I hadn't laid any bets. I hadn't allowed myself to think consciously about "always." But I'm a woman, and women are prone to having "always" fantasies even if we don't admit to them.
At age twenty-three, I'd had only two sex partners and only one that lasted. The latter was the one that was murdered.
I know, I know: not very LA-ish, right? This is Sin City West, where we're all supposed to be fucking
all the time.
Chalk it up to my parentage: two of the straitest-laced Vietnamese immigrants you're ever likely to meet...except that you won't. They almost never leave their home, they only leave it together, and they absolutely do not talk to strangers. To them there are two and only two kinds of girls: good girls, and whores. I was raised to be a good girl.
It took...until I got out on my own, anyway. Having spent my younger years--all the way through college--without any significant degree of contact with the male gender, I wanted to be a wee bit more popular with the boys than Mom and Dad's standards would permit. So I loosened up. Sexually only; most other ways I remained conservative as hell. Get those drugs away from me unless you want to spend the night in a cell.
I learned to like sex. A lot. And as a result of some well-meant advice from a rather strange friend, I didn't stop with "vanilla." After we'd been bed-friends for a few weeks, I encouraged Brian, with whom I felt myself falling in love and who the idea would probably never have occurred to, to try fucking me in the ass--and I discovered, much to my surprise, that for me it beat cunt-fucking hollow.
Unfortunately, Brian decided the same thing. What followed gave rise to a misunderstanding that parted us and probably cost him his life, indirectly at least.
For my year of no standards, I resolved on anal sex only. Always with strangers, and never with the same man twice. I figured the pattern would pall on me, that I'd be hankering for a return to normal by the time the year was up.
So every Friday and Saturday night (plus a thin scattering of weeknights) for a year, I dolled myself up--sexy blouse, short skirt, high heels, and tarty makeup--and sampled a new point on the LA nightlife circuit. I'd take my time checking out the menfolk, settle on one--if possible, and it usually was, the best looking un-paired guy in the establishment--and seduce him.
We would go to his place. Once we were both naked, I'd pull a condom and a tube of lube from my purse, look him in the eye, and say "Want to fuck me in the ass?" From a hundred or more guys over most of a year, the answer was an invariant and enthusiastic yes. I wallowed in the pleasure of it. But as soon as he had come, I would rise, dress, and beat a swift and anonymous retreat, never to see him again.
Of course I took precautions. I'm not an idiot. None of them ever got my name, address, or phone number. It kinda surprised me how few of
them
took precautions. I could have been a crazy woman, an axe murderer out of the pulps. There are plenty of crazies in the LA basin. You can't tell them apart from the normals until they haul out the axe.
I lived through it. And I enjoyed nearly all of it. But it was for a year only. When it was over, I gave myself a year of chastity, just to be sure I hadn't changed in any important way. I hadn't.
Then came Jason.
***
Jason and I were spectacular together. Everything
worked.
We were happy whether we were fucking, strolling along the Venice Beach boardwalk, playing the word games he loved, or just sitting together in front of the TV. From the night we met to the day we parted, I don't think we were apart more than a handful of evenings.
But something changed when he felt forty approaching.
There was an eleven-year age difference between us--and they were eleven really important years, the ones where a young person finishes maturing. The years where an engineer, which was both of us, either hits his limits and decides to content himself with a vanilla career, or really feels the power and decides to shoot for the moon. Jason had lived those years. I hadn't.
Jason was a top-flight engineer. More, he was a polymath. He could design mechanical and chemical systems as easily as he designed circuits. And he could program computers. A vanilla career, forty years taking direction from some drone in a suit for nothing but a salary and an occasional attaboy, was plainly not for him. There came a day when he decided that he couldn't want any longer to try for the big time.
And what do you know: at the exact right moment, a startup in Michigan that had heard about him reached out.
***
"I can't pass it up, Minh."
I nodded. "I know. It's practically got your name engraved on it."
The comfy leather sofa in his living room, where we'd whiled away a thousand quiet evenings reading, chatting, watching TV, or just holding hands, felt like a foreign country. If he were to take the offer--and he would; I knew it from the moment he first described it to me--it would become a foreign country. I'd have no reason to be there in his absence. He might decide not to keep it, even though he'd called his decision "a trial run."
"When do you have to leave?"
"My flight's tomorrow Noon."
I looked away.
"You could come with me."
I'd known that was coming.
"I don't think that would be a good idea," I said. "You're going to need to give this your full attention. Yeah, it seems tailor-made for you, but it's likely to be a hell of a lot more demanding than anything you've done so far, right?"
He nodded.
So much for the "always" fantasies.
"If I decide to commit to it," he said, "would you consider relocating?"
Give up LA for the outskirts of Flint, Michigan? Give up the most vibrant city on Earth for a tundra where the major excitement is a Bigfoot sighting? Where he'd be working twelve or fourteen hours a day, six or seven days a week, and it would be against the odds that
I'd
be able to land a job at all?
"I don't think so, Jason."
His face fell. I guess he'd been having "always" fantasies too.
***
I won't over-dramatize. I wasn't a complete wreck after he left, but I wasn't my usual self, either. My coworkers caught on pretty quickly that not all was well with the bouncy little geek they were used to. Still, none of them tried to probe. I'd say that was for the best.
After a couple of weeks, I decided to take my troubles to my favorite counselor.
We met at The Guilty Pleasure, a little bistro April favors. It's a nice enough place, but I think she prefers it mostly because she's unlikely to run into any of her former coworkers there. We always meet at an in-between hour, about equidistant from lunch and dinner, to reduce the chances still further.
You see, April is a former porn star. When she says it, you can feel the edge on "former." While she's said she has no regrets about her previous trade, she's also said she's glad it's well behind her. And she's done something I'd never have imagined a former porn star pulling off: she's parlayed her looks, her intelligence, her shrewd judgment of people, and her take-no-shit carriage into a position as the vice-president of a prestigious venture capital firm. She's done so well at it that she's got a bank balance eight digits wide, after only six years plying her new trade. Not bad for a gal who once made her living on her back, eh?
We hadn't seen one another much while I was with Jason. I think she sensed that I was in the middle of something that needed time and space, something that might be "always." The few times we'd talked about it, I got the sense that she envied me. April hasn't exactly given up on love, but at forty-three she knows there are possibilities she can no longer offer a man. I decided not to flaunt Jason at her, consciously or otherwise.
She acted unsurprised that it had fizzled, though a little puzzled by the reason.
"Why wouldn't you consider relocating?" she said. "LA is nice, I love the hell out of it, but it's just a mass of buildings at the edge of an ocean."
"I don't think you'd much like northeastern Michigan," I said.
"You looked into it?"
"Yeah."
"So not even for true and undying love?"
I shook my head. "Not even. That might not be a good description of me and Jason anyway. He never once mentioned marriage, you know. Besides, he didn't broach the idea of declining the offer and staying here even after he heard me say that I wouldn't go with him or consider moving there later."
"Hm." She sipped her mai tai. "Doesn't sound like true love."