The Sex Sphere (15 page)

Read The Sex Sphere Online

Authors: Rudy Rucker

Tags: #Fiction, #Science Fiction, #General, #Adventure

“Come on, Virgilio,” she hissed. “Let me on top.”

“I can’t move,” he moaned. “My leg hurts too much.”

The red-haired German boy, Peter Roth, had tied a rag around Virgilio’s wound, a simple in-out bullet-hole in the right calf. There hadn’t even been much bleeding, and at first Virgilio had seemed to be recovering. He’d certainly been as ready as Sybil for their little mondo-bondage sexhibition. But now he was weak and whimpering.
Basically, women are much stronger than men
, Sybil thought to herself. She jerked her left leg sharply.

“Don’t,” Virgilio begged. “Don’t move!”

Sybil jerked her leg again. “Let me on top.”


Malditti Americana putana!
” Hissing with histrionic pain, he rolled over, away from his bad leg. Sybil rolled with him. It felt much better on top, like lying on a bear-rug. She planted a kiss on Virgilio’s tense mouth. Somewhere outside a bullhorn boomed. In the room next door, Beatrice shouted a hoarse response.

“What are they saying now, Virgilio?”

“They’ve brought in a professional negotiator. He’s trying to win Green Death’s confidence. He tells them they are very clever to have assembled an atomic bomb. But he is offering nothing but a fair trial.”

Virgilio wriggled beneath Sybil, trying to get comfortable. “Move your foot up,
cara
.”

Sybil drew her leg up, lessening the pressure on Virgilio’s wound. “Is that better, you poor darling?” Now that she was on top she could afford to be sympathetic. Drawing up her leg had pressed their privates together. It still felt good. She kissed Virgilio, then pushed her tongue into his mouth. His strong shaft stiffened against her. She rocked her hips, feeling blindly for his tip. This was crazy. They were making their own pheromones now.

Virgilio moaned, though not in pain, and shrugged himself down a bit. Sybil bore down, engulfing his strength in one smooth motion. Doing this made her wonder again what had happened to Alwin. He’d jumped in the giant ass, and it had shrunk to a little ball. The ball was in her purse. And where was the purse? The terrorists had taken it along with their clothes when they moved to a different room, a central room with only one window. In there they were yelling into the night, and in here Sybil and Virgilio were naked and all alone.

While all these thoughts passed through her head, Sybil kept gently jouncing, being careful not to jar Virgilio’s wounded leg. She let her face slide down to rest in the hollow of his neck. This felt
so good
. She was bad to have started at all—she should have fought Virgilio off—but right now it was still fun. The guilt would come later. Sybil wondered what had come over her to let Virgilio fuck her next to “The Rape of Persephone.” She’d always heard that the imminence of death makes you horny. Or maybe that sex sphere had something to do with it. Virgilio was coming now, she could feel the twitching of his penis and the distant gush of seed. She pressed against him and came as well. Sweet sex, sweet fuck, sweet cock and cunt.

The noises around them came filtering back in. Beatrice was screaming in Italian, her voice rough and cracked. Sybil raised her head, trying hard to understand.

“What’s going on?”

“She asks,” Virgilio paused, listening, “she asks that an armored car come for them to drive to the airport. She wants to fly to Libya with ten million dollars and the bomb.” Beatrice’s voice ranted on, rhythmic and musical. “She wants all the imprisoned
Brigate Rosse
terrorists released with her. Also Mehmet Agca.”

“Who’s he?”

“Don’t you remember? The man who shot the Pope. She’s crazy.”

“But what if she sets off the bomb?”

“I think she wants to. It’s a shame I have to deal with such people.” Virgilio seemed relaxed and comfortable again. Sex as anaesthetic. “Madmen and terrorists. I just try to make a little money for my family.”

“You’re married?” Sybil felt an unreasonable stab of jealousy. Tied up naked here she felt she could say anything. “Do I fuck better than her?”

Virgilio shrugged beneath her. His limp penis slid out. “
E possibile
. But where is your husband? What happened to him?”

“That big sphere of skin,” Sybil said. “It must have something to do with what the TV said about Lafcadio Caron. A spacewarp or something. Supermatter. Alwin jumped in. Maybe he saw the bomb dropping.” Not knowing whether he was dead or only hiding, Sybil couldn’t decide how to feel about Alwin’s disappearance. He’d deserted her in the face of danger, hadn’t he? And been unfaithful to her with garter-belt Giulia. Somehow the memories of Alwin seemed so unreal—like remembering a dream. Virgilio was no hallucination—that was for sure. Some boyfriend, a professional kidnapper. Sybil’s train of thought was interrupted by more cries from Beatrice.

“She sets a deadline,” Virgilio whispered. “One half hour. But the police are stalling. I don’t think they will give in.”

“Oh, Lord,” Sybil moaned. “We’ve
got
to get out of here. I don’t want to die. Come on, damn you. Stand up.”

She rolled them over onto Virgilio’s good side and drew that leg up. Then, hopping a bit and pressing their hands against the floor, they rose. Virgilio’s clenched teeth were a white grid in the dark of his face.

“Good boy,” Sybil murmured. “Now let’s go downstairs and surrender to the police.”

Their wrists and ankles were still bound together. A single tight strip of cloth encircled their waists. The two-backed beast. Now that they were standing, it was quite easy to move. They eased out of the wood-floored room, out into the marble hall.

The staircase was at the other end of the hall. They shuffled lightly along, then paused by the door of the room holding Peter, Giulia and Beatrice. Should they just dart past and hope for the best? With agonizing slowness, Sybil eased one eye past the door frame and peered in. The three were glued gangster-style to the far wall.

Beatrice held the bomb and stood on one side of the window. Giulia stood on the other side, holding an Uzi and half-facing the door. Peter slouched on the floor. Beatrice was berating him in English.

“Why didn’t the cocksucking bomb go off? I fucking
wanted
it to when I shot that wop bastard Virgilio. Don’t tell me I got plutonium poisoning just for a shitass dud!” She coughed hoarsely. “I can already feel it. My lungs are going.”

“Alwin panicked us for his own purposes,” mused Peter. “The Styrofoam is in fact so rigid that the force of a conventional explosive is needed to sufficiently compress the device.”

“The pigs are ready to charge and I’m sittin’ here with a fuckin’ dud.” Beatrice spat on the floor. “Look at that
blood
, Peter. Help me out, baby.”

The bullhorn shouted, and Giulia shouted back. More silence, then a sudden crash as Beatrice threw the bomb across the room. Sybil snapped her head back and Virgilio took a jerky step away from the door.

But, again, there was no blast. Just the gongy
roing-roing-roing
of the steel mixing bowls rolling around.

“Look out,” cried Peter. “You’ve split the seam.”

“That’s what I wanted,” grated Beatrice. “I’m gonna play the cymbals, man. I’m ready to rock and roll. I’m gonna get out those pieces of plutonium and…”

“Giulia! Help me grab her!”

Sybil and Virgilio spidered past the door. Glancing sideways, Sybil thought she saw Beatrice wrestling Giulia’s gun away from her. But then they were scuttling crab-style down the stairs, Virgilio giving a little grunt of pain with each step.

There was a burst of machine-gun fire and a scream. Giulia. Peter was yelling, loud and louder. Another burst of gunfire and he fell silent.

“Quick,” Sybil hissed. “Let’s go outside.”

“No!” Virgilio’s voice was sharp. “We go out, they grab us, the bomb goes off, we die. Or it doesn’t…and I go to jail. No! Come this way.”

He waltzed Sybil around to a door set under the staircase. “Down here!”

“Hide in the basement from an atomic bomb?” Sybil had trouble keeping her voice down. “Are you crazy?”


Lágrimas de Cristo!
There’s a tunnel, you dog-bitch, a tunnel to the zoo. I
know
this.”

Sibyl struggled for a second, then gave in. Virgilio was too strong to drag out the front door. She could hear Beatrice banging metal upstairs. As one wo/man, Sybil and Virgilio hurried down the basement steps.

Set into the stone of the basement wall was a steel door, just as Virgilio had promised. He raised his hands and did something to the latch. Then they were dragging the door open, rusty metal scraping stone. There was total dead blackness in there.

Spiders
, thought Sybil,
broken glass, oubliettes
. “I don’t want to go in there, Virgilio.”

He didn’t bother to answer. There was no alternative, and she knew it. They tangoed on in. As the meters of close darkness bumped past, there was nothing to occupy Sybil’s mind but images of what Beatrice might be doing with the bomb.

***

There’s blood all over the marble floor. In the dark, everything’s black-and-white. Black puddles, white floor, gray flesh-tones.

Giulia: slouched just under the window, disabled by a shattered femur. Her long-fingered hands clutch to stanch the spurting blood. Her eyes are big and shiny, her mouth is straight. Her Uzi rests by the door, well out of reach.

Peter: twisted into a rag-shape no living body takes, dead in the middle of the room. His mouth and chin are gone to black smash.

Beatrice is on all fours, crawling around the room. Her hair hangs over her eyes. You see only her mantis chin, her feral mouth. Dark blood on her lips, the lips moving, crooning disconnected lyrics to unheard neo-rock.

She has the steel mixing bowls, and is slamming one on the floor.

“In the time of the flood.”
Fwuuunmmmp
.

“Dead mountain of God.”
Whannng
.

“Sweep broken angels in a seedbed cloud.”
Plumpp
.

She lifts up the loose hemisphere of plutonium, holds it high with cupped hands. Her chalice. Touches black lips to it, coughs, starts pounding the other mixing bowl.

“Suddenly inside a mirror.”
Blannk
.

“The priestess merry with intrigue.”
Fwuunnng
.

“The rooster shrieks my midnight.”
Plampp
.

Both chunks of plutonium are free now, and she holds one in each hand, weighing them like Blind Justice. In the background, Giulia watches, empty, black-and-white. There are clothes next to her, Sybil’s purse on top. The purse eases open like a stealthy clam. Inside we glimpse a gleam of happy Babs.

The bullhorn outside is talking, sounding a little nervous now, after the gunfire and the silence. “
Bay-ah-tree-chay!
” beseeches the bloated voice. “
Arriva l’ autoblinda!
” They’ve brought that armored car too late.

Beatrice is kneeling now, kneeling over her dead lover, with half an A-bomb in each hand. Her eyes meet Giulia’s for an instant. Yes. A tiny nod. Yes.

Beatrice’s hands rise slowly up, accelerate into a sweeping cymbal crash. Her graven face. White light: the film burns through.

***

Sybil
felt
the blast rather than heard it, felt it with her whole body. It seemed to go on for a very long time. Part of the noise was the tunnel behind them collapsing. The air they breathed grew thick and dusty. Sybil coughed and laughed and cried. She could barely remember that man Alwin’s name.


Avanti
,” urged Virgilio. “I tell you this tunnel comes out at the zoo. It’s not much further.”

Loose rocks had slid down from the tunnel walls in several places. Blindly they stumbled along, gritting their teeth to filter out dust. And then finally there was a door. Their mated hands…her left, his right…dragged it open. Up a flight of stairs, unlatch another door, step out.

Sirens and police-horns were sounding everywhere. Looking over the zoo buildings, Sybil could make out a small mushroom cloud. It glowed light X-ray purple. Its underside was red-orange, lit by the fires the blast had set.

Something nudged Sybil in the thigh. A penguin. They’d stepped out into the penguin pit. The calm short birds crowded up to them, turning their heads this way and that. There was a strand of barbed wire along one wall of the pit. Sybil and Virgilio used it to saw through the wrist ropes, and then they untied the other bonds. Finally they stood there, free and naked beneath the stars.

“We’d better get out of here,” Sybil said after a while, gently disengaging Virgilio’s arm from her waist. “There’ll be fallout.”


The Rape of Persephone
,” Virgilio said, shaking his head. “Blasted to radioactive dust.”

“And all those poor police.”


E vero
.”

One of the feathered little gents chanced a peck at Sybil’s hand. “Shoo,” she said. Somehow the bird reminded her of Tom in a baseball cap. Same height.

“Good-bye, Virgilio.”

“Good-bye. But we see each other again,
eh?

“I don’t know yet. I’ll be at the Savoy, under Burton.”

“Burton?”

“My last name.”

They kissed almost tenderly, then helped each other out of the pit. One of the penguins aaaawrked
arrivederci
.

“This way,” said Virgilio. “I know the man at the front gate. He can give you clothes.”

“And you.”

They walked through the park, the zoological garden, naked in the strangely warm night. Sybil had an unreal, larger-than-life feeling…as if she were a person in a book.

In the magic of the moment, Virgilio divined her sentiments and said, “We are a painting come to life. The dust has settled.”

Sybil could feel the truth of this. The soul of some placid Dark Ages Eden scene, A-bombed into energy, was passing through.

And then they were at the gates. Behind them frightened animals roared. Virgilio hammered at the guardhouse door. No answer. He kicked the door once, twice, thrice, then stopped to nurse his battered foot. The door swung open.

At first Sybil was relieved…she’d begun to fear the guard was dead. But then the light hit the guard’s face. Burned blind. Virgilio asked a rapid question, the man croaked something back.

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