Youâre not a little girl any longer, Mimi. He said that.
Ben.
The moon is so bright that my whole room is filled with a cold blue light. Nearly a full moon. In the corner I can make out my record player, the case of vinyls next to it. I painted the walls in here such a dark blackish-blue that they donât reflect any lightat all but the poster hanging opposite me seems to glow. Itâs a Cindy Sherman; I went to her show at the Pompidou last year. I got completely obsessed with how raw and freaky and intense her work is: the kind of thing I try to do with my painting. In the poster, one of the Untitled Film Stills, sheâs wearing a short black wig and she stares out at you like sheâs possessed, or like she might be about to eat your soul. â Putain! â my flatmate Camille laughed, when she saw it. âWhat happens if you bring some guy back? Heâs gonna have to look at that
angry bitch while youâre screwing? Thatâll put him off his rhythm.â As if, I thought at the time. Nineteen years old and still
a virgin. Worse. A convent-school-educated virgin.
I stare at Cindy, the black bruise-like shadows around her eyes, the jagged line of her hair which is kind of like my own,
since I took a pair of scissors to it. It feels like looking in a mirror.
I turn to the window, look down into the courtyard. The lights are on in the conciergeâs cabin. Of course: that nosy old bitch
never misses a trick. Creeping out from shadowy corners. Always watching, always there. Looking at you like she knows all
your secrets.
This building is a U-shape around the courtyard. My bedroom is at one end of the U, so if I peer diagonally downward I can
see into his apartment. Nearly every evening for the last two months he sat there at his desk working late into the night,
the lights on. For just a moment I let myself look. The shutters are open but the lights are off and the space behind the
desk looks more than empty, or like the emptiness itself has a kind of depth and weight. I glance away.
I slide down from my bed and tiptoe out into the main part of the apartment, trying not to trip over all the stuff Camille leaves scattered around like itâs an extension of her bedroom: magazines and dropped sweaters, dirty coffee cups, nail varnish pots, lacybras. From the big windows in here Iâve got a direct view of the front entrance. As I watch, the gate opens. A shadowy figure slips through the gap. As she comes forward into the light I can make her out: a woman I have never seen before. No, I say silently. No no no no no. Go away. The roar in my head grows louder.
âDid you hear that knocking?â
I spin around. Putain . Camilleâs lounging there on the couch, cigarette glowing in her hand, boots up on the armrest: faux-snakeskin with five-inch
heels. When did she get in? How long has she been lurking there in the dark?
âI thought you were out,â I say. Normally, if she goes clubbing, she stays till dawn.
â Oui .â She shrugs, takes a drag on her cigarette. âIâve only been back twenty minutes.â Even in the gloom I see how her eyes slide
away from mine. Normally sheâd be straight into some story about the crazy new club sheâs been at, or the guy whose bed sheâs
just left, including an overly detailed description of his dick or exactly how skilled he was at using it. Iâve often felt
like Iâm living vicariously through Camille. Grateful someone like her would choose to hang out with me. When we met at the
Sorbonne she told me she likes collecting people, that I interested her because I have this âintense energy.â But when Iâve
felt worse about myself Iâve suspected this apartment probably has more to do with it.
âWhere have you been?â I ask, trying to sound halfway normal.
She shrugs. âJust around.â
I feel like thereâs something going on with her,
David Sherman & Dan Cragg