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EXTRACT:
The Sandman by Miles Gibson
Chapter One
Tulip stood and stared
at herself in the mirror. She was wearing a black satin dress, high-heeled
mules and an absurd wig of thick treacle curls that fell, in glittering
cascades, to her elbows. Beneath the wig her face seemed very small and
flat. She had the eyes of a goldfish and a slightly crooked mouth. Her
eyebrows were no more than tiny black brushstrokes and her lips a mere
splash from a scarlet pen. She stared at herself and smiled. She was tired
and bored. Her ankles ached from the cruel tilt of the mules. She cocked
her head until a curtain of heavy curls obscured her view, parted the
hair with her fingers, smiled again, thrust out her breasts, cradled her
belly in plump white hands, flirted with herself in the glass. When she
was satisfied with her reflection she turned her attentions upon the room.
The room was small and hot and filled by a clumsy old-
fashioned bed. Beside the bed a red telephone and a large arm-chair. Behind
the armchair a locked door. There was a washbasin in one corner. On a
shelf above the basin a bowl crammed with tablets of scented soap. A glass
vase of wilting flowers on a low metal table. Rugs on the floor. A blind
of candy-coloured slats against the window. A bookshelf against one wall
and a battered wardrobe. A collection of dolls on the bookshelf. Beside
the wardrobe a second door that led to the stairs and the street.
Tulip walked to the bed and picked up a twisted pillow. She punched it
several times with her fist and threw it aside. She glanced at her watch.
It was a little past ten-thirty and she had opened for business at noon.
It had been a long and difficult day and it wasn˙t finished. She bent
to the low metal table and plucked at one of the limp roses. The flower
exploded between her fingers. She swore and searched for a cigarette,
when the doorbell rang.
She walked to the door and drew back a chain. When she opened the door
she found a young man in a heavy winter coat, clutching a leather bag
in his hands, standing among the shadows. For some moments she stood and
stared at him in silence. And then, with a little movement of her head,
she beckoned him into her room.
'What shall I call you?' she asked as she turned to confront him.
'My name is William.'
'That's nice. I'll call you Billy.'
The man said nothing. He looked around the room. He was wearing a pair
of heavy spectacles and he screwed up his eyes as he tried to peer through
the smeared glass.
'Don't look so scared, Billy. I'm not going to eat you,' chirruped Tulip.
She began to laugh. She threw back her head and bared her teeth. But the
man looked puzzled. When she saw that he was not amused she tried to compose
herself, lit a cigarette, gave it several brief tugs and snorted smoke
through her nose.
'Why don't you sit down, Billy, and take off your coat?'
The young man took off his coat and folded it carefully across the bed.
He sat down in the armchair and placed the leather bag at his feet. His
hair was short and shone like silver where it caught the light. He turned
suddenly towards the door behind him and squinted at the keyhole, jerking
his head as if listening for some faraway sound.
She took a step towards him, hesitated, glanced across his shoulder at
the door. 'That's my own private room, Billy,' she said forcing another
smile. 'Would you like a drink?'
He frowned. 'Is it empty?' he whispered.
'Yes, of course it's empty,' she said with a laugh. 'This is the room
where I entertain. Don't worry, Billy, we're quite alone. Be brave and
have a drink.'
'Yes, thank you,' he said.
'Scotch?'
'Fine.'
She turned to a cabinet beside the bed. He was young and frightened. He
looked as if he might faint if she touched him. Old men made difficult
customers they were always trying to smell your shoes or peer at
your bum through a keyhole. They were unpredictable. But the young men,
ah, they were quickly satisfied. They had no imagination. She stifled
a yawn as she poured the Scotch. 'I haven't seen you before,' she said.
'No.'
'Is this your first time?'
The young man nodded, adjusting the spectacles on his nose.
'That's nice,' smiled Tulip. 'Well, don't look so unhappy. You'll be fine.
I've got clients who've been coming here for years and years. You'd be
surprised. They're just like old friends. They look after me and I take
care of them. You understand?'
The man nodded and sipped his Scotch. Tulip sat down on the edge of the
bed and crossed her legs. A bracelet of silver beads sparkled on her ankle.
She smiled and sucked at her cigarette. Through the shroud of smoke her
eyes flickered across his face, his hands, his clothes, his shoes. Behind
the greasy spectacles he had bright, green eyes. His hands were clean
and dainty. She didn't like his hair.
'Some girls don't care,' she complained. 'They work the streets, steal
your money while you're pressed against the wall with your pants around
your knees. They give the business a bad name. I like to make my clients
feel special. That's why I've gone to so much trouble here. It always
pays to take a little extra trouble.' She gestured around the room with
a fat, white hand.
'I used to be a dancer,' she explained. 'I've had classical training.
But I have very weak ankles...'
Without warning she opened the dress at her throat and peeled it away
from her shoulders and breasts. There was a pause in the undressing while
she searched for an ashtray, picked it up, dropped it, damn, picked it
up and stabbed it several times with her cigarette. Then she prised her
fingers into the wrinkled satin that had bunched around her belly and
pushed the dress to her knees. It fell whispering to her feet and she
stepped out of it with a little wave of her hand and a smile.
She was wearing nothing but a pair of fine black stockings that cut wickedly
into the tops of her thighs making the skin there seem excessively polished
and fat. Her breasts were heavy and swung loosely when she moved. The
nipples were small as buttons. She dipped her hand between her legs and
tweaked at the hair between finger and thumb, twisting it into a long
black curl. Then she lit another cigarette and perched on the arm of the
chair, swinging her legs, rubbing a breast against the young man's face.
'There, Billy, isn't that nice?' she inquired. She pulled at the cigarette,
threw back her head and blew smoke up towards the ceiling.
Billy reached up and whispered into her ear, 'I wonder if you would allow
me to indulge in a little habit of mine?'
Tulip frowned and stood up. 'What is it?' she asked suspiciously. 'I don't
want anything violent. And I don't do anything... you know... dirty. This
is a nice place.' She tugged in frustration at her cigarette and stared
at his hair which had begun to glow with an unearthly light. It was bad
enough having an old man peer at your bum through the keyhole without
having a young one prancing around in bra and panties. She had hoped to
attract a better class of customer.
'Oh, no, it's nothing unpleasant,' said Billy soothingly. 'But I'd feel
much happier if I could wear my gloves.'
She frowned and shrugged. It wasn't too bad. He might have wanted lipstick
and a pair of high-heeled shoes.
'They seem to lend me so much confidence. I suppose it's the rubber. They
have such a wonderful rubbery smell.'
'Yeah, but what are you going to do with them?' she demanded darkly.
'Wear them,' smiled Billy innocently. He drew a pair of gloves from the
leather bag. A pair of rubber kitchen gloves.
'What else have you got in that bag?'
'Books,' said Billy as he teased on the gloves.
'I read a book once,' she said and crushed out her cigarette. Then the
young man smiled again and opened his arms, inviting Tulip to embrace
him. She stepped forward and he cradled the back of her skull in a fat
rubber hand.
For a long time the man and the woman stood, wrapped together in a silent
embrace. And then Tulip sank to her knees. The handle of a slender knife
was stuck in her neck. A chrysanthemum of blood had blossomed brightly
from her ear. The man staggered beneath the weight of the fallen woman,
dragged her forward and allowed her to collapse in the chair.
When he had recovered his breath he stepped back a few paces to admire
the corpse. She was sprawled, as if asleep, her arms hanging loose and
her legs slightly parted. The stockings were wrinkled and torn loose from
their moorings. Her head rested against one shoulder. She stared back
at the man with her cloudy goldfish eyes.
He knelt down and tried to smooth the stockings against her knees but
the gloves made him clumsy and he dragged down the stockings in exasperation,
peeling them roughly from her toes. He stared up at the woman then and
smiled blissfully. She wore the handle of the knife against her hair in
the manner of a Japanese comb. The chrysanthemum had thickened and its
petals were spreading against her neck. He stretched out and tenderly
touched her face with his rubber fingertips. He closed her eyes and her
mouth fell open. Her tongue was red as a pomegranate. He brushed the hair
away from her breasts and arranged her hands in her lap. His touch was
delicate and precise. She had lost her mules and he retrieved them, slipping
them neatly onto her feet.
When he was satisfied with her appearance he took his leather bag from
beneath the armchair and pulled out a Polaroid camera. He took three photographs
of the woman and laid the prints along the edge of the bed where they
ripened into glossy bruises. He peered at them anxiously, impatient to
examine the portraits.
And then he thought he heard it. A scuffle, a muffled cough, a groan or
a sigh. He didn't know... he couldn't say exactly what he heard... but
he felt someone was watching him. He turned in horror towards the window
and stared at the cracks in the metal blind. He swung towards the door
and snarled. His hands were trembling. His face was yellow and glossy
with sweat. There were eyes glinting from every shadow. High on the bookshelf
the dolls' mouths hung open in silent screams. He twisted on his heel
and scooped the pictures from the bed. He threw the pictures, the camera
and tumbler of Scotch into the leather bag, bundled his coat beneath his
arm and ran from the room into the cold and dangerous night.
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