"Kerothen Philoi Aei" ("Friends from the Heart, Forever")
I may be the only female DKE. That is not a misspelling of a sexist slur. Delta Kappa Epsilon is the college fraternity of U.S. presidents, legendary CEOs, and Hollywood stars. It does not admit women. Baboon tribes do not adopt puppies; they love them, but only for lunch, with a side of tubers and grubs.
A couple years earlier, at my university, DKE came near to being shut down. A pledge had died during "Hell Night," the DKE initiation into manhood, and DKEs had upheld their reputation for maturity by deciding to bury the body in the woods. Pledge? Nah, we got all our pledges, don't we guys? They got caught sneaking the corpse across the quad.
If Franklin Delano Roosevelt, both Bushes, Gerald Ford, Potter Stewart, Howard Heinz, John Pierpont Morgan, Cole Porter, Dick Clark, and Dean Acheson—to name but a few famous DKEs—had not revered their old house, the university would have closed it. Possibly imploded it with the DKEs inside.
I, Ellen Pierce Melville, survived a DKE initiation—not "Hell night," more like the violation of the Sabine women--after the DKEs grasped that they weren't getting rid of me, that I was a compulsive dishwasher and toilet sanitizer, and always good for a consolation rub-and-tug—hey, I don't fuck just anybody--when the girlfriend was laid low with what we still called her "monthly." They never wondered if I had monthlies since no DKE ever did; I mean, that's just empiricism.
Back for junior year at the women's co-ordinate college, not yet absorbed into the big male amoeba. We did not have sororities. For the first two years, I had lived with roommates like Iowa Kathy and Alabama Sue-Ann. A broadening experience for a girl who attended a New England Academy in Connecticut, wearing a uniform every day. I can't, CANNOT, go into my sex life at the Academy. I am still in recovery from... No, I cannot go into it. Moving right on, now.
Junior year, the housing office assigned me a suite with another sweet girl. I think we could call her Kentucky Sadie. By then, I was a woman; I had had experiences. I dared lift my eyes above the trench to survey the landscape. Where the HELL was I, anyway? What were all these other people doing—I mean, outside of classes, the library, the lobby at Faunce Hall, the Blue Room...?
What was everyone keeping from me? That has been the question of my life. Why is everyone in on it but ME?
Then, Scotty, from geology—we had to take a science course, there were "distribution" requirements, then—took me to see DKE house. They had a full kitchen, living room with faux Persian rug, library with a beautiful antique globe, big rooms, a gym, and the foremost collection of male primates outside the San Diego Zoo or the NFL. I walked around, holding hands with Scotty—a step he had daringly taken as we walked through the doorway. This was the House of Testosterone.
But wait. How come the guys at this university, ambling along on their knuckles, inhabited these brick manor houses while the women bumped around their crowded hives and deposited their honey in cells described as "single" or "double"--with one bathroom for the hall that had curled pussy hair plastered to the toilet seats and with a ban on single-burner stoves as imperiling the dorm's electrical capacity? Making a cup of tea was a fire hazard.
Clear, now. I could be a second-class citizen or a DKE. I never am a second-class citizen; no woman ever has been a DKE. Did someone say this was an uneven struggle? DKE tradition and the Orangutan Centurion guard versus my smile, tits, and pussy. Now, who do you think wins? Of course I did.
Earlier, Scotty had invited me to a couple Saturday night parties at DKE. Oh, Scotty, how sweet, I was looking forward to getting alcohol poisoning and being gang-banged this year. What should I wear? Special tear-off clothing?
Poor Scotty seemed forlorn, standing on the time-worn granite steps of the Geo building, wondering why I used big words. He must have loved me. Or figured that with a kind of flat chest I would faint with joy at being invited to a DKE Saturday evening orgy. Well, I do have shapely legs rising in a long sigh up to my ass. Scotty needed a subtle hint. "Scotty, you're taking me to DKE at 2:30 today for a tour."
And thus the tour. Scotty escorted me into the DKE equivalent of a "front parlor," where virgins experienced their last moments with their hymens. He had sweetly taken my hand as we crossed the brick front terrace and passed beneath the Greek letters over the door. Scotty, will you die to defend my honor from future presidents, CEOs, and Hollywood stars?
He produced a little glass of Madeira. I listened carefully. No distant moans of protest, weeping of violated co-eds, ugly snap of the lash tracing red paths on the pale perfect butt. Coast was clear.
"Can you give me a tour, Scotty?"
"Of DKE?"
No, Place Victor Hugo.
"Well, there are areas off limits, you know."
I let my cheek fall against his. Accidentally, just a girl all tuckered out. My hand came to rest on his thigh not too far from IT. I mean, possibly the side of my breast pressed him, but that would not be a notable sensation.
"Sure, I guess," he said. "It's so quiet."
Not only was there a living room, dining room with crystal chandeliers, full kitchen, sitting room, and large bedrooms. There were more bathrooms—and bigger—and a gym with a steam room. What WAS this? Where was equality? Why were there no women DKEs? They had everything but bidets with perfumed rose water. Probably no demand for them. At the women's dorms, we were petitioning to replace the baskets of pine cones with real toilet paper. O Susan B. Anthony wert thou with us at this hour.
Scotty? I'm going to live here. Be the first woman DKE. Tell the brothers you have a new pledge who won't do 500 one-hand push-ups, but might do the dishes. Be happy to shower with the guys. Massage with happy ending, no problem.
I did not say that. Men around the world in offices of power and influence would have trembled. Do them good.
"Can I visit you, here, Scotty?" I murmured. I was slumping against him, full body block--cheek, butt, tit. My hand was farming the piedmont near his Blue Ridge Mountains. My small hand with nicely manicured fingernails makes any man feel big.
"Oh, Ellen...sure. SURE."
If we had been sitting on a couch, at that moment, he would have hit me like a leopard taking down a wapiti. But we were walking. I let him put his arm around my waist and smiled into his frustration-glazed eyes.
I sat in "Social and Intellectual History of the United States to the Civil War"—I think we were at Jonathan Edwards and the first Great Awakening—taking notes via "hope from beyond" automatic writing—but really strategizing the fall of the DKE fortress. What would appeal to the DKEs? A legal argument based on precedents of sex equality? An appeal to gender diversity as enriching fraternity life? Pussy?
I thought I had a plan. My notes later revealed that Jonathan Edwards was using a rhetorical technique called "qualified repetition," endless variations on saying you are a spider dangling from a thread over the famished fires of Hades. The guy was in sorrowful need of a hand job. Where was Mrs. Edwards? The Second Great Awakening might have come a lot sooner.
Am I ever, ever going to get on with this story? My readers have logged out and are rummaging in their basements for their old paperback copy of The Perils of Pauline. There is not so much sex in this story. I did not aspire to live in DKE House as a camp follower or Sallie Mae in her slip chained to the double bed.
I walked alone into DKE. A lanky girl with long, slender, pale legs revealed by a mini-skirt, tight black jersey over my 32-B breasts, uncharacteristically enhanced for battle, high heels, and my pixie face with brown eyes and short black hair in feathery bangs. And my book bag, of course, with a change of underwear and some things James Bond and I carry.
I stride beneath the letters, DKE, then down a short hall. How convenient, there is a table. I toss down my book bag. Time for milk and cookies. I'm home, Mom. Where is that kitchen?
"What the HELL are you doing in here?"
I had not had been introduced to the president and alpha primate of DKE, Ashley Bloker. Along the line, young "Ashley" had become "Tiny," weighing-in at six-foot-six inches and 250 pounds. Tiny was from Switzerland, trained in the Swiss armed forces—every single male is, he later told me—and aspired to be part of the Pope's Swiss Guard. I had not realized that that position required an Ivy League education, but, arguably, the DKEs did not get one.
Is there, or will there ever be, ANY sex in this story? I apologize, readers, on my knees, arms cruelly bound behind my back, breasts, such as they are, out-thrust tenderly at your mercy. Anyway, sorry. You aren't still sober, are you?
"What the HELL are you doing here?"
"I'm a friend of Scotty's," I say, as though this were not the first inter-species communication in man's recorded history. "I have to stay here, tonight. I can't go to my dorm."
Tiny plays chess one move at a time; he doesn't grasp that he will have to move again. He accepts the premise of my argument. He has lost already.
"Why not?"