After exiting the taxi and paying my fare, including a tip rather larger than I could afford, I took a moment.
Standing on the sidewalk, I looked up, past the towering palms, at the expansive white facade festooned with balconies and towers. The latter's red, conical roofs projected, brick-red, against mountainous clouds in the otherwise azure sky.
The Hotel del Coronado was glorious! I'd like to have contemplated it longer, but it wasn't wise to keep Harrison Porter waiting, not if I'd judged AltRom's owner correctly.
On our way from Seattle, we'd sat next to one another in the 747's first-class section. After watching a movie, Mr. Porter had offered me his hand, introducing himself as the owner of AltRom.
"An airline?" I'd asked, supposing "Alt" might stand for "aviation."
Porter had smiled. "Not 'Alt dot com,'" he'd corrected me. "AltRom." He'd stressed the second syllable: "Rahmmm."
I remembered the rush of warmth to my cheeks as I'd blushed, feeling stupid. "Oh, I see," I'd replied, although I hadn't seen.
It was only when Mr. Porter had added, "We publish alternative romances, mostly LGBT lines" that I'd understood. "Digital and print."
Foolishly, I'd asked, "Is there much of a market for that?"
"We do pretty well."
Of course, he did. Mr. Porter was traveling first-class, wasn't he? Of course, so was I, but only because I had claustrophobia and couldn't fly coach. Reluctantly, my employer paid the difference, when it was absolutely necessary for me to fly.
"What line of work are you in? Sorry, I didn't catch your name."
I'd blushed again. Like a nitwit, I'd forgotten to introduce myself. "Andrew Lane," I'd said. "Journalism's my game."
Opening my briefcase, I'd removed a copy of
The Washington Standard-Tribune
and showed him the article I'd written last week for my column, "American Lives." It was only after I'd returned the newspaper that I'd remembered what I'd hidden beneath it. I shoved the newspaper back in place and glanced at Mr. Porter. If he'd seen anything untoward, he hadn't let on.
"What takes you to sunny southern California, Andrew?"
He'd called me "Andrew," while I'd called him "Mr. Porter." We were nearly the same age. I might have been a few years younger, but something about Mr. Porter seemed to demand my respect.
"I'm writing a feature story about the Hotel del Coronado. Victorian beachfront, wood, historic, it opened in 1888 and has hosted presidents, royalty, and celebrities." Realizing I was gushing, I'd broken off my guidebook spiel.
"I know it well," Mr. Porter had said. "In fact, I'm staying there while I'm in San Diego." He'd paused, then said, "If you'd like to write a feature article on the AltRom business, give me a ring while you're in town. I can work you into my schedule." He'd drawn a business card from his vest pocket. After writing something on the face of the card, he'd passed it to me.
Without looking at it, I'd slipped the card into my shirt pocket. "Thanks, Mr. Porter. I'll do that."
I'd had no intention of doing any such thing at the time I'd made that comment. I'd just wanted to be polite. I'd never see Mr. Porter again after we'd disembarked at the San Diego International Airport. I'd go my way, while Mr. Porter went his. It had been sheer chance we'd met on our way to California, although I'd wanted to believe it was fate. There was something about Mr. Porter—his good looks, his commanding mien, his success, his obvious wealth?—that I'd found attractive.
Now, impossible though it seemed, here I was, on the fourth and last day of my trip, standing before a beautiful, fantastic hotel as real as the beach, the palms, and the sky but a place that still seemed, somehow, a dream.
I took Mr. Porter's business card from my shirt pocket and read the information the AltRom owner had written on the face of it while we'd been winging our way west. I read it twice to make sure it still read what it had when I'd examined it an hour ago, before calling Mr. Porter. Sure enough, he really had written, "Suite 3318, Hotel del," followed by his own personal cell phone number.
"There's no need to check in at the desk; just come straight up," Mr. Porter had told me after I'd worked up the courage to call his number to ask whether he was still interested in my writing a feature article on AltRom.
As he'd directed, I took the elevator straight to his floor.
"Excuse me, Andrew," Mr. Porter called, as he answered my knock.
I looked away, not knowing whether to feel angry, shocked, embarrassed, or some combination of these emotions. Mr. Cooper was stark naked, rivulets of water running down his deep chest, six-pack abs, and muscular thighs. A small puddle had collected on the floor at his feet.
"Sorry. I was in the shower."
"I can get a cup of coffee and come back in fifteen minutes or half an hour," I suggested.
"Nonsense, Andrew!" he opened the door wider, careless as to whether a passerby should see him from the hallway. "Come in, pour yourself a drink, relax. There's a bar in an alcove off the living room. I'll be with you in a minute or two."
I stepped past him, keeping my eyes focused straight ahead. I'd already seen more of him than I cared to see—not that he had a bad body, not at all. He was buff, trim, and fit as an athlete, and, I couldn't help but to have noticed, he was "well-endowed," to put the matter delicately.
I poured a scotch on the rocks and drank it in a single gulp. I needed it, after seeing Mr. Porter naked. The fiery liquor seemed to blossom inside me, its warmth radiating through my belly and loins. I poured a second and was sipping it, as I sat in an armchair, when Mr. Porter, attired in a silk robe, a gold Rolex on his wrist, entered the living room, a snifter of brandy in hand.
"I have a confession," he told me. "I didn't invite you here, to my hotel suite, to discuss your writing a feature article about AltRom." His gaze passed over my physique, as if his eyes were a pair of hands.
I sipped my scotch. "Why
am
I here?" I suspected I knew, but I wanted everything to be clear.
"I'm looking for a vice-president," he said, "someone I can put in charge of publicity. The fact that you're a feature writer for
The Washington Standard-Tribune
impressed me, and I've had my people check you out."
I didn't much like the sound of that, and I let my tone of voice express my displeasure, as I declared, "I trust you weren't disappointed."
"If I were, you wouldn't be here."
I didn't know what to say, so I said, "I'm flattered."
"If things work out, at some point, you'd be promoted from VP to partner." He paused. "When I say 'partner,' I mean my business partner," he explained, "
and
my domestic partner."
I set my glass down. "Mr. Cooper, I—"
He laughed, holding up his hand. "You're not that kind of a boy? Andrew, I saw the novel in your briefcase, the one you'd stored under the copy of the newspaper containing the feature article you'd written a week ago."
I blushed, thinking of the cover of Gordon Merrick'snovel, which showed two shirtless, tan, well-built, good-looking young men, one dark of hair, the other light, seated together, snifters of brandy before them, pink and red chrysanthemums and the blue Mediterranean Sea, fronting a jagged sandstone ridge, behind them. The blond rested his head upon the brunette's left shoulder, sleeping in the sun, as his pensive lover looked past him. The title
Perfect Freedom
was introduced by the caption, "He never knew freedom . . . until he found love." "He" was the dark-haired man, who had the same hair color as Mr. Porter, and whose appearance was similar enough to Mr. Porter's own for my host to have modeled for the artist who'd painted the figure, just as I might have sat for the blond leaning on the brunette's shoulder.
Mortified, I stammered, "I-I d-don't know wh-what to say."
Mr. Porter sipped his drink. "Say you'll consider my offer," he suggested. "I'm a very wealthy man, Andrew. Instead of your reading about the good life, you and I could be living it together. We can go all the places the characters in Merrick's novels go,
do
the things
they
do."
I blushed, thinking about the "things" Merrick's characters do. "I'm surprised you've read his books."
"I'm not only rich, Andrew; I'm educated, cultured."
He stretched his bare legs, and his robe parted across the chest, revealing his tan, chiseled pecs. I averted my eyes, but my gaze returned.
"When I was younger, I wanted to fuck every good-looking twink I came across—" he chuckled at the pun—"but, now that I'm approaching forty, I'm more interested in a monogamous relationship than I am in one-night stands. Promiscuity can be exciting, but it's also dangerous, and, I've found, of late, ultimately unsatisfying. I prefer to live the lifestyle featured in Merrick's novels than the one chronicled in John Rechy's