what, frigid? Was there such a thing really? He thought that feminism had declared frigidity to be a myth that men made up to explain why women didn't want to have sex with sweating ignorant louts. Admittedly, he was ignorant and probably had been sweating. But - a lout? That was harsh. Had something happened in her childhood that made her interpret all sexual advances as something vile? By afternoon he had a couple more books, this time about sexual dysfunction, and read intently until he fell asleep by the still unringing phone, the fifth of his abject apologies and pleadings still unanswered on her voice mail.
The next morning he awoke to the doorbell ringing. Insistently, ring, ring, ring. Groggily he tried answering the phone, which was not ringing, and then got up, slipped on a robe, and went to the door.
It was Madeleine, carrying a bunch of daisies and looking as if she hadn't slept much the night before. "You must hate me," she said.
"I thought you hated me," he said.
"Can I come in?"
"Yes, of course, come in."
"You have to understand that I - I know I overreacted the other night. I thought you were - oh, who cares what I thought? I do want to marry you, you know, and of course marriage means physical intimacy and I just - I've never been with a man that way, you know, and so I - I'm just so sorry."
"Mad, it's all right, you don't have anything to apologize for, I was insensitive I guess, I just - "
"No, it was my fault, I - "
"Didn't you get my messages?"
"I listened to them over and over. I couldn't believe you still loved me after the way I acted. I just - I couldn't call you because I didn't know what to say, I - "
"At least let me put these flowers in water. And your coat, is it that cold this morning?"
He pulled a glass pitcher out of the cupboard and put in the daisies. He meant to fill it with water but first he turned around to speak to her and saw that she had unbuttoned the coat and under it she was wearing nothing.
The coat was sliding off her shoulders but then she saw the look on his face. It must have seemed like a look of horror - not that she wasn't beautiful, her body was perfect, but from the way she acted two nights before this, it was too much, and besides, Quentin was terrified, he didn't know what to do. He dropped the pitcher onto the counter, just a couple of inches' drop so it didn't break, and the handle kept it from rolling off.
Her face changed from a smile to embarrassment, consternation. She shrugged the coat back on and wrapped it around herself and sank down onto the couch into a near fetal position and began to moan. "I've blown it again. I'm so stupid! I can't believe I - "
"No, no, Mad, it's all right, I just - I mean it was sweet of you, but that isn't what I wanted the other night, I just - "
"But that was supposed to be a real turn-on or whatever, that's what the article said - "
He laughed out loud.
"Don't laugh at me," she said miserably. "I'm sitting here naked in a coat with a polyester lining and polyester gives me a rash."
"No, come here, come with me." He got her up from the couch, trying not to notice how the coat fell open and she couldn't really close it efficiently with him holding one of her hands. "Come here."
He led her into his bedroom. "You have to see this," he said. He bent down and picked up the whole stack of sex manuals he had been studying. "Were you reading, perhaps, one of these?"
She looked at the sides and it dawned on her what they meant. She laughed, too. "Oh, you're kidding. You, too? There's another person on this planet as naive as me?"
"Maybe most people are like us," said Quentin. "They're just ashamed to admit it."
"No, nobody gets to their thirties as ignorant as we are. How did two freaks like us ever get lucky enough to find each other?"
"Listen, Mad, let me tell you something. I'm glad to know you have such a beautiful body. Such a... terrific body. Such a..."
"I get the idea."
"But I don't need to see you like that again until we're married, OK? Pressure's off for now. We