Glasshouse - Charles Stross [43]
“Help.” I sit down next to him and hike up my skirt to show him the mark on my thigh. “Look.” I hold up the ampoule where he can see it. “They got me. What in seven shades of shit is that stuff?” My crotch is unnaturally sensitive and I feel slightly dizzy, worryingly relaxed and unstressed in view of what’s just happened.
“It’s—” He blinks. “I don’t know. Who did this to you?”
“Jen and Angel. They dropped me off from a taxi and I think Angel got me with this thing as I left.” I lick my lips. I’m feeling distinctly odd. “What do you think? Poison?”
“Maybe not,” he says, staring at me. Then he picks up his tablet and pokes at it. “There,” he says, holding it for me. “Must be their idea of fun.”
I thrust my hands between my thighs and clamp them together, my eyes blurring as I read. My crotch is tingling. “It’s a—huh!” Fury washes over me. “The bitches!”
Sam shakes his head. “I’ve had a really tiring day, but it sounds like you’ve had an exciting one. Coming home dressed like a—and your friends, spiking you for sexual arousal.” He raises an eyebrow. “Why did they do that, do you suppose?” Sam can remain analytical and composed in the most trying situations. I wish I had half his grace under pressure.
“I—” I force myself to move my hands. “Bitches.”
“What’s going on, Reeve? Is the peer pressure really that compelling?” He sounds concerned, sympathetic.
“Yes.” I grit my teeth. He’s sitting too close to me, but I don’t want to risk moving. The drug is hitting me hard in warm, tingly waves, and I’m afraid of leaving a damp patch on the sofa. “It’s the social points. We knew the points were shared with our cohort, but there are extra compulsion mechanisms we didn’t know about. Jen and Angel told me about them, but I didn’t . . . shit. And then you can score points for . . . other activities.”
“What other activities?” he asks gently.
“Use your imagination!” I gasp, and bolt for the bathroom.
SAM knocks on the bathroom door once, tentatively, as I’m lying in the bottom of the shower cubicle in a daze of lust, letting waves of hot water sluice over me like a tropical storm—Since when do I know what a tropical storm on Urth felt like?—and trying to feel clean. Part of me wants to invite him in, but I manage to bite my lip and stay silent. I guess I can cross Jen and Angel off my list of possible assassins, but I find myself fantasizing in the shower, fantasizing about getting them alone and the myriad revenges I’ll take. I know these are just fantasies—you can’t kill somebody more than once in this place, and once you’ve killed them, they’re out of reach—but something in me wants to make them hurt, and not just because they’ve destroyed any chance of my ever having honest sex with this curiously introverted, thoughtful, bear of a husband I’ve acquired. So I work my arms to exhaustion on the weight machine down in the basement, then go to bed alone and uneasy.
Sunday dawns bright and hot. I reluctantly put on the dress Jen and Angel made me buy and go to meet Sam downstairs. I have no pockets, don’t know if I’m allowed to carry a bag, and I feel very unsafe without even a utility knife. Sam’s wearing a black suit, white shirt, black tie. Very monochrome. He looks solid, but going by his face he feels as unsure of himself as I am. “Ready?” I ask.
He nods. “I’ll call the taxi.”
The Parish Church is a big stone building some distance away from where we live. There’s a tower at one end, as sharp and axisymmetrical as a relativistic impactor (if warships were made of stone and had holes drilled in their dorsal end with huge parabolic chimes hanging inside). The bells are ringing loudly, and the car park is filling with taxis and males and females dressed in period costume as we arrive. I see a few faces I know, Jen’s among them. But I find I don’t recognize most of the people in the crowd as we wait outside, and I hang on to Sam’s arm for fear of