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Homebody by Orson Scott Card Read Free Book Online

Book: Homebody by Orson Scott Card Read Free Book Online
Authors: Orson Scott Card
Tags: Fiction, Horror
so long. But what other people saw was the shabby face of the house, the seedy yard, the boarded-up windows, the smell of cheap old carpeting and thick-laid dust. It would take a year and thousands of dollars to get the place back into livable shape again. Other people had neither the time nor the money for it. But Don had nothing but time, and it wasn’t half so expensive when you did the work yourself. As long as you knew how to do it.
    No doubt about it, the Bellamy house had once been a beauty and it would be a beauty again a year from now. It would go on the market as the leaves were turning. Don would see to it that it looked like a dream of the lost American past. Everybody walking into it would feel like they had come home at last. Everybody but Don himself. To him this place would feel no more or less like home than any other. Walking into it now, the bad smell of it, the dust, the squalor, did not make him shy away; walking out of it a year from now, with gleaming floors and walls and ceilings, with his beautiful finish work everywhere and the autumn-shaded sunlight dancing through the windows, it would not make him yearn to stay. It was a job, and he would live here because he didn’t want towaste money paying rent when he already owned a roof and walls that would be good enough.
    Not tonight it wouldn’t, of course. There was the little matter of the closing, and then the hooking up of water and power. But in a few days he’d move in and sleep where he worked. Better than the back of the truck.
    If Cindy Claybourne had known that , would she have given him the time of day? Maybe. Some women were drawn to a little bit of wildness, even in a middle-aged man. Trouble was, most women didn’t know how to interpret the wildness of men. Don had seen it even in high school. How the brutal guys who thought of women as an easier way to jerk off always seemed to have a pretty girl close at hand. What were these women thinking? He finally came to understand it in a biology class in college, before his dad’s death took him out of school and put him in the house-building business. These women weren’t looking for danger, they were looking for the alpha male. They were looking for the guy who would subdue the other males, rule the pack. The man with initiative, drive, a will to power. The trouble was, civilized men didn’t express their drive the same way the brutes did, and a lot of women never caught on to that. They saw the masculine display, the casual violence, and thought they were seeing just what the estrous female wanted. What they got was only another baboon. While the real men, the kind who built things that lasted, who cared forthose under their protection, those men often had to search long and hard for a woman who would value them.
    Don thought he had found one. It wasn’t until four years into their marriage that he suspected she was having an affair. Only the lover wasn’t a man, it was coke, and when she couldn’t get that, it was booze. She far preferred what she got from drug dealers and bartenders to what Don had to offer. She called it “having a good time.”
    Women who were attracted to wildness didn’t interest Don. In fact, it had been a good number of years since Don had been attracted to any woman at all. Well, that wasn’t strictly speaking true. He noticed them, all right, the way he noticed Cindy Claybourne, how she kept sizing him up, how her smile got extra warm when she spoke to him, how she hung on his words even when he knew perfectly well that what he was saying was empty and boring or so filled with the jargon of his profession that she didn’t understand a bit of it. He noticed women, but when he thought of actually trying to see one alone, talk to her, start establishing a relationship, it just made him tired. Sad and tired and a little bit angry even though he knew that not all women were unreliable child-stealing chimps.
    Besides, what Cindy Claybourne saw as wildness in

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