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Sacrament
Sacrament
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Sacrament

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‘Well, I don’t,’ she replied.

He smiled at her. ‘Rosa—’ he said softly ‘—you could not deny me.’

He slipped his hands beneath her knees and hoisted them up. ‘We should give up all hope of children,’ he said, staring at the dark bud between her buttocks. They have always come to nothing.’ She made no reply. ‘Are you listening, love?’ He glanced up at her face. She wore a sorrowful expression.

‘No more children?’ she said.

He spat in his hand, and slickened his prick. Spat again, more copiously, and slickened her arse.

‘No more children,’ he said, drawing her closer to him. ‘It’s a waste of your affections, smothering love on a thing that hasn’t even got the wit to love you back.’

This was the truth of the matter: that though they had together made children numbering in the many dozens, he had for her sake taken them from her in the moment of their delivery and put them out of their misery, if the cretins ever knew misery. He would dutifully come back when he’d disassembled them and disposed of the pieces, always with the same grim news. That though they were fine to look at, their skulls contained only bloody fluid. Not even a rough sketch of a brain; nothing.

He pushed his prick into her. ‘It’s better this way,’ he said.

She let out a little sob. He couldn’t tell whether it was out of sorrow or pleasure, and at that moment didn’t really care. He pressed against the warmth of her muscle, his prick utterly enveloped. Oh, it was good.

‘No…children…then…’ Mrs McGee gasped.

‘No children.’

‘Not ever?’

‘Not ever.’

She reached up and took hold of his shirt, pulling him down towards her.

‘Kiss,’ she said.

‘Be careful what you ask for—’

‘Kiss,’ she said again, raising her face towards his.

He didn’t deny her. He pressed his lips against hers, and let her tongue, which was nimble, dart between his aching teeth. His mouth was always drier than hers. His parched gums and throat drank deep, and murmuring his gratitude against her lips, he pressed hard into her, their hold on one another suddenly frantic. Her hands went to his throat, then to his face, then to his backside, pushing him deeper, while his fingers pulled at her buttons to gain access to her breasts.

‘Who are you?’ she said to him.

‘Anyone,’ he gasped.

‘Who?’

‘Pieter, Martin, Laurent, Paolo—’

‘Laurent. I liked Laurent.’

‘He’s here.’

‘Who else?’

‘I forget all the names,’ Jacob confessed.

Rosa brought her hands back up to his face, and caught tight hold of it. ‘Remember for me,’ she said to him.

There was a carpenter called Bernard—’

‘Oh yes. He was very rough with me.’

‘And Darlington—’

‘—the draper. Very tender.’ She laughed. ‘Didn’t one of them wrap me up in silk?’

‘Did he?’

‘And poured cream in my lap. You could be him. Whoever he was.’

‘We have no cream.’

‘And no silk. Think of something else.’

‘I could be Jacob,’ he said.

‘You could. I suppose,’ she said, ‘but it’s not as much fun. Think of someone else.’

There was Josiah. And Michael. And Stewart. And Roberto—’ She moved her body to the rhythm of his litany. So many men, whose names and professions he’d borrowed to excite her, wrapping himself in their reputations for an hour or a day; seldom longer. ‘I used to like this game,’ he said.

‘But not any more?’

‘If we knew what we were…’

‘Hush now.’

‘…maybe it wouldn’t hurt so much.’

‘It doesn’t matter,’ she said. ‘Not as long as we’re together. As long as you’re inside me.’

They were knitted now, so tightly wound around each other, limbs and kisses intertwined, they would never be separated.

She started to sob again, the breath pushed out of her with every thrust. Names were still coming to her lips, but they were fragments only, pieces of pieces—

‘Sil…Be…Han…’

She was lost to sensation; lost to his prick, to his lips. For his part, he had given up words entirely. Just his breath, expelled into her mouth as though he were resurrecting her. His eyes were open, but he no longer saw her face, nor the candles that shook around them. There were instead vague forms, particles of light and dark, pulsing before him; dark above, light below.

The sight brought a moan from him. ‘What is it?’ Rosa said.

‘I…don’t…know,’ he replied. It pained him to have this sight before him and not understand what he was seeing, like a fragment of music to which he could put no name, though the notes went round and round his head. But for all the anguish it caused him, he would not have had it taken away. There was something in the sight that quickened a secret place; a place he never spoke of, not even to Rosa. It was too tender, that place; too frail.

‘Jacob?’

‘Yes…?’

He looked down at her, and the phantom evaporated.

‘Are we done so soon?’

Her hand went between her legs, and took hold of his prick. Half its length was still inside her, but it was rapidly softening. He tried to push it back in, but it simply concertinaed against the tightness of her arse, and after a couple of dispiriting attempts he withdrew. She stared at him rancorously.

‘Is that it?’ she said.

He put his prick away, and got to his feet. ‘For now,’ he said.

‘Oh am I to be fucked in instalments then?’ she said, pulling her skirts down over her pudenda and sitting up. ‘I give you my arse against my better judgment and you don’t even have the decency to finish.’

‘I was distracted,’ he said, picking up his coat and putting it on.

‘By what?’

‘I don’t know exactly,’ Jacob snapped. ‘Lord, woman, it was just a fuck. There’ll be others.’

‘I don’t think so,’ she replied sniffily.

‘Oh?’

I think it’s high time we let one another alone. If we’re not out to make children, then what’s the use of it? Huh?’

He stared hard at her. ‘You mean this?’

‘Yes, I do. Most certainly. I mean it.’

‘You realize what you’re saying?’

‘Indeed I do.’

‘You’ll regret it.’

‘I don’t think so.’

‘You’ll be weeping for want of a fuck.’

‘You think I’m that desperate for your ministrations?’ she said. ‘Lord, how you deceive yourself. I play along with you, Jacob. I pretend to be aroused, but I have no desire for you.’

That’s not so,’ he said.

She heard the hurt in his voice, and was astonished. It was rare, and like all rarities, valuable. Pretending not to notice, she went to her battered leather satchel and pulled out her mirror, and squatting beside the candles for better light, studied her reflection. ‘It is so,’ she said, after a little time. ‘Whatever was between us is dying, Jacob. If I loved you once, I forgot how. And frankly I don’t much care to be reminded.’

‘Very well,’ he said. She caught his image in the glass; saw the look of distress that crossed his face. Rarer than rare, that look.

‘As you say,’ she murmured.

‘I think…’

‘Yes?’

‘I…I would like to be alone for a while…’

‘Here?’

‘If you don’t mind.’

He flicked his fingers together, and a feather of flame leapt from them, extinguishing itself above his head. She did not care to watch him exercise this peculiar gift of his. She had her own skills, picked up, as Steep’s had been picked up, like jokes or rashes, somewhere along the way. Let him have the room to brood, she thought.

‘Will you be hungry later?’ she asked him, sounding (much to her perverse delight) like a parody of a wife.

‘I doubt it.’

‘I have a meat-pie, if you want something.’

‘Yes?’ he said.

‘We can still be civil, can’t we?’ she said.

He let another flame go from his fingertips. ‘I don’t know,’ he said. ‘Maybe.’

With that, she left him to his musings.

X (#ulink_23dc828c-02f1-55fa-b7d2-db61a9b8fdf6)

Halfway along the track that led from the crossroads to the Courthouse, Will heard the squeaking of ill-oiled wheels behind him. He glanced over his shoulder to see not one but two bicycle headlamps a little distance behind him. Breathing an inventive little curse, he stood and waited until Frannie and Sherwood caught up with him.

‘Go home,’ were his first words to them.

‘No,’ said Frannie breathlessly. ‘We decided to come with you.’

‘I don’t want you to come,’ Will said.

‘It’s a free country,’ Sherwood replied. ‘We can go wherever we want. Can’t we, Frannie?’

‘Shut up,’ Frannie said. Then to Will: ‘I only wanted to make sure you were okay.’

‘So why’d you bring him?’ Will said.

‘Because…he asked me…’ Frannie said. ‘He won’t be a bother.’

Will shook his head. ‘I don’t want you coming inside,’ he said.

‘It’s a free—’ Sherwood began again, but Frannie shushed him.

‘All right, we won’t,’ she said. ‘We’ll just wait.’