Glasshouse - Charles Stross [59]
“Don’t—” he mutters, but I’m not listening. Instead, I’m running my face down his chest, kissing him as I fondle what’s down below, giving the lie to his disinterest.
Sam’s been holding back because of a lover stranded in the real world without him, and I’ve been holding back because of pride and the greedy eyes watching my social score. We’ll probably regret this in the morning, but right now I’m drunk on touch. I rub my cheek against his thigh and lick him hungrily, feeling his hands in my hair—
“No.” He sounds hesitant. I take him in my mouth as far as I can, and he sounds as if he’s strangling. “No, Reeve, please don’t—” I carry on sucking and licking and he draws breath to say something and instead gasps a little, and I finish him off with a sense of anticlimax. That was too fast, wasn’t it? Then he’s standing on the other side of the bed, his back turned and his shoulders hunched. “I asked you to stop,” he says sullenly.
It’s a while before I can talk. “I needed—” I stop. My mouth is acrid with the aftertaste. “I want you to be happy.” If I’m going to give in and humiliate myself in front of the score whores, the least I can do is throw it back in their faces.
“Well, that’s not the right way to do it.” He’s tense and defensive, as if I’ve hurt him. “I thought we had an understanding.” He sidles around the bed and out the door before I can think of anything to say, refusing to meet my eyes, and a minute or so later I hear the shower come on.
I’m completely awake by now, so I pull on my bathrobe to go downstairs and make a mug of coffee by way of a substitute for mouthwash, because there’s no way I’m going to go into the bathroom while Sam’s busy trying to rinse my saliva away. I’ve got some pride left, and right now I don’t think I could look at him without yelling, What about your self-control, eh? He moons incessantly over this amazing lover he met outside the polity, but he’s not too proud to let me fellate him—until afterward, when suddenly I’m an un-person. I could really hate him for that. But instead I sit in the kitchen with my cooling coffee, and I wait for the noise of the shower to cease and the light upstairs to go out. Then I tiptoe back to my bed and lie brooding until near dawn, wondering what possessed me. In the end, I resolve not offer him any intimacies ever again, until I’ve had a chance to spit in his imaginary lover’s face in front of him. Finally, I sleep.
THE next day I don’t stir from bed until Sam has left for work. Once I’m up, I phone the Chamber of Commerce. The zombie who takes my call sounds only marginally sapient but agrees to send a taxi for me the next morning. I go outside and jog up and down the road until I’m exhausted—which takes a lot longer now—then take a shower. I spend the rest of the day in the garage trying to do some more work on the crossbow, which is not going well. I wonder why I’m bothering: It’s not as if I’m going to shoot anyone, is it?
I leave Sam a half-defrosted pizza and a note explaining how to cook it in the kitchen. By the time I come indoors it’s dark, Sam’s holed up in the living room with the TV on, and I have no trouble sneaking upstairs and going to bed without seeing him. It’s easy to do, now that we’re both avoiding each other.
I am troubled in my sleep. It’s a different bad dream, nothing like as vivid as the slaughterhouse nightmare, but even more disturbing in some ways. Imagine you’re a detective, or some other kind of investigator. And you’re looking for people, bad people who hide in shadows. They’ve committed terrible crimes but they’ve altered everyone’s memories so that nobody can remember what they did or who they are. You don’t know what they did or who they are, but it’s your job to find them and bring them to justice in such a way that neither they, nor anyone else, can forget what they did and the consequences of their actions. So you’re a detective, and you’re walking through twilit polityscapes hunting for clues, but you don’t know who you are or why you’re charged with this mission. For all