*PokingFun...she tells me things I need to hear*
*The Sniper, the Bodyguard, the Genius and the Student - you know who you are and I thank you*
*Sorry, no sex this time around. In fact, I don't think there is any sex in Chapter 8 either. There is some in Nine, so if you can hold out...*
*If you save a thousand, you are soon forgotten. If you save one, you are always remembered*
I picked up the phone and made the call.
"Eloise, you still want your comment?" I said bitterly.
"Of course, Israel," she responded calmly.
"A cop in China murdered six men today," I told her.
"It looks more like assisted suicide," Eloise countered.
"No – absolutely not," my voice shook. "Had those men been able to defend themselves, they would not have been there in the first place. They would have never agreed to go. They wouldn't have even plotted this tragedy out."
"They were utterly defenseless. Society rendered them this way. That cop was only the last in a long line of aggressors they couldn't fend off," I was clearly shaking now. "Saying they were suicides implies they had a choice in the matter – they didn't. Her brother had no chance of doing something like this – none."
"She found out what he wished for and she made the only real choice to be made – to live or die and she chose from them to die. Those men had a final word alright – it was 'Help!' It is the worst kind of cruelty to blame the victims for the crime. Tomorrow the press is going to say it was suicide because they sat there and were slaughtered like sheep."
"Well – duh! You raised us to be sheep. How dare you blame us for acting like sheep when it was suddenly inconvenient for you!" I was screaming. "Their choices were to sit there or fight back but you don't want us fighting back, so they did what you trained them to do. They sat there, exactly like you taught them to."
"This time it was a murderess with a knife, instead of a grabby co-worker, a horny cop, or a gang of women looking to party. You certainly didn't want them saying 'no' those last three times, so why are you surprised they couldn't say 'no' to the former? It isn't a matter of scale. It is a matter of learning to make choices and men aren't given that luxury."
"Is that all?" Eloise said after a long pause.
"Yeah, that's me venting," I sighed.
"'Chinese Policewoman murders brother, five others'," she stated. "That is the headline I'm showing my editor. I like the sheep metaphor. I'll use it. Thank you, Israel."
"Well, shit," Seneca mumbled. "Tomorrow is going to be ten kinds of messed up. I had better get going."
"Yeah," Angel said as she stood to see Seneca to the door. I tagged along until we were all out in the public walkway.
"Sorry about that, Seneca," I apologized.
"Israel, the public is already unhappy with the police's handling of this Vanisher controversy. Now you want them to think that cops are murdering men too," Seneca stated wearily.
"Did we watch the same video?" I grumbled. "She killed all of them, then herself."
"They wanted to die," Seneca countered. I held Angel back. Seneca was her partner.
"Seneca, were they clinically depressed men off their meds – all of them?" I pointed out.
"What about the daycare in Denver? They committed suicide," Seneca reposed.
"Exactly!" I declared. "They struck back. What did those Chinese men do? How did they strike back?"
"Enough," Angel separated us. "Tomorrow is probably going to be a long day for us, so let's get some sleep." Seneca nodded, doubled-back to hug Angel – then offered to shake my hand.
"You make her happy," Seneca explained as I did so.
"It is accidental, believe me," I grinned. Seneca snickered, shook her head then left.
"Everyone, time to go," Angel announced as we stepped back into my condo. It was my place, but Angel was my girlfriend so it was normal for her to make decisions like this. For all the battles I had won during this long day, I would let this one go. Angel was Angel, I wanted my company to go, and I'd get revenge on her in the bedroom.
"Kuiko, you and I are going to have a chat during lunch tomorrow," Angel slipped in there. Oh, hell no, that wasn't going to happen. After people left, I tapped Angel.
"Have you thought about getting some of your things and bringing them over here? Toothbrush and stuff like that – maybe a change of clothes," I suggested.
"Are you sure?" Angel studied me.
"Last time you had to run back to your place I was tuned up by your buddy's buddy," I pointed out. Angel didn't like my explanation but she couldn't deny its validity.
"I'll get some things and tell Roni," Angel struggled to sound upbeat.
The second Angel was across the hall, I called Kuiko and begged her to come back over. She arrived a minute before Angel returned with an armful of things.
"Hey..." Angel began then caught sight of Kuiko.
"Put your things in our bedroom and then we can all talk," I directed.
Now I was making the calls and was daring Angel to be pissy about my rights in my own home. She returned a minute later. Kuiko was in the comfy chair, I was on the floor with my back to the TV screen so Angel took the sofa.
"So, what do you want to talk to Kuiko about?" I dove in.
"Something I think two women need to discuss – just between us," Angel evaded. I was not having that. I knew women very well. Angel would steamroll over Kuiko out of instinct, not reason. I wasn't angry with Angel as much as determined to put my stamp on our relationship.
"Has Kuiko insulted you?" I started.
"No, that's not..." Angel got out.
"Has she left her hallway a mess?" I persisted.
"No..." she grumbled.
"Has she failed to put away her trash properly in the bins?" I glared.
"I get it, Israel. You are no Kinsey Millhone, so you can stop now," Angel allowed. "I want to talk to Kuiko about you." This was not a revelation to Kuiko or me. I had no clue who Kinsey Millhone was, but I had to assume whoever she was, she was a better interrogator than me.
"Let's talk then," I breathed a sigh of relief.
"It is still girl-talk," Angel insisted. I was screwed by her intransience. I wasn't going to hold our affection hostage. That would cheapen what we had. I couldn't give in – that would undercut what little bliss I had accumulated. I had the worst option of all – trust.
"Angel, what can I tell you to convince you to accept Kuiko's place in my life?" I pleaded.
That wasn't what either expected. Angel mulled over her response. Kuiko eyed the door.
"Have less impressive sex!" Capri screamed from the back bedroom. That cut through some of the tension.
"Israel, I become upset when any woman talks about having sex with you – when they trumpet to the World how much they liked it...and want more," Angel confessed.
"Sorry," Kuiko meeped.
"It is not just you," Angel turned on Kuiko. "It is going to be the next girl and the next. Goddess, I hate sounding like some whiney, selfish cunt."
"You are not," I comforted her. "I love you and I think you love me, but that doesn't mean I am going to surrender myself to you."
"No attachments – no marriage on their terms. For me, your declaration is all I need," I said.
"Israel...how often are you going to have sex with other women?" Angel groaned. The emotional shoe was really on the other foot.
"Inside, or outside the coterie?" I responded. Angel mulled that over.
"Israel, I really, really want to ask you to not have sex with anyone else but me," Angel murmured. Kuiko nearly burst into tears. "But I'm not. I have to trust you as much as you've trusted me. Considering how much I've betrayed that trust – I'm glad you've been patient."
"Love – it does NOT make your life better," I sighed.
"It is easier for me," I added, "because I already have so many other psychoses to deal with, this is nothing new."
"Not funny, Israel," Angel looked me over. "Aaaarrghhhh..." she growled as she stood up. She did her best venting when she stood, I was discovering.
"I'm trying to give you permission to sleep around – wait," she held up her hand, "but I know it is not my permission to give. I'm struggling to accept this...helplessness."
"Thank you, thank you, thank you," Kuiko threw herself on her knees and hugged Angel's waist. "I would have given him up, but I truly didn't want to."
For a second, I was afraid Angel was going to yank Kuiko up by the hair and whirl her around the room like some archaic weapon. Angel feigned anger well – she wasn't as out of control as she would lead people to believe.
"Kuiko," Angel sighed, "couldn't you have simply typed 'he was good' and left it at that?"
Angel hesitantly reached down and patted Kuiko's head.