Read You Deserve Nothing Online

Authors: Alexander Maksik

You Deserve Nothing (9 page)

I nodded.

“Actually, I thought it was you, you know? I mean when that man went forward I saw you, not him. I mean I saw you being hit by the train.”

This kid with his shaved head and his dark blue eyes. He bit his nails and looked from me to his coffee cup and back again. He was waiting for me to say something but I didn’t know what to tell him.

I hadn’t considered how close we’d been standing.

“It’s really messed up, Mr. Silver. But I’m glad it wasn’t you.”

I smiled at him.

“I wish I had something important to tell you, something that might explain but I’ve got nothing.”

“There is nothing.”

“You don’t think so?” I asked, looking at my hands, hearing the sound again and again.

Ça fait longtemps que vous attendez?

“No. I don’t think so. I don’t think so at all. I think it’s just the way it is. I agree with Sartre.”

“No God?”

“No God.”

“Not very cheery.”

“What, you believe in God, Mr. Silver?”

“I don’t know.”

That man in his fine coat crushed by the train.

“No,” I said. “I’m with you. You and Sartre.”

“I like your class, Mr. Silver. You know, I think maybe I’ve learned more in a month than I’ve ever learned anywhere.”

“That’s nice of you to say, Gilad. Thank you. You don’t talk much. It’s hard to tell.”

“Yeah, well I like it. I think somehow your class has made today make more sense. I understand better somehow. If you know what I mean.”

“Really? No, I don’t. I don’t know. I don’t understand it.”

“I guess I’ve stopped thinking that the world should make any sense. It stops you from being disappointed. You know when you’re always looking for some sort of logical explanation and stuff. I mean I haven’t believed in God for a long time, but even still, up until this year I’ve always believed that there was some, I don’t know, system, some kind of universal balance or something. Like, if I gave a certain amount I’d receive a certain amount. I guess, I don’t know, I’ve always believed I’d be rewarded in the end just for being good. Or no, not really, not even for being good, just for, I don’t know. Just for suffering.”

He looked embarrassed by this last sentence and waved his hand as if to erase it. “I don’t know, whatever.”

I nodded. “For suffering?”

“No, no forget it.”

“Tell me.”

“I don’t know, like the shit you go through. Whatever problems a person has. I guess I’ve always had this idea that if you endure it, you know? You handle yourself, take care of yourself, I don’t know, like just get through it without becoming a total asshole you get rewarded in the end.”

“By?”

“I don’t know, by the universe?”

I nodded, “And you don’t feel that way anymore?”

“No. It makes much more sense that you do what you can. I mean given what you’ve been given and then, then you just hope for the best. The whole idea that you deserve something, some kind of reward, I don’t know, it’s just. What am I? Ten? Come on, Mr. Silver.”

I liked Gilad. He seemed such a lonely kid. He rarely smiled and when he did it was cynical and accompanied by a knowing nod usually in response to a comment he found idiotic.

My heart had slowed and the waves of nausea had subsided, leaving me weak and cold. The sun shone through the front window of the café and the room became bright. I squinted and turned my head away. It was nearly noon. The two of us had been sitting there together for a long time, neither of us speaking.

I took a breath. Again I felt like I needed to tell him something. But as miserable as he looked I had nothing to offer.

 

* * *

 

That night I stayed late at La Palette and sat in the back corner near the window facing the open room. It wasn’t crowded, only a few couples and a group of girls laughing and drinking champagne. I ordered beer after beer from the white-bearded waiter who always called me
mon vieux
and shook my hand when I walked through the door. Eventually the girls stood up and left, taking with them whatever hope was left in the night.

I sat and waited for something to happen. And then, incredibly, wonderfully, it did. My phone vibrated with a message from Marie.
I’m close. Do I come over?

I waited pretending to contemplate the decision. And when it felt as if enough time had passed, I answered, paid the check, said good-bye, and walked home.

She came up the stairs and into the apartment. Long dark hair. Too much make-up. A tight black T-shirt. Short, pale-green skirt. She balanced awkwardly on a pair of high heels.

“Sit down.”

She drew out the chair and sat in it, placing her purse on the table.

“Does anyone know you’re here, Marie? Honestly.”

“No one.” She raised her eyes and met my gaze with a determined stare, a slight grin on her face.

I nodded. She smelled like cigarettes and alcohol. Something sweet. Her lips shone. I imagined her standing in the stairwell, carefully applying gloss. I looked at her but said nothing.

“Aren’t you cold?” She wrapped her arms around herself and shivered. She looked across the room at the open window. “Oh you can see the Eiffel Tower,” she said, standing and walking toward it.

I turned in my chair. She walked back slowly, looking around the room. “I love your place.”

“So why’d you come?”

“Why’d you tell me to come?”

“I was curious. Why’d you come?” I asked again.

She was nervous and walked to the long kitchen counter, leaned against it, her back to me.

Having her there calmed me. I felt suddenly in control. I could breathe.

“Do you like this, Marie?”

“Like what?” She asked turning from the counter.

“Showing me your body like you are, letting me watch you.”

She smiled. “You like my body?”

“I do.”

“What do you like?”

I looked at her facing me—arms spread out behind her, fingers on the countertop, her breasts full. I was absorbed by her body, all of it offered so certainly. And though I knew she was playing at seduction, I created her for myself, made her what I wanted.

“I’ll tell you precisely. Would you like that?”

She hopped up onto the counter, dangling her legs. “Yes,” she said.

I waited, studied her face, searched for some indication of fear. But there was only determination.

“I like the curve of your breasts, I like your ass, the way you move, as if wherever you’re going is the most important place you’ll ever go. I like your hair. I like your lips, how they’re full the way your breasts are. That’s what I like. Of what I’ve seen, anyway,” I said.

Her face had flushed, her cheeks made redder in the low light cast by the lamp on the dresser. She looked, before she raised her chin to speak, like a girl receiving praise from a proud parent. There were those wide pleading eyes and her face turned to me. I did my best to suppress my instinct to change course. But I felt the weight return softly to my chest, my heart began to pound and the clarity I’d felt minutes before was lost.

“I—” she said.

“Wait,” I told her, and walked into the bathroom. I closed the door. I stood above the toilet and took out my cock, which minutes before had begun to harden and was now flaccid in my hand. I pissed into the water and closed my eyes.

Finished, I stood in front of the sink and ducked the mirror.

I wet my hands with cold water and ran them over the back of my neck.

She was still sitting on the counter leaning slightly forward so that her hair fell across her face. I leaned against the open bathroom door.

“Do you know why I came here?”

I shook my head. She hopped from the counter and I felt the night slow and slow and slow until it looked as if Marie were flying, her arms propelling her outwards, her swinging legs bringing her toward me. I saw her hands leave the counter, her body arch through the air. She landed and I could breathe again. She looked me dead in the eyes and said, “You know why I came here, Mr. Silver? I came here to fuck you.”

I laughed but she didn’t flinch.

“I did,” she said. “That’s why I came here.” I smelled cigarettes and that sweetness like overripe apples. I raised my hand and slid my fingers into her hair. At the base of her skull it was soft, but as I moved outwards there was the hardness of hairspray. I took a step closer so that my lips were inches from hers. She was breathing quickly, her eyes shone with a steady determination, as if she were playing a character she couldn’t quite inhabit.

And we looked at each other, the two of us in a room, in a building, in a city in the world. I was far enough away to see us there. I took a deep breath and then her knee was between my legs, her arms around my neck.

She held on tightly, desperately, moaning as if she were in pain. She turned her back. She moved up and down, stroking me, my hands cupping her breasts, my mouth at her neck. I wrapped my arms around her, holding her with strength until she slowed slightly.

She spun and faced me again, bit my lip, ran her hand over the fly of my jeans, felt how hard I was and smiled at me, victorious. I grasped her hair tighter, pulled her head back and kissed her neck softly. She squeezed my cock tight. I pushed my hand up her skirt, slid her panties away, and felt her slick. I stroked her gently, gliding my forefinger lightly between her lips. She moaned but now guttural. She squeezed me too hard. I pulled her hand away. She opened her eyes and looked at me, frightened.

“Gentle,” I whispered, and pushed my two middle fingers deep into her cunt. She exhaled fast and made the same, rough moan. “Oh my God,” she said quietly. “Fuck.”

I pushed deeper and pressed my palm against her clit. I held her like that, barely moving. “I can’t stand anymore,” she said. “I want to go up.”

“Take off your clothes,” I said.

She stood in front of me, pulled her t-shirt over her head, reached behind her and unfastened the clasp of her bra.

“You’re beautiful,” I told her.

“Take off your clothes,” she told me.

I pulled my shirt over my head as she unzipped her skirt. She stood in her panties, looking at me. I paused. “Go on,” she said, smiling. “Shy?”

I unbuttoned my jeans and stepped out of them. She looked at my body. “All.”

I slid my underwear down and stood in front of her naked.

“You.”

She left hers on the floor. I walked to her.

“Up,” I whispered, moving her toward the ladder to my bed. I stayed close to her as we climbed, as she stepped tentatively upwards. I’d left the window open and the air was cold. We slid into bed together with her back to me. I wrapped my arms around her warm body, she sighed a long slow sigh. In that moment I felt the tremendous physical relief of finding someone there with me, the sense that something missing had been returned.

I kept her close to me, smelling her hair, stroking her skin. She gave in completely. Softened. And for a while we were still. There was street-noise outside, bursts of laughter, glasses breaking in the café below. I felt her back expanding against my chest. We were still until she reached between my legs and fitted the head of my cock inside her. I moved slow until I was deep, until I could feel her so warm, impossibly soft, so tight around me.

“Oh my God,” she said. “
Oui, c’est bien ça
.”

Outside there was more noise. A crash. Crying. Breaking glass. Silence. Then laughter in the café again.

“What was that?” she whispered.

“Friday night. Who knows? Marie, I’m going to put on a condom.”

“Yes, Jesus, I forgot. Hurry up.”

I slid into her gently. Now she was on her back and kept a hand on her belly and as I slid deeper she said, “Gentle.”

I began to move. She clawed at me. When I stopped she told me not to. “Please,” she said, “don’t stop, please,” and pulled me down so that my chest was against hers.

She said, “I want to hear you come.”

“So soon? What about you?”

“I’ve never,” she told me.

“Please,” she said. “Come loud.”

As I moved faster and faster she dug her nails hard into my skin. She bit my shoulder. She moaned her strange low moan, louder and louder. “Please,” she said again and again, “come for me.” When I cried out she said, “Yes, yes,” and caressed the back of my head, so slow.

That tenderness surprised me. I was grateful for it. Then I wished the whole thing hadn’t happened. And I knew it would again.

 

* * *

 

I was standing at the top of my stairwell shirtless in a pair of jeans when she kissed me good-bye. Then she was the brave girl. Tough with her purse, and a new coat of lip-gloss.

“Goodnight,” I said.

“Goodnight,” she smiled, and shook her head. “This is crazy. O.K., I have to go. Bye, Mr. Silver. I’m leaving now.”

Other books

The Girl In The Cellar by Wentworth, Patricia
Skagboys by Welsh, Irvine
The Madonna of Notre Dame by Alexis Ragougneau, Katherine Gregor
Eight Days to Live by Iris Johansen
A Novel Idea by Aimee Friedman