Part 5 (1/2)
”What does what remind me of?” he says.
”This. All of us.”
Jann seems confused, so she goes on. ”Have you noticed how no one really likes each other?” she says. ”We're like a family.”
He is amused. He takes a long drink of beer and runs his hands through his hair. ”Speak for yourself.”
Bernadette laughs and then stops. ”What's holding us together?” she asks.
”That's easy,” says Jann, leaning so far back in his chair that the cheap wood creaks. ”That's a no-brainer.”
”Humor me,” says Bernadette.
He leans forward, resting his elbows on the oilcloth tabletop. The wind carries snaking bits of music in from the narrow streets. The models have wandered away, and the room is filled with people so black their skin s.h.i.+nes blue in the light.
”We're on a fas.h.i.+on shoot,” he says.
He rolls a matchstick between his palms and then waves at the waiter for two more beers. Flies settle on the table's edge. He looks at Bernadette. ”To getting those shots,” he says, raising his beer. He sounds uneasy. Bernadette drinks from her bottle, letting her head fall back. Her neck is long and white. Jann watches her throat move as she swallows.
”To the hand that feeds us,” she says.
Now the girls gallop over. They want to go dancing someplace. In Mombasa there was a discotheque filled with young African wh.o.r.es who danced languidly and waited for business to arrive. The girls were fascinated.
”Not in Lamu,” says Jann. ”Remember, there aren't even cars.”
Alice yawns openly, like a cat. Her teeth catch the light. She leans down and rests her head on Jann's shoulder. In a helpless, teenage way she has adored him from the start.
”I'm sleepy,” she says.
Jann glances at Bernadette and pulls the girl into his lap. He runs a palm over her soft hair, and she relaxes against him. Her long legs scatter toward the floor. All of them are silent. The girl squirms and moves her head. At this hour two months ago, she would be kissing her father good night. She climbs to her feet. ”Well,” she says, looking from Jann to Bernadette, ”see you tomorrow.”
She wanders in search of the other two, who have left her behind.
”Poor kid,” says Jann.
As they watch her go, Bernadette reaches under the table and touches him, softly at first, then more boldly. It's amazing, she thinks, how you can just do this to people. Like stealing. Luckily, the youngest girls don't know it.
Jann looks at her and swallows. She decides that he is younger than she thought. She sips her beer, which tastes of smoke, and does not move her hand. ”What does this remind you of?” she says.
He shakes his head. Color fills his cheeks.
”Let's go upstairs,” says Bernadette.
They leave the bar and climb the narrow flight of steps to the hotel rooms. Bernadette presses her palms against the walls. She is drunker than she thought. They pause at the top, where insects dive against an electric bulb. Jann hooks his fingers into the back of Bernadette's jeans and gently pulls. Desire, sour and metallic, pushes up from her throat.
”Your room?” she says.
Jann's bed is neatly made, its curtain of mosquito netting twisted in a bundle overhead. He goes into the bathroom and shuts the door. Bernadette stands at the window. There is no gla.s.s, just wood shutters that have been pulled aside to let in the night wind. A bright moon spills silver across the waves. Painted sailboats line the sh.o.r.e.
She hears the toilet flush and stays near the window, expecting Jann to come up behind her. He doesn't. The bed squeaks under his weight.
”You know,” she says, still facing the sea, ”this reminds me of something.”
”Everything reminds you of something,” he says.
”That's true. One of these days I'll figure out what it is.”
”Any ideas?”
”Nope.” She stretches so that her stomach pulls. ”It must be one of the few things I haven't seen or done.”
Jann is silent. Bernadette wonders if he has pulled the netting down.
”Well,” he says, ”then it shouldn't be hard to spot. When it comes along.”
Bernadette lifts off her s.h.i.+rt. Her bra is black, her b.r.e.a.s.t.s full and white inside it. There is too much flesh. This has always been the case, but after a day of dressing girls with p.r.o.nged hips and bellies like shallow empty dishes, her own body comes as a surprise. She turns to Jann. ”I'll know when I've found it,” she says, ”because it won't remind me of anything else.”
He is lying down, hands crossed behind his head. His photographer's eye is on her. Her body feels abundant, tasteless. She wishes she had left her s.h.i.+rt on.
”If you close your eyes,” she says, ”you won't know the difference.”
Jann shakes his head. The ceiling fan spins, touching Bernadetten bare shoulders with its current. She goes to the dresser and finds scattered change, film containers, a pack of cigarettes. She takes one out and lights it. There are Polaroids: two from this morning in town, another from the docks. She finds one of Alice in the dunes and holds it up. ”What do you think of her?” she says.
”Cute,” says Jann. ”Stiff, though. New.”
”She has a crush on you,” says Bernadette. ”I'm sure you've noticed.”
”Poor kid,” says Jann. ”Should be going to high school proms.”
Bernadette looks again at the picture. Sunlight fills the girl's hair. The sand is pale and bright as snow, the sea turquoise. She longs suddenly to be in those white dunes, as if she had never seen anything like them before. She must remind herself that she was standing just outside the shot, that she chose the girl's bathing suit.
”Have you ever noticed how meaningful these things can look?” she asks.
Jann laughs. ”Have I noticed?” he says. ”It's my shot.”
Bernadette flips the picture back among the others. Her voice goes soft. ”I meant in a general sense.”
”In a general sense,” says Jann, ”that's how they work.”
The room is filled with stale light. Bernadette goes to the bed. It's amazing, she thinks, how l.u.s.t and aggravation will combine to push you toward someone. She sits on the bed and then wishes she had headed for the door. She would have liked to make him ask. He would have asked, she thinks.
She stretches out beside him under the twisting fan. It reminds her of a scissors. They do not touch.
”So,” she says, addressing the fan, ”are you planning to cash in?”
”On what?”
”On Alice.”
His arms tense. ”Are you always like this?”