Read Malcolm and Juliet Online

Authors: Bernard Beckett

Tags: #ebook, #book

Malcolm and Juliet (4 page)

BOOK: Malcolm and Juliet
11.64Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

At 2.36 p.m. hunger got the better of Juliet. She needed a snack and the supermarket was just there. She hurried across the street, chose a family pack of salt and vinegar chips, fidgeted in the two person queue, forgot where she had put her $10 note, located it, waited forever for the change and rushed back out onto the pavement, almost knocking the mother of the boy with the water pistol off her feet in the process. As soon as Juliet recovered her balance she knew she had taken too long. She could sense it, well before noticing the white piece of paper, folded neatly, beckoning her from the bottom corner of box 93186. She grabbed the note and read it on the spot. She didn’t care who was watching. Him probably, from the window of some car that was about to speed away. The handwritten message was simple and to the point.

There’s no point watching for me. I need the
money.

Nothing personal.

But it
was
personal. A battle of two minds, two wills. It couldn’t be more personal. And standing there, the smug note crumpled angrily in her hand, dogs and baby strollers moving around her, Juliet knew there was little reason to feel confident of victory.

Confidence

It was all about confidence and Malcolm’s was on the rise. Now his ambition swelled to meet it, filling places in his imagination which he had never felt before. He had watched the footage so far and there was no denying it was rather good. The opening monologue hardly needed editing, he had found the perfect music to fade in at the end, and best of all there was the filming from the party. Brian had been perfect, even if it was unintentional, and the naked statue, complete with surreal lighting, was most surely a gift from the gods.

Yes, life was full of good things right now, and good things is the place where great things grow. Malcolm understood this, just as he understood how important it was to exploit life’s little upswings. And so it was that Malcolm had reached his latest decision. He stood before his camera, reached for the remote, and in the familiar privacy of his small bedroom, he made his announcement.

‘Hi, it’s me again. Malcolm. Your researcher. I have made a decision. I am going to have a go at this sex thing myself. It seems right that I should. In fact anything less might well be considered unscientific, in the circumstances. I have always been afraid to try, in case I might be a total failure. But the more I hear, the less likely this seems. I mean to say, if someone like Brian can achieve it, apparently without too much difficulty, then really how tricky can it be? And if someone like Kevin can stand naked before the world, his exposed buttocks awash with refracted light from the disturbed dribble of a malfunctioning fountain, and emerge not in shame but instead as some sort of drunken hero, then what is there to be embarrassed about?

‘So there you are. Next time you hear from me I will no longer be the ivory tower academic, removed from the real-world complications of his subject matter. No, I will be amongst it, with stories of my own to tell. Teenage sex, don’t go anywhere! Malcolm is on the way over.’

Malcolm sat down on the end of his bed. Hearing the words out loud that way made it all seem so much more real and, if he was honest, a little bit of apprehension was nestling up beside his excitement. Malcolm was a details man and he knew enough to realise there were still hurdles to sidestep. For instance, a willing partner was a requirement and, as with any experiment, he would need to choose his subject carefully.

He already had an idea. At the party there had been a girl who was hard not to look at. Charlotte was her name, and that night Malcolm had imagined the two of them alone together, and the image had lingered longer than his consciousness. He had a plan. He would ask to interview her, for the documentary. It would be a good way of raising the topic of sex. And after that, well he supposed he would just ask her outright.

He had seen enough of the way his peers operated to understand this wasn’t the normal approach, but Malcolm had never had much time for the sloppy complications of normality. No, he was a Scientist, and Science was all about method. This was by far the most sensible, scientific way of doing things.

Movies

Charlotte knew it wasn’t sensible, but then the best things never were. She knew exactly what she had to do. It had come to her in a moment of clarity, of inspiration even. She spun around in her bedroom, watching the faces of the posters on the wall merge into an heroic blur. Orson, Atom, Quentin, Lars, Alfred, Robert; surely they would understand. Surely they’d all had moments just like this, when the future had reached out and offered its hand. Charlotte spun faster, and the blur became a single grey line of encouragement.

She had never been in love before. Any number of hopefuls had stood before her and pleaded their cause but years of obsessive movie-watching had gifted her a certain jaded cynicism, and a certain hopeless romanticism too. In the movies this was no contradiction. She knew exactly why they wanted her, those sweaty boys with their cigarette breath. They wanted her because her hair was a certain colour, and her mouth formed a certain shape when she smiled, and it did a certain thing to a certain chemical balance in a certain part of their brains. But that could never do. In the movie of her life, which each day she refined inside her head, Charlotte was altogether a different kind of heroine.

The man for her would see something more, he would understand something more. He wouldn’t need to be beautiful; Quentin’s eyes after all were far too small and Orson had always been too heavy. Her man would just have to know a few things about plot-line and composition, and the fragile tension between them. He would be the sort of man who could spend a day to frame a single perfect shot, and then work quickly in a rush of adrenalin in the few seconds before the light faded. Brooding and intense, then suddenly light as air. Unpredictable, original, an impulsive perfectionist, and above all clever. For Charlotte had been convinced of this one thing as long as she could remember: she could only ever fall in love with a genius.

She looked into the mirror and wondered again if it wasn’t possible that at last she had met just such a man. He had arrived unannounced, right here, inside this very house, and he had come with a camera. While the others at her party had been content with drink and drugs and bad jokes told too loudly, he had settled on a greater purpose. And now she couldn’t get him out of her mind, that look of concentration on his face as he squinted at his LCD screen, the way his tongue pointed out from the corner of his mouth as he had circled the fountain, wading through water, crashing over shrubbery, brushing aside onlookers, an eye only for the perfect, naked shot.

She hadn’t spoken to him, although it had taken all her restraint to stay away. She had to be careful. If fate had delivered him it would expect her to treat the opportunity with respect. So Charlotte had kept her distance, and quietly collected her information. His name was Malcolm, which she had no great feelings about one way or the other. He was making a documentary on teenage sex, which threw her at first. The line between creativity and deviance was a fine one. But he was known for the purity of his intellectual endeavour, people said, and it was the steady hand of a film-maker she had seen direct the lens that night, not the shaky grip of a pervert.

Charlotte sat down and an idea came to her, while on the walls her idols looked on approvingly. She would offer herself, as a subject for his documentary. It was the perfect scene to enter on. True, she didn’t actually have a first sexual experience, but she did know exactly how she would like it to be. It was all plotted out, perfect frame by perfect frame. All she had to do was convert it from the celluloid of her imagination. Yes, that would do it. She would paint him a picture so compelling, so breathtaking, so damned sexy, that he would have no choice but to open himself up to her, invite her in to the world of his camera, and all its twisted genius.

Charlotte took her pen and held it poised above the formidably blank sheet of paper. Then she waited for the inspiration hovering in the room to fill her.

My first sexual experience…

Secrets

‘Still on your sex thing then?’ Juliet asked. She had called in on the way home from school, the way she often did. Even in the heavy uniform her private college made her wear, designed to keep the physical form hidden from the world, she was compelling. Muscles twitched in her calves as she bounced on her toes before him, and she held her cream bun carefully between two fingers, as if afraid she might crush it.

‘It’s a Science thing actually,’ Malcolm reminded her.

‘Never said it wasn’t. So how’s it going? Did you get to Charlotte’s place? Great house eh?’

‘A bit tacky, I thought. There’s such a thing as too much money.’

‘Not in my life there isn’t,’ Juliet said, but Malcolm found it hard to take that too seriously.

‘It must be awful being poor,’ he joked.

‘Fucking desperate actually,’ Juliet told him, and the expression that slipped over her face, just for a moment, was so far from her usual Xena-like display of invincibility that Malcolm sat forward on the couch and felt an emotion he’d never before directed toward Juliet. Concern.

‘Is there something wrong?’

Juliet sat down beside him and swallowed the last of her bun.

‘I need money. One thousand dollars. It’s sort of an emergency.’

‘So why don’t you ask your dad?’

‘Because then he’d find out what it was for.’

‘Oh.’ Malcolm knew better than to ask, but knowing isn’t everything. ‘What is it for?’

‘I can’t tell you.’

‘Fair enough,’ he replied, although it didn’t seem fair at all. He always told her everything, didn’t he? He’d even thought about discussing his Charlotte plan with her, to get a female perspective. Now he wouldn’t, not if they were going to have secrets.

‘Sorry. I’d want to know too. It’s just something I have to do myself. Okay?’

‘I guess.’

And the moment of disagreement slipped past, the way they always did. Malcolm had known Juliet since they were both four years old, and they’d never once had a proper argument. Some of that was fear on Malcolm’s part, but most of it was habit. Habits, the way he saw it, were sorely undervalued.

‘So can you help me? Where does a girl find a thousand dollars quickly?’

‘I could lend you a hundred and fifty. You haven’t got any?’

‘One hundred.’

‘How soon do you need it?’

‘A week maybe.’

‘We need a four hundred percent return then. That’ll be tricky.’

‘Come on, you’re clever. Think of something.’

That was true, but only partly. Malcolm was more recreationally clever than gifted in a practical way, and after twenty minutes of impossible suggestions it was Juliet who finally hit on the idea.

‘Phone sex!’

‘What?’

‘You know, like people ring up and pay you money, and you—’

‘You what?’

‘You must have seen the ads in the paper.’

‘Yes, I have actually,’ Malcolm admitted. ‘I even thought about ringing one, as part of my research, but I never did. I mean what sort of a person…And wouldn’t you feel, you know…It’s the sort of thing people do when they’re desperate. People who don’t have any choices.’

‘Malcolm, look at me.’ And his best friend in all the world, with her split-level architecturally designed home, who had been overseas four times in the last two years and whose family had three cars at home in the garage, leaned forward and tried to make him understand. ‘That’s me, right now. I’m desperate. I can’t tell you why, but I am. So please, help me set this up.’

‘I just don’t think it’s the best way,’ Malcolm objected.

‘So give me a better one.’

‘I can’t.’

‘Then this is it.’

‘How will you know what to say?’

‘I’ll make it up as I go along.’

‘But how will you charge?’

‘How do the ones in the paper do it?’

‘They have a special number, but you need your own phone before you can set that up.’

‘Doesn’t matter.’

Malcolm saw the look in Juliet’s eyes and knew instantly where this would end. Once Juliet took the first step, the journey was as good as finished. You could depend upon it. Some people found that admirable, others plain frightening. Malcolm was without an opinion on the matter. It was just Juliet, part of her nature, beyond reason or judgement. ‘They have to pay first. Like I give them a taster, for free, and then they send me money, and I send them a password, and next time they have to use it.’

‘But they’ll never tell you who they are,’ Malcolm reasoned. ‘So then, if the first time’s free, they’ll just keep ringing back pretending to be someone else.’

‘You know how I once said your intelligence made you attractive?’

‘I wrote it down and made you sign it.’

‘Yeah, well write down this,’ Juliet scowled. ‘I’ve changed my mind. It’s a pain in the arse.’

‘I’m just saying—’

‘Well it doesn’t matter,’ Juliet interrupted, catching hold of the next wave of desperation as it crashed towards the shore. ‘See, the first time is just a taster, like those free tours porn-sites have. It leaves you wanting more. So they will pay.’

‘How will you advertise?’

‘Easy. Same way everybody advertises. Junk mail. Remember how I did job experience for that radio station and they had a campaign, where schools tried to get everyone to e-mail in, so they could get a new computer? I’ve got the passwords. I can get in and load up half the student e-mails in the city. It’s perfect.’

Perfect was an overstatement, but it was starting to sound possible, and Malcolm, always the researcher, was loath to deny the opportunities.

‘So who do they send it to, this money? You can’t put your name on it.’

‘I don’t have to. I’ll use a made-up name, Eileen say, and your address. You can be the money man.’

‘No way.’

‘Why not?’

‘I have a price.’

‘Name it.’

‘I get to film your first call.’

‘You’re on. Here, can I use your computer?’

BOOK: Malcolm and Juliet
11.64Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Never Call Retreat - Civil War 03 by Newt Gingrich, William R Forstchen
Sita's Ascent by Naidu, Vayu
One in a Million by Jill Shalvis
Fairytale Not Required by Stephanie Rowe
Into the Dark by Peter Abrahams
Promiscuous by Missy Johnson
Blown Away by Brenda Rothert
Defying Fate by Lis, Heidi