In the summer of 2003, I visited my old speech teacher, Mr. Lundquist, aka Mr. Blowfish, in Washington, Iowa. I ended up asking my sister-in-law if I could borrow her car for another day, then driving an hour north to Mount Vernon, Iowa, to spend the night with his son, Sam.
Well, Sam was extremely hot: shorter than me, dark skin, red hair, and a tight, lean physique.
Besides, I was suffering from Florida's dearth of Asian men, and Sam was Asian (actually half Vietnamese, half Swedish)..
Besides, he had just taken a tenure track job at a small college in the heart of the Straight World. I sensed that this might be my future, and I wanted to see what it was like.
He had literally just moved in to his apartment in someone's house a few blocks from the campus. We had to walk through a clutter of boxes to get to the bedroom, where the bed was unmade and the lamps were sitting on the floor.
"Sorry about the mess," he said, wrapping his arms around me. "When you drive down to spend the day with your Dad and brothers, you don't really expect to bring someone home."
Sam was very energetic and very passionate -- maybe too passionate. We didn't get much sleep that night -- every time I dozed off, he would initiate another session. Of course, he was 26 years old, but still, it seemed odd.
In the morning he took me to breakfast at a weird diner stuck in the 1950s, where scruffy men in overalls ordered things like "The Farm Boy": 3 eggs, 3 slices of bacon, 3 sausage links, hash browns, pancakes, and toast. He tried to grab my crotch under the table, but I pushed his hand away.
Then we toured downtown -- 3 blocks of depressing brown brick buildings, mostly bars and small, deserted boutiques -- and the campus -- more of the same.
"Why Cornell College?" I asked.
"Well, I wanted a liberal arts college where I could really get to know the students. And I'm basically going to be the entire art history program. This year I'm teaching Italian Renaissance, Asian, and Precolumbian. Try doing that at Stanford."
"Did you get an offer from Stanford?"
"Actually, my only other offer was in Utah. Mormon country, full of rattlesnakes and homophobes! Cornell is much more gay-friendly."
"But does it have a gay presence?"
"Um...I don't think so. There's a gay bar in Cedar Rapids, about 20 miles away."
"20 miles isn't bad." I didn't have the heart to tell him that I lived a 3-block walk from a dozen gay bars, restaurants, beaches, and boutiques.
"Besides, Des Moines is only 2 hours away, and Chicago is 4 hours. I'll be driving to one or the other every weekend."
We both knew that he wouldn't -- once the semester began, he'd be too busy, or the weather would be too bad. On most weekends, he'd be stuck in Mount Vernon.
Next Sam took me to his office, which was very nice, with real bookcases and a window looking out onto the quad -- actually, an alley, but if you stood right up against it and looked to your left, you could see the King Chapel.
He shut the door, drew me close, and started kissing me.
"Hey, wait -- this is your office!" I exclaimed, shocked. "Anybody could walk in at any moment." Besides, I was sweaty from walking around the campus on the second-hottest day of the year.
"Come on, it's Sunday -- there's nobody around," he murmured, nuzzling my neck. He started to unzip my pants.
I've spent my whole life on college campuses, as student and professor. But that was the first time I actually had a sexual encounter in a professor's office.
Sam drove us into Cedar Rapids that afternoon. It was more of a city: there was a nice Vietnamese Restaurant, a nice park with jogging trails -- he tried to go down on me on the jogging trail, but I refused -- and an art museum that specialized in the work of Grant Wood.
Followed by another night of outrageously energetic bedroom calisthenics and another gut-buster breakfast.
"How long are you going to be in the area?" Sam asked.
"My flight to Fort Lauderdale is on Wednesday."
"Great, that gives us three more days...."
He wanted me to spend the rest of my visit with him? But -- I came back to the Midwest to visit my family and friends! "Well, I have to get my sister-in-law's car back."
"No problem. I'll follow you to Rock Island, you can drop off the car, and then we'll drive back."
"Um...it's about 70 miles."
"I don't mind...in the country, you have to drive a lot."
"Besides, I need to get to the gym," I continued.
"You can use the campus gym as my guest."
Suddenly I realized what was happening: Sam had latched onto me as an escape from Straight World isolation and tedium. If I didn't act fast, I would become "the boyfriend." He might even ask me to stay in Mount Vernon. "I have a better idea. Let's spend the day in Rock Island -- I want to introduce you to some friends of mine. I just have to make a couple of phone calls first."
After we worked out, Sam followed me to Rock Island, where we dropped off the car and toured all the old sights of his childhood. In the evening we had dinner with Dick, my old bully, now a muscle bear in his 40s, and his partner Jack.
A night of energetic sharing followed.
The next day he drove back to Mount Vernon with their phone number in his pocket and an invitation to visit anytime.
And I got to visit my family and friends.
See: Mount Vernon Muscle on A Gay Guide to Small Town America.
Eggs and sausage (My phone won't Lenny, so pretend I just used a mix of bullet points and IPA characters to make a face looking suggestive.) were actually already going out of style in the 1940s, if not earlier. The name Farm Boy even suggests "Only hayseeds eat this."
ReplyDeleteSo, the restaurant was even further behind the times.
Of course, the rise of breakfast cereal was because nitrogen promoted masturbation and poor digestion; I'm convinced that today, Kellogg would just be a bottom.
I had eggs and sausages just the other day. It's on the menu of the restaurant next to the campus, but most of the breakfast clientele looks over 60.
DeleteStill, the combination of obsession over bowels and hating his own penis does suggest a bottom.
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