8

“Good morning, sweetheart.”

I must be awake; nobody could dream a headache this bad. Cautiously — or incautiously, as it turned out — I opened one eye, and a needle of sunlight struck straight through into my brain. “Holy Mother of God!” I groaned, and snapped the eyelid shut again over my charred eyeball.

A smell of coffee threatened my stomach with upheaval, and a voice I recognized said, redundantly, “I brought you some coffee.”

This time I squinted, which was safer, and vaguely made out her female form. Liz, or possibly Betty. Which one was it? Come to think of it, which one was I?

“Do you want your glasses?”

Ah hah, a clue. Glasses = Bart. “Sweetheart” said to Bart = Betty.

Sweetheart? Betty? What bed was I in? “Glasses,” I muttered, feeling sudden urgency, and waved a hand in the air until my spectacles were thrust into it. I donned them without sticking the wings in my eyes and blinked around at a bedroom I knew from somewhere. Good God, there was the closet, its door demurely closed. I was upstairs once more in the Kerner house, and had apparently spent the night.

Oh, really? I struggled to a sitting position, my back against the knurled wood headboard, and looked fuzzily around. This room was furnished with twin beds, in one of which I was roiling about and on the edge of the other of which Betty was sitting, cheerful and not at all hung over, crisp and cute in white shorts and a pale blue top.

She smiled at me. “Hung over?”

“I think it’s terminal.”

“I brought you some aspirin.”

“Gimme.”

She watched me struggle the aspirin down with gulps of coffee, and her expression was fond and indulgent and maternal, three of my least favorite mannerisms in a woman.

It was hard to think and swallow aspirin at the same time, but I forced myself. Last night: romantic evening, motorboat, Pewter Tankard. Betty had informed me she never drank anything stronger than wine, so I’d seen to it the table flowed with the stuff. Sherry beforehand, Moselle with the appetizer, Médoc with the entree, and stingers with dessert. (The wine limitation had fallen by then.) I did remember the stingers, but from then on memory faltered. There was a scene involving hilarious laughter and me failing to get out of a boat There was something to do with whether or not we were going to steal bicycles. Beyond that, a veil covereth all.

At last I abandoned the effort and put the coffee cup on the night table between the beds, saying, “God, what a head.”

“I guess you’re just not used to wine.”

“That might be it.”

“You know, you look a lot more like your brother with your glasses off, and your hair tousled that way.”

I whipped a guilty hand to my head, but could do nothing effective there, and permitted it to drop again to my side.

“Have you ever thought of trying contact lenses?”

“Oh, well,” I said. “Glasses are good enough for me.” They were hurting my nose.

“You’re really very good-looking, you know,” she said, and when I looked at her it seemed to me there was something possessive, possibly triumphant in the set of her head and the glint of her eye.

Had we? There are things you don’t forget, aren’t there? Aren’t there? I was naked beneath the sheet and thin blanket. Speak, memory. Goddamn it to hell. But memory remained silent. And that is one question it is never possible to ask a woman. They don’t take kindly to the thought of being forgettable. “I think,” I said, “you should take cover. I believe my head is about to explode.”

“I’ll massage your temples,” she offered. “I do that for Liz sometimes when she has hangovers, and she says it helps just wonderfully.”

“Anything,” I said.

So she moved over to sit on my bed, remove my glasses, and began stroking my temples with her cool fingers. It did nothing for me in any medical way, but it did put her in arm’s reach, so I slid a hand around her waist The smile she gave me was very nearly as lewd as her sister’s, and she said, “Again? You’d better rest.”

Ah hah, another clue. Again, was it? I stroked a breast and drew her close and murmured, “It’s the only known cure. A medical fact.”

“Now, Bart,” she said, and we kissed. Despite my throbbing head I enjoyed it.

But when I tried to roll her into the bed with me she pulled back, becoming at once serious. “Not in my father’s bed!”

“Your fa—” I glanced toward the other one. “Not that one either, I guess.”

“You can understand, can’t you?” She petted my chest, seeking forgiveness.

“Oh, sure. But—” How to phrase this, without tipping the fact that our previous encounter wasn’t on the tape? “Last night,” I suggested, “didn’t we, uh?...”

She looked at me, with humorous shock covering the true shock. “You don’t remember!”

“Of course I remember.” I sat up straighter, astounded that she could doubt me. “I remember you. But you know the condition I was in, and the dark, and...” I let it trail off, with a vague wavy gesture of the hand “I just don’t remember where” I said.

“You silly thing,” she said. “On the porch.”

“Ah.”

“And the living room.”

“Ah hah.”

“And the bathroom.”

“Ah?”

She giggled, and petted my chest some more. “You were just insatiable,” she said.

I must have been. “I still am,” I said, and petted her chest, while I looked around for some solution to our quandary. My eye lit on the closet; no, that would be going just too far.

“Oh, Bart,” she said, and leaned forward to nibble my pectorals.

“Um,” I said, and pointed to the floor. “You see that rug?”

“What a wonderful idea,” she said, and bounded out of her shorts.

Even with twins, there are certain differences. Betty was a trifle thinner than Liz, and somewhat less imaginative. She was also a lot harder to bring off; in fact, I’m not sure I did. However, she seemed well enough pleased, and afterward, as I lay on the rug like a trout in the bottom of a boat, she wetly kissed my ear and whispered, “I’ll make you a nice breakfast.”

“Thank you,” I whispered. She had whispered because it was romantic, but I did so because I didn’t have the strength to talk.

She started away, then came back to whisper some more. “Now, if Liz comes in, remember we’re going to keep it a secret.”

A secret. Screwing? I wasn’t up to any response other than a bewildered squint in her general direction.

She was about to become hurt again. “Now,” she said, no longer whispering, “you’ll tell me you didn’t forget our engagement.”

“Oh, our engagement! Well, naturally I know about that. I just didn’t know what you were talking about”

She considered me briefly, but finally decided to let it go, for which small kindness I hope she was given full marks in heaven. She left the room, and slowly I made it to a sitting position on the floor. I spoke aloud. “I’m engaged,” I said, and then I giggled.

It wasn’t until some time later that I thought of the world’s third largest supplier of wood and wood products, and the several other firms including a television station in Indiana.

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