“We know more of genetic scripts than you realize,” said Anna X. “Male genetic scripts rule the planet beneath us— scripts which program men for destructive competition with their kind and destructive oppression of my kind. The modern era’s ethics, politics, and economics are all shaped to acquisition and domination, the ultimate goal of which is control of women’s bodies. Testosterone provides more than enough explanation for
They might as well have been speaking Hindi and Urdu for all that they understood each other. He knew the words, but he could not grasp her context; she heard only her translations of his arguments. Deryn saw him growing frustrated, not only with his failure to persuade her, but also with their inability even to agree on the facts. But then, he had long had an unreasonable faith in the power of reason, and too little grasp of the power of emotions.
“So what you’re really saying is that you won’t help me because I’m the enemy,” he was saying, his tone sharp and impatient. “I’ve got an outie, not an innie, so anything that helps me must harm you. It must, or I wouldn’t want it, is that it?”
“No. Not the enemy,” Anna X said, ignoring the rest. “But your goals are not our goals, and we have the right to focus our resources on our own goals. Our midwives are busy enough with the work they have now. We accepted your presence here as a courtesy to Deryn. But this is
And as quickly as that, it was over.
For the rest of the day, Deryn left Christopher alone in her home. She had obligations—a class in rhythmic language at the school, a meeting of the Code circle to set sentence in a minor case, a bit of healing work to which she had promised to lend her hands and energies.
But even if she had not been obliged to leave him, Deryn would have tried to find a reason to do so.
He was struggling to stand, burning from within. She could not catch him if he fell, nor protect him from the flames. She could not allow herself to treat him as her child, for he was all too ready to return to that comforting security.
That night, he talked about his family for the first time since he arrived. They were sitting in Deryn’s teaching ring, a circle of cushions in a carpeted corner of her flex space. He had picked a spot where he could lean back against a wall; she sat cross-legged and straight-backed a third of the way around the circle. Between them was a low table bearing a woven basket of dried flowers and brown field grasses.
“This business about men and women—what Anna X said this morning,” he said. “Does everyone up here believe that?”
“There’s nothing that
“Most, then? You?”
“What we think is conditioned on what we know, and what we know best is our own experience,” she said. “My experience is that men and women are different enough that I can say I prefer to be with one and prefer not to be with the other.”
“What kind of difference? Or is it one of those if-you-have-to-ask-you’ll-never-understand things?”
She shook her head. “It isn’t sexual, which is what everyone thinks. For me, it’s something about balance, or focus. Men make me jangle. They confuse me. I change around them, and I don’t usually like the changes. Their presence is a demand, somehow.”
Smiling, she added, “We’re not angels, mind you, and Sanctuary is no Utopia. But I find it a very calming place to be. In fact, that’s how I think of it—a place to
“I don’t feel like the kind of man she’s talking about,” he said. “But that’s nothing new. I had a friend who saw all his relationships that way. But I could never see mine that simply. They always seem so much more complicated than that, even when I think they’re going to be simple.”
“Did that include your trine?”
“And my marriage before that, and Vanessa before that, and Patti in Vernonia. They all started easy and ended hard.”
“Your trine is still alive, isn’t it?”
“Only a technicality. Only a matter of time. Jessie’s locked on someone new, and Loi—I don’t think I’m important enough to Loi for the amount of trouble I bring. Anytime I want, I can call and hear the death sentence. I wouldn’t be surprised to hear that Fields is already living there.”
“I wondered why you hadn’t wanted to call out,” she said. “Now I’m wondering why you’re content to just let it happen. Is it over for you, as well?”
He gazed into the basket of curled leaves and crisp petals. “Jessie was so—so agreeable, so accommodating, at first. It seemed like she was happy making us happy. I guess I never thought she was going to want more. I don’t even know how to win her back, because I never had to win her in the first place. Does that make sense?”
He had been spoiled by easy answers, she saw, by mind mechanics who pronounced their verdicts as quickly and shallowly as an on-air psychologist. Even if they were right answers, he lost the chance to learn from them— they meant nothing to him because they were won so easily.
“What do you miss?” she asked.
There was no hesitation. “Cuddling with her,” he said. “I never knew anyone so willing to cuddle and so comfortable to do it with. Loi could never sit still that long. She’d have to talk, or plan, or get up and go do something that needed doing. Jessie has a way of melting into you. We shot a lot of evenings on the couch, just wrapped together and humming along at warm.” A wan, sorry smile flickered across his lips. “She made me feel good inside. It was easy and I thought it’d always be there.”
Deryn nodded understandingly. “Is she happier now?”
He nodded glumly. “It seems so.”
“Then let her be.”
“Why didn’t she tell me what she wanted at the beginning?” he said with sudden anger. “Why did she let me think she was happy the way things were?”
Deryn made a bowl of her hands between her knees. “Years before I met your parents, I was in love with a man twelve years older than I,” she said. “He was very sure of himself and very much in command of his life, both things I admired then. He was an executive with a company that took very good care of him, so he could take very good care of me. We went to Hawaii, to Rio. He surprised me with presents, never extravagant, but thoughtful, perfect.
“We’d been together six months when he asked me to go with him to a doctor in New York. He wanted me to have an operation so that I could give him more pleasure during sex. He’d had such a woman in London, in one of the Triangle clubs. I didn’t even know such things were done.
“I can hardly believe it now, but I almost said yes. He was, I thought, a wonderful man. He loved me, he was giving me so much, why shouldn’t I do this for him? The closest I got to the downside was thinking, ‘Even if we break up, whoever comes next will appreciate it—’
“But when he left the next morning and it was just me by myself, everything changed. I had never had any surgery, never even broken a bone—no medical problems more serious than the flu. But I was going to volunteer to let someone cut and sew my body in the name of better orgasms. I was angry that he wanted me to do it. I was hurt that he wanted what a joybird had given him more than what he and I had shared—which up to that point I had thought was pretty wonderful.
“So I called him at work and told him I’d changed my mind,” she said. “I never heard from my ‘wonderful man’ again. He moved on to someone else, a friend of a friend of a friend. A few months later, they went to New York for two weeks. When they came back, she was so happy with herself that she couldn’t wait to tell everyone. I was still so miserable that I was actually jealous. And I had no idea why.
“It took me fifteen years to forgive myself for almost giving in and to understand how he managed to find