Authors: Kathryn Harvey
30
He was falling in love, damn it.
He wasn’t supposed to, not with one of the members; it was against the rules. “Don’t
let yourself become emotionally involved with the club members,” the director had told
him when he had been recruited to work upstairs at Butterfly. “Keep in mind that most of
our members are married. They aren’t looking for real or permanent relationships. Some
of them might want to tell you their problems. By all means, listen, but don’t give advice,
and don’t get involved. Give them love, that’s what they’re paying for. If it will help, think
about the money you’re earning. Think about getting a good tip. It helps keep the emo-
tions at bay.”
Well, he
had
thought about the money and the tips and the occasional expensive gifts,
and it hadn’t helped. He was falling in love with one of the members and he couldn’t help
himself.
It was a gray March day, and when he arrived at Venice Beach he found deserted sand
dunes and a ferocious surf pounding the shore. Locking his car, he zipped his nylon wind-
breaker up to his neck and headed into the cold wind.
Who was she? What was her name? Where did she live?
He knew so little about her, how could he possibly be falling in love with her? Was he
really in love with her, he asked himself now as he committed himself to the salty spray of
the Pacific, or with just an illusion? Was he in fact in love with
her
or with the idea of her?
Was it the woman who had insinuated herself into his heart, or was it just a phantom, a
ghost, someone unreal, untouchable, and nonexistent except in his own imagination?
She had been on his mind so much these past few days that he was afraid it was turn-
ing into an obsession. It was getting so that he looked forward to her visits at Butterfly,
and anxiously awaited the call from the director with the familiar instructions. He was
beginning to dislike time spent with other members, time that was not with her, that
should be with her only.
And that was not why he had been hired. To love just one woman. He was expected to
love them all.
Some kids had set up a barrel and a ramp on the Speedway and were trying to break
their necks on skateboards. He paused to watch them.
And then, on the other hand, what did she feel about him? He thought he knew
women, thought he knew how to read them. Was he really seeing love in her eyes when
she lay in his arms? Was he sensing real tenderness and devotion when they made love? Or
was she merely making love to her own particular phantom and not the flesh-and-blood
man?
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Kathryn Harvey
Illusion. That was what Butterfly was. Nothing but an illusion.
But his love for her was real. He knew that. He could feel it as surely as he now felt the
biting March wind against his face. When his phone rang and it was the director asking
him to come to Butterfly, and she spoke the words he so wanted to hear—to get himself
ready for that fantasy—he felt his heart leap in a way it hadn’t in a long time. Not since a
painful episode in his past when he had decided that love was no longer written in his
stars. And yet here it was again, knocking on his door. He would enter that familiar room
and see her, and he would be consumed with joy and passion and the outrageous desire to
keep her there with him forever.
She seemed so vulnerable at times. At others, she came across as a tough lady. He did-
n’t know what she did in the real world, but he suspected she was a career woman in the
sort of profession a female might have to prove herself in. There were just a few clues here
and there, nothing to go on really.
She was such a mystery. Was that what he was in love with? A mystery? If she did one
day reveal her identity to him, if she exposed all there was to expose about herself, would
the “love” vanish? Was the very enigma that seemed to surround her the thing that kept
his love alive?
He thrust his hands into his pockets and watched the kids fly up the ramp and land
miraculously upright, the way kids and cats do.
No. He wasn’t in love with any enigmas or mysteries or phantoms. She was a flesh-
and-blood woman and even though he didn’t know her name, he knew her and that was
what he was in love with.
But the problem was, where to go from here?
The March cold got to him and made him shiver. It also made him realize he was hun-
gry. There was a hamburger stand down the Speedway, nestled in between the old syna-
gogue and a roller-skate rental place. Most places were closed at this time of year. The
elderly residents stayed indoors, the beach was left to itself. But because a few hardies did
venture down to Venice in the winter, and because someone had to take their money,
Sylvia’s Burgers was open and Sylvia was glad to see a customer. He ordered a chili cheese
dog with onions and a cup of coffee, and ate standing up at the counter, catching the
greasy drippings with inadequate little paper napkins.
Feeling a little warmer and a little fuller, he said good-bye to Sylvia and continued on
his walk.
“Our members come to Butterfly because it’s
safe,”
the director had told him. “We
promise safety from violence, from disease, and from anyone finding out who they are.
Break one of those rules, and you will answer for it.”
But that was exactly what he was thinking of doing—breaking one of those rules. He
wanted to ask her who she was.
But dare he risk it? Suppose he risked asking her and she ran from him? Suppose she
never came back to Butterfly? How would he find her, in this vast Los Angeles sprawl? He
wouldn’t have a clue about where to start looking.
He felt so helpless. Something he hadn’t felt in a long time. He wasn’t used to it; it
made him angry. As a man used to being in control of things, he resented having to wait
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for the phone call. It made him frustrated and perplexed. Everything seemed topsy-turvy.
Nothing was going according to set rules. She would ask for him, he would hurry to be
with her, they would spend an afternoon, an evening in perfect intimacy and lovemaking,
then she would vanish and he would be left with only a memory of what she had felt like
in his arms.
I’ll tell her I’m in love with her, he thought.
He stopped and turned to gaze out at the gray, angry ocean. A lone seagull swooped
overhead. It gave out a single cry and disappeared over the rooftops.
He suddenly saw the futility in his plan. Butterfly companions were expected to tell
the members what they wanted to hear. It was part of the fantasy. If I tell her I’m in love
with her, she’ll think it’s part of the role I’m playing, she’ll think I’m reciting a rehearsed
line.
But what if…
His gaze traveled to the pier where a few old men and some Mexican kids were hang-
ing fishing lines over the side.
What if she feels the same way about me?
His heart began to race. Was it possible? After all, she asked for him over and over
again. As far as he knew, she wasn’t seeing other companions. Could that be it? That she
was falling in love with him?
But…how to find out? How to make sure? And how to go about doing it without
risking losing her altogether?
If I’m wrong. If I reveal my feelings to her and she runs…
His shoulders slumped slightly. There was no safe solution to the problem. He saw
that now in the metallic ocean and fine sand skimming over the beach. Dark clouds were
rolling down from Santa Monica. The kids were dismantling their launching pad and
Sylvia was boarding up her burger stand. And he realized that he was trapped in a conun-
drum that had no exit.
All he could do, he finally conceded as he pushed into the wind back to his car, was
wait for her next phone call. And pray that there would not be a day when it would be the
last one.
31
Linda had just finished tying her black velvet mask when she heard the door handle
move.
Her heart racing, she looked in the mirror, at the room behind her.
It was all Louis XVI confection, a lady’s boudoir lifted right out of the palace at
Versailles: small gilt chairs with satin upholstery, cabinets of polished tulipwood and
bronze fittings, a delicate writing table mounted with Sevres porcelain, a bed covered in
creamy white satin with gold tassels and fringe, its four posts ornamented with tiny gold
bellflowers, the canopy rising to an ornate gold crown guarded by winged sphinxes. There
were wine and goblets on a table, and plates of sweet breads, cheese, and fruit. The air
swirled with the fragrance of crushed roses; a harpsichord played a minuet softly, as if in
the next room.
And Linda herself—not a product of the nuclear age but a daughter of a past age of
elegance and gentility. Her hair was hidden beneath a white powdered wig, tall and fes-
tooned with strings of pearls; three carefully combed curls fell over her bare shoulder. The
dress of pale blue satin was cut daringly low, lavishly decorated with tiny embroidered
bows, and flared out over outrageously wide panniers. Around her neck she wore a white
lace choker. And beneath the dress, complicated corsets with an impossible number of
bows, each to be slowly untied in its turn.
She kept her eye on the door. No beeper was going to intrude upon tonight’s fan-
tasy—she had seen to that. Tonight was too important.
And then he came in.
He took her breath away.
His athletic figure was clothed in the finest black velvet: flared jacket with wide, gold-
trimmed cuffs, a tight-fitting black waistcoat, snug black velvet knee breeches, white
stockings and shoes with large silver buckles. At his wrists, the frilled cuffs of his white
muslin shirt; at his throat, a white lace jabot. And his hair—the beautiful black hair that
Linda so liked—was hidden now beneath a silver-white wig drawn back into a ponytail
and tied with a large black velvet bow.
He closed the door and remained standing there, looking at her. Linda kept her back
to him; their eyes met in the mirror.
Finally, after a long moment in which the two were held frozen in the perfume of
bruised roses and the melodies of Mozart, he stepped forward and offered her an extrava-
gant bow. Linda watched him as he theatrically pointed one foot forward, made a swirling
gesture with his right hand, bent elegantly at the waist, and said, “Madam, your servant.”
She smiled, turned in her seat, and held out a hand to him.
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When he came and took it, bending to kiss it, for an instant their eyes met again,
framed by two black masks.
“I missed you at court today,” he said, spinning out the fantasy.
She rose and swept past him, having to turn sideways because of her wide-hipped
skirt, and went to pour sweet red wine into the silver cups. Her hands trembled slightly.
“I doubt that, monsieur,” she said. “You would have had the attention of every lady in the
palace, including the queen herself.”
When she turned to hand him the cup, she caught a fleeting look cross his face—a
dark, disturbed look, she thought. And then it was gone and he was smiling and she was
wondering if she had imagined it.
But she had seen that same look before, in each of their meetings. Did she perplex
him? No doubt she did. Linda was probably the one member of Butterfly who would
allow him to go only so far and no further.
“Even the blessed Marie Antoinette is a dull star eclipsed by the brilliance of yourself,
madam.”
He took the cup; their fingers touched. She was trying desperately to give herself up to
the fantasy. Every time she walked through Butterfly’s doors Linda tried to leave behind
reality and the world of medicine and Barry Greene and her fears. She tried to allow her-
self to become someone else, so that that someone, and not Linda Markus, could have her
sexual spirit set free. But it was almost an impossibility. One did not just shuck off eight
hours spent in surgery and then rounds on the burn wards, a meeting of the Ethics
Committee, and a half-typed article for the
Journal of the American Medical Association