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His Butler’s Story (1980-1981)

Page 10

by Edward Limonov


  Thus I quietly lay there, despondent yet at the same time thinking, But what about Rena, the Rumanian dancer? How am I to explain then my bestial, hour-long fucking with her? Of course, it had been several months since I’d quit fucking her. Maybe something had happened to me in the meantime? I didn’t believe there was anything wrong with me. Probably it was something else, say a temporary aversion to Jenny. Or that I wasn’t used to her yet? Yes, that’s what it was. I was still getting used to her.

  I didn’t succeed in reassuring myself but returned very awkwardly that morning to my hotel — retreated to my hole, ashamed to even look at Jenny. You know, masculine pride. There is nothing more painful than wounded masculine pride. A prick that won’t stand up or one that’s too small are devastating discoveries for a man. Even a small child’s first discovery of the existence of death doesn’t compare in horror. I was crushed. My prick wouldn’t stand up! And I have to say that no sensible references to bestial fucks with Rena or other beings of the female sex more remote in time could reassure me, although they did help to salve the wound a bit.

  An old man was riding up on the elevator with me, and I glanced at him and shuddered. His ear was a bloody abscess covered with scabs, and there were ulcers on his cheek too. His nose was half rotted away. Why on earth do they let such creatures walk around on the streets and in hotels? I wondered. And then I had a sudden ironic thought: His probably stands up every time like a stick. I even broke out laughing at my own black humor.

  I didn’t call Jenny for two days. She called me herself.

  “Come over, I have a surprise for you,” she said to me in her usual voice, or even, I thought, in a slightly mischievous one. I went. Another wouldn’t have, but I always go, even if disgrace awaits me. I’m brave, or maybe stupid, but I go.

  A surprise. The surprise turned out to be a questionnaire from Dr. Krishna consisting, if you can imagine it, of about three hundred questions; I’m not exaggerating. The Indian quack wanted to know everything about his patient, the better to devise his Indian-Gypsy tricks later on. After you’d already forgotten what you’d written down on the questionnaire, he would suddenly but gently announce, looking into your soul with his piercing eyes, “Well, sir, your mother’s uncle was an alcoholic or your grandmother on your father’s side was insane…” Despite the shitty state of my affairs, I had a good laugh while reading the questionnaire, as did Jenny, although she still declared in a severe tone of voice that we would start filling out the questionnaire the very first thing next morning.

  There wasn’t any food in the house from Jenny’s point of view, and so we went to a restaurant. From my point of view, the refrigerator was full, and it would have been possible to live for a good several weeks on the food that was there. But I didn’t argue with her. Hers was the consciousness of an American girl, mine that of a foreign writer struggling with poverty.

  In the restaurant, Jenny suddenly started feeling bad and complained about a pain in her back, and we returned home immediately. Aware of my own guilt, I offered my unfucked girlfriend a massage by way of compensation, and we went up to her room, I in terror, to tell you the truth.

  By morning Jenny had forgotten all about the questionnaire, as had I, because by then I had fucked her, three times at least. “What’s happened to you, Edward?” she asked happily on her way to the shower mat morning. Nothing; I had simply gotten beyond my usual tangle of feelings.

  She sang happily in the shower, and I listened to her voice while lolling on the bed like a kind of lazy person, one leg hanging over the side, and reckoned up my feelings. The reckoning wasn’t very comforting. I suddenly realized distinctly and clearly for the first time that I didn’t love Jenny (I don’t love Jenny), and that I never would.

  I wanted very much to fall in love, wanted it, I realized, more than anything. I liked Jenny, but she didn’t even suit me physically. She didn’t know how to fuck, and would just lie there like a big unhappy dummy, a female animal waiting for sperm to be deposited in her. There are men, no doubt, who like specimens of that kind and find them exciting, but I unfortunately do not. She was patently a mama, and I even felt something a little like shame in fucking her, as if I were fucking my own mother. Maybe she was my mother in my last incarnation?

  Although I had fucked her a rather long time all three times, I don’t think she had an orgasm even once. Licking her cunt would have been no problem for me of course, and she would probably have come if I had, but if you’re going to lick a cunt, you at least have to feel like it, but with her I didn’t. Even though I have more than once in my life risked licking the cunts of prostitutes.

  Jenny wasn’t the least erotic. She was a healthy animal, healthy despite her continual indispositions and complaints about a pain in her back, or in her stomach, or in her “vagina,” as she would say. But if Martha must bear children and bake bread, they will go to Mary Magdalene to fornicate.

  Thus I lay and drowsily mused. Jenny came out of the shower. “Lazy boy!” she said in the lisping voice she had probably used with children when she was a governess and a babysitter. “It’s time to stop idling and get up. I’m going down to the kitchen now to make us some coffee and an excellent breakfast. Do you like bacon and pancakes with maple syrup? I’ll make bacon and pancakes with maple syrup and you get up and take a shower.”

  Jenny was obviously in a good mood. Later on I became convinced that the knowledge she was “making love” was more important to her than any pleasure she got from the act itself. How nice! I’m doing it. I’m making love just like all the other girls! she probably thought. Her God, and she had gone to Catholic school, no doubt encouraged her to feel that way. Well, it doesn’t matter if I don’t enjoy it; Edward does.

  I was sure she would later tell her girlfriends in detail how her new boyfriend had fucked her three times, and how afterward “we drank coffee and had delicious whole wheat pancakes with an extra cup of barley flour; the pancakes turned out really well. And maple syrup… It’s hard to get real maple syrup now, but Nancy brought some from Connecticut. She got it herself — you know, they make holes in the bark.” Jenny was fond of all the pleasant little details.

  I’m not making fun of her; I still respect Jenny, and there aren’t many people that I do. But, good Lord, she was such a little Martha that she would regularly bake her own bread! Various kinds: unleavened, sweet, raisin, and even with zucchini or whatever else she could think of. Incredible homemade bread that even Steven would proudly serve his guests now and then. She ground the flour from grain herself; that tells you something, doesn’t it? In a real flour mill given to her by her friend Isabelle.

  We had breakfast on the roof, where we had taken a small folding table, and we sat across from each other and drank coffee out of red ceramic cups and poured maple syrup over our pancakes. Then Jenny brought a cassette player up to the roof and a cold bottle of champagne, and we took our places in lounge chairs, drank the champagne in the blazing sunshine, and listened to music.

  The tape was called “After the Ball,” the name of one of the songs included on it. They were old popular songs: “I’ve Got Rings on My Fingers,” “Good Bye, My Lady Love,” and “Will You Love Me in December as You Do in May?”

  Those melodies both then and now evoke in me a kind of festive melancholy. Perhaps because they really are about our lives in this world — my life and Jenny’s and the lives of other people who lived before us — about our private little stories and tragic mistakes, our whims and our passions. The song “After the Ball” tells how at a ball «he» mistook her brother for her lover, and so foolishly lost his happiness, and how «she» soon caught cold and died. “After the Ball.” I’m writing this too after the ball.

  Chapter Four

  I’m very ashamed to admit it, but I gradually came to hate her, quietly and feebly. Maybe it was the hatred of an adventurer for an escapade that hadn’t lived up to his expectations, that hadn’t come off, an irresolvable subconscious bitterness at the fact that sh
e was a servant and not the lady of the house. I don’t know. One thing is certain; along with the gratitude I felt to Jenny, I also detected in myself the first twinges of antipathy for her. She had revived a corpse, and the corpse, having come back to life, at once resumed its nasty little tricks, as you see, and instead of gratitude, concealed a bitterness toward the girl who had found him on her doorstep.

  The first time I remember being ashamed of Jenny was when she and I were sitting in the kitchen and I was introduced to a young woman who had unexpectedly walked in holding the hand of a blond boy of about five.

  “The Marchioness Houston… Edward Limonov, my boyfriend,” Jenny said proudly, introducing us.

  The nicely perfumed and beautifully coiffured marchioness, obviously no older than I, smiled benignly and extended a cool hand to me. To say that “we exchanged a few words” would be an exaggeration, since, like an idiot, I said nothing and stupidly gawked at the guest from across the sea. It wasn’t that the marchioness was particularly beautiful — after all, I had once been married to a very beautiful woman, Elena — but that she was a lady from head to toe. I glanced at my girlfriend, who unfortunately was sitting in the kitchen barefoot, with her hair uncombed and a mess and a white pimple breaking out under her nose. She stubbornly refused to squeeze out her pimples, letting them burst by themselves since she was afraid of blood poisoning. She was wearing a blue skirt I had made for her, and not very well either — it was my first attempt, and the skirt stretched across Jenny’s fat stomach, emphasizing it, and the wide ruffles, which were inappropriate for such heavy material, made her backside look so heavy that she seemed to me at that moment to resemble nothing so much as a large goose.

  Looking at Jenny and comparing her with the Marchioness Houston, I returned from the realm of dreams and the petty everyday details of my struggle to the harsh reality of today. I was the lover of a servant. The full wretchedness of my situation loomed before me in the guise of the unkempt Jenny, and there in the kitchen, responding to the unaffected questions of the Marchioness Houston, to the simple courtesy of a well-bred lady, while Jenny was giving the little Lord Jesse a glass of milk, I swore to myself that I would leave Jenny that day and never return.

  Fortunately I didn’t keep my word. The fact is that I had nowhere else to go except back to what I had known before. And returning to Central Park to read and dream was something I simply could not do. Madame Margarita, the fairy Volodya, and the superstar Sashenka Lodyzhnikov hadn’t accepted me as one of them. They might have, but on terms that would have been humiliating to me, and I didn’t want that; I wanted to be treated as an equal and with respect. And anyway they didn’t interest me.

  My casual sexual relations had been a passing thing, and I had no wish to prolong them. I had derived something from them, a certain kind of knowledge, but the main thing, gentlemen, is that my partners were all poor homeless creatures like myself who had been cast out into the huge city either by their own volition or against it, but poor! Like me, they had their own struggles, on a much lower level, but struggles. For a good job, for success in their own narrow area of life, or perhaps for a better lover. Often I was a lucky find for my partners, but they never were for me. I didn’t want to associate with poor people; they depressed me. I needed a psychologically healthy atmosphere. That was the secret.

  More than Jenny, it was the millionaire’s house I needed. I loved the house; it was good for me, it and its carpets and pictures, its parquet floors and thousands of books, its huge leather folios with drawings by Leonardo da Vinci, its garden, and its children’s rooms — they were what I needed. Both nature and instinct had shown me the way, for the only means of getting into the house, the key to it, was Jenny. Not even through Steven Grey could I have gained entrance to it and lived there, unless he had been gay, but he wasn’t.

  I know what you’re thinking; go ahead and ask: “Why didn’t you, Limonov, who prattle so much about world revolution and the necessity of wiping a whole civilization off the face of the earth, why didn’t you take even one step in that direction? Why have you been so busy with your dick, as we’ve seen, and with every other kind of thing, some even directly opposed to your ‘goal’? Why didn’t you join a revolutionary party, for example, since they exist, even in America?”

  I’ll tell you why I didn’t. In the first place, those puny little parties would only have taken me as a minor little member, a mosquito, and I would have been handing out little newspapers and tracts on the street and going to petty little meetings, and maybe after about twenty years of party discipline and demagoguery, I would have become, say, a provincial Trotskyite boss. And then what?

  And in the second place, I want action. Not one American leftist party has any chance of success now, and I don’t play games that are already lost. My life is running out; I can feel it in my bones.

  And then, gentlemen, you’ve obviously got me mixed up with somebody else. I have my own ideas, you see, and the well-fed face of the proletarian is no less unpleasant and repugnant to me than the well-fed face of the capitalist.

  There was another way out — I could have let myself go and exploded in rage and left for somewhere in Beirut or South America where there’s shooting, and taken a bullet in the brain for something that had nothing to do with me, something I didn’t understand at all or understood only partly, and walked around with a submachine gun and felt free and alive. I have never been afraid of getting killed, but I am afraid of dying in obscurity; that’s my weak point, my Achilles’ heel. What can you do; everybody’s got one. You’ll forgive me, but I’m ambitious, even incredibly ambitious. And greedy for fame.

  And therefore I would, like Lord Byron, have gone off to fight to free the Greeks, or, in my own case, the Palestinians, if I had already made a name for myself, if I had already become known to the world. So that if I were cut down by machine gun fire somewhere among the sandbags and palms of Beirut, I could be sure that the fat New York Times, which always leaves your hands so black that you have to wash them with soap and water after reading it, would come out the next day with my photograph and four lines on the first page (with the rest in the obituary section) — “Died: Edward Limonov, poet and writer, author of several novels, including It’s Me, Eddie. Killed in a fire fight in the Moslem sector of Beirut.”

  But I knew that those lines wouldn’t appear anywhere. And that’s why I didn’t lose control.

  I think after that encounter with the Marchioness Houston, I wrote a poem, a ridiculously bitter poem, only part of which I remember, but containing the lines, “You won’t make a lady out of a servant,/ Never, never, never…” To be honest, I wasn’t trying to; I realized I would have to grit my teeth and endure Jenny and take advantage of the millionaire’s house. The typical reflections of an opportunist, I admit, but is that against the law? Who says it is?

  It turned out that at home in England the Marchioness Houston lived in a thirteenth-century castle with three hundred servants(!). Not too shabby. I hadn’t even suspected that such castles exist. They even had their own zoo, with tigers and bears, as I learned from an illustrated tourist guidebook to the castle. The marchioness had brought a certain number of the guidebooks with her to America to give to friends and acquaintances, and she gave one to Jenny. She also gave Jenny, if I’m not mistaken, two hundred dollars for looking after the young Lord Jesse and serving him breakfast.

  I too did a little work for the marchioness — I shortened three pairs of pants for her, one of them yellow and all bought in America. Neither Jenny nor I particularly cared for them; one pair was even made of polyester instead of cotton or wool. The fabric should have been natural — cotton, wool, or silk — as the housekeeper of that advanced and well-to-do American home knew, and as I, her boyfriend, did too. When Bridget came over, we all sat in the kitchen in various postures and condemned the marchioness for her polyester pants, deciding that the English were still very provincial, even the lords.

  I too went along with what th
ey were saying, although I was wistfully thinking too about the freshly bathed marchioness and her rather impressive bottom lying upstairs on her bed on the third floor, obviously wearing one of the red night shirts our black Olga had laundered for her.

  I had gone into the laundry room and had looked at the marchioness’ night shirts — I just couldn’t help it. The marchioness is lying in her bed, I thought dreamily to the monotonous chatter of Jenny and Bridget, my eyes half closed… fragrant with the warmth of her body and the odor of her fashionable perfume, a smell like the one the ordinary Soviet cologne White Lilac used to have. Maybe she’s stretching and rearranging her pillow…

  I’m sitting here in the kitchen with my servant girl and her friend, I thought dejectedly, while my place is upstairs, in bed with the marchioness. Wherever else an opportunist’s place is, it is in any case not in the kitchen.

  Jenny, of course, couldn’t have been aware of my treacherous thoughts, but seeing that I had suddenly grown sad, she got up from the table, came over to me, and bending down low said in a lisping whisper, her governess’ whisper intended for children that I found so incredibly irritating, “Silly man. Just be patient, my period will be over tomorrow and you can go inside me then.” She thought of course that I was in an agony of desire, that I wanted her. That I craved her insipid charms.

  Not likely. It was the marchioness I wanted! The marchioness, wife of a lord, the marchioness who lived in a castle with three hundred servants, a castle where tourists were admitted several days a week from ten until three and where there were pictures by Goya and Velazquez and Titian. What was I put on earth for, if I couldn’t fuck the marchioness!

  I think the Marchioness Houston liked me. Well of course she liked me; she had mentioned my beautiful hands and my beautiful shoes several times. Obviously it was clear from my face that I wasn’t born to be the lover of a servant. Maybe I was born to be the lover of a marchioness? Houston even pitied me for living in a foreign country and outside my natural surroundings. It’s unlikely the marchioness was thinking it would be nice to fuck Edward, but running into her on the stairway and in the kitchen, I desired her passionately. But not so much sexually, I think, as socially. I had a social inferiority complex; that’s all. If fate had presented me with an opportunity to fuck her then, it would no doubt have been very therapeutic for me. How proud I would have been. But there wasn’t any such opportunity. Whenever important guests like the marchioness and her husband stayed at the house, I spent relatively little time there, because then Steven Grey was home a lot. During such periods Steven and his guests relegated Jenny and me to the kitchen, to the servants’ quarters, so to speak. I was intimidated.

 

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