I came running into the morning staff meeting six minutes late. After six years on staff, you'd think I'd know that the freeway turns into one giant parking lot between my house and the paper. I had to say that I earned that dirty look from my editor when I interrupted him with my belated entrance at the staff meeting that started promptly at nine.
I figured that I also deserved the "Come into my office, shut the door" command just as I was about to take a seat at my desk after the meeting adjourned.
"Listen, I didn't want to give you this assignment in front of everyone else at the staff meeting ..." he started to say.
Good. He wasn't being his normally dickish self. I was pretty sure I knew where this was going. From time to time there were stories that were so sensitive that my editor didn't want anyone, even on the staff, to know we were working on them — like the time he pulled me in to investigate a suspected tryst between the mayor and his chief of staff. I blew it wide open. It was pretty much all I covered for a good couple of months.
"There's a guy in town that's coming out with a book, 'Encounter at Green's Rock,' that's going to be getting a lot of press from what I've been told by a friend of mine who's his editor," he said. "The publishing company is priming it to hit the top of the bestsellers lists. We have first crack at doing a human interest profile on him before the book comes out next Tuesday. This is something that will put our circulation figures over the top. I had to pull some major strings to get it as an exclusive one-on-one with the author. I think you're the person who can handle it best. This will be Page One top of the fold of the Arts section on Sunday."
A human interest profile? That's what I got called in for? OK, sure. Whatever. I thanked him and went back to my desk to take a look at the PDF galley that he emailed to me.
"Oh, for Christ's sake!" I thought as I was into the first chapter. This guy wrote a book about a grown woman, probably my age, who had a summertime affair with a guy who was barely the of the age of consent? I knew people sex. Heck, even I did and pushed a few boundaries of propriety, but nothing like this.
I went back into my editor's office. To say that I lit into him was an understatement.
I walked back into his office and screamed, "You've got to be fucking kidding me! You want me to do a fluff piece about a smut monger? Can't you give this to the book reviewer?"
He told me to lower my voice and said, "I had to let her go last week. Budget cuts. I'm not asking for a review of the book. I really don't care what you think about it. You do the best job of doing human interest profiles of anyone on the staff. You know how to get into people's minds, and with the way you handled the mayor's story, I know you can handle this with finesse. Our numbers depend on this story, not to mention the money we can get off reprints. You really don't have a choice. I'm not giving you one unless you want to be the next person to be let go when I have to cut staff again."
It wasn't an idle threat. After six years on staff, I was now the lowest person on the newsroom totem pole.
I asked him how soon he needed it. He told me by the end of the week.
I called the author to arrange an interview. Surprisingly, he seemed like a very polite, intelligent and well-spoken man. Actually, I quickly got the sense that he'd a dream interviewee. He had already told me a bit about himself and the book before I had a chance to ask him any questions.
Jack Parrott had an American lit degree from an Ivy League university and had been working on this book for the past three years in his spare time. He said he finally pursued the project after several friends told him that he should be writing erotica for profit instead posting it for public access on the Internet and selling high-end real estate.
In no way did he say anything lecherous or untoward. He said he could clear the next morning for an interview at his office. A public place. That was good. At least I'd feel safe.
Once I got off the phone, I started looking over the story. I found myself amazed at the fluidity of his writing. It was lyrical, almost magical, even through passages I would have would have ordinarily taken as raunchy and distasteful. I had to admit that it took a true talent for me to be entranced with a 13-page description of how a grown woman hid behind trees to watch a 16-year-old boy masturbate buck naked on the shore of an island in Maine where the waves of the Atlantic finally made contact with land. I was surprised to admit that I could see myself as being that woman. I couldn't keep my eyes off the copy to see where it would lead next.
When I got home, I did some digging online and found a trove of short erotic fiction written by him. His stories had Facebook and Twitter likes and shares that numbered in the tens of thousands and were all over Reddit and StumbleUpon. Many of his stories had gotten high praise from some well-respected fiction and erotica bloggers.
I went back to reading the book. I forgot about feeling like a kid reading something I knew I'd get in trouble for if I got caught.
"... I kept watching this beautiful young man from behind my concealing shrub. Fascinated, I watched him repeatedly bring himself just to the point of orgasm, then stop, allowing his erection to subside again. He seemed to have all the time in the world. As he was lost in his own pleasure, I dared to move even closer, slipping quietly from bush to bush. At last I was close enough to him that I could have reached out to touch him; I could even hear his breathing if I held my own breath. His eyes were closed as he lay on the rock. His hand still encircled his cock, which was beginning to soften again. I crouched directly behind him, and I knew the only way he would be able to see me would be to raise himself up and turn around. That didn't seem likely, given his total absorption in his pleasure. His legs were spread wide; I could see a light sheen of sweat around his pale tummy. I imagined what the cool breeze must feel like as it caressed his body, drying the sweat around his young balls, cooling the sensitive skin between his scrotum and his asshole.
"I could see a tiny drop of liquid emerge from the tip of his cock. I imagined myself licking it, savoring the salty, musky taste. To my surprise, he looked at the droplet, then carried it to his own lips with a finger ..."
If anything, I never quite felt so good to allow myself to slip my fingers under my panties and let myself come like crazy — more than once. It was a good thing I was reading this stuff at home. There was no way I could have read this in the middle of the newsroom with other people around. No wonder why his friends encouraged him to write professionally.
Secretly, I was looking forward to meeting this guy. Any writer that could have that kind of effect on me certainly had my respect, not to mention my curiosity. But of course, I was going into this assignment as a professional, and I had to uncover everything that I could out of this guy, warts and all.
I rolled into his office promptly at 10 a.m. A rather polished and stylish receptionist let him know that I was here to see him. Actually, she was gorgeous – in her early 30's, impeccably coiffed blonde hair, tiny waist, surgically enhanced breasts, and a dress that stretched tight across them that probably cost as much as much as I made in a week. It made me wonder how she qualified to get this job, but I was grateful to have a female employee nearby as backup. She asked me if I wanted a cappuccino or mineral water. I opted for the cappuccino. I really needed a heavy-duty dose of caffeine. I worked straight until three in the morning doing the background work and prepping for the interview. I'm sure that I looked as much of a wreck as I felt. It didn't help that I ran out of time to put on my mascara before I ran out of my house to check in at my desk and then haul out here as fast as my Ford Focus could push itself.
But today was not one of those days to put off my grooming and put my commuting heroics before everything else in the name of dedication to my work.
Jack didn't look anything like a younger Hugh Hefner in a satin smoking jacket as I imagined. He wasn't like any kind of lounge lizard that spent as just as much time trolling for chicks in the singles bars as he did rattling his gold chains when he jerked off in the men's room every time he struck out. If anything, he had this very proper East Coast look and a confidence that was as attractive as his tall, solid and slender build. He had a sparkle in his eyes and his smile that went along with polite and cheerful persona.
I had to remind myself that all I had to do was act as a professional and that my looks didn't and shouldn't matter to him. Perhaps it was best that I didn't look as if I needed to impress him. I had to ask some pretty tough questions, and, yes, juxtapose his personality and presence against his questionable prose.
I asked him how he got into real estate. He said it was something he could do well as he could write. Even with an Ivy League education, he said it was tough to transfer an American lit major into any other line of work that would let him lead him the kind of lifestyle to which he wanted to be accustomed. He said something vague about bringing in a six-figure income. I asked to back up his claim. He showed me a full year's worth of MLS sales records that showed a list of sales that backed up his claim. The diploma on the wall I'd have to verify with the records department his school, but the way he spoke and wrote he clearly came from a very well-educated background and well-heeled cultural stock. He said his mother's side of the family had deep roots in Boston by way of England back before the states were united.
However, he was tight-lipped about his wife who was only mentioned as, "Parrott is married," in the bio of his press kit. After years of experience, I often knew the best story was in the detail that was practically ignored and swept under the rug. I couldn't eek her name out of him or what she thought of the book. There were no pictures of her on his desk like there were of him and Steven Tyler, Neil Young and Steve Jobs – all of whom had purchased houses from him.
"Steven Tyler and Sharon Stone invited me to their housewarming parties," Jack bragged. "I got to spend the day playing guitar and with electric trains with Neil Young after he moved into his last house, and Steve Jobs was an incredibly private man. He did everything he could to keep the purchase of his last house off public records."
He reached for a folder on his desk and handed it to me.
"Oh, and speaking of Sharon Stone, here's a story she asked me to write for her," he continued. "Her publicist's name and number is inside. She'll put you in touch with her."
He didn't weave her into the conversation at all in the same way he did his two college-age daughters and his involvement in the music ministry at his church.
"Your church?" I asked. I didn't expect to hear that.
"There are quite a few people there that know about my writing," he said before going on to tell me a story about a retired gentleman in the choir. The man asked him if he could write a story that would entice his wife to spice things up not in the bedroom, but outdoors on a camping trip.
"They're the ones who inspired me to write my book, well, at least a short story, which eventually turned out to be the first chapter," he said. "The next time I saw them, they walked into church holding hands like two smitten teenagers."
A Viagra generation church-going couple inspired him to write this book? This was good copy. I'd eventually get him to open up about his wife later in the interview. I just had to. He was just starting to open up. Eventually, he did.
"I was a late bloomer sexually," he said. "I didn't come to realize it until after my kids were born and my wife lost interest in having sex. I could only play guitar and mandolin, sail, ride my motorcycle, and go hang gliding to a point that it was no longer a distraction. I'd go for months, now years, without sex."