Being huge isn't all it's cracked up to be. People are always looking at you, for one thing. Staring. I can see their eyes tracking up and up, and then their lips sort of purse just a moment before they hide it, if they're being polite. If I thought that would change when I came to university, I was wrong. Still, being locked in the ivory tower's better than being out in the real world, where people aren't even polite. That's one reason I signed on for four more years of grad school.
I'm not pretty and I'm not cute. I've been called handsome, by my mum. Thanks, mum. What I am is solid. Six feet up and three across, I'm a beast in the boat, the power in your power ten. Yep, I'm a big dumb jock trapped in the body of a big dumb jock.
It feels that way sometimes, anyway. Boys are scared of me. Or disgusted. Girls want me to be the boy. The few that are my size look at me like I'm the competition. Which I appreciate, a bit of respect is all right.
I just wish I didn't have to be such good friends with my vibrator. All this sport leaves me hornier than a dog in heat. I have to try not to stare too hard at all the fit girls in the changing room, or the boys when they're out on the river in their onepieces.
There's nothing quite so discouraging as spotting a lad getting hard in his lycra, and watching him wilt when he makes eye contact with you. If I was a different person maybe that would turn me on, but I've got enough power in my muscles, I don't need to go around dominating people.
And I don't want to give the girls the wrong idea by staring too hard either. I've ended up in bed with a couple of women who just lie there, waiting for me to take the lead.
At least a lack of romance in my life lets me commit 100% to rowing. First in, last to leave. The only other member of my crew who shows the same level of commitment is our cox, Sarah. A skinny northern lass, she probably could have gone out for the lightweights but she has mad coxing skills. I'd never heard her run out of things to say to us on the river. Sometimes it's a little bit difficult to get a word in edgeways, to be honest. But I'm the strong, silent type, aren't I? Hmmm? Nobody wants to hear what I have to say, and they probably know what I'm going to say anyway.
I'll talk about rowing. It's my life right now. I don't have any other hobbies. Well, there's work, but the less I have to think about my arse-faced PhD advisor, the fewer arse-faced PhD advisors are going to get punched.
Sarah's probably the only one who understands. I mean, it sounds like she does, I've never actually asked. She's all business and that's fine by me. Training rotas, boat maintenance, analysing the reams of data that come off the cox-box, that's her thing. She squeezes the best out of us and that more than makes up for carrying her weight in the boat.
I'm constantly astonished that you can pack all the bits a human needs into her leggy body. I must be twice her volume at least.
She must have felt me looking at her. "How's it hanging, Anna? Off home?"
"Cheers, coxie," I say. I like calling her that. She seems to like it too, because she's never corrected me. Some of the other girls, usually the ones who were in the boat last year, before she showed up to school us, call her Sarah, but I don't think that's completely respectful. "Not just yet. Gonna work on my calves a bit."
She looks down at my legs and tilts her head a little. "Come here a sec," she says.
I stand in front of her, turned a bit to the side so she can check out my calves up close. That's not what she's after, though.
"Step into my office," she says, sweeping her hand grandly at the corner of the boathouse she's appropriated. "I've got something to show you."
I plant myself on the bench next to her makeshift desk - a folding chair with a box on it - and turn my attention to her computer.
But she lifts her laptop off the box. "Here, grab that," she says, nodding at the box.
I hold it in my lap. It's not just an empty box but it isn't very heavy. "What's this?"
"Next generation training technology," she enunciates crisply. "Build a better rower, or your money back."
I grin at her. "Aces."
"Want to try it out?"
I shrug. "Yeah, course."