Chapter One: Transition Points
"Craig. Craig. Professor Simpson."
Shit. I'd hoped to get a clean escape. I stopped on my journey to the Delta check-in desk at New York's JFK international for the evening flight to Amsterdam and turned.
"Hello, Kurt. You didn't come from New Jersey to see me off, did you?"
My erstwhile live-in was approaching me, looking oh so young and sexy. Looking past him, on the outside of the doors to the departure hall, hovering, loathe to come in, I could see Kurt's new lover, Austin. He was young and sexy too. How did I ever think that, at thirty-seven, I could hold a beautiful college junior? Perhaps if he had been taking a class from me at Rider University's Westminster Music College, I could have held his attention for more than a semester. Housing and feeding him hadn't been enough. If I'd had the power of grades over him, perhaps . . . but that was unfair and nasty of me. I had just gotten too old for him. I was getting too old for any of this. He had even said that to me, and it had stung.
"Of course, I did. I couldn't leave it as it was. I would have loved to come on the Rhine cruise and gone to the Bayreuth music festival with you. I feel terrible that you have to pay for two fares—that there wasn't time for you to find a replacement."
Sure you did, little guy. You came to the airport to make sure I was getting on the airplane. Then you and Mr. Replacement are going to rush back to Lawrence and jump in my bed. What's really regrettable is that I didn't make an effort to kick you out of the house before I took this trip. But I did manage to cancel your airfare and get the money back.
"I don't really want to talk about it, Kurt. It's too late for any of that." Even as I said it, I wondered if it really was too late—if we could somehow smooth this over. I was that pathetic. This having forty looming in my near future and not wanting to less loose of young men was eating me up.
I wondered when he was going to tell me he was leaving me. Would he have gone on the trip if I hadn't honed in on the rumors on the campus and caught him in bed with Austin? Austin was a senior—a bass in the Westminster Choir that Kurt was a tenor in. They both were beautiful young men—and of much the same age. I didn't have a chance once they'd found each other. But, of course Kurt would have gone ahead and taken the trip—and probably would have let me continue bedding him as well—if I hadn't made him mad and lose control over what he thought our relationship had come to. He was a music student and had no morals that I'd ever discovered. It was a chance of a lifetime to have his way paid to the Bayreuth summer music festival in Richard Wagner's town. Not as much of a thrill as it would be for me, of course, since I taught music composition, concentrating on the German composers, at Rider. But it would have been a special trip for him as well—with a Rhine cruise thrown in. All he'd have to do is to let "the old man" lay him now and then.
"I know how hard it is to get tickets to the Bayreuth festival," he said.
"Do you?" I answered. Did he know that the shortest wait I'd heard about was six years—and that it had taken me seven years on the wait list? Fuck, he hadn't even been the young man I'd been ticketing to go with me to the festival. Not even the second to last of the young men. I'd had a succession of male students in my bed since I'd joined the Rider faculty, thinking each of them, in succession, would become a permanent part of my life. They'd all been music college students. They'd all been in the Westminster Choir. I was in a rut. And I wasn't getting any younger. I needed to escape—escape being on the treadmill of wanting much younger men in my bed. Once I'd reached forty that would be the natural end of all of that. Would my life end at forty?
The Rhine cruise and two weeks at the Bayreuth festival—and maybe a lone motor tour of Bavaria was the escape I needed now.
I should just cry off younger men altogether—maybe all men.
"I can't dally, Kurt. And you can't come any farther than here. I'm prebooked. All I have to do is get my boarding pass out of the machine and then go on to the business lounge. I'm sorry you felt you needed to come to the airport to see me off. You saw me off when you let Austin Taylor fuck you—and when you lashed out about me being too old to have sex with."
That did it. He gave me a shocked look and shrank from me.
"I was drunk," he said.
"And that let you say what you believed," I responded.
He automatically turned his head and gave Austin, still on the other side of the glass, a pained look. That was it. He'd looked at Austin in shock, not at me.
With that, I gripped the handle of my suitcase and resolutely trudged toward the check-in machine. I hadn't been able to resist pointing out that I had been going to take him to Europe business class. I always gave him the best. Of course, he had been a firecracker in bed.
But I needed to escape from all of that.
I didn't look back. I was too afraid that I'd see relief in his face—or worse, either him retreating back to stand with Austin or Austin coming forward to take full possession of what once was mine—when I was a slave to much younger men.
* * * *
We landed at Amsterdam's Schipol airport at 6:45 in the morning and were at the baggage claim by 8:00 a.m. More than a dozen of those from my flight were gathering under a Uniworld sign for transportation into the city and to the
River Princess
, a river longship cruise boat that would be taking us up the Rhine and Main from Amsterdam to Nurnberg for eight days. Most of the cruise passengers coming in from the States were on this same flight. Most of the others didn't get a few hours of sleep like I had, since I was in business class, so they looked like they were ready to fall over.
The river cruise didn't cast off until 5:00 that evening, but the cruise line had taken everything into consideration and was picking us up in a bus at the airport and driving us into Amsterdam. They had a hospitality suite booked for us at the Montien Amsterdam Hotel, near where the
River Princess
was berthed, where we could rest and unwind, taking walks out into the adjacent canal-laced old city as we wanted and were able to. Our luggage was sent ahead to the ship and would, we were told, be in our cabins. We could check in on the ship anytime after 2:30. That gave us over four hours to check out Amsterdam from when we arrived at the Montien until the ship sailed. It would be our only time to see the city. We could either lunch on our own or a buffet would be set up for anyone who wanted to stay in the hospitality suite.
The tour director, a thirty-something once-god with golden hair, Horst, all smiles and good-will, was there to jolly us along. He glad-handed us all, taking a quick assessment of each as he did so, and, since he devoted extra time to me and assessed me in the same manner that I did others, especially young, good-looking men, I recognized immediately another men-preference top, although, in his case, there was a sizable dollop of bi capability, I thought, to keep the older women passengers twittering about him.
He must have assessed me correctly, as well, because once everyone had been settled in the hospitality suite or already sent on their way into the town, he took me aside as I was doing some grazing at the buffet before preparing to strike out for a mission in the city of my own that I'd been struggling during the flight whether I wanted to do or not. Whether or not I did would be sort of a watershed moment for me.
"You're Mr. Simpson, aren't you?" he asked, keeping his voice down so that the conversation would be private. That alerted me to the possibility that he'd make a pass, because before this what he had to say had been meant for and projected to the whole assemblage. This was something he wanted to say just to me, and he put a hand on my forearm to ensure I'd stay there to hear him out.
"Yes," I answered.
"I believe you have a double cabin to yourself. Traveling alone, are you?"
"Yes. My companion couldn't make it at the last moment."