Straight Man Gay
Daniel Marion Culpepper
Published by Sherrie Yvonne Johnson at Smashwords
copyright 2011 Sherrie Yvonne Johnson
ISBN 978-0-9848596-2-7
Confession is by the author
Welsh translations
provided by the Welsh Language Board
Professional proofreading
services provided by WordSharp.net
This book is a work of fiction. All names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s colorful and vivid imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.
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No part of this publication, however small, may be used or reproduced in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, scanning, emailing, or otherwise without written permission from the author. Daniel Marion Culpepper, Danny Culpepper, and D. M. Culpepper are pseudonyms used by the author.
Please visit http://www.straightmangay.com for more information about this book, other publications, and to contact the author.
Dedication
To kind and gentle Patrick McAtee, who fills my mind with wonder and joy and expands my meager knowledge of a dynamic minority culture that is woefully misunderstood and to this day, still openly persecuted in so many violent ways by an ignorant society.
To my mother, who instilled in me the values, strength and perseverance that allowed me to believe I could accomplish this.
To the memory of Roger Horwitz and Paul Landry Monette and the millions who have died and are still dying.
Thanks
Although this book was written alone and without input regarding its content or subject matter, I embarked on this journey with the motivational input of well-wishers; those patient few who listened to my frustrations and knew I could overcome the countless hurdles. I want to thank Tina and Rina for their positive encouragement, Dave for kicking me in the ass, and Thanh for guiding me to the Billy DeFrank LGBT Community Center. I want to thank the Billy DeFrank Center for the use of their fabulous library and for allowing me to volunteer my time to support their vision of diversity and inclusiveness. I must thank those who read the manuscript and offered constructive feedback: Patrick, James, Liz, Edna, and Sioux. Ultimately, I give thanks to my wonderful sister Diane for her camaraderie and her numerous insights regarding my numerous oversights—and for obliterating my errant commas and self-doubt.
Confession
A
burning love inflames my heart,
I cherish him as no one can.
Fate
decrees we will not part,
The truth must out: I am a man.
Chapter
1: The Little Fool
Chapter
2: Going Alone
Chapter
3: A Lavendery, Lusty Hue
Chapter
4: Monkey Business
Chapter
5: The Advantage Of Really Dark Sunglasses
Chapter
6: Welcome To The Biosphere
Chapter
7: So Much For Sexy
Chapter
8: The Impact Of The Impact
Chapter
9: The Impact Of Tarpaper On A Glass Dome
Chapter
10: A Miserable And Frustrated Gay Bastard
Chapter
11: High Definition And A Very Dim Spotlight
Chapter
12: How Stupid Can You Be?
Chapter
13: He Deserves A Bickie
Chapter
14: The Element Of Surprise… And Not Much Else
Chapter
15: Two Eighty Nine A One
Chapter
16: This “Ass” Thing
Chapter
17: Going Home
Chapter
18: The Impact Of Joe
Chapter
19: The Puppet Master
Chapter
20: This Is Love
Chapter
21: That Amazing Eurostar Chunnel
Chapter
22: Commitment
Chapter
23: Claiming What Is Rightfully Mine
Chapter
24: Goodbye, John
Chapter
25: An Ass By Any Other Name
Chapter
26: Ten
Chapter
27: Accepting The Reality Of Our Situation
Chapter
28: Where I belong
Chapter
29: Guns And Roses
Chapter
30: Bydda’ I’n Aros Amdana’ Ti Am Byth…
Chapter
31: There’s Only So Much A Bloke Can Take
Chapter
32: The Simmering Comes To A Boil
Chapter
33: The Sober Realization Of What’s To Come
Chapter 1: The Little Fool
Carol – January 10
My mother was an evil witch who carried her seething hatred of me to the grave. Her idea of parent-child bonding was to bung me in the street every time her current boyfriend felt up my knickers. And the only useful bit of wisdom she ever gave me was about money: If you can’t make it, marry it. So I did. Twice. Okay, both assholes dumped me for a younger bint, but I’ve still got what it takes and I’m determined to use it to get what I want.
I lean forward and rap on the partition. “Will you turn that thing off? No, not down—off. I’m a paying customer and I don’t want to hear that racket.” I flop back into the seat and stare out at the rain. They’re calling it moderate precipitation. Moderate, my ass. God has been pissing buckets on London for days. And when I say pissing, I don’t mean that hesitant tinkle I let out in tiny spurts because there’s some lingering cow in the next loo and I’m too shy to have a good, long pee. I mean that bladder-bursting torrent that splashes about the bowl with so much pressure I have to lift my bum off the seat for fear of a back-splash. This incessant rain is just amplifying my impatience with everything.
As we pull up to the address, I grab my umbrella and step out of the cab. Then I bend down to hand over the fare to this subservient creature. He stares at the money in his hand, looks up at me and frowns. Oh, no. This punter isn’t getting a tip from me. Instead, I bless him with a few parting words: “Your cab stinks.”
I cross the pavement, open the door, scope my surroundings… and truly regret saying I’d meet her here. It’s a common dive full of common creatures living common lives with common thoughts rattling around in their common little brains. I rid myself of this existence years ago. I’m so much better than this now. And yet, here I am again, confronted with visions of nose rings, leggings, tattoos, and t-shirts with offensive slogans. I see skulls that are buzzed on the left, half-shorn up the back, and sporting one stringy lock on the right, dyed in a hideous day-glo hue. These are London’s commoners; the dregs of society, the pale cretins I abhor and have worked so hard to leave behind. They are dead common, one step above street scum and only because they don’t reek of urine. Laboratory mice produce more brainwave activity than this lot staring at my beauty with their dull, ignorant eyes. My understated elegance infuriates them. They know I don’t belong here, a goddess among lepers. Their contempt (or is it simply jealousy?) bounces off my shield of superiority like the raindrops bouncing off the pavement.
I tug on my diamond-stud earring (a reassuring reminder of the Tiffany world I inhabit—a world I’m eager to return to) as the drone-waiter hovers near, hoping I’ll grace him with an order. Whereas most cheap eateries present garish pictures of food, this down-market Petri dish believes encrusting the laminated cardstock they have the nerve to call a menu with bits of real food is more appealing to their undiscerning clientele. As if sticky gobs of canned marinara sauce and dried specimens of ricotta cheese would better sell the day-old calzones. Witnessing his lethargic swipe over the menu with a slimy gray rag—which only serves to smear the shit over the entire surface—makes the decision to say “no” an easy one. Drone-boy is lucky I’ve lowered myself to touch the water (bottled, thank God, but not even a recognizable brand).
I gaze out the window for a change of dismal scenery just in time to see a stretch limousine screech to a halt on the slick tarmac as a silly, little fool without an umbrella or mack darts across the street, trying to catch the bus. The tiny elf is prancing along on his tiptoes as if he were a show pony, sporting a pink bow in his wild, piss-yellow hair. I shake my head in disgust. He’s just another commoner—and a faggy, little git.
I close my eyes and breathe deeply as I remind myself why I’m here. With only eleven months of maintenance left I need another man, and he’s got to be rich—very single and very rich. The hard part has been trying to find one without adult children clinging to his wallet. Those money-grabbing vultures can make a new stepmother’s life a complete hell, sticking their big noses in everything, trying to sabotage a generous pre-nup or derail a revised will. The fact that I did find one shows my diligence and resourcefulness. Now I just have to snag him. And that’s where she comes in. I’ve paid her a small fortune and I expect results. She had better come through for me.
I spy her as I open my eyes, just walking in, a moronic grin consuming the lower half of her fat face. With orange-glazed hair, pagoda earrings, and rhinestone-encrusted glasses she’s just as bad as the rest, but older—a sad reject from the Cindy Lauper Fan Club. It’s embarrassing to have this… creature approach me in public even if it is a shit-pit none of my contemporaries would ever frequent. She shuffles along with carrier bags and sacks and a plastic Gucci knock-off hanging from her shoulders, banging into everything she passes like a maced elephant charging through the jungle.
When she finally reaches the table, the look in my eyes clearly says, “It’s about time!”
“Sorry, sorry. These half-day cabbie strikes are driving me mad. I was a little too long at the shops and by the time I did get one I had to share.”
Smoldering anger seeps from my pores as I bite my tongue. I do not like to be kept waiting, especially by low-class people in low-class places. What is up with her hair? I’ve just realized it’s one color in front and another in back… and the silly cow is chewing gum in my presence when I’ve asked her not to. I do my best to stay focused. Her antics are appalling, but I need answers. “Never mind that drivel. What did you find out?”
Her semi-bloated face entertains the look of amazement. “Hang on. Can I sit down first? Maybe you could treat me to a drink and a bit of nosh?”
Is she having a laugh? This ill bred, vile Patricia Thompson—a self-titled Informationist (a mere gossip)—is pushing her luck. With what I’ve already paid, it wasn’t my intention to slop the buggering sow, too… but she does have something I desperately need (and she knows it) so I relent. It takes her a few minutes to shed her cheap paraphernalia and shimmy-jerk her bulk into the booth. She orders a white wine, garlic cheese bread, deep-fried calamari, and fettuccini Alfredo off the plastic card while I stare in amazement. It’s no wonder she’s dripping with bad skin and cellulite.
As the waiter leaves, she jabs something in my face. “Before I forget, here’s your invite. Now don’t lose it. Without it you’ll never get in.” She spits her gum into a paper napkin and sets it on the table as if it were a delicate treasure.
I snatch the crumpled invitation and shove it in my purse.
“Uh, you wanna read that? See what it’s about, what the fundraiser is for?”
“I don’t care what it’s for. You’re sure he’ll be there?”
“No, Carol,” she exasperates, as if telling a retarded child something she’s repeated a thousand times. “I told you before, I’m not sure of anything when it comes to him. He changes his mind at the drop of a hat. He says he’ll go and then turns around and just mails a check instead. But the last I heard, he was still expected to show, okay?”
I slit my eyes, not liking the answer (or that bitchy attitude) one bit but not having any power to change it. “Okay.”
As we wait for her three thousand calories to spew forth from the bowels of this fetid dump, Patricia’s attempt at chitchat is a grating nuisance, like a lazy fly buzzing about my head. I’d eagerly smack it dead if I could only find a swatter. Why a lump of her nondescript upbringing would even think we had something in common, is beyond me. Her Cockney accent is rough, at best. Her language foul. Her mannerisms crude. Her appearance: haphazard, disheveled, disgraceful; yards of clingy, petroleum-based fibers encasing rolls of shameless, jiggling self-indulgence. I keep glancing at my watch. I feel as if I’ve reached my limit of exposure in this cesspool, and I want out. After twenty minutes, the first of her dishes finally hits the table, along with her wine. The second the waiter slinks away, I pounce. “Now, tell me everything.”
She stabs several calamari rings and pops them in her mouth. She speaks as she chews: low class, typical, and gross. “Well, there’s the obvious, right? Rich beyond belief, worth about four hundred million or more, only here in London for a few months, can’t wait to get back to Scotland, and casually dating a couple of birds but no one in particular.”
“Yes, yes. I know all that. Don’t tell me that’s what I paid you for.”
The dirty glare flashed across the table could kill a horse. She adjusts her massive bulk and shovels more cholesterol into her gob. “All right, let’s begin. He’s got this thing about certain smells, so don’t wear any perfume.” My almost-beehive ‘do’ gets a critical stare. “And I’d lose that lacquer, too. He likes his birds tall and curvy so you’re bang on, but those helium tits,” she waves her fork at my breasts, “are really gonna turn him off. He can’t stand fake knockers. I know you can’t do anything about ‘em and I’m sure they cost you a mint, but try not to shove those blimps in his face every five seconds, yeah? Just cover ‘em up a bit, ‘cuz right now they look like a great big arse stuck up under your chin. Christ, a turd could come flyin’ outta that crack any second!”
My mouth drops open. How dare she insult my assets! My first ex paid a fortune for these triple-D, saline beauties.
She ruminates for a minute (in mind and in mouth) and swills her wine, oblivious to my shocked face and still staring at my breasts in a creepy, “Sure-wish-I-could-squeeze-‘em” way.
Another thought finally breaks her spell. “He likes to shag early on but he’ll always get a posh hotel room. He’ll never take you back to his penthouse. As a matter of fact, you may never see his penthouse to begin with. That’s off limits to everyone.”
“Why?”
Her brow furrows and her loaded fork hovers in midair. “Not sure. All I know is you gotta have patience. And don’t drop hints about wanting to see it—or his yacht—or anything else he owns.” The fork resumes its mouthward journey.
“Right.” I’m soaking up this stuff like the sun in Saint-Tropez. This is important information, and lack of information is where so many others have failed.
“Don’t whinge on about weekend getaways or anything like that. He’ll drop you like a stone.” She pauses as her plate of ghastly fettuccini arrives, slams some in her mouth, and continues. “And he doesn’t wanna have dinner with your friends or family. He sees that as commitment, thinks you’re tryin’ to reel him in.”
“I am trying to reel him in.”
“Yeah, but discreetly, right?” Precious seconds are dedicated to emptying the contents of a saltshaker onto her food. “Now he’s not into looks, so don’t expect any compliments, but he remembers everything you say, so watch the lies if you have any. They could get you into trouble.” Another dripping forkful approaches her gaping mouth like a jumbo jet on final approach. It’s a wide load. She helps guide it into the landing strip with her fingers and then noisily licks each one. “He doesn’t talk much. Sometimes he won’t say a word for twenty minutes, so shut your trap if you notice him getting quiet and watch the questions. He can’t stand lots of questions.” She motions for the waiter to refill her wine glass. “He doesn’t wanna take care of anyone. None of this ‘poor little damsel in distress’ crap. You need to deal with your own shit. He’s not gonna rescue you, so you can’t be needy.”
I nod. “What about that gay comment he made a few years ago?”
“Huh? Oh, yeah. I looked into that. It didn’t lead to anything. I’m not even sure why he said it. Although, the fag he was talking about—what’s his name, John Kaiser—is a super-hot actor right now here in London, and he’s gorgeous. Anyone would shag him. Hell, I’d shag him. But still, that’s insignificant. No worries there.”
“So you’re sure he’s not gay?”
She waves her hand dismissively. “Positive. He’s straight, front door only, tits and clits. As a matter of fact, I found out a lot on that subject so listen up. At the hotel—if you get that far—never, ever jump his bones.”
“What?”
“I mean it. Don’t attack him and don’t go for him. He can’t stand that. Let him make all the moves, right? He wants to be in control.”
“Are you sure? I know men love to be groped and seduced,” I say with proud authority.
“Not this one. I’m serious, Carol. Believe me. One of my sources tried it, and she got a rude awakening and a cab lift home.” Patricia stops talking abruptly, sits bolt upright, and stares at the diamond in my right earlobe as if possessed. Apparently, having scarfed her food too fast, she’s now off-gassing; she tries to stifle a colossal belch—and doesn’t succeed. The strong odor of cheap wine and garlic, accompanied by a disgusting, un-human sound, wafts across the table. Nausea and embarrassment engulf me as she rambles on. “Oh, and be prepared for a surprise in bed. And from what I’ve heard, I mean a seriously big surprise. This chap has an unbelievable pud!”
“Is that so?” I cringe at the crass slang. In my world, a penis is a penis—not a pud.
“Yup. You know that old saying about running the tartan up the flagpole to see who’s gonna salute it?”
“Vaguely.” I watch as she blots congealed Alfredo sauce with greasy garlic bread. “I suppose you’re going to tell me I’ll be saluting his… tartan all night long?” I make sure the tone of my voice conveys my upper-class disdain for her trash talk.
“No,” she haughtily replies, as if I’m the one who’s rolling around in a smut gutter. “I’m going to tell you: Forget the damned tartan; his pud is the flagpole!”
My face turns red. “Oh.”
“Do you sweat during sex?”
“No.”
“Do you snore?”
“I don’t think so.”
She shoots a doubtful look at me.
I sit up straighter in the booth. “No, I don’t snore. I never snore.”
“Good! That’s champion.” While she’s been talking, Patricia has done a fantastic job of sucking up food like a Hoover and slamming back wine like a lush. Her plates are spotless—not a crumb left. She orders a third wine refill from the waiter, props her elbows on the table, and makes stupid faces and sucking noises as she tries to clear bits of food from between her teeth with her tongue. And then, because the tongue just isn’t doing the job, she picks her teeth with her fingernails, carefully taking time to examine each morsel for its nutritional value once she’s scraped it out. She finishes her command performance by unwrapping her gum (which now has bits of paper napkin stuck to it) and popping it back in her mouth. God, she’s like a cheap tart with hairy armpits and a bad weave—dead common!
“Now, here’s the most important thing I’ve got. This is what your money bought, okay?”
I eagerly nod and lean in across the table.
Her bulging eyes stare at me intensely as she mercilessly grinds her gum; a starving rat dead set on devouring a chunk of rancid bread. “Lose the emotions, Carol. He can’t handle ‘em and he doesn’t want to deal with ‘em. His world is calm and cool, no disruptions, no excitement. If you’re nervous, shy, stressed, or angry, that’s a turn off. He likes confident, strong birds who take everything in stride. Never panic. Never lose your temper. No tantrums, no begging, and above all, no crying—ever. I know you need the dosh soon, right?”
I nod. Patricia may be a lowlife, but she’s got my number. She knows I’m desperate.
“Well, if you get emotional on this Scotsman or step one foot wrong, you can kiss his mega-rich, fine ass goodbye. Got it?”
I nod again, with just the slightest hint of humbleness.
Brian
I’m not a very visual person. I never have been. Looks don’t interest me, and physical features are a blur five minutes after someone walks away. I’m more inclined to remember what someone said and the tone of their voice than whether they were wearing a black coat or a brown coat. Once they’re out of sight, I wouldn’t even remember if they were wearing a damned coat. I can’t place a face in the crowd but let me hear a voice from years past and I’ll remember everything we spoke of long ago. My keenest sense is my sense of smell, and as I grow older, I realize more smells—and scents—offend me. So, with the ability to remember things that were said and my acute sense of smell as my guide, I make most of my decisions in life that don’t involve business dealings. My world usually chugs along at an even keel; well balanced, centered, and calm. I can’t say that’s the case right now.
I’m sitting across from Anna Kims, one of London’s most beautiful women. She certainly wouldn’t be mistaken for a particular Notre Dame bell ringer, but as I said, looks are often wasted on me. Her age: forty-five. Her heritage: granddaughter of one London’s most well-known clothiers. Her mission: land another millionaire. It’s no secret. She’s made that clear her whole life and has succeeded in dragging two (or is it three?) to the altar. Pity the poor buggers didn’t last, but she did get a bit of maintenance out of each one. The money may be running out, though. I appear to be the next bugger. Am I shocked? Not really. I’m a big boy. I’m forty-one and I know the game. These days, it’s easier for older, high-society women to make their intentions clear up front than waste time faking a silly romance to get their hands on decent money. They’ve got bills to pay like everyone else and, to them, marrying money is just like landing a job at Herbert Smith—only easier.
Anna is bright, witty, and decent company, but tonight she’s also wearing a lot of perfume—way too much perfume. It smells as if she washed her hair with it, ate it, drank it, injected it, infused it, and then sat in a vat of it for three days (fully clothed) before putting just a dab behind each ear. And in the confines of the limo, my senses are being assaulted in the worst way. I’m getting headache and once I have headache, irritability and rudeness are not far behind. I’m an asshole in that way, and if I don’t find relief from this pong soon she’s going to find out just how big an asshole I can be.
She hasn’t a clue I’m suffering as I stare into her face. She merrily drinks her wine and jabbers on about the inconvenience of the daily cab strikes. London’s cab strikes don’t interest me. Tonight, nothing interests me, especially Anna. Either that fact hasn’t dawned on her and that’s why she keeps talking, or (more likely) it has dawned on her and that’s why she keeps talking—and drinking. I close my eyes. With every fiber of my being, I silently command her to spill wine down the front of her dress, but this chatterbox is a pro at pouring libations in moving vehicles, tipping the bottle gingerly and re-filling her glass to the rim. I’m doomed. At this point, it would take an act of God to—
My thoughts are shattered as Jack crams on the brakes, the heavy limo screeches to a halt, and Anna—straight out of a classic Monty Python skit—hurls her full glass of wine into her face with a flourish. She’s certainly not jabbering now. I’d be laughing myself stupid if I weren’t so stunned by this incredible turn of events. I flip on the comm to discover the cause of this good omen. “Jack, is everything okay?”
“Yes, sir. Sorry about that. I just had a chap wearing a pink bow dash in front of the car.”
A pink bow? “Is he okay?”
“Yeah, he’s fine. Silly little fool was running for the bus. Didn’t even look. He almost became your new hood ornament. Are you all right, sir?”
“Oh, yes. We’re fine.” I survey Anna, hair and dress drenched in red wine and a little bit still dripping from her chin. “We’re just fine.”
“We’re not just fine! I can’t go to dinner like this! I’m a mess!” she exclaims.
“No. You really can’t, can you? And you certainly are a mess, aren’t you? What a terrible blow.” I try to feign sympathy and disappointment—but know damned well I sound like an asshole who doesn’t give a shit. “Jack, it’s unfortunate, but we’ll have to take Miss Kims home and call off the dinner.”
“Oh, my. That is truly unfortunate, sir. I’m so sorry. I’ll cancel the reservations.”
***
As I happily sip my scotch, riding alone back to the flat in a car that now reeks of nasty perfume and spilt wine and thanking God for the small miracle he just performed, I know what Mickey will think when he hears of tonight’s incident. He’ll assume I did something to ruin the evening, and normally his assumption would be right. I would have done something to ruin it because the evening would have been miserable. I would have made it miserable. I always do because I’m an asshole. Slogging through boring dates with beautiful, cash-starved women these past three years has left me as less-than-engaging company, even when I can tolerate their perfume.
Was the divorce hard? Oddly, no. We had an average marriage, but some people just can’t stand each other after ten years. Moyra was doing her thing and I was doing mine. We looked at each other one day and realized we were strangers who couldn’t satisfy each other’s needs on any level. It was only a matter of time before one of us was suffering from multiple stab wounds and the other was being led away in cuffs. So she flew to Amsterdam and moved in with her lover—her best friend, Jane, from her college days (which shocked me just a little)—and I stayed on in the mansion outside Glasgow. I leap back and forth from Scotland to the flat here in London (a place I’ve always enjoyed) and life goes on.
“It’s been a long time, Brian. The public wants you to start dating someone special,” Mickey always says.
Mickey knows what the public wants. It’s his job to know. I really like him, and I’ve always trusted him. He’s never given me bad advice in the past, but dating for the public’s sake is utter crap. I’ve ticked off every woman I’ve gone out with. Not a single one interests me. Not a single one understands me. And I know I drive him crazy every time I cock up a date he’s arranged, but tonight I’m in the clear. Tonight, I have a little fool with a pink bow to thank for ending what would have been a miserable evening.
John – January 14
I’m a very visual person. I always have been. I love looking at things, especially beautiful things like a chic haircut, a sexy smile, a tight butt, or high quality shoes. I notice it all. You could say I drink in beauty and it wouldn’t be a lie. And I love to touch things, to feel things—especially clothes. The style, the choice of fabrics, and the cut can make or break a look. When it comes to clothes, I think they’re an opportunity to make a statement. And when I see something beautiful, I have to acknowledge it somehow, in some way. So, as I sit here squinting at myself in the mirror, humming I Feel Pretty, I have to acknowledge that… I am beautiful. I think. I lean in closer and squint harder. Contacts would help. How long has Mickey been telling me to get my eyes checked?
I’m a bit conceited. Some would say I’m very conceited and they’re probably right. In my profession, I have to be. I need a lot of confidence and a big ego because I have to walk into each casting call with a hoard of good actors and believe I’m the best. When I do that, I always get the part—always. And because I’m good looking, I’m a bit cocky, too. Why shouldn’t I be? Guys are always gawking at me and drooling over me. They get nervous and tongue-tied just trying to talk to me. They want to take pictures with me and date me. So do most women, even after I tell them I’m gay. It’s the effect I have on people and I love it. Yes, just like Maria Nunez, I have the pretty face, the pretty smile, the pretty m—
“David looks hot! The public adores him! When you two step out, the press can’t get enough. You’re storybook!” Mickey proclaims, interrupting my Westside Story revelry.
“I know.” I pat on more face powder and squint at my progress in the mirror. No. I should leave the make-up application to Linda the pro. It’s important I look my best for the camera. I don’t know what I’m doing and it shows.
“So what’s the problem?”
Mickey is shocked and I don’t blame him. He’s tried so hard to keep our relationship going—five long years to be exact. David is a really good-looking guy and he can be sexy when he wants to be. There’s no doubt he and I look great as a couple but I’m tired of the drama. He’s unpredictable and volatile, and I want it to end. I turn around to look at him. “Mickey, he’s changed. We don’t have anything in common. You know he’s not getting any work and that makes him angry and bitter. It’s been hard on me. The relationship is such a sham now. I want out.” As I see Linda approaching, I turn back to the mirror and study Mickey’s reflection. He’s going to have a bad reaction to what I’ve just said. He slumps back in his chair, emits a horrible groan, and mauls his face. Then he sighs and closes his eyes.
Mickey is a great guy. He’s almost, but not quite, a bear. Born and raised in Los Angeles, his enjoyment of socializing comes through in his boisterous and good-natured demeanor. Hovering somewhere in his early forties, he’s the proud owner of a booming voice and a magnetic personality that lights up a room long before he steps into it. A stocky build, bright red frizzy hair, countless freckles, and an over-abundance of body hair that (I can only imagine) covers every square inch of his physique all pay homage to his Irish ancestry. If he weren’t so damned hairy, I might have considered dating him when we first met, but the word ‘waxing’ never appeared in his lexicon so I kept my mouth shut. He also had the worst fashion sense I’d ever encountered in a gay man: drawstring, baggy-assed madras shorts and cheap, tire-soled burlap espadrilles—with bright white socks. In the end though, everything worked out for the best; he’s my manager, we’ve become great friends, and I wouldn’t want it any other way. If it weren’t for Mickey, I wouldn’t be sitting on the set of one of the most popular British detective dramas—as its star. He had to convince the stodgy producers they could have a hit with a (gasp!) real American actor and not just a familiar Brit faking the accent. He had to re-convince them when that real American actor turned out to be (double gasp!) gay.
He opens his eyes and ponders my reflection, weary and resigned. “I may be able to give him a kick start. No promises, mind you. There’s an independent play by this new guy. I forget his name but the script is good. It’s about a street hustler who gets framed for murder and then solves the crime himself. They’ve kept the casting call low key so there’s sparse competition, and I have some history with the casting director, Andrew. I think I can get David an audition for one of the better parts—a speaking role, I hope. Again, no promises.”
Linda takes one look at me and shakes her head at the damage I’ve done.
“If he smells charity he won’t even consider it.”
“I know, I know. I’ll get Andrew to call him out of the blue, say he’s heard some good things about him from a friend, wonders if he’d like to do a quick read—blah, blah, blah. I’ll tell him to keep it casual.”
He can see I’m still wary as Linda performs her magic to get me camera ready. Secretly arranging casting call opportunities for David hasn’t worked in the past. A well-meaning production assistant usually tips him off that it was a favor, and then the dam breaks and a tsunami of wounded-pride shit (buoyed by plenty of alcohol) flows my way.
“I promise I’ll keep myself out of the picture.”
“Well, it might work if he just got a little role—anything, really. It might get him back on track. I don’t know.”
Mickey leans forward in his chair and practically bumps Linda’s butt. “Look, I’m just asking you not to dump him yet, okay? Sometimes you just don’t wanna be too hasty. You’ve got a lot of great things going on in your career right now, Johnny: the series, the musicals, the promotional appearances and the guest spots, all those endorsements. If the press gets wind of trouble in paradise…. Well, you’ve seen it. You’ve read about it. Look what happens when celebrities break up. The media always makes sure someone comes out looking like a shit.” His hairy hand grabs my knee and gives it a strong squeeze. “Johnny, right now, with everything you’ve got going on, you can’t afford to be the shit.”
I close my eyes so Linda can apply translucent powder to my lids. Mickey is right about the media, especially the paparazzi. They snap a picture when David and I aren’t holding hands and the next day there’s a front-page headline screaming about which one of us caused our impending breakup. And if I did break up with David, he’d be so bitter. He’d have stories (true or not) to tell anyone who would listen, especially if they paid for an exclusive. I feel trapped. With my eyes still closed as Linda dabs concealer near the bridge of my nose and at my temples, I realize I don’t have a choice. At least, not right now. “Okay, I’ll stick it out for awhile.”
Chapter 2: Going Alone
John – January 14
My best friends are just like Ethel Merman’s spectacular voice: tolerable at a low volume and in small doses, but only if I’m inebriated. I lovingly call them the nincompoops. Well… not to their faces. Together, the five of us have been through a lot since I’ve come to London: first calls, second calls, final cuts, demo tapes, modeling shoots, getting the part, not getting the part, elation, devastation. Some are employed and some aren’t at the moment. They’ve listened to all my problems with David, and they’re all gay, except Martin. Straight as a laser beam and married to Angie (we call her ‘Angina’), their relationship is rocky. He insists he’s not gay, but she won’t believe him because he shuns underwear. I’ve told her gays don’t hold the patent on going commando but it’s no use. She’s ignorant and homophobic, so I stay away from her—and her loony family. The poops and I try to meet at least once a week for lunch, dinner, or a night out on the town. It depends on our schedules, our finances, and our moods. Today, it’s dinner and a trip to one of our regular clubs, a place where we all feel comfortable.
“Hey, Johnny! Where’ve you been, honey? We’ve already ordered,” Jeff says.
“Greetings,” Martin mumbles.
I sit down, grab a menu, and start scanning the salads. “Sorry. I had to discuss something with Mickey.”
“Where’s Prissy?” Ben demands.
“I don’t know. Was I supposed to pick him up?”
He looks at each of us gravely. “Someone was supposed to. He had an audition. You know he lost his license.”
We all know Prissy lost his license because of speeding, red-light running, and shitty driving in general. The little road terror has gotten more traffic tickets and has caused more accidents than anyone I know. We also know he’s a pain in the butt as a passenger because he won’t shut up about how badly everyone else is driving so no one ever wants to give him a ride. I flag down a waiter. “Well, if I was supposed to pick him up someone should’ve told me. I’ll have a chicken salad and a diet soda, please.” Head bobbing obediently, he scribbles on his notepad and ducks away.
“Salad and a diet soda?” Ben asks, looking up from his lasagna. Ben eats anything and everything. He’s skinny, wiry, has no ass and puts away more food than a sumo wrestler in training.
I lower my voice. “I’ve been told I’m getting a little porky.”
All three look at each other across the table and laugh.
“Yeah, yeah. Really funny.”
Through a mouthful of prime rib, Martin asks, “Can they do that, man? Tell you to lose weight? They snap their fingers and you jump?”
“Of course they can.” I pull out my phone and scroll to Prissy’s number.
Jeff’s confused gaze bores through me.
I roll my eyes and explain: “My weight can’t fluctuate during the series. How’s that gonna look on camera? I can’t be thin in one scene and fat in the next.” The waiter reappears with my soda and I take a sip while Prissy’s phone rings.
Still, Jeff stares.
“What?”
“But you’re the star, honey. You’re the moneymaker. I can’t believe they can tell you to lose weight when you’re the number one guy.”
“It’s not like that. I don’t have the auth—Hey, Prissy! Where are you?”
“I’m on the bus.”
I can’t hear him with all the noise coming through the line. I thumb the volume and take another sip of soda. “What?”
“I’M ON THE BUS!” he screams.
Everyone at the table hears it. I nearly cough up my soda when I start laughing. We’re all laughing. It’s hard to imagine tiny Prissy suffering through a bus ride in London. He’s still shouting up a storm after we’ve calmed down.
“…DAMNED BUS DRIVER CAN’T EVEN TURN A SINGLE BLOODY CORNER WITHOUT HITTING THE CURB AND THEY TAKE MY LICENSE AWAY?”
“So, I assume you’re on your way?” My salad drifts down in front of my face. The pathetic thing looks as if it was pre-made and sitting in a cooler for hours—wilted, dehydrated, sapped of nutrients—but I’m too hungry to complain. I mouth, “Thank you,” to the waiter.
“Yeah. I’ll be there… whenever. Soon, I hope.”
I shove the phone back in my pocket as Ben reaches across the table to skewer a piece of my chicken. “So what did you discuss with Mickey?”
I take a deep breath and say in a low voice, “I want to break up with David and he doesn’t think I should, at least, not right now.” I’m not insinuating I’m a great big celebrity, but I am a popular celebrity and reporters have been known to eavesdrop by taking up a close table. I’ve learned the hard way: You don’t talk about personal things too loudly when you’re famous, even if you’re not mega-famous. All three exchange quick glances. It’s the first time I’ve mentioned breaking up with David, and it’s caught them by surprise.
Martin wags his little finger. “Is it because of his…?”
I shake my head. Martin, bless his ignorant soul, believes every gay breakup is instigated by the size of, look of, or working condition of a guy’s penis. “He’s just not the same. I don’t feel… I don’t know… respect for him anymore and there’s no passion.”
It’s quiet as everyone concentrates on his food. Our little group doesn’t handle extreme change well. When Jeff shaved off his wispy goatee, we couldn’t look him in the face for a week even though we all agreed it was the right thing to do.
Ben finally puts down his fork and leans back. “You know, there’s just no way around that.” Then he leans forward over the table, pushes his glasses up higher on his nose, and whispers, “It’s not like he can grow another one.”
I roll my eyes and hiss back in a whisper, “It has nothing to do with his penis. His penis is fine.”
Then Jeff leans in. “Isn’t there something he can take? A pill or some of that gay spray?”
Ben perks up. “Gay spray? What the hell is that?”
“It grows your willy,” Jeff proclaims.
“Really? How long?”
I glance at the diners near us. “Would you two shut up?”
“They’ve got these operations that… you know.” Martin gestures with his knife. “But they never work. Damned thing always gets infected, turns green, shrivels up, and then just falls off.”
Jeff scrunches up his face. “Eww.”
“Look, would you guys be serious for once?” I plead, trying to get the vision of a shriveled, green penis out of my head as I attack a sausage-shaped clump of shriveled, green lettuce on my plate. “All I know is I’m tired of not feeling… not really enjoying….” I trail off as I look around the table at blank faces.
“Yeah, man.” Martin wags his finger again. “That’s not something you just ignore.”
I give up. These guys are morons and it’s just a joke to them.
Prissy finally shows up and collapses into a chair next to Ben. “Okay, what’d I miss?” His cheeks are flushed, his clothes are damp and his yellow hair, sporting his precious pink bow, is sticking up all over the place. He looks like a baby hedgehog that just fell out of a tumble dryer. He insists he wears the bow in honor of breast cancer awareness, which sounds commendable when people ask about it, but he really wears it because it’s his favorite color and because Ben gave it to him.
I flag down a waiter. “Nothing important.”
“Johnny’s dumping David,” Jeff whispers.
“Because he’s got a small dick,” Martin adds.
“And he can’t feel anything,” Ben chimes in.
Prissy looks at me with mock shock as he takes the menu. Again, I roll my eyes. If they’re going to act like idiots, I’m going to ignore them—and sulk.
Ben finally pushes his half-finished plate forward and places his elbows on the table. “Okay, so let’s say you’re dumping him because of this… lack of respect thing. Then what?”
“What do you mean, ‘Then what?’” I’m hunting down the last slivers of chicken in my sad salad.
“Well, all you do is give the tabloids a juicy story, David-The-Git makes you out to be a right bastard, and you end up going to bed alone.”
“It has nothing to do with going to bed alone. I go to bed alone anyway, but I know what you’re saying about the tabloids and David’s reaction. Mickey said the same thing.”
No one is eating. Everyone is searching my face for something more.
I set down my knife and fork. “Look, things were tolerable when he was in that summer review, right? But how long has it been—over two years now?” I glance at each of them. “Do you know what it’s like to come home from the studio every night and hear the same old story of how he was late for the call, they didn’t like him from the start, they rushed him through the reading, they said they’d call him back for a second look and never did? I’ve tried to be positive and supportive. I’ve tried to be understanding. I just can’t do it anymore. He’s moody, obnoxious, and rude.” I lower my voice to a whisper. “He’s drinking too much and he’s been kind of violent.”
Prissy flags down the waiter and points out his selection on the menu. He watches him retreat and then whispers, “Johnny, he hasn’t hit you again, has he?”
Everyone leans in, waiting for my answer. The last time David punched me I hid the shiner under pancake makeup and behind sunglasses for a week. “No, he hasn’t.”
They’re all relieved.
“But he’s put some holes in the wall, broken a lot of stuff, and he’s always passing out.”
“Well, when are you going to dump him?” Jeff asks.
“I don’t know. I want to do it before the Willowby event.”
Again, all eyes are on me.
Martin laughs. “You’re kidding. You’ll dump him and then go to a function stag? Man, the tabs will have a field day with that.”
“Why? It’ll be okay. Other people are going alone. Mickey will be there and Rick and Sandy and…and Kyle.”
Ben is amused. “No-Style-Kyle? He has to be the lumpiest anorak and the biggest gossip I’ve ever met. Just stand next to him and you’ll probably sink your career. You mark my words.” And with that, he pulls back his plate and shovels the remainder of his food.
Brian
“Brian!”
I pull the mobile away from my mouth. “Hey, Mickey.” Just as quickly, I pull it back. “No, he didn’t fix it. I know he was here last week. Christ, he was here for two hours, made a hell of a racket, and a big mess.” I close the door and follow Mickey into the flat. He heads for the bar and pours a scotch and soda while I go into the living room and sink into a chair. “Look, I’ve said it before. I’ll say it again. He’s got to find a stud. The damned thing won’t stay up unless he screws it into a stud.” I’m rubbing my temple, ready to lose my temper. It’s something I avoid at all costs but this situation has gone on forever. “Fine. Just get him out here on Thursday and tell him to find a stud this time.” I toss the mobile on the table and rub my eyes. Mickey is now sitting across from me, looking amused.
“A stud?”
“In the dressing room—the long clothes rail. It’s about to fall down again because he’s not screwing the support bracket into a stud. I keep telling him: Find a stud, screw it into a stud. He doesn’t listen.” I loosen my tie and take a swig of scotch.
Mickey sighs wistfully. “Ah, Brian, we’re all trying to find a stud to screw into. It’s just not that easy.”
I laugh. Mickey can brighten my mood on any day. “So what brings you here?”
“How was Monday night?”
I give him a roll of the eyes.
“Brian, Anna was perfect for you. I handpicked her. What did you do this time?”
“Nothing. She dumped wine on herself in the car.”
He slits his eyes.
“I’m telling the truth. It wasn’t my doing.”
“Well, okay… if it honestly wasn’t your fault. What about next Saturday? You’re definitely going, right?”
“Of course. I said I would.”
“Good! The word is out you’re going to be there and that’s got the press buzzing.”
“Why?”
“They know you’re going to make a hefty donation and then staying for the sit-down dinner—well, that’s just icing on the cake. I’m not sure who you’re sitting with yet. I haven’t seen the seating chart. I don’t think they’ll be assholes.”
I give him a cold look.
“I’ll make sure they’re not assholes. Lots of eyes will be on you, Brian.” Mickey hesitates. “Will you bring Anna or maybe Vivian?”
“No, Mickey. I’m going alone.”
“But Brian, why?”
“We’ve been over this a hundred times. I just want to go, force myself to chat with assholes, eat tasteless crap in a lumpy white sauce—God, it’s always a lumpy white sauce—write a check, and leave.”
“You could do that just as easily with a beautiful woman on your arm, couldn’t you?”
“I could, but I won’t.”
“But what will the public think if—”
“Mickey, I don’t care what the public thinks. This time, I’m going alone.” I throw my tie on the table and finish off my scotch.
John
A cute shots boy shimmies by, balancing a full tray of kamikazes and Alabama Slammers above his head and swinging his little rhinestoned, micro-shorted tush from here to New York.
“Honey, it’s been ages,” Jeff shouts over the loud music as he watches that bouncing, sparkly ass disappear into the crowd.
I watch it, too. “Tell me about it.”
“Okay, I will. The only friction I’ve been getting lately is from pulling my zipper up and down and let me tell you, I’ve been doing a lot of that!”
I laugh and shake my head. Jeff is beautiful. Unfortunately, he’s also picky. He tries to accept flaws, but in the end, no one can ever measure up to his high standards and vision of perfection. A poorly-placed mole or a few lengthy nostril hairs just don’t stand a chance, which is ironic considering he only has one testicle.
“You’re gonna go to this thing alone?” Ben shouts as he sways a bit and spills his pint.
I nod, my eyes transfixed on all the men gyrating out on the dance floor. I love the music and I love coming to the clubs. I have an extensive fan base here and I live for the attention. I’ve started looking at guys again, even though I’m not ready for someone new. I may not be breaking up with David yet, but I want to see what’s out there, what kind of man gets my juices flowing. I miss having a real relationship, one with a lot of sex. I’m someone who needs a lot of sex in a relationship.
I let my gaze (intermittently blinded by tiny strobe lights) wander around the crowded space. I see gorgeous guys with hot bodies, twisting and turning, pumping pelvises and swinging hips to the thumping beat. As conceited as it sounds, I know I could take my pick of anyone here. I’m that good looking. Specifically though, I’m searching for one particular guy. He’s been here the last few times I’ve come: strawberry blond hair and brown eyes. I don’t know his name but we always make eye contact—intense eye contact. I see him now, standing off to one side of the dance floor. The moment our eyes meet, he looks away. Then shyly, he looks back and holds my gaze for about three seconds before looking away again. There’s a lot of tension between us, and I know he wants to talk. He wants to get to know me. If the nincompoops weren’t here I’m sure he’d—
“Hey, why don’t you ask that guy?” Prissy pipes up, invading my lustful thoughts.
I take my eyes off Strawberry Blond to look down at him. “What guy?”
Prissy is swaying a bit, too. He reaches up and clamps his hand on my shoulder to steady himself. “That guy, the rich one from the chat show. Why don’t you ask him?”
“Who?”
“Prissy, what are you talking about?” Jeff slurs.
Ben stabs a knowing finger at Prissy. “Yeah, what’s-his-name! Brian… something.”
“Mallory,” Prissy says, leaning—or more accurately, falling—toward him.
Ben laughs. “Yeah, yeah! Brian Mallory. You could ask him to be your date.”
“I have no idea who you guys are talking about.” These fools are too drunk to be taken seriously. I turn my attention back to the dance floor.
“He’s this guy, right? He goes on this interview—”
“No, no. It’s a chat show, Ben. He’s on a chat show,” Prissy shouts (and spits) up into my ear.
Ben giggles. “Yeah, that’s right, a chat show, and he says he fancies you.”
“‘E’s a Scotsman,” Prissy proudly adds in the worst fake accent I’ve ever heard.
I shake my head. I’ve got hundreds of guys who have crushes on me and have said so in public. I get love letters from hundreds more. I even get nude shots from countless guys like Tate whom I’ve never met. He’s the president of one of my ‘official’ fan clubs and keeps sending me pictures of his hairy butt and his less-than-impressive genitals. It’s nothing new. I spy Martin making his way through the crowd with his pint and my half pint. Dozens of guys (including the shots boy) are checking out his ass, one of his best features and always prominently displayed in Levi’s shrink-to-fit, 501 button flies—the only jeans he’ll wear. “Big deal.”
“Yeah, but Johnny, get this, okay? Listen to this!” Prissy’s bony fingers are clamped hard on my shoulder. He’s standing on his toes and almost kissing my ear at this point. “He’s straight. He’s totally straight!” He leans back, impressed with himself. “This mega-rich, married straight guy goes on the telly and says he fancies you!”
“Wha… huh?” I’m sure I didn’t hear that right.
Ben giggles again. “I know. Weird guy, right?”
“Well, I mean, he was married when he said it. He’s divorced now, but he’s still straight,” Prissy chatters, mostly to himself.
Martin hands over my half pint. “Who’s still straight?”
“The Scottish guy who fancies Johnny. Said so on the telly, right on the telly. Said it to everyone!” Prissy waves his hand in a wide arc to include everyone at the club and spills his pint.
Martin, who never gets drunk, carefully takes the pint from him and sets it on the bar.
Jeff turns to Martin and says, “So these two yah-yahs think Johnny should ask him to the charity event.” Then he belches loudly—right in Martin’s face.
“I don’t even know the guy. I’ve never heard of him. Why would I ask him?”
Ben turns to me. “It was just a thought. The tabs would have a field day with it: Gay Takes Straight Mate.” With his silly giggles, he thinks he’s just cracked the funniest joke.
I think he’s a drunken ass.
He sees the look on my face. “Okay, okay. It was just a thought.”
I turn back to the dance floor and sip my drink as I mull over what these two fools have just told me: A straight man has a crush on me.
Prissy fumbles with a button on his shirt with his free hand. “Well, he’s gonna be there anyway.”
I turn to him. “What?”
He clamps down harder on my shoulder to keep his balance. “The event. He’ll be there anyway.”
We’re all looking at Prissy as if he’s just become a cupcake. He’s a bit baffling. Ever since we found out he likes to wear women’s panties (backward) and can kiss his own elbows, we’ve decided he’s a little… odd.
He rolls his eyes and almost falls over. He steadies himself on my shoulder again and continues. “I’m working it as a waiter. I saw the seating chart for the dinner.”
We’re still staring at him.
“My audition? The job I got? I’ll be a waiter at the event.”
Jeff looks a little shocked. “Honey, I thought you were auditioning for an acting job.”
“So did I, but I caught the wrong bus.” He’s still fumbling with the button, which is now loose in his hand. “I was late and I missed the call. An agency rep down the hall said they needed waiters.”
We’re all smiling and just about ready to laugh.
Prissy pouts. “Hey, it’s work and it pays.”
He’s right and now he’s piqued my interest. “Marty, give me your phone.”
He digs it out and I hand my half pint to Ben, who promptly starts drinking it. “What’ya want it for?”
“Information.” Even though I have Internet access on my phone, I don’t dare use it to look up anything questionable because David checks the history. And while some smartass might say, “Then just wipe out the history,” they don’t know David. Having no history at all would be ten times worse. I fumble around with the phone and turn so I can hold it away from the glare of the strobe lights. Prissy, hanging onto my shoulder and mesmerized by his own button, has to turn with me or fall on his face. “What’s his last name again?”
He stretches up and carefully pronounces each syllable in my ear. “Mal…or…ee.”
“Standard spelling?”
He pauses, deep in thought. “Two ells.”
I spend a few minutes messing around with the phone. Martin stands close, watching my progress, while a drunken Jeff tries to convince an even drunker (and gullible) Ben that gay spray really does exist and will net him an extra inch with just two pumps. Prissy sleeps against my arm as he clutches his precious button. “Damn!”
“Wha…what?” Prissy is wide-awake.
“It’s just a bunch of crap about his companies and his money. That’s all these websites have.”