The party had been going on for almost three hours by the time midnight rolled around. Cigarette smoke wound its way around assorted-shaped forms of a fairly apathetic group of young undergrads, and the sweet scent of hashish intermingled with the nauseatingly rich aroma of Professor Rufus T. Bogsworth's maple-walnut-blend pipe tobacco.
Bogsworth had the distinct honor of being the sole representative of the university faculty present at this, another "week down the tubes" bash, one of which had been held each Friday night over the past two-and-a-half years. As always, the get-together was held in the old Philosophical Studies Center, a turn-of-the-century Tudor-style mansion located just off campus that originally had been one of several such buildings that housed the long-vacated Charles Dickens Home for Wayward Waifs.
Bogsworth stood solemnly, alone, near a gray-and-black, tar-and-nicotine-misted window that peered out over the center's grounds. The professor sucked idly away on his gunk-encrusted antique-walnut Lord Camden (crafted in the Scottish Highlands by frustrated virgins), every other puff sending a small, juggling sphere of solid white smoke aloft, half way to the mansion's sixteen-foot-high ceiling, where it settled for a moment, then slowly began to dissipate, thinning to a translucent mist, which would waft across the enormous room, prompting unsuspecting olfactory nerves to scream out for mercy.
The students tolerated Bogsworth's presence, though, because he consistently had been a strong force in their efforts toward forming more practical curricula and extracurricular activities. In fact, the previous semester, when the dominant outcry of students had been for shorter terms and an extended spring break, Bogsworth was at the fore, just in time to prevent a group of overzealous sophomores and juniors from storming stalwart Forthwright University president Albert "Iron-Fisted Academic" Goshen's office, thus preventing an already riotous situation from evolving into greater turmoil. Bogsworth had taken it upon himself to meet with deans of each college to explain, at their level, the benefits such actions as those suggested by students would mean to the university administration and its ruling faculty.
Every so often, a puff of gut-wrenching smoke would barely eek its way out from the red-hot bowl of Bogsworth's Lord Camden, slipping over the rim, and losing itself in the professor's closely cropped beard. Each time this occurred, a low, school-girl-like giggle would crawl along up Bogsworth's spine. Who was laughing at him, he wondered. Who found him so amusing?
As Bogsworth's entire beard became enveloped in a mist, the incessant giggling persisted. He quickly turned away his gaze from the solitary window near which he stood, just in time to catch a glimpse of the giggling's perpetrator, semi-cowering in embarrassment several feet away. Bogsworth immediately recognized the guilty party, and pondered how he had not sooner recognized the delicate laughter. He should, after all, have recognized it by now, having heard it so often in his History's Greatest Perversions class. Jeanne Davenport was always laughing, if not at one of Bogsworth's anecdotes, then at the usual folly that went on every class session β what with no one save Bogsworth taking the course very seriously.
Jeanne stood about average height, in the average Junior League preppy ensemble of jeans and corduroy blazer. Bogsworth could feel the young woman's intoxicating perfume beginning to work its way up his nostrils, boring deep into his pleasure center. He casually winked at her, prompting another short burst of giggles.
Jeanne's face seemed to glow beneath her sun-bleached, wheat-blonde hair, its pixie cut accentuating her beautifully quirky features: her eyes, which seemed to beckon; her nose, which delicately curved at just the right angle; and her mouth, a delicate slit surrounded by pouting ruby-red lips that seductively promised pleasures beyond one's wildest dreams β that is, when they weren't caught up in her latest fit of giggles.
Bogsworth could sense his body slowly moving toward his vision of splendor, wondering who exactly had granted permission to his feet to begin walking. His legs dragged him nearer, another part of him wanting to look away in embarrassment over his seeming boldness, what with the professor being a shy person. Bogsworth's mind was a blank. Whatever would he say?
As Bogsworth sidled up alongside Jeanne, he forced a smile, which he found, surprising to him, quickly returned. He choked for words. "Uh...."
Jeanne held back a giggle. "Hi." The courteous coed had greased the path.
"How are you, Miss, uh, Davenport?" Bogsworth sheepishly inquired.
Jeanne lowered her head, blushing. "'Jeanne.'"
Bogsworth scratched at his chin, losing his hand for a moment in his Lord Camden fog. "I beg your pardon?"
Jeanne's eyes rose to meet Bogsworth's, startled at first by the professor's roving left orb, which danced about while its companion remained intently still. "Please, call me Jeanne. Even in class you call me β er, us β by our first names.
Bogsworth's smile became less forced. "Yes, of course. I'm sorry. I guess I just feel so out of place here β like a ham sandwich in synagogue."
Jeanne smiled now more than she giggled. (And suddenly Bogsworth missed the high-school silliness of it; it had begun to grow on him.) "Professor...."
"Please, 'Rufus.' Or, as some of my colleagues kibitzingly refer to me, 'Rufy.' Let's try to make this as mutually comfortable as possible."
Jeanne's lips barely parted. "OK."
Bogsworth felt an urge to reach over and gently insert his forefinger into the small space between Jeanne's bright red smile. "Uh, Jeanne...."
Her face remained still, anxiously awaiting the question.
"Would you care to...."
The slit between Jeanne's lips widened, into a smile that seemed to jump off of her face and attack Bogsworth. "What is it, Jim?"
"Fresh air. How about, how about some fresh air!" Bogsworth's voice became stilted, robot-like.
"Sure," Jeanne responded. "We can go out back. If there isn't already someone out there. We can find a place to sit and...."