The first time I saw Lester Hodges, the Midwest shopping mall developer and owner, was at the blood fights in Kampala, Uganda, in early November. He had invited his lawyer, Art Brandeis, out to attend the fights, and Art, one of my regular clients, had brought me along.
Hodges was an ugly bear of a man, over six and a half feet tall, heavy to the point of obesity, but muscular as well. He appeared to be strong as an ox, hirsute, and thuggish. He looked like he'd been in a good many no-holds-barred fights himself, which were what the Kampala blood fights were. Big, black brutes paired off and bludgeoned each other in the ring, bare-fisted and however they wanted to fight until one of them was unconscious or dead. In contrast to the brutishness of the physicality of the fighter, the bald man, who must have been in his late forties or early fifties, dressed expensively and dominated the room like the commanding, successful business entrepreneur he was.
At dinner at the Kampala Serena hotel's Lakes Restaurant, with its white and blue underwater motif mosaic circular columns, where we ate before we went to the fights, Hodges was all sophisticated businessman, totally at home in the expensive restaurant. At the fights, he was all blood and gore pugilist, standing in our box seats and weaving and dodging with the fighters and encouraging them to rip each other apart. He scared me a bit—well, more than a bit. But I wasn't there with him. I was there with his lawyer. Art Brandeis, in his handsome, late-fifties, tall and slim presence, was all money, refinement, and elegance, a big city expensive firm law partner, here, obviously, because Hodges was a major client who had to be handled and coddled. Even at dinner, though, there seemed to be some tension between the two men, as if they were in some business negotiations that wasn't going well for Hodges—that he wasn't fully pleased with Brandeis's services in.
Brandies was a man of culture and unusual fetish, who had initially hired my services from a Chicago male escort agency to accompany him to plays and concerts that he didn't want to attend alone. He also enjoyed male fashion shows and, as my day job was as a runway model and I played in minor roles in movies and plays when I could land them, I had proved to be a good fit for him. With the escort agency's coordination, he had me on a retainer, which was why I was here in Africa with him.
Hodges had brought a young man—younger than my twenty-four—to the Lakes Restaurant with him, and I quickly surmised that he too was a high-priced escort. He did what he could to meld well with the overpowering businessman, but I could tell that he—Jan Wyener, up from South Africa, he said—was apprehensive about the situation. He admitted as much when we went to the men's room together before we left for the fight arena.
"I don't know about this blood fight we're to go to," he said. "I understand they fight to the end. I've never seen anything violent like that."
I could believe that was true. He was both young and effeminate acting. He was more beautiful than handsome—very fair skinned and freckled, which went with his copper-colored hair and watery blue eyes. He was small and thin, more willowy than muscular, with the narrowest hips I'd seen on a man. I could understand him being a high-class rent-boy—he was gorgeous—he just looked more like what someone like Art Brandeis would like than a heavy thug like Hodges.
"I'm not looking forward to the fights, either," I said. "If you have your eyes squeezed closed most of the time you won't be alone. Art tells me the boxes aren't within the blood splatter zone, though."
Jan made a slight retching sound, so I guess even talking about it had an unfortunate effect on him.
"But just grin and bear it. I'm sure you're here for what comes afterward in his hotel room." That wasn't the best choice of something to say, I decided.
"I'm not exactly looking forward to that that, either," he said.
"Weren't you matched somehow by your escort agency? He must be paying a mint to have you here. Up from Cape Town, did you say?"
"I understand I match what he asked for. He certainly isn't what I expected, though," Jan said. "I'd like to switch with your man. You're more a man's man than I am. I would have expected Hodges to want someone like you. As big as he is and as much as he swaggers, I'm afraid he's monster hung. You look like you're built better to take that."
"For what we're being paid," I said, "if they wanted to switch, we'd do it and act like it's just what we wanted. I don't know why Hodges invited his lawyer to this, although Art said something about them wanting to discuss some urgent business someplace outside of the States. But if they want to do both of us together, that's what they'd do. Here in Kampala we're pretty much at the end of the world, and they are paying top bucks for us—or whatever money you have in South Africa."
That didn't go over very well with him, either, but although I enjoyed talking to him about our various travels and experiences while Hodges and Brandeis had had their heads closer together on business talks at dinner—talks that seemed to have bit of tension in them—I didn't really have much sympathy for Jan. He was a whore and was being paid well. But then he was right; I probably could take a big cock better than he could—and I enjoyed taking monster cocks. Brandeis had a bigger one than most would suppose from looking at his tall, thin frame, but then Brandeis had a demanding quirk of his own. And he paid highly for it.
Jan didn't take well to the blood sport of the fights in the Kampala ring. He spent more time in the bathrooms behind the boxes upchucking and with his head turned away from the carnage than he did at Hodges's side in the box. Hodges didn't seem to notice, though. He was totally into the fights, jumping up and down, giving advice to the fighters, and pumping his fists in the air like he was in the fight himself. And he was so big and powerfully built and thuggish in looks and action that I could see him in one of those no-holds-barred fights, holding his own and beating the other man to a pulp. I could tell that it was sexually arousing to him too. He had an obvious hard on throughout the evening, and I could tell, as Jan had surmised, that he was monster hung.
My own patron, the lawyer Art Brandeis, was equally aroused by the fights, I could tell, but his response was totally different from that of Hodges. He sat quietly, eyes slitted and tongue darting in and out of his mouth as he watched one pair of big blacks after the other destroy each other in the ring. And throughout most of the evening he had one hand rubbing himself in the crotch and the other one on my body as I sat next to him, only taking in the spectacle of the fighting from time to time.
My attention focused on one of the fighters during one bout. They all fought just in skimpy silk boxer shorts and one black fighter was particularly muscular and sexually arousing to me. He also was particularly cruel and, after he'd beaten his opponent to a pulp, he straddled the other fighter's chest, pulled the waistband of his trunks to under his balls, and made the beaten fighter suck him off. The fighting obviously had been arousing to him, as he was hard as a rock when he forced his cock into the other fighters' mouth.
The crowd roared its approval at this act of total dominance and, under Art's rubbing of my shaft through the material of my trousers, I came in my briefs. Holding my cock in his grip, Art leaned over and took my mouth with his. I knew then that he was revved up for our night later, at the Kampala Serena Hotel, but I didn't know the half of what he had in store for me.