harnsberger’s fly, threw back their heads and pantomimed openmouthed laughter, began shoving him gently between them – back and forth, the way baby jackals play with a rabbit. The music took on even more speed. Off came the trench coats; the girls wore identical black leather bustiers, black thongs, garter belts, and fishnet stockings. Several beats of bump and grind. I stared along with everyone else, caught a side view of busty profiles, heard the girls whoop and laugh as they continued to tease Harnsberger. The black-haired girl tickled his chin, veneered herself against him, ran her hands over his head, messed his hair. The blonde took hold of his face, kissed him long and hard on the mouth as he tried to wriggle away, hands flying wildly. Suddenly he succumbed to the kiss, getting into it. He was reaching for the blonde’s rear when she shoved him away, did an athletic squat, danced back up to him, shook her head from side to side, peeled back a bustier cup and flashed a nipple, let the leather flip back up. The black-haired girl joined her for more crotch rubbing and prancing. Both bras teased down on cue, now shed and tossed to the crowd. Full, young breasts bobbled and rotated. The girls pinched their nipples hard, bent low, dropped to perfect splits, bounced up, danced wildly, played with their G-strings. Pointing at Harnsberger and moving in on him, but this time they guided him offstage and returned, just the two of them, holding hands. The G-strings popped, snapped back on firm, flat pubises. A bit more genital hide-and-seek, then the black-haired girl got down on all fours, rotated her buttocks, pulled at the blonde’s ankle. The blonde stood there, shaking her head no, pouting, feigning resistance. Hoarse screams of encouragement from the choir. Everyone In a flash both girls were naked but for garter belts and fishnets. The music slowed to languid sludge in a too-sweet key, and they began caressing each other, vamping, stroking, kissing, tongues lizarding. The black-haired girl sank to the carpet, lay on her back, arched her pelvis. The blonde shimmied between her partner’s legs, lowered to her knees, bowed her head prayerfully, grazed the dark girl’s abdomen with platinum spikes. Tonguing the dark girl’s navel. The dark girl writhed. The blond girl looked up, placed a finger on her lip, as if contemplating what to do next. A big-eyed travesty of innocence, holding out her hands as if seeking counsel from the crowd. The crowd cheered her on. She tilted her head back to the dark girl’s crotch, began to dip again, raised her face. Kneeling in place but not moving as the dark-haired girl, still bucking, took hold of her arm and urged her down. The blond girl studied the audience. Took in the entire room. Turning my way, giving me a full view of her face. Long, oval face beneath the silvery spikes. Pale eyes under plucked brows, dominant but perfectly proportioned cleft chin. Recognition was a splinter in my chest. Hers too. The slyness dropped off her face, replaced by… a queasy smile. She stared at me, and her head froze above the black-haired girl’s writhing hips. I thought I saw her give the faintest headshake – denying something? The music oozed on. The black-haired girl kept gyrating, started to realize something was off. Made a grab for Lauren’s head. Lauren didn’t budge. Then she did. As she allowed herself to be dragged down, I escaped. |
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