I'd made my high school years tough by hanging with the "nerds" and the "geeks." Not that it wasn't correct to call us that, it's just that I didn't like being singled out and called names.
But I had to admit it.'
It's true, it's what I am
.'
There wasn't a lot of uniformity in our group. We were distinguished by our prickly concentrations on our selves. Writing, drama, classical music, cooking, and long-distance biking were among our loves. At first mine was nineteenth-century novels and role-playing from them, but in my senior year I discovered photography.
As a freshman, I paid a little extra and got a single dorm room. Photography became my obsession. By the end of the year I'd had to buy two 40-gig external drives for my Mac and was more likely to lurk around the campus than study. Oh I got by, and that was okay, but classes didn't excite me.
By spring I noticed my loneliness. '
Living in a single room means just that: single. Alone. Solo. Unencumbered, that's who I am
.' It didn't meant friendless, because the guys on the floor were friendly enough, and I had acquaintances from classes. But I was lonely.
Many of the guys on the floor had girlfriends. Girlfriends who slept over with them, or who hosted them in their rooms. Girlfriends whose laughter echoed in my mind and whose shrieks of pleasure I heard through the walls at night.
Getting laid became my second obsession.
By November of my sophomore year my luck hadn't changed and I concluded that I had to make some sort of change. I decided to move off campus and get a roommate.
The number of on-line ads for apartment-sharing was overwhelming. I set my criteria to walking distance to the library, male heterosexual roommate, separate bedroom, safe neighborhood, and bearable rent. Even then, it was hard to get the list to a manageable size. Then I saw this ad:
Male roommate wanted. Available immediately. Separate bedroom. Share kitchen. Safe building. Walk to campus. No smoking. Nerds, geeks welcome
. It sounded exactly like what I wanted.
'
Does Google personalize even classified ads?
' I wondered. I clicked the link, asking about the rent and saying I met all the criteria.
I was still poring over the other possibilities when the ding told me I had a response. "Hi Carl, sounds great! Let's talk."
It was easy to spot Pete when I arrived at the student union. As he had described himself, he was tall and wore a plaid shirt, We exchanged information on interests, high schools, families, and majors. The rent was more than the dorm but that was okay because the university was trying to get single rooms back so they could convert them to doubles. They were offering to pay the difference between the dorm rent and an off-campus apartment for the rest of the year to anyone who gave up a single.
The situation seemed perfect, just what I wanted.
"Can I see it?"
"Sure. Let's go."
Pete's former roommate had left a bedframe, dresser, desk chair, and desk. I'd have to buy a mattress, box spring, and bedding, but that was it. The two bedrooms opened onto the living room and were separated by the kitchen and bathroom. It was perfect.
"Can I ask you something, Pete?"
"Sure. What is it?"
"How come you said 'nerds and geeks welcome' in the ad?"
"To be honest, it's because I don't want to have jocks and party animals around. I'm a neat person who likes his peace and quiet. I usually study in my room. Is that okay with you?"
"Oh sure. I work on my photos till all hours of the night, if that won't bother you."
"No problem. Is it a deal?"
We shook hands on it, and Pete broke out two cold Sprites from the refrigerator.
"Oh, I should have mentioned one thing."
"What's that?"
"I've got some girlfriends. Could you make yourself scarce when they're here?"
"You mean leave? I —"
"No, not leave, just hang out your room. We won't spend much time in the living room, if you get my drift."
I gulped.
"Okay, I guess, yeah, that won't be a problem, sure."
"I appreciate that. I go out once or twice a week and on Sunday afternoons. Sometimes I won't be home until morning."
I moved in the next week. We got along great, dividing the refrigerator into sections, sharing gallon jugs of milk, even taking turns vacuuming the living room and cleaning the bathroom.
The parade of women was unending. At least once a week a new girl spent the night with him or he was at a girl's place. Sunday afternoons he was gone from noon to past dinner time. While the bathroom and the kitchen were between our rooms, I still heard all sorts of noise from their lovemaking.
I was envious, intensely jealous. What did he have that I didn't? One night, just before Christmas break, I brought it up.
"It's nothing special, that's for sure. I have to work at it. I'd like to talk about it, but right now I can't say anything more. I will, sometime soon. I just can't discuss it now. I'm sorry."
I moped about his secret for a week, even thinking of following him. But he was a good roommate and I didn't want to ruin that.
When the Christmas cards addressed in female handwriting began arriving, I sunk deeper into my funk. The two little boxes wrapped in red paper with gold ribbon that I stumbled over outside the front door one morning, with the cards addressed "Peter" tucked under the bows, did nothing to improve my mood.
Exams took my mind off my social zeroness, and then there were the holidays with my family. Mom saying "I love you" and my sister kissing me under the mistletoe didn't do it for me. I couldn't wait to get back to school.
Classes resumed and Pete and I fell back into our pattern. One Wednesday evening in late January, while we were watching television, his cell rang.
"Great! I'm really glad to hear it. Thanks for calling."
Pete flipped the phone shut.
"Man, today is your lucky day."
"You found 'For a good time call Suzie' and a phone number on a men's room wall, written in neat script, and decided she was my kind of girl?" My sarcasm wasn't funny even to me. Pete ignored it.
"I belong to a club. It's where I go on Sunday afternoons."
"A club?" He'd never said anything about any clubs he belonged to.
"A social club. The membership is limited, so someone has to leave before anyone else can join. It would be perfect for you, but I had to wait for an opening. That's what the phone call was about."
"What kind of a club? You know I'm not a joiner."