Eve lay under the apple tree, plastered, looking at the snake through the drink in her hand. He wavered in the irregularities. She looked over the top of the glass. He stopped weaving about.
“You’re going soon, aren’t you?” she asked, pouting.
The snake assumed an upright position. He was on his toes, so to speak. “Soon,” he said. But he was just gaining time. He knew there would be more. Eve surprised him by remaining silent, forcing him to take the initiative. “I do have to, you know.”
She shrugged and sat up, turning her back to him. “I don’t see why,” she said, with as little expression as she could manage.
“What else?” he asked.
She leaned her back up against the tree, so that if he wanted to he could see her body, with its firm breasts and taut thighs. She knew she looked good. She could feel it. “You could stay here,” she said.
“Here?” He looked around at the trees and flowers, the grass, the sky, the myriad small animals playing on the green. What would he do here? She was innocent. Hopelessly so.
“I don’t see why not,” she answered, making her voice casual and conversational. “It was your idea, this place, so you must have thought it was pretty nice.” She wanted to ask him what the hell he meant by his tone of voice. If he thought it was so great, as he’d been telling her for days now, where was he going in such a hurry?
He chuckled lightly. “Well, it’s all right for you.” He put a hand on her shoulder. The other five dangled at his sides, tingling and wanting to get into the action. He ignored them. Something told him he’d better not get involved right now.
He was right. She turned on him, flicking off the hand as she did so. “And what do you mean by that?” she asked, icicles hanging from each syllable.
She scared him. What was all the fuss about? “Just that I have other things to do,” he mumbled. Somehow, it wasn’t coming out right.
“Like what?” she demanded. “Like roaming around the cosmos, making it with a female from every species that has one?”
He was genuinely affronted. “It’s not like that,” he objected. Then he moved closer and put two hands on her shoulders. “Look. I happen to like you.” That should do it, he thought, nuzzling his head under her hair. She ripped the hands from her shoulders again.
“Yeah. That’s why you’re in such a hurry to get out of here. You like me so much you can’t bear one more day of it.” She was close to tears now, and her voice had an ugly tone.
“Look,” he said. “It’s not my fault. I’ve got a job to do.”
“Ha!” She was on her feet now, hands on hips, towering over him as he sat, half erect, half supine, on the ground. “Some job! What do you do? Lay down a few scrubby bushes, make up a few animals, and then pick out one you’d like to screw and get down to business.”
He was shocked at her vulgarity. It made him angry. It made him act the way she expected him to. “Look, lady,” he sneered, his lip curled up on one side, “Nobody forced you, you know.”
They remained in their respective positions, glaring at each other. Then Eve sank to the ground next to him, folding her legs demurely under her and gave him a hug.
“This is crazy,” she said, “I guess I just don’t want to see you go.”
“Then don’t look,” he wanted to say. He said nothing. He returned her embrace, but did not enlarge upon it. They leaned back against the tree. He was worried. This had gone all wrong. He should have listened to orders and not thought he was such a big shot.
She was quiet now. Maybe that meant it would be all right.
“Will I ever see you again?” she asked, in a melancholy voice.
“Not if I can help it,” he answered to himself. To her, he said, “I suppose it’s possible.” This was the wrong thing to say. She wrenched away from him.
“You mean you did all those things with me, and you knew we would probably never see each other again?”
He covered his eyes with his hands. This was becoming intolerable. “I didn’t think about that,” he said. “I told you. I like you.”
“Like? Like?” She was screaming now. “Is that all you can say? What about love? I haven’t heard anything about love!”
“Love?” he shouted back. Now they were both standing, scowling into each other’s faces. He had a stroke of genius. “You don’t look too full of love yourself,” he said.
That brought her around. She sidled up to him and wrapped her arms around him. “Just stay a little while longer,” she said, cooing, and rubbing her hands up and down him as he had taught her to do.
A thrill ran through him, and he tried to resist it, but he felt himself harden, and knew it was too late.
“Just one more time,” she was saying. Pleasure was coursing through him. He tried to remember the ship, and what time it was, but the thoughts wouldn’t stay in his mind. All he could think, or feel, or be, was the throbbing caused by her hands. What did anything matter in the face of that? He entered her, and became complete. He was wholly, totally alive, and at the same time, he was not there at all. There was no room for him. There was only room for sensation, for existence itself, and then, in a shattering burst of release, for ecstasy.
He lay there, coming to his senses, thinking about slowly untangling himself.
He opened his eyes, to feast them once more on the pale blue skies of this new planet. He was staring up at his captain. A wave of fright swept over him, then one of shame, and then, the worst, belief.
It really was the captain standing over him, swaying slightly, probably with fury, and he actually was lying on the ground, under a tree, his limbs entangled with the woman’s. It was all too obvious what he had been doing.
“Don’t bother getting up,” said the captain, a malicious smile on his face. “You seem to like it here, Lieutenant. I’m sure the planet can accommodate you.”
The snake jumped to his feet, letting Eve roll away on the ground. She had been lying in his arms, a wicked smile on her face.
“But Captain,” he begged, “I don’t want to stay here. I want to go back to the ship. I’m a Former.”
“You’re now a former Former. There are apparently other things you like doing better,” the captain said, eyeing Eve.
The lieutenant grabbed his captain’s first arm, an act of unacceptable familiarity. “But Captain, there’s nothing I like better than being a Former. There’s nothing anyone likes better. You know that.”
The captain looked haughty. “Yes, I know that,” he said. “Especially on my ship where there’s room for creativity.” His eyes became soft for a moment as he considered the desirability of his command.
“You’ve been warned before, Lieutenant. It’s not as though this were the first time.” From her position on the ground, Eve shot the lieutenant a black look. Things were not going to be too pleasant for him if he stayed.
The lieutenant made another attempt. “You can’t do that!” he said. “It will change everything if I stay here.”
The captain smiled. “That is the beauty of an open-ended approach to creation,” he replied. “It really doesn’t matter. Things will adjust.”
He brushed his primary hands down the lieutenant’s sides. As he touched each pair of appendages, they un-formed. “You won’t be needing these any more,” he said. The lieutenant sank slowly to the ground. Without his lowers, he could not stand upright.
A sad expression appeared on Eve’s face. She’d enjoyed all those skillful little limbs.
With that, the captain strode off, forbidding the lieutenant to follow, with a symbolic flick of his tail. The lieutenant writhed on the ground, sobbing.
“Slut,” he hissed. “You’ve ruined my life!”
“I don’t see what I did,” she answered angrily.
He looked up at her and her miserable, tempting hands. He was repulsed by them now. They had cost him everything he considered “living.”
Abruptly, Eve jumped to her feet. “You’d better high tail it out of here,” she said, “Adam’s coming.” The snake looked up, and saw a man approaching through the orchard. From his new perspective, the lieutenant was alarmed at the sturdy construction of the male. He looked formidable. With a distasteful glance at Eve, he bent his head and, remaining out of sight, slithered away through the underbrush.
His head was down so he missed the pillar of fire – his ship boosting up… leaving Project Earth.