Sometimes, I feel like hell is right here on earth, and not in some distant subterranean realm like the Bible says. It's like an intense feeling , one that cannot be ignored. My name is Elroy Samson. Who am I? Just your average, everyday gorgeous six-foot-three, lean and athletic African-American homo fatale. Yes, I'm Black and Gay and totally proud of both. I'm out to the entire world. The way I see it, life is too short to hide who and what you are. My family had trouble accepting that their favorite son, the family golden boy was a homosexual. My church-going mother Ellen and her man-hating, narrow-minded lady friends like my aunts Gina and Dinah were dead set on me marrying some chick and making my life fit their view of the world. If there's one thing I hate it's when other people try to map my life out for me.
I'm a man and I make my own decisions. Especially those concerning my life and my future. Marriage to some random woman was not in my plans. It's not how I envisioned my life. It's not compatible with who I am. I'm a gay brother, for one thing. So I told them to take a hike. They basically banned me from the house. I didn't care. I didn't need them for anything. Not anymore. I don't believe in compromise. I am what I am and I don't hide it, nor do I apologize for it. My father Franklin Samson was cool with me. He knew what I was long before any of them did. To him, I would always be his son. No matter who I shared my bed with. That's why I got nothing but love in my heart for my old man. My father is a great man. He was the first person I called when I left the state and moved to a major city.
I'm originally from Colorado . I attended CSU on a basketball scholarship. I earned my law degree there. These days, I work for a law firm in New York City . It's like that. Life at a New York City law firm can be quite hectic. Especially if you don't know how to navigate the minefield that is everyday life in corporate America . There's always some drama going on. There are vicious people of both sexes around here. Let me take you on a grand tour. First, there's senior partner Leland Orwell. He's a tall, good-looking Black man in his early fifties. He's married to a college professor named Elaine Brown. They have three grown brats together, college football stud Jeremiah, police officer Elliot and struggling actress Nadine. He's a good man and quite often the only level-headed person in an office full of hedonistic egomaniacs. Leland was the man who hired me. He's also totally cool with having a gay Black attorney working for him. As long as I bring in the big bucks, I'm cool with him. That's just the way I like it.
The other senior partners are Oswald Anderson and Katherine Tyrell. Oswald Anderson is a bald, round little man in his fifties. He's half Chinese and half Black, born and raised in New York . He's a brilliant attorney with a penchant for expensive suits, sailboats and loose women, not necessarily in that order. I won't even tell you the details about the tall, buxom, large-breasted and big-bottomed ghetto girls he brings to the office late at night when he thinks there's no one there. I've caught him with everything from drop-dead gorgeous Ebony girls to totally ugly hood heifers. Oh, well. Everyday I thank the Lord for making me gay. The lives of straight people are way too complicated, for one thing. I keep my private life out of the office. I just don't believe in mixing work with play. It doesn't go well, no matter what your race, gender or sexual orientation. Keep your private stuff out of the workplace. Trust me on that one.
The last and certainly most difficult senior partner at the firm was Katherine Tyrell. A tall, attractive woman in her late forties. She's biracial, of African and Hispanic ancestry. She's married to an architect named Jamal Sands. He's the visionary behind all those new, gothic style buildings in lower Manhattan . A Black artist who believes in the classics. Got to give the man credit for being original. They have no offspring together and hardly ever see each other. Katherine Tyrell and Oswald had an affair once, but that's all in the past now. She's a very good attorney. If you're in a jam and have lots of cash, then she's your best friend. She's not someone you should invite to meet your folks. She's a sociopath. Of course, nobody knows this but me. In many ways, she was the perfect predator. Completely amoral, ruthless and without conscience. I've heard some of the other lawyers call her a snake in a skirt, behind her back of course. Those who give her a wide berth last longer at the firm. It's a fact of life. What's also a fact at our firm is that Katherine has a penchant for younger men. That explains why as the Head of Human Resources, she hires mostly young Black and Hispanic men to join our firm. Sometimes, she takes one of these young hotshots under her wing. Translation : She sleeps with them. When she gets bored, she moves on to the next young stud. You do not want to be in her radar. Again, thank God I'm an openly gay Black man. Were I one of the breeders, there's no telling what I might have had to do with her just to keep my job. Female managers in the corporate world abuse power and are just as wicked and corrupt as their male counterparts. They just don't get caught as often. Let no one tell you otherwise.
Working at the firm enables me to live the kind of lifestyle I always dreamed of. I drive a very cool red BMW. I live in a very nice apartment. It's got two bedrooms, a living room, a large kitchen and a bathroom worthy of one of America 's best hotels. I had a good deal, too. One of my first clients owns the apartment building and he got me the place at a nice price after I got a lawsuit dismissed for him. The man's name is Lawrence Wolfram, a good-looking, forty-something African-American real estate mogul. At the time we met, he was being sued by a former secretary for harassment. The secretary in question was Amber Freeman, a plump Black chick from Queens . I had the lawsuit dismissed without prejudice. Lawrence was so grateful that he rewarded me handsomely. He said that we brothers had to look out for one another. I wasn't sure what he meant by that but I didn't care. I got myself a nice spot!