Neuromancer
From Neuromancer by William Gibson
He lay on his stomach, arms stretched forward, tips of his fingers against the walls of the
coffin. She settled over the small of his back, kneeling on the temperfoam, the leather jeans
cool against his skin. Her fingers brushed his neck.
"How come you're not at the Hilton?"
She answered by reaching back, between his thighs, and gently encircling his scrotum
with thumb and forefinger. She rocked there for a minute in the dark, erect above him, her
other hand on his neck. The leather of her jeans creaked softly with the movement. Case
shifted, feeling himself harden against the temperfoam.
His head throbbed, but the brittleness in his neck seemed to retreat. He raised himself
on one elbow, rolled, sank back against the foam, pulling her down, licking her breasts, small
hard nipples sliding wet across his cheek. He found the zip on the leather jeans and tugged it
down . . . She struggled beside him until she could kick them away. She threw a leg across
him and he touched her face. Unexpected hardness of the implanted lenses. "Don't," she said,
"fingerprints."
Now she straddled him again, took his hand, and closed it over her, his thumb along
the cleft of her buttocks, his fingers spread across the labia. As she began to lower herself, the
images came pulsing back, the faces, fragments of neon arriving and receding. She slid down
around him and his back arched convulsively. She rode him that way, impaling herself,
slipping down on him again and again, until they both had come, his orgasm flaring blue in a
timeless space, a vastness like the matrix, where the faces were shredded and blown away
down hurricane corridors, and her inner thighs were strong and wet against his hips.