Love, they say, is a many splendored thing. It features in a million songs and books and plays and movies. But what about friendship?
"Stop, honey, it's all right," the voice said. "Everything is fine, it was just sex. You did wonderful."
Juliana gasped. Then she broke down again, burying her face deeper into the woman holding her.
The two of them sat like that for quite a while after the men left. Their faces were a mess, as was their hair. They both reeked of the sperm that clung to their skin.
Juliana tried to squeeze words through her sobs.
"I... I be-betrayed him," she said, after two failed starts. "He lies there all alone while I... I..."
Her words drowned again in a sea of sobs.
"Betrayed," Ellis said. "Such a big word, honey. Who did you betray and how?"
Juliana sat up and stared at the older woman; her face was blotched and swollen.
"You... don't know?" she asked.
"I know a lot." The woman smiled. "But I'm not sure what you mean." She took a tip of her smudged top and cleaned Juliana's mascara-stained cheeks. Then she covered the girl's nose with it.
"Sneeze," she said. "Clean yourself up, girl." Juliana did. "Now what is this about me not knowing?"
Juliana sat back on the sofa, pulling up her knees and cradling her legs.
"Can't say," she said, looking down. "It's too embarrassing." The woman laughed.
"Embarrassing," she repeated. "After what we just did?" She pulled Juliana back into her embrace.
"I know why I'm here," Juliana said. "But why are
you
?" When there was only silence for an answer, she looked up to Ellis. "This place is bad, isn't it?" she asked. It made the woman chuckle, although her face didn't join in. She sighed before speaking.
"I guess you could say that, in a way," she agreed. Juliana looked closer at her face. The woman must be older than she'd supposed earlier on; maybe in her forties. There were lines around her eyes and on her brow. They touched her and she felt an urge to kiss them. Then Ellis started talking.
"But bad or good are not the point, honey. We are bound to this place; all the women who come here have a debt to pay." 'All the women,' Juliana mused. How many
were
there?
"I have been err... visiting here for almost three years now," Ellis continued. "I don't live here; I come whenever they call me."
"Why?"
"Because of my mother," she said, looking away.
"My mother is a widow in her early sixties. Three years ago she fainted while we were shopping at the mall. I took her to the hospital. They needed a week to find out what her problem was. Then they told us it was a very rare neural syndrome that you could healthily live with for a long time. But you'd need regular shots of medicine, and that was the hang up." She fell silent.
"What was the hang up?" Juliana asked.
"She needs twelve injections a year, once every month, and they are two thousand dollars a piece." Juliana gasped.
"Two
thousand
," she whispered. Her hand automatically reached out to touch Ellis's face. The woman grabbed it and kissed the palm.
"Yes," she went on. "Twenty-four thousand a year. And because the disease was so rare, her insurance didn't cover it. She'd have to pay every penny."
Juliana started to connect the dots.
"Dr. Charrier..." she began. Ellis nodded.
Juliana hugged her.
"Three years," she whispered. "My God."
Ellis pulled herself free, forcing her face into a smile. "It isn't all bad," she said. "Lots of sex, no strings, huge variety, free health tests... a sumptuous wardrobe and free dining and dancing on a regular basis. See?" she said, lifting the breast with the gold ring. "Free piercing, real gold - and a free tattoo." Turning, she showed it. "Could be worse for a forty-something mom, couldn't it? They even pay for the baby sitter."
"You have a child? Are you married?"
"Two; and divorced from a bastard who ran off and can't be found for child support, let alone alimony. I am a single mom and an only child. My mother only has her small widow's pension. We could never have paid for those damn injections." She stopped and stared. "Don't know how long this body will hold, however."
Juliana hugged her again and they kissed - there was some tongue, and then there was a lot of tongue. When they finally broke up, they both panted.
"Pheww," Ellis said. "Come on girl. Let's have a shower. We stink."
They went to Juliana's room and showered. Then they sat on the bed in bathrobes and towel turbans. Ellis filed her toenails.
"Now what about you, honey?" she asked, not looking up. Juliana didn't answer for a bit, faking interest in the glossy magazine she'd opened.
"Don't give me that nonsense about feeling embarrassed again," Ellis went on. "This is me, you know."
Although Juliana met the woman only a day ago, she knew she was right; she could be trusted. And even if she couldn't, Juliana
needed
to trust her - anyone.
"My husband," she started. "We just got married. He did have this stroke; a minor one they say, but he went into a coma." Ellis put away the file.
"They showed me these scans, you know," Juliana went on. "And they said the bleeding would be all right. But there was a tumor." She heard Ellis take in a sharp breath and felt her hand on her wrist. "It was a small one, the tumor. I couldn't even see it. They - you know, Dr. Fleming - said my husband could live to be eighty and never have a problem; but he could be just as well dead by tomorrow."
"Let me guess," Ellis said, sitting up. "They have to operate and the insurance doesn't cover it."
Juliana sighed, picking up Ellis's hand. She kissed its knuckles one by one.
"Dr. Fleming said it would be partly covered if the hospital did it cheaply. But he doubted they would be able to pull it off without complications. Then he mentioned Dr. Charrier..."
"Okay," Ellis said. "When will they operate and how long do you have to pay?"
"I don't know," Juliana said. "He has to get stronger first. And then... I really don't know if I can do it." She started crying again.
"Stop that!" Ellis said. "Of course you can do it. It's only fucking sex, you pussy. He is your husband and he's dying, goddammit." The rude language stopped the sobbing.
"But," Juliana said. "But for me it isn't, you know?" "What isn't," Ellis wondered.
"The sex!" Juliana cried out. "For me there is no 'just sex.' I wasn't brought up like that. For me it's the... the whole package, or nothing." Ellis sat back, watching the girl as if she were an alien species.
"How old are you, Juliana?" she asked.
"I know, I know!" Juliana wailed. "I am twenty, but I am from a farm in Iowa. My parents are born again Christians from the most conservative denomination. Just thinking of sex is a mortal sin.
Liking
sex is a shortcut to hell! I never knew anything about sex,
did
anything until I turned 18 and came to Chicago. I was 19 when I met my husband and all we did was kissing and feeling up. We married three months ago when I turned 20. Alec is 23. All
he
knows about sex is how to put his penis in my vagina with the lights out. At best it doesn't hurt."
Ellis's face twitched; she brought her hand to her mouth.
"Sorry," she said. "I really won't laugh, but this is too much. Two young people in America in 2014 and you tell me
this
?" She grabbed Juliana and pulled her close. "God, sweetie, you must be frightened to death!" Juliana pushed her away.
"No," she said, "and that's the really scary part - I'm not frightened. I am bewildered and hurt and nervous, but I'm
not
scared." She cupped the woman's face in both hands and held her eyes. "I know I should be," she went on. "But I'm not. Today I was more aroused than scared. I was upset, but fascinated - watching you, licking you. I was curious how it would be to handle that huge penis... holding it, sucking on it, and... having these feelings. That is how I betray my husband - by having these feelings I never had with him - and
enjoying
them. Do you understand?"
Ellis stared at the girl. She felt old, and very old memories returned to her - teenage thoughts, teenage angst. Then she shook her head no.