Page 20 of Sex and the City

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And then, pretty much out of the blue, Ian made an announcement. “I’ve been in more situations when it’s two guys and one girl.” He quickly added: “And I haven’t participated in having sex with the other guy.”

There was a moment of stunned silence. I wasn’t quite sure that I’d heard correctly.

“It’s the easiest way to do it,” Ian shrugged. “It’s sport. You don’t care for that girl; otherwise, you wouldn’t let your buddy have sex with her. It’s not like she means anything to you.”

“And it’s a lot cheaper,” Sam, the investment banker, piped in.

I thought of a few female friends of mine who had confessed to me the occasional fantasy of being with two men. I decided to tell them it’s best to leave it a fantasy.

Chloe was still skeptical. “I’ve never had two men try to do that,” she said. “Besides, men are so fucking competitive with each other, you’d think

they wouldn’t be able to deal with it.”

“I wouldn’t want to have sex with a woman after another man had been with her,” said Peter.

Tad disagreed. “If it’s my best friend, anything goes.”

“Totally,” Ian said.

“I could care who goes first, or what happens,” Tad said.

“It’s a conspiracy between the two guys,” said Ian. “It’s a one-on-one thing with your buddy. You’re wondering with your buddy if you’re going to be able to pull it off. And when you pull it off you’re like—yeah!”

Jim was shaking his head violently. “I disagree.”

“Jim, how can you say you disagree?” Ian asked.

“Yeah,” Tad said. “You did it once with Ian.”

“It’s the idea of it that I don’t like,” Jim said.

Ian pointed at Jim. “But he was pushing me up to the girl,” Ian said.

“A BAD VIBE”

Garrick spoke up. He said he had had about ten threesomes—“Hey, I’m thirty-five, a lot of shit has happened to me”—and several were with another guy. “It was always with my best friend, Bill,” he said.

Bill was a model, and Garrick and Bill met at a gym downtown when Bill asked Garrick to spot him on the bench press. “Most of the guys who worked out there were gay,” said Garrick. “So after that, it was like we were going out of our way to prove we weren’t gay. The three-way was almost a validation of our heterosexuality. You’re validating your masculinity to another guy.

“With me and Bill, it was about the thrill of the freak show,” Garrick said. “Sometimes both of us had intercourse with the girl at the same time. Once a woman’s submitted to that role of being with two guys, she’s pretty much open to anything.”

Garrick leaned forward in his chair and took a drag of his cigarette. “Bill once did it with another guy,” he said. He laughed. “I always kid him about it. There was interaction between them. I don’t know. To me, that constitutes latent homosexual yearnings. Do I have those yearnings? I don’t know. Maybe Bill wasn’t my type.”

The younger men got kind of quiet.

Instead, Peter spoke. “I’m not a homophobe—I did happen to be in a situation with my best friend once and another woman. They were sleeping in a queen-sized bed in the same room. And I remember the vibes of sex. And when it was over, his hand was burned. Even though he was my best friend, I saw that he was an extra man on the scene, and it was such a bad vibe. I just remember pushing his burned hand away. It was such a bad vibe.”

We all sat back for a moment. It was getting late. Almost time to go for dinner.

“Aw, I don’t know,” Garrick said. “I’m convinced three-somes are good for your psyche emotionally. It’s such an atypical sexual experience, it’s almost like it doesn’t count. As soon as it’s over, you don’t think about it. If you cheat on your wife or girlfriend, you usually feel guilt afterwards. With this, there’s no way you’re going to have an ongoing relationship, so it’s no threat.

“Besides,” Garrick continued, “it brings you closer to the guy. Cements the relationship. What else can you do that even comes close? You’re sharing the most intimate experience.”

And what about afterward? The next morning?

“Oh, no problem. I remember, once, we all went to breakfast,” Garrick said. “I remember it, because I paid.”

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Tags: Candace Bushnell Fiction