âErotica is all the rage in publishing at the moment. And cross-dressing is all the rage in everything.'
âThat's true,' Julia concurred. âIt's a kind of a fin-de-siecle, end-of-millennium sort of thing. Did I tell you girls, by the way, that just before I went to China I got a commission from
Image
to do a photo-essay on drag queens? One of my big coups on the China trip was getting a Beijing drag queen to pose for me.'
âA Beijing drag queen?' Chantal was immediately fascinated.
âLook, I wouldn't have believed it either, but there you go. Besides, Chinese men tend to have a lot less body hair, and more slender builds than Westerners. They make excellent drag queens. Really beautiful. This guy was stunning.'
âFor some reason, I never even thought there would be gays in China,' Helen admitted. âBut I suppose that's silly. Why wouldn't there be? Do you have the pictures here?'
âI'm still developing them. But I'll show you as soon as they're ready. Together with other photos from the trip.'
âCome to think of it,' said Chantal, âI've always associated China with a kind of gay aesthetic. I remember finding this book with photographs of those, what did they call them, revolutionary operas or something? There were all these really gorgey blokes done up with rouge and lipstick and eyeliner and leaping about in stylised army uniforms. I thought, how utterly, absolutely
camp.
I showed the book to Alexi and he loved it. In fact, he kept it.' Chantal held her glass out to Julia for a refill.
Philippa breathed a secret sigh of relief. This change of topic was most welcome. âSo tell us more, Jules,' she enthused from the kitchen. âTell us everything. And speak loudly enough for me to hear in here.' Julia happily obliged, saving Mengzhong for last. They were suitably impressed.
âA snake-charmer!' cried Chantal. âHow perfectly exotic.'
Helen remembered promising Philippa a hand and joined her in the kitchen. Julia followed with an empty blender.
âThat's where the blender is!' Philippa exclaimed. âI'm going to need that in a sec.'
âMaybe it's time to open up a bottle of wine,' Julia said, rinsing it out and handing it to her. âWhat are you making?' she asked her.
âAjo Blanco, an Andalusian white soup, made with garlic and almonds and grapes.'
âGarlic and almonds and grapes? Wild.'
After Julia had taken a bottle of white from the fridge, Philippa shooed her and Helen out of the kitchen. She decided she didn't need help with the grapes after all. Just as they were exiting the room, however, she thought of something. âHey Helen, whatever happened with that letter you were trying to get back? Did you ever find it?'
âWhat's this, Helen?' Julia demanded.
Helen launched into the story of the lost letter. âIt's so weird,' she concluded. âEveryone replied to my letters except Bronwyn, a colleague in Melbourne. I was pretty sure then that she'd got the hot one. Very very embarrassing, but better, I suppose, than my parents or that academic journal. Just to be safe, I sent her an innocent little note asking whether she'd received my letter and if she'd be sending me her paper soon. When Bronwyn wrote back, it was to say she had meant to mail me her paper right after getting my first letter. She apologised for not responding sooner. So it's still a mystery. Sometimes I wonder if I wrote that letter at all or if I just imagined it.'
You wrote it all right, Philippa thought.
Philippa preferred to be alone when she cooked. It was a very sensual activity. To make the soup, she first took the crushed almonds and poured them into the blender. Then she picked up the bread she had soaking in milk and pinched it between her fingers, letting the milk run over her hands as, mashing the soft pulp, she squeezed out the last drops of liquid. She dropped the bread pulp onto the almonds. Extracting four large cloves of garlic from the head, she lay them on the cutting board and crushed them under the flat end of a large carving knife. They gave in under the pressure with a tiny âphht'. Separating the lacerated and juicy flesh from the skin, she dropped them on top of the bread pulp and almonds. She put her fingertips to her nose. Inhaling, she drew in the strong garlic of her fingertips and then licked them, savouring the sharpness. She turned on the blender until all the ingredients turned to paste. She added the olive oil, a few drops at a time, then a flow. Finally, she added water that she'd been cooling with ice, a touch of salt and white vinegar, and poured the creamy thick mixture into bright green bowls. She tore the skin off several fat and juicy green grapes, cut them in half, scooped out the seeds and floated them in the white liquid.
It was the first time she'd been able to face grapes since that morning with Jake. After he'd left, she'd suddenly remembered how he'd counted aloud as he'd sucked the grapes out of her cunt. One. Two. Three. It only occurred to her later that there had been four altogether. What had happened to the fourth? She pulled down her pants, bent down and prodded with a finger. Unbelievable. The thing had lodged just out of reach in the cavity just beyond her cervix. She was able to touch it and roll it around with her finger, but no matter how she tried, she couldn't pry it out. Two days later, it was still there. Red-faced, Philippa fronted up at the Sydney Hospital's Sexual Health Clinic. A nurse, assuring her she'd had to remove far stranger objects from both women and men, managed to extract it with a speculum and a probe. Philippa decided then and there that some things were better left to the realm of fiction. Eat me, indeed.
When at last she emerged with the soup, the girls ooh-ed and ah-ed and eagerly took their places. Julia poured white wine into each of their glasses as they collectively marvelled at Philippa's creation.
âYou know,' giggled Helen, âmaybe I'm just a bit silly from all those cocktails, but this looks suspiciously like semen to me.'
âOh,
nice,'
Chantal spluttered. âThanks for sharing that with us, Helen.'
âWhat's wrong, Chantie,' Julia teased. âDon't you swallow?'
âDarling,' Chantal replied, dabbing at her lips with a napkin, âI don't even taste. But seriously, it's delicious, Phippa.'
âIt is,' Julia concurred. âAbsolutely yummy. Speaking of swallowing, did you hear the one about the boy who had to break up with his vegan girlfriend?'
Now it was Philippa's turn to choke. Helen patted her on the back. âLethal soup, Philippa,' she commented. âIf things continue in this vein, we'll never make it to dessert.'
Philippa, stifling coughs, signalled that she was all right.
âYou okay Phippa?' Julia looked concerned. âSure?'
âSo what was the story?' Chantal prompted. âAbout the vegan?'
âOh right,' said Julia. âWell, it seems she wouldn't have oral sexâdidn't believe in swallowing animal proteins.'
Helen and Chantal chortled. Philippa's voice, on the other hand, disappeared altogether, having apparently followed the ajo blanco down the wrong tube. âWho told you that one?' she finally managed to croak.
âOh, that boy I'd been seeing, you know, the young one. Jake.'
âJake?' Her voice fled even further down her oesophagus, and the name came out like a tiny squeak. The others burst out laughing.
âIt's not that funny a name,' Julia protested.
âSo, what's the latest news on that front?' Chantal asked.
âOh, I don't know. It's off, it's over, kaput, end of story. I think.'
âWhy? And what do you mean, you
think?'
Chantal sucked a peeled grape half into her mouth and toyed with it on her tongue, popping it out again between her full lips and then sucking it in again.
âGod, stop that Chantal,' Julia laughed. âYou're making me free-associate. As for Jake, he sort of did the nineties thing before I left, you know, saying he didn't really think he wanted a relationship. All I said to prompt this was, I'll write. It spun him out. I mean, he looked so panicked, you wouldn't believe it. Tell me, is it too much to ask for a little commitment? Like, say, a promise that he'd open and read one or two pieces of mail? Is that really asking too much?'
âBut I thought,' Helen interrupted, âthat the casual nature of it really appealed to you. That you didn't really want a “boyfriend” as such. That's what you said when you told me about it, anyway. Did you change your mind?'
âWho knows,' Julia sighed. âDoes anyone know what they really want? I mean, casual's fine, and it lasted longer than I expected in the first place. So, like, it's cool. On the other hand, everything seemed to be going so well. And when it's going that well, I really wouldn't mind, to be honest, if they'd just stick around for a year or two. Like till they turned twenty-four or something. Is that really asking for too much? This new generation really is beyond me. Without a second thought, they can make lifetime fashion commitments, to tattoos, to having earring holes all over their faces, but they can't cope with a relationship that lasts more than a few weeks.'
âDoes Jake have piercings and tats?' Chantal asked.
One eyebrow, one nipple, thought Philippa. And a tattoo of a scorpion on his right shoulder.
âOne eyebrow, one nipple,' replied Julia. âAnd a tattoo of a scorpion on his right shoulder.' She sighed. âNever mind. The sex was great. Atomic. While it lasted.'
Helen frowned, more in perplexity than annoyance. âSex, sex, sex. Do you think we talk about sex too much?'
âI don't know. I mean, it's not like we're just bimbettes with nothing else on our minds,' Julia countered. âWe all work pretty hard and spend most of our time pondering serious things like, oh, you know, social issues, and aesthetics, and f-stops and there's all your academic work, Helen, and...'
âFashion,' Chantal contributed. âMy mind is deeply engaged with the style issues of the day.'
âI suppose,' Helen nodded. She was well aware that she thought about sex even more than she spoke about it. âAnd, after all, we're all planning to go to that Green rally next Sunday.'
âBesides,' said Julia, âsex is the eternal mystery. It is our most private experience, yet, unless you're talking about wanking, it's always shared with someone else. Sometimes a stranger. As far as careers and other aspects of our lives, well, they respond pretty well to logical analysis. But sex rarely does. So we're always trying to figure out what it is, what it means.'
âRelationships are pretty mysterious too, of course,' Helen added. âAnd they seem to be getting more so, for some strange reason.'
âExactly,' Julia enthused. âI don't think that either relationships or sex were less mysterious, say, in our mothers' time. But at least they didn't have to work out the form of things from scratch, and every time at that.'
âQuite,' Chantal agreed. âIt used to be, a boy brings you roses or sings under your balcony, you date, you establish a relationship, then, after a ceremony in which you get to wear the most excellent frock of your life, you have sex. Now it's all, well, arse-about. We jump straight into the sex, and thenâif we feel like itâwe start worrying about the relationship. And frocks don't come into it at all, really.'
Philippa had finally regained her voice. âI get to think about sex all the time because I'm writing about it.'
âSounds like a good excuse to me,' Julia chortled.
âI don't know about that,' commented Chantal. âYou've chosen to write about sex. If you were a responsible, socially aware writer, you'd do, I don't know, environmental thrillers or childcare mysteries or something. Then again, we probably wouldn't be so keen to read them. How's it coming along, anyway?'
âSeven chapters down. Five to go.'
âYou pleased with it so far?'
âKeeps me amused and off the streets.'
âIs it all going to be based on real life?' Julia demanded.
Philippa hesitated. She thought guiltily of Jake, and had a vision of red velvet. âWhat's real life?' she countered. No one had an answer.
Surveying the table, she observed, âWell, it looks like everyone's decided to swallow here,' and began stacking the bowls. Julia refreshed the wine glasses.
âI suppose I should go and get the main course ready.' Chantal rose from her chair, took the bowls and plates, and disappeared into the kitchen.
When she emerged, each plate boasted a tangly pile of black, squid-ink pasta topped with a generous spoonful of pesto, dramatically garnished with cherry tomatoes and tiny yellow pear tomatoes and a leaf of basil. She served up a large mesclun salad in an emerald green bowl with a sprinkling of miniature vegetables and brightly coloured flowers. A matching bowl contained the rest of the pasta.
âThis is beautiful, Chantal!' For about the twentieth time that evening, Helen wanted simply to
be
Chantal. Helen had no trouble turning out nourishing, tasty dishes but, for some reason, they always turned an unappetising and uniform brown-grey (curries) or brick red (pasta sauces). She imagined herself preparing the squid-ink pasta dish for her colleague, Sam. After they'd finished, she would clear the table, still basking in the warmth of his compliments. He would follow her into the kitchen and stand behind her as she put on the kettle and poured milk into a jug for the coffees. He would fold his arms around her waist and apply his lips to the back of her neck. She'd relax against his body and he'd press himself against her. His hands would move up to her breasts, and free them from her new, daringly low-cut blouse. He'd take the creamer of milk from her hand, and spill the cool white liquid slowly down her chest, rubbing it into her breasts and then turning her around to lick it off her skin. Her eyes would be closed and her neck stretched back. Removing her milk-soaked shirt, he would work his way down to her skirt, pull it down and pour more of the milk over her stomach. He'd lick her tummy and then, rubbing her underwear with his milky hands, start to eat her through her panties, and then those would come off as well. She would open her eyes to gaze out the window of her kitchen, and her unfocused gaze would just register her handsome new neighbour standing at his window, eyes clamped upon her. He'd slowly unzip his fly and take out a dick that looked enormous even at a distance and would spank it until he came all over the window pane. Ajo blanco. She'd reach down now, wanting to pull hard at Sam's thick, salt and pepper hair. Her fingers found his head and curled round the clumps of his lime-green pigtails. Lime-green pigtails? Sam didn'tâ¦how did Marc get into her fantasy? Goodness. This was a bit off. She tried hard to reinstate Sam back into the picture, but the image dissolved as the dinner conversation forced its way back into her consciousness.