Authors: Nell Zink
Penny tries hard to think. Her mother's words seem to lower the bar an awful lot, calling Matt normal because war criminals are bad. She wonders if this is an insight into anything but her own mind. “But you did love Matt, when you were young,” she insists.
“I was horny like a worm!”
The words carry an echo of a blanket condemnation of sexâthough this resonance, too, might not be in the words at all, but only in her mindâand she goes on the defensive: “What's so wrong with that?”
“You want to sleep with a worm? A squirmy worm, squirming around? Or a man who loves you?”
Penny frowns. She shakes her head. She opens the refrigerator and changes the subject to the immediate desirability of BLTs.
She slices some tomatoes, very thin.
JAZZ STANDS ON THE TERRACE
of Matt's apartment in the early evening, wearing her fetish heels and a garter belt. A breeze from the Hudson wafts her hair up and down and into her eyes and mouth (it is on the nineteenth floor, and the wind tends to hit the building and swirl) as she smokes. “Hey, Jazz, I want to try something,” Matt says.
She looks inside. He is lying on his back on the couch wearing a blue morph suit, the 3-D headset, and a blue condom. His laptop, open on the coffee table, faces his crotch.
“You look ultra-pervy,” Jazz says.
“I took a Viagra to match my outfit. Sit on my dick.”
“And what will you see?”
“You, on my dick.”
“With what background?”
“Secret.”
She sits on his dick and transfersâshe doesn't hesitate, and Matt doesn't resistâthe headset from his head to her own. She sees herself sitting astride a black, scaly monster. The odd perspective makes her lose her balance. She dismounts briefly, exposing the cruelly barbed end of its outsize penis. “What
are
you?” she says. “Priapus the pangolin?”
“You don't like scales?” Sitting upright, he turns the laptop so that she sees the monster's headâroughly that of a wolverineâwhile he makes some adjustments. The scales vanish.
“Give yourself better fur,” she suggests. “Glossy, like a mink.”
“Why not,” he says. “I like you in that mask.”
“Is there a camera on the headset?”
“Not on this model. Should I get the one with a camera?”
“I don't know,” she says, fucking him. “It strikes me as sort ofâa noveltyâitemâunh.” The giant weasel's arm enters the frame. Matt adjusts something, and it turns into the black, scaly monster. His hands press on her ears. She sees its jagged penis tearing her skin and its pelvis drenched in her blood. She closes her eyes, and Matt turns on the soundâpiercing screams. She pushes upward on his forearms. She rips at his fingers. She can't take off the earphones. Opening her eyes, she tries to slap the monster in the face and misses, blinded by the headset, her equilibrium gone.
She fumbles with one hand on the coffee table and slams the laptop shut.
Matt pulls the headset off her and drops it on the carpet. She shakes her hair loose and looks down. Though obscured by the morph suit, entirely blue, he appears relaxed. Amused.
In her mind, she senses absolute self-control. In her body, she tries to exhale and can't. Her lungs quiver like they need a defibrillator. She feels palsied.
To him, she looks harrowed. It's a good look, he thinks. Suits her. The look of impaled protoplasm, and he's not even close to done. “Need a break?” he says.
He lets her stand up and walk to the balcony. Her eyes are wide. She grasps the railing in both hands and puts one foot up on a planter.
He sees what she's up to and makes a lightning three-point landing. Before she can jump, he is inside her again, his dick pushing her into his arms. She fights and struggles to get away, over the railing, but he won't let her go.
She'd rather die? Fine, let her try. He knows that would be the wrong choice, and he won't let her make it. His body and his conscience are one person. It's a kind of sex he has never known. Sex as a life-giving actâthe higher, spiritual sexuality priests and rabbis are always talking about. The kind he never believed existed. He thinks back on the scene with the gun, when he thought there might be nothing hotter than killing, and he feels like Saul on the road to Damascus. He was so wrong. Life is hot. Death is not. He saves her life because he needs her alive so he can save her again. The rescue operation is as circular as breathing air so he can live to breathe more air. Pure, self-motivated ethical action. The categorical imperative. Virtue as its own reward. Love that gives life that gives love. The cosmic snake, nourished by its own tail.
By the time two minutes have passed, he can't imagine life without it. He pulls her back inside the apartment where she is safe.
As they cross the threshold she relaxes suddenly, falling against him with a high moan, and the sound and the motion combined are too much for him. He comes so much the condom is awash in fluid. It caresses him like a soft-lipped mouth, high inside her body.
He imagines what it might feel like to get her pregnant. He holds that power. He could give her a life beyond her own. Or even several. He could give her descendants like the sands of the seashore.
“I'm breaking up with you,” she says after her shower.
“No, you're not!” he says. “Are you crazy?”
MATT DROPS JAZZ OFF IN
front of Nicotine. She runs up the stairs, opens her door, throws herself facedown on the bed, and sobs. It is 10:00
P.M.
Rob hears her crying. He puts down Jean Cocteau and peeks out the storm door. He puts on his striped summer bathrobe and crosses to her room. “Jazz,” he says.
“I'm such a moron. Why am I a moron?”
“You need to ask me a question that means something.”
“Why was I fucking Matt?”
“Did I just hear past tense?” He sits down and puts his hand on her back. “Did something happen?”
She turns over and says, “Please stay here for a minute. Lie next to me, like you did at DJD. Stay with me.” He lies down, and she stares into his eyes. “Rob,” she says, holding his head between her hands. She lowers her hands, turns her face downward into the pillow, and cries.
“What the fuck happened?”
“It's hard to explain. But it was
wrong
. It was just
wrong
. The kind of thing, when somebody does it, you know he's not right.”
Rob puts his arms around her and hugs her tight. “It's okay. It's over, and you'll forget it soon.”
“I thought I was so hard-core.”
“No way! Not you. You're the sweetest girl I ever knew.”
“And I'm turning you on.”
“Yeah,” he says, backing away.
“Don't go. Stay. Make love to me, Robby.”
He backs farther away and sits upright. “That's not a very nice thing to say! I'm too small to âfuck' you like everybody else, but I can still âmake love'? Should I blindfold you first?”
Hiding her face, Jazz returns to crying.
“Don't cry!”
“Then don't hurt me that way,” she says. “Don't turn me into an evil creature that can only fuck. That fucks people and doesn't love them.”
“I didn't do that. Nobody could ever do that.”
He lies down again and embraces her. He is immediately hard, in his small way. She smiles, nuzzling her crooked nose into his bathrobe. They kiss each other. He looks around. “Where do you keep condoms?” he asks. “I don't have anyâ”
“Don't use one. Make love to me. I'm too skinny to ovulate, and you've never had sex before in your life, so who cares? I want to feel you, your skin and warmth, you know? Not to be poked with a medical device. I am sick to death of being poked with safety equipmentâusing lube so I can pretend I'm turned on enough to want to be poked with safety equipmentâdoing scenes and fantasies and role-playing to distract myself from the reality that I'm being poked with safety equipment!”
“You're outraged,” he says. He hugs her again. He embraces her shoulders, her ass, her waist. He kisses her hesitantly and is soon short of breath. He trembles, and his heart races. She makes herself small, cuddling into his arms. They peel the underwear from each other's rear ends, pull it to knee-level with their hands, and push it the rest of the way down with their feet.
Saying, “I can't believe this is happening,” he kisses her and touches his bare penis to her vagina.
“Are you inside?” she asks.
He laughs and goes inside.
THAT NIGHT, MATT SUFFERS FROM
insomniaâthe sort of insomnia that saves a man's life.
He is worrying intensely about a woman who wants nothing to do with him, and the more he worries, the more he feels he has a right to worry. That's how love works. It grabs and takes and snowballs, an emotional ambition, and it's nowhere more at home than in hell. He calls her over and over, but her phone is turned off, and of course it is, because she made him promise never to contact her again. But that doesn't mean she won't contact him, right? He thinks about having an Ambien and a nightcap, but he doesn't want to sleep. He wants his phone to make a sound that will be Jazz, saying she needs him.
It's so quiet. The city that never sleeps makes its accustomed
whooshing sound on the other side of the Hudson. Fort Lee hangs suspended above it, a concrete hammock filled with sweaty snorers. No sound but predawn traffic on the bridge and tunnel approaches, crows cawing, little babies. He gets up and dressed and behind the wheel of his car, where falling asleep would be life-threatening. So it's a good thing he has insomnia.
He wants the city. He crosses the George Washington Bridge and drives down the West Side toward a strip club where he knows a hostess. He used to think she was wild. He breezes past it and makes a left on Twenty-Third, toward his estranged girlfriend's dorm at NYU. He thinks of fucking her dull face while she fingers the pink vibrator in her rump and turns south again to take the Holland Tunnel to Bayonne. Why not just go to work? It's four. The sky is getting light. The birds will be singing.
When he gets out of the tunnel, he finds he still has options. He keeps making choices. Negative ones. He says no to everything. No coffee, no diner, no impulse trip to Vermont. The car wheels in great arcs, like a hawk marking its territory. Then it lands.
MATT KICKS IN THE FRONT
door of Nicotine.
He knows the quiet click the latch makes when it closes, so he is unsurprised to find that it breaks easily. The only sound is the splintering of the doorframe to a distance of about two feet above and below the latch.
Sorry wakes up. She hears footsteps charging up the stairs and shouts, “Hey! There's somebody in the house!” Anka yawns, turns over, opens her eyes, and dials 911. Holding an empty wine bottle in one hand, Tony peers into the hallway. But Matt is faster, already sprinting up the last flight.
He strides across the roof and opens Jazz's door. Rob stands up to face him, naked. A downy golden body, a mass of fluffy pubic hair
like a hippie girl. That's not what he expected to see. He opens his mouth to say something, bends his knees, and punches Rob hard in the stomach.
Rob falls down. Matt kicks him once near the groin. He picks up Jazz's armchair, places it with one leg near Rob's navel, and kneels on it.
Rob is too weakened to scream. He can barely breathe. The chair leg does not perforate his abdominal wall, instead sliding along it as he turns. At waist level next to his torso, it tugs the skin of his front down to meet the skin of his back. It looks as though it might punch a hole.
Matt kneels and bounces. It's as though he were righteously killing a vicious animal with no feelings, but it's Rob.
Finally Jazz, on her knees in front of her bookshelf, finds the handgun on the floor where it fell down last time she hid it behind the books. “Matt,” she says to get his attention. “Matt.”
He looks up and sees her. She is not cowering anymore. She is naked and barefoot, just like Rob. He has never seen her naked. This realization really, really, seriously pisses him off.
He stands up, kicks Rob once in the ribs, and moves toward her. She wiggles the gun to make him notice it.
Tony, standing behind Matt with the wine bottle, also notices the gun. Jazz gives him this look like maybe he's in her way, and he turns and runs down the stairs. Matt follows him. Jazz, too. A breathless scuffling and running down the slippery wooden staircase ensues, with no shots fired. Past Anka, now barricaded in her room (because Tony screamed, “She's got a gun!”) on hold with 911, and down to the second floor where Sorry stands in the hallway with her hand on her doorknob, unsure what to do. Tony pushes her inside her room, joins her, and locks the double doors on them both.
With no one left in front of him, Matt turns to face Jazz.
He knows that look. He saw it earlier, when she was about to jump. Except now she is pointing a gun at his nose.
“Let's get out of here and fuck,” he says. “I want you every day for the rest of my life. Marry me.”
She takes a step toward him, closing her eyes instinctively to protect them from the spray of meat and bone.
He sees two alternatives. He can turn and run down the stairs while she is free to take aim at his back. Or he can test the obvious assumption that the door next to him opens on a space with at least one window to the roof of the porch.
He pushes open the door opposite Sorry's and ducks into the bucket monster's room.
Jazz is close behind him. He misses his chance to close the door. She stands in the doorway. He turns and crouches the way he did before he punched Rob. He believes he is going to charge her and knock her down. He believes she will not pull the trigger.
She picks a low bucket on an outside row and fires. The bullet scars the rubber and digs a small hole in the plaster.