"Cam, come over here and meet our guest. Jordan, this is—or was—my prize pupil, Cameron Williams. He likes to be called Cam. He now provides private lessons for some of our students—both piano and voice. He's truly gifted. Oh, there are the Thompsons at the door. I'll have to greet them. I'll leave the two of you to chat. Jazz, it's all about Jazz. All that jazz." Hannah Brandt laughed a deep-throated laugh, turned, and hauled her zaftig, floral caftan-clad body off in a cloud of perfume.
It was fairly obvious to both men that she was throwing them together.
Cam stood there, left alone with the visiting conductor from Philadelphia, fully suspecting that this was one of Hannah's setups. She was always trying to help Cam move along in his goal to become a premier jazz musician and composer—and, knowing he was gay, she was equally intent on finding him a sugar daddy to promote his professional goals and personal needs. Seeing Jordan Smallwood in person and up close now, and the way in which Hannah had thrown the two together, caused Cam's antenna to go up. Hannah, his former high school music teacher, was the department head for music at Baltimore's School for the Arts, the city's special performing arts high school.
Jordan Smallwood was a tall, elegantly dressed, and commanding-presence man who probably was in his early fifties. He had a probably cultivated air of English don about him. He was dressed for the part of the conductor of Philadelphia's Jazz Orchestra—in flamboyant style, with elegant black silk shirt and trousers and a red-silk-lined black cape. He sported a wavy mane of gray hair and a classically handsome face that bordered on the effete and handled a gold-headed walking cane more as a theatrical prop than a walking aid. He was slender and held his body in the manner of a runway model. It was clear to Cam that the man was gay, but he carried it off with an air of authority—the most interesting man in the room. He'd still be the most interesting man in the room if this wasn't just a reception at Hannah's apartment for her students after Smallwood had given a lecture in conducting jazz at the high school.
Cam, a half black Baltimore inner city youth of nineteen, had attended the performing arts school on a gifted student scholarship. Hannah Brandt had seen his extraordinary talent in both piano and voice and had taken him under her wing. He was out of high school now and working part time in the piano bar of a gay-friendly hotel near Patterson Park as well as giving private lessons to students Brandt sent his way. She wanted to get him into a good music college and Cam wanted that too. That was going to take time and effort, though. Cam didn't want to be beholden to anyone. He wanted to do it on his own, in his own time. He was determined that a young man with one foot in the Baltimore black ghetto and the other in the high, white society of the DuPonts in Wilmington, Delaware, could make it in the music world on his own efforts.
"Hannah tells me she's trying to sell you the idea of going to the University of Arts in Philadelphia for a BA and Master's in music," Smallwood said after Brandt had wafted off. "It's a good school. Your jazz piano performance at the school today was phenomenal. I have no doubt you could get in. She's asked me if I could help you get a scholarship there. I was skeptical until I heard you play and sing today. You have a natural talent for jazz. I'm sure we could get you in."
"We?" Cam asked.
"Well, you know I conduct the Philadelphia Jazz Orchestra."
"Yes, I know," Cam said.
"I teach at the University of the Arts too."
"I have work here in Baltimore. Philadelphia is an hour and a half away, and I don't have a car. I'd like to go to the Philly arts university, but—"
"You could move to Philadelphia. Hannah says you have students here. You could do that in Philadelphia as well—and I understand you play in a piano bar. We have piano bars in Philadelphia. And I could give you work in the jazz orchestra."
The man sounded serious in his proposal. Cam was infused with a glimmer of hope, but he'd been disappointed relying on others before. He knew he should feel elated at the possibilities being raised here, but the response he was getting from his body was more one of going on guard and throwing up defenses against false hope. He'd been raised in the Baltimore ghetto with a few heart-breaking visits to the manicured lawns of Wilmington, where he and his mother were received as relatives of one of the house servants, even by his natural father.
Smallwood had a hand on Cam's arm and the look he was giving Cam indicated that his interest in the young man went beyond music. Cam was a handsome young black man. He wasn't tall, but he was solidly built—muscular and movie star handsome, the Jamaican black features melding with French ancestry providing a sensual mix. He was a chocolate brown, with full lips and velvety brown eyes. His dreadlocks, tipped with gold beads, made his exotic looks extremely attractive to women and some men as well—men like Jordan Smallwood.
"Did Hannah tell you that I conduct a jazz orchestra in New York City too—the Queer Urban Orchestra?" Smallwood asked. He was stroking Cam's arm and had pulled in close to him. "I hope the name doesn't shock you."
"No, not at all," Cam answered. Was this some sort of check on his preferences, he wondered. Surely Hannah had fully explained his orientation to the man—especially if she was trying to hook them up. Smallwood's orientation was quite obvious.
A head taller than Cam, the man was looking down into Cam's face, hovering over him, asserting a stance of control and intent that was not to be questioned. Cam shuddered, which Smallwood no doubt felt. He didn't pull away from the conductor, though—which Smallwood also was clearly aware of.
Hannah Brandt surely had told Smallwood more about her prize student and his needs than just about his musical abilities. Cam wasn't promiscuous, but immediately after graduating from the performing arts high school, he had taken up with one of Brandt's male teaching colleagues, a man in his fifties. The affair hadn't lasted long, but Brandt had been well aware of it and not only that Cam would go with an older—and white—man but also that having a mature male lover had served to focus Cam better on his music. Since Cam and Roger had broken up, she had been on a campaign to settle Cam down again with an older man—preferably a rich one. And one from the music world. Hannah knew Cam wouldn't be interested in a man who didn't understand and appreciate good music.
"New York?" Cam asked.