They say you can't turn a friend into a lover or a lover into a friend, but after making Law Review I didn't have time for lovers or friends. During seven months of writing editing and arguing round-the-clock in the little clapboard house off the Common where all the law review editors lived, my earning potential had tripled but my Nordic skin had turned a paler shade of herring. Over this period I had been laid a total of five times: twice with Elizabeth the psycho 3L and once each with Naomi Fischfleisch, Bekka the barmaid at the Pizza Trowel, and Assistant Prof. Jennifer Weinglass.
That last encounter reached its climax with the this renowned legal expert on women's objectification begging her partner, banshee-style, to "Fuck the shit out of me, fuck the fucking bliththliflshhblifssshhh fuck shitfuck out of me." I had no choice but to turn the good teacher's face into the sheets, flip her over on her belly, and plow with superhuman concentration on the task of finding a golden money-shot memory. I was saved from ignoble failure only by recalling a college summer spent stripping at bachelorette parties in California. I managed to cream my professor's asscheeks by dwelling on one particular hot night in Oakland when, surrounded by cheering sisters, I reverse gangbanged the bride, the bride's mother and three of her tawny bridesmaids. Fuck that white boy fuck him girlfriend LORD that's a thick cock, he fucks just like a brotha, FUCKTHATWHITEBOY WOO WOO WOO WOO!!
As I type, sweet musk-filled memories cloud my thought, the blood surges, my balls swell, and I must again to the men's room by a route that avoids the knowing stares from the paralegals' pool.
Drained and better for it, I return to my tale. The arrival of April, that time when every young man's fancy lightly turns to thoughts of lust, I resolved to get my skin tanned and my dick wet—and not with psychotics or postmodern banshees or pizza Trowelettes. On a trip to New York for my final interview with Judge Abner Schlagbaum—a formality, really; he too had been Notes editor of the Law Review (Class of '74)-- I bought a copy of the Voice, circled five roommate ads, put on some 501s that nicely hugged my ass and set out beneath the apple blossoms of the East Village to find myself a down and dirty fuckpad.
Three days of inspecting roach and roachclip motels and more than my share of unwelcome glances from the Village's bikershort season Lance Lancestrongs made me rethink my strategy. A Law Review colleague suggested Hoboken, home to wiseguys, junior bond traders and hard-drinking wall street women, also only two stops away from SoHo bars by PATH and subway. I circled five more ads and went a-knocking.
At the first house, a three story brick walkup on a block where size 16 stretch pants and Miguelito baby clothes fluttered from backyard clotheslines, a short, very handsome and heavily pomaded thirty-ish man appeared and told me that the apartment was no longer available. "De owner has decided to sell hees condom," he said in a lilting accent I recognized as from the Aegean.
"I'm sorry, I don't understand?" I said.
"Hees condom, he's going to put it on the market. De real estate agent will be here in few minutes eef you wanna buy eet." He laughed. "Yeah, my ex-wife she never understood me neither. Come on in, you wanna beer?"
The entry room was immaculate. Stacked very neatly and rising to the ceiling were some 300 CDs, mainly techno compilations with titles like "IBIZA DANCE PARTY 1997" , "TECHNOMANIA vol VII". A black metal bookshelf held pictures of a Turkish house with relatives sitting stiffly on a little balcony overlooking the Sea of Marmora. On the top shelf were photos of my host with a petite and very beautiful black woman, smiling broadly and standing on tiptoe. He returned with two open Carlsbergs. He said his name was Arkan; he was from Istanbul. "I come here four years ago, meet Barbra, marry her, have 18 months happiness then we get divorced. American marriage, you know? Ha ha."
The doorbell rang. Arkan left and I picked up a photo of Arkan and Barbra standing before an ocean. She was unusually black, with large luminescent eyes like a cat in darkness, and exceptionally long fingers. In every photo her hair was obscured by a variety of baseball caps. Having let in in the real estate agent Arkan said to me, "Hey you know my ex-wife she lives in Hoboken she looking for roommate. If you interested I give you her number." I was. I gave thanks for the Carlsberg and bid farewell to the Turkish techno fiend.
When I called the number that evening I got a recorded message in a clipped, odd Old South accent that sounded like it came from another century. Thank you fer callin ... yer perfitly welcome to leave yer name and number. I hung up without leaving a message. That evening I went to the house, a prim Queen Anne about a mile from Arkan's. As I was about to knock a twenty-ish couple left and passed me on the steps, speaking German. I rang the bell and saw the same pretty, very dark little woman in Arkan's photos, wearing shorts and with the same white baseball cap I'd seen, come to the door. I told her my business and she let me in, stiffly, to a room that could have been decorated for a meeting of the junior league of some suburb in the Old South. Lace, candles, floral pillows, cobalt glass and chintz everywhere. Leaded windows. Oaken doors with skeleton keyholes.