This is a story based on actual events. The names have been changed to protect the innocent.
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I was a Mass Communications major in college. With my degree, you could go into radio, television, film, or journalism. Unfortunately, there were far more people looking to go into those fields than there were actual openings. I took to telling people what my major was by saying "Mass Communications, would you like fries with that?"
I had decided I wanted to be a disc jockey. I loved music, and years and years of music lessons had proved to me that if I wanted a future in music, it would have nothing to do with performing it. Of course, when I would tell people I wanted to be a disc jockey, they would usually make a face and say 'oh, you want to be the next Howard Stern?' And I would say, 'no, I just like playing music.'
I was actually one of the lucky ones who found their way into a radio station. I worked for an AM station right out of college, but that hardly counted. It was a news/talk station. I replayed tapes of Rush Limbaugh's show at night. It wasn't really what I set out to do but it counted as 'experience.' It was also a financially inadequate position, so once my lease was up on my apartment in my college town, I had to leave the job behind and go back home.
My radio career came to a quick end, right? I puttered around in minimum wage retail jobs for a few months, directionless and miserable. I mean, I worked at Kids R Us. I didn't like children, and I didn't like clothes, so you could imagine how much I hated working in a children's clothing store.
However, fate was on my side. A friend of mine worked at a nursing home where she ran into a disc jockey of a radio station who was visiting his grandmother. She told him about me and got me his number, which led to an interview with the manager of the FM station. Things were looking up until I followed up with the manager a week later and found out he had been sacked.
Luckily for me, a spot opened up on the AM station, where I found myself actually on the air three days a week playing soft rock music to virtually nobody. This went on for months, working Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Saturdays, and maybe picking up the occasional open shift, but I got on the air, which was all that mattered, and I got the experience that I needed to get good. Finally, about 8 months later someone left the FM station and in the reshuffling the overnight slot became open, and was mine if I wanted it.
I jumped at the chance. Who needed sleep anyway? I was thrilled that I would be getting to play music for 30 hours a week to an actual audience, but as far as compensation went, I actually had to take a slight pay cut when I left Kids R Us. Also, the equipment was antique. Don't get me wrong, I loved my job, but it was a lousy place to work, situated in a converted old house way back from the road on a residential street. Still, the odds of making it even to the worst shift on the lousiest station were probably less than 1%, so I couldn't complain. I relished every moment I was able to sit in the 'big chair' and broadcast.
We played 'alternative music', bands like REM and U2 and Pearl Jam and Nirvana and plenty of other artists from the 80's and 90's. It was July, 1999 when I began my shift. The current overnight guy was moving to mornings. He was the epitome of someone who wanted to be 'the next Howard Stern'. He tried his best to be controversial, and ended up getting himself fired within a few months because his idea of being controversial was to air the station's dirty laundry, which just made management angry.
I inherited a stalker from him. She was a nice enough girl, more goofy than crazy. She used to turn up during his shift and bring him odd gifts. Flowers, ice cream, Playboy magazines, things like that. She showed up during my third week on the air bearing similar gifts for me, with an equally goofy male friend in tow. I had no interest in stalkers. It fed the last guy's ego, but I didn't really have one, so I politely discouraged the behavior, and she left me alone. She was kind of young and she wasn't all that attractive, either. Maybe if she was better looking I would have been more interested.
That's not to say that I didn't eventually put together a small following. Alone in the radio station all night, there wasn't much else to do and it was hard to stay awake sometimes, so I took to talking to whoever would call in to pass the time. The ratio was at least 90% female among my frequent callers. I ended up being on the phone for hours at a time with some of my listeners, pausing whenever I needed or wanted to go on the air, which got comical sometimes when I had to virtually drop the phone in the middle of a conversation to rush to the microphone. Still, I developed some good friendships with a number of insomniacs.
I knew from the first time that Stacy called that she was different. You could sense that she had an agenda. Most of the callers were bored or lonely, and at least somewhat curious to find out about the guy that they had been listening to on the radio. Stacy didn't really convey any of that. She made some small talk, and although it was a good conversation within barely 10 minutes she stated that 'we should get together sometime'.
It's not like meeting women wasn't one of my major goals. I was pretty much single at the time. I had given up on a long distance relationship when I took over the night shift. It wasn't really going anywhere and I didn't have the energy for the long drive while I was nocturnal. In typical rebound fashion I was sort of dating a girl that was living right around the corner from my house, but it was also clearly doomed to crash and burn. We had gotten together about once a week for the past two months and there wasn't even any physical contact. To be honest, I was hoping eventually a girl would call into the station and want to meet me and have some kind of relationship. I just didn't expect her to be this aggressive. I kind of laughed her off. She wasn't being reasonable and suggested I should come over to her house. Somebody would suggest that to a complete stranger, in this day and age, really? She gave up after a few suggestions and ended the phone conversation. I figured that was the end of Stacy.
A week or so later she called again. She began telling me some bizarre story about being in the woods with some friends and taking her top off. I was only half-listening, since it was early in my shift and I was still pulling CD's off the shelves for later on in the night. Once the story was over she suggested that we get together again. I called her bluff again. I asked her when and where we should get together. She said again that I should come to her house.
"Umm, no," I clearly remember saying, "If we're going to meet we need to do so in a public place."
"What's the matter?" Stacy replied, "Don't you trust me?"
"Well, I've had nothing but two phone conversations with you," I said, "I think it's the safest thing to do. Besides, you hardly know anything about me, either."
"I know that you have the sexiest voice that I've ever heard," Stacy said. "You make me so hot listening to you on the air. Do you know what I will do to you when you come over?"
Hack me into pieces with an axe? I thought to myself. "No, what would you do?" I asked.
"Well, first I would take off all of your clothes," she said, "And then I would do a little strip tease for you."
No way! I thought to myself. Is she seriously going to try to have phone sex with me? I glanced at the clock. The next scheduled break was after the next song and I would need to go on the air.
"I would take off my shirt and start playing with my boobs," Stacy said. She sounded lost in her own world. Maybe if I put the phone down and did my thing she wouldn't even notice. "Then, I would pull my pants down and show you my lacy underwear," she continued. "You like?"
"Yeah, it's very nice," I said to her while I was setting up the commercials for the break.
"Then I would get on my knees and start sucking on your hard cock," she said. "I would lick it and suck it and stroke it. Mmm," she said, "Am I turning you on?"