Author's note: This one takes a while to build. Hopefully you'll find the climax worth the wait.
*****
"You worthless piece of crap!" I spit, desperate to provoke a reaction, any reaction. But all I get back is a blank, blue stare from the computer screen. I've just spent the better part of a year at this keyboard, writing and re-writing the manuscript of what I hoped would my best-selling erotic novel to date. But now queasy fear fills my stomach as I face the very real prospect that the hundreds of pages I spent countless hours conjuring are lost forever. Beyond the investment of time, I poured the lurid details of my forbidden fantasies into this soulless machine, trusted it with my most secret desires, only to be betrayed.
The computer continues to stare mutely at me, unblinking, uncaring. Bizarrely, an image of my ex-husband's face flashes in my mind. I'm so frustrated that I scream at the machine again in futile rage and pound the keyboard with my fists. It's no use, of course. I look down at the battered keyboard, it's P and L keys now missing. My anger slowly drains away and I'm left just feeling childish.
Sighing with resignation, I pull out my phone and dial the nearest computer store. An older man answers enthusiastically, "Thanks for calling CompuHut, this is Phil!"
"Hi, do you guys make house calls?" I ask.
"Sure," he replies brightly, "we offer free delivery on any new computer or printer purchase!"
"No, I mean for a repair," I clarify.
"I'm sorry, ma'am, we don't do repairs anymore," he says, the brightness gone now.
"Is there any place else in town that does?" I ask, adding "I'm a bit desperate."
"Well, there is a kid named Milton who used to work here. He does freelance repairs now," he offers sympathetically. "Do you want his number?"
"Yes, please," I reply, and scribble down the number.
I say goodbye to Phil and make the call immediately. On the third ring, the phone is answered by a rich masculine voice, not the pimply teen voice I was expecting from a kid named Milton.
"This is Milt," he says simply, somehow infusing the short greeting with strength.
"Uh, hi, my name is Angie and I got your number from Phil at the CompuHut? He says you do computer repairs?" I say, realizing with embarrassment that these statements ended as questions, making me sound like a teenage girl instead of the 30-something woman that I am.
"That's my story," he says smoothly. "How can I help?"
"Well, my computer starting making a funny whine while I was working this morning, and then the screen went blank," I report.
"Any error messages? Did you try restarting it?"
"No and yes. All I get is just a blue screen."
"Hmm. Sounds bad," he says, but in an ambiguous tone that could be serious or mocking.
"The thing is," I blurt out, "it's got all my work in it, every draft of every story I've ever written."
"Do you have a backup?" he asks.
"What's a backup?" I reply cluelessly.
"I'll take that as a no," he says, but not in a snide way. "Sounds like we better focus on reviving your primary copy. It might be an easy fix. I'd be glad to take a look at it for you."
"I'd really appreciate that. When could you come over?" I ask eagerly.
"I could come now if you like. Where do you live?" he offers.
I give him directions to my apartment and say a grateful goodbye. My worries slip away at the thought that help is on the way. But then the queasy fear returns, this time for a different reason. I just invited a strange man, referred to me by another complete stranger, over to my home. Who is this computer kid named Milton with the sexy voice? What if he's a serial killer? Too late now, so I grab a cup of ginger tea to soothe my stomach and sit down on the sofa with a book to wait. Less than five minutes later, I'm startled by a loud knock on the door. I jump to the door and reach for the knob, then pause.
"That you, Milt?" I ask apprehensively through the door.
"Hi, Angie," comes the reply.
I swallow, prep my friendliest smile, and pull open the door. I didn't know what to expect, but the man standing in front of me is still not what I was expecting. Milt is younger than me, but definitely not a kid. He has broad shoulders that fill an untucked plaid shirt, and athletic legs wrapped in tight black jeans and cowboy boots. His dark hair is cropped short and slicked forward. Long sideburns extend down to a strong jaw, a micro-goatee under his lip. The thick black frames of the glasses resting on his nose would be Revenge-of-the-Nerds comical were it not for the penetrating green eyes behind them. Tribal tattoos peeking out from under his rolled-up sleeves complete the incongruous portrait. Whatever Vogue would call this look (metro-western geek chic?), he's pulling it off. I should say hello or invite him in, but I just stand stupidly in the doorway, dissecting him with my eyes while an awkward silence grows. Finally, he breaks the tension.
"Uh, can I come in?" he asks, an uncertain smile on his tanned face.
"Of course!" I exclaim, much too loudly. "Please! Thanks so much for coming!"
Embarrassed, I usher him quickly into my living room, offer him something to drink. He declines so graciously that I begin to relax.
"How did you get here so fast?" I ask.
"I live just around the corner," he explains with an easy smile, "we're practically neighbors."
"Lucky me," I say, "to have a computer surgeon so close by."
"Yeah," he says with a grin. "So, where's the patient?"
Only in this moment do I remember that the computer desk in my bedroom is stacked with the sex manuals and porn videos I use for research. I think I even left a couple of my favorite toys out on the bed. Though part of me is dying to introduce Milt to Elektra Lee, my naughty nom-de-plume, the Angie who grew up attending Catholic school feels a moment of panic. If he's not into kink, or not into me, I don't want to make a fool of myself.
"Uhmmm, it's in the other room," I say, hoping my voice sounds less quavering to him than it does in my own ears. "Can you give me just a minute? I forgot I've got a bunch of, uh, laundry piled on the desk."
"No problem," says Milt sincerely. "I'm a very patient man," he adds with a wink.