It was my first summer living in the Bay area. Aside from my brother and his family who had moved out this way before me, I really didn't know anyone since I started my new job as a marketing manager and writer a few months earlier for a Silicon Valley firm.
"You need to get out, meet people, date," my brother said after dinner one night. "There's so much to do."
I got the feeling that I was overstaying my welcome by coming over every weekend for dinner, but he was right. There was lots to do in the area, but my social life was lacking for someone to enjoy all those things. Even though I loved my work and did it well, I just didn't quite fit in socially. I could write about the apps and services my company provided and make them all sound so necessary and appealing to everyone from the Wall Street executive to the high school kid in Topeka. However, I just couldn't get into the conversations about how to create the next big ideas at our unofficial after-hours staff meetings that took place at a craft brew pub we frequented after work. I didn't speak code.
I heard that lots of people headed out to the coast to get away on the weekends, and I had kept coming across ads for a writers' retreat at a resort between Santa Cruz and Half Moon Bay. Now this was the kind of place I could get away and have fun with some like-minded people. Plus, I was missing the smell of pines and the feel of the wind and the sun on my skin from the time I spent at my family's vacation condo when I lived in Michigan. Surely, I could book a room in the lodge, take the classes, and have some time to explore the beaches and the trails.
Wrong. The lodge was totally booked as were the cabins and the tent cabins. I didn't have an RV, so my only option was to bring my own tent. The only thing was I had to buy one -- and the gear to live outdoors for a couple of days. It couldn't be that rough. I only needed the tent to sleep. There were comfort stations that had heated slate floors and saunas. It would be a comfortable adventure. "Glamping" was one word that described the accommodations in the one of the reviews I read about the place.
When I got there, I completely underestimated how posh getting out in the outdoors would be. The little pup tent I picked up at Target was an embarrassment compared to the setup in the spot next to me -- a six-person tent with zip-up screen windows and a covered entrance. It was too late to change my accommodations to a bed and breakfast 10 miles down the road. Besides, what I spent on my camping gear was about as much as I would have spent on more comfortable digs if they were available in the first place.
I pulled the tent pieces out of the box, looked at them, and wondered. How am I going to sleep in that? The instructions read as if they were written in a foreign language. Actually, they almost were. They were written in broken English with formally awkward verbs, and not all of them were in the correct tense.
Over my shoulder, I saw a man who was amused with my befuddlement. He just stood there and chuckled under his breath, and let it come out completely when he saw that I did not appreciate being his source of humor.
"Here, let me help you with that," he said as he walked over.
"That's OK, really," I said, rolling my eyes.
I was sure he wouldn't have offered if he didn't see that I caught him getting his giggles at my expense. I'd figure this out eventually. I was a smart woman.
He picked up the metal supports and snapped and connected them together as quickly as 1-2-3. He unrolled the tent fabric and instructed me to follow his lead from the other end. Of course, I fumbled as I twisted instead of straighten the tarp.
"No, no ... the other right," he said with a chuckle as I tried to follow along.
His mockery didn't help in alleviating any embarrassment of my ineptness, even if he was a genuine help. It also didn't help that he was also incredibly handsome -- tall and lean with a solid physique that towered over me by a good 10 inches. He had gorgeous lapis blue eyes and a charismatic smile. He was incredibly neat and polished in a proper way for a camping trip. His T-shirt and khaki shorts were immaculately pressed and clean. At least I got my secret revenge laugh in when I noticed the graphic on his shirt: Arrogant Bastard Ale. How apropos. I couldn't help but to let out a smirk.
"What's so funny?" he asked in almost a teasing way.
"Oh, nothing," I said as I covertly gained my sense of dignity.
I thanked him, threw my laptop and notebook into my backpack, and said I had to run. I really hoped that I wouldn't see him again the rest of the weekend.
But there he was holding court at the campfire with some of the workshop attendees later that evening. He was charming the women and had the men in awe if he were some kind of elder statesmen of swagger.
It turned out that he was. He was leading a workshop the next day on "Erotic Fiction: How to Turn Smut into Seduction." It was just my luck. I signed up for his seminar, and there was no getting out of it.
As the wine flowed freely, so did the conversation around the campfire. It got bawdy in a perfectly academic way, of course. We had the master of erotica, Morgan Joseph, in our presence. He managed to turn quite a profit on the kinds of books that were usually relegated to back rooms that now took front and center in front door displays in book stores and on the top of bestseller lists. He had niche for writing stories that appealed to both men and women that doubled his audience and exponential outpaced his competition. Rumor had it that most of his stories were based on real-life experiences. He certainly had his pick for his next story. All of the women had their ears open to his every word and their eyes glued on every single one of his body parts -- and he looked as if he knew it.
I was determined to launch an attack dismantle his immodest air of superiority down just a notch around this flock who wanted to be (or be with) and write like him.
"OK, tell me this," I said. "Is there any other way to describe a penis beside 'My throbbing eight-inch cock?'" I asked.
I got the bursts of laughter I was hoping for among the clichΓ©-busters in the group, which was basically all of them.
"Obviously, you've read too much Penthouse Forum," he said.
Wow. This smug son of a bitch just wouldn't let up on me. The crowd turned their chuckles on me as if they were a bunch of school kids on a playground watching the smart, popular boy tease the awkward girl who failed at her attempt to assert herself.
Unfortunately, he was spot on about Penthouse Forum. I didn't read it, but my last ex-boyfriend did. Sometimes he'd read the stories to me, thinking it would get me in the mood because he did him and I liked to read. I found it amazing and infuriating that he just couldn't tell the difference between Larry Flynt and D.H. Lawrence. All they did was make me laugh as soon as I heard "my throbbing eight-inch cock," which was usually somewhere in the first three paragraphs of any story.
Before I got to explain the reason for my question, he lit in with the alternatives: "My monumental eight-inch penis? My Statue of Liberty that needed to be set free?"
The laughs turned into guffaws and cackles. He glanced over to the trees behind us.
"My big tree trunk of a dick?"
"My big tent pole?"
He nodded in the direction of my puny bargain basement find of a tent that looked as if it violated some sort of taste and size standards next to his grand testament toluxury outdoor living. That one really got the laughs. Thank goodness no one knew that sad little thing was where I would be sleeping the next few nights. But he did, and he was having too much fun with it.
I got up and said I was going to call it a night, but he protested.
"Don't. It's the wine that's talking and this conversation is just starting to roll. Here, try this," he said as he poured some of his white wine into my plastic tumbler.
I took a sip. My tongue lit up my eyes.
"Apples?" he asked, referring to the undertones of an especially complex Chardonnay.