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Hundred-Dollar Baby Page 4


  9

  “You know something that occurred to me,” I said to Susan.

  “I know what usually occurs to you,” she said.

  “Besides that,” I said. “Men, at least straight men, have no idea what other men are like during sex.”

  “Are you planning to ask me?”

  “No,” I said. “But presumably, conversely, straight women probably have very little idea what other women are like during sex.”

  “Are you planning to tell me?”

  “No.”

  “Isn’t it swell that it occurred to you,” Susan said.

  “You’re not interested?”

  “No.”

  We were sharing a Cuban sandwich at the bar in Chez Henri. Susan felt that Riesling was appropriate with a Cuban sandwich. I was drinking beer.

  “Men think about stuff like that,” I said.

  “Women don’t,” Susan said.

  “Are we both generalizing from our own experience?” I said.

  “Yes,” Susan said.

  “April says all men are pigs,” I said.

  “Her experience may have contributed to that view,” Susan said.

  “Sure,” I said. “But I have no way to know. Is it certain that the men she has encountered are pigs?”

  “Not everyone patronizes whores,” Susan said.

  “And those who do so regularly,” I said, “maybe have something wrong with them.”

  Susan nodded. She had cut a small wedge of one half of the sandwich and was chewing a small bite she had taken.

  “I don’t find you unduly piggish,” she said.

  “Wow,” I said. “Thanks for the vote of confidence.”

  She smiled and sipped her wine. “Why are you so interested?” she said.

  “I worry about April,” I said.

  “Probably with reason,” Susan said.

  “She seems so integrated, and calm,” I said. “It’s kind of heartwarming. And then we’re walking along and I ask about her social life, and she says all men are pigs.”

  “Including you?”

  “When I raised that issue, she said except me.”

  “If I may generalize,” Susan said, “everyone generalizes. We just got through generalizing, you may recall.”

  “But this generalization seems to have cut her off from any possibility of…love?”

  “She has spent her life in circumstances where love was a commercial exchange,” Susan said. “As I recall the time when she got into the biggest trouble, where you had to in a sense buy her back, she did so out of love.”

  “You think that was love?” I said.

  “She thought it was. It didn’t make her more likely to feel love again.”

  I ate some sandwich and drank some beer.

  “When I was about twenty-two,” I said, “I went with two other guys to Japan on R & R. We stayed in a hotel near the Sugamo subway stop, with some girls we had rented for the week. We took hot baths, and they cooked us food on a hibachi in the room, first time I ever had sukiyaki, and we had what seemed at the time reasonable sex in reasonable amounts. It was very pleasant. After a week we went back to war.”

  “Your point?” Susan said.

  I could feel her eyes on me. She was becoming interested. The force of her interest was always tangible.

  “We liked each other. We weren’t contemptuous of them. Maybe if we were, the language barrier made it easier to hide, but I felt no disdain. We didn’t feel anything for them, either. We were sort of like new pals, having some fun…for a short while.”

  Susan nodded.

  “Yes,” she said.

  “It was the last time I was with a prostitute.”

  “Probably drank some during that week, too,” Susan said.

  “Absolutely.”

  “War, whiskey, and women,” Susan said.

  “The big three,” I said.

  “Can you say rites of passage?”

  “I know,” I said. “And it may look more charming in that context.”

  “So where are you going with this?” Susan said.

  “I don’t know. It’s bothering me.”

  “April is better off than she would have been,” Susan said, “if she hadn’t met you.”

  “Yes,” I said. “I think that’s so. But it doesn’t mean she’s well off.”

  “That’s true,” Susan said. “It is also true that you are not God.”

  “You don’t know that,” I said.

  Susan smiled at me with her eyes while she took another delicate bite of the small wedge she had cut off her half of the Cuban sandwich.

  “After I talked with April the other night,” I said, “I went home and looked up escort services on the Web. She’s right, there’s millions of listings. And pretty soon, as you would expect, they linked to porn sites. So I surfed the porn sites. I didn’t sign up, I just looked at the marketing.”

  “And you always read Playboy for the articles,” Susan said.

  “Scan a few porn sites,” I said. “After a short time, they become pretty repellent. What struck me was the contempt with which the product is marketed. It seems aimed almost entirely at people who dislike women. The women are always referred to as whores or sluts or bitches or whatever. They are voraciously eager to dangle your doop or flap your floop or whatever the site was selling. I even scanned some gay sites. Same thing. The object of desire, male or female, is treated with scorn, except for their uncontrollable willingness to bleep your bippy.”

  “No mutuality,” Susan said.

  “None,” I said.

  “You’re not the first to notice that,” Susan said.

  “How disappointing,” I said.

  Susan smiled. “So you’re saying commercial sex and porn dehumanize the object of desire?”

  “And the object which desires,” I said. “Works both ways.”

  “So perhaps pornography and prostitution are not victimless crimes,” Susan said.

  “Probably not,” I said. “The trick is to figure out which is the victim.”

  “The questions are too cosmic for me,” Susan said. “But on a level where I can operate, it seems clear that April, while perhaps less unfortunate than she was, is still a victim.”

  10

  One of April’s girls, on her night off, was walking back from Copley Place when she was yanked into an alley near the mansion and badly beaten. Her nose was broken; a tooth was knocked out. Her face was bruised and a rib was cracked. She was out for a while and when she came to, she got herself up and dragged herself back to the mansion, where April called an ambulance.

  They set her nose and taped her ribs and gave her some pain meds and kept her overnight for observation. In the morning, April and I brought her home.

  “You take as much time as you need, Bev,” April said. “Get better.”

  Bev tried a small smile, but it fell short.

  “Nobody’s paying anything for me the way I look now.”

  “You’ll be fine once you recover,” April said. “You need dental work, we’ll get it for you.”

  Bev tried a nod, and that hurt, too, so she didn’t do anything.

  “Don’t be afraid of the Percocet,” I said. “Take it as scheduled, even if you don’t need it.”

  “You ever get beat up?” Bev said.

  “Some,” I said. “It’s important to stay ahead of the pain.”

  April went upstairs with her. I went in the living room with Hawk.

  “So do I walk them to the movies now?” he said.

  “And while you’re gone they bust in here and make a mess?” I said.

  “Be a good plan,” Hawk said.

  I nodded.

  “Beating her up could have been a random act.”

  “Sure it could,” Hawk said.

  “But we both know it’s not,” I said.

  “’Course we do,” Hawk said.

  “Making trouble here is much more effective,” I said. “It’ll ruin her business overnight.�


  “But I’m here,” Hawk said.

  “So they beat this kid up,” I said. “Maybe to see if that will scare April into doing what they want, maybe in hopes you’ll start escorting the girls outside, and they can come here unimpeded.”

  “Maybe both,” Hawk said.

  “We need to impede both,” I said.

  “We a body or two short,” Hawk said.

  “Maybe we should call Vinnie,” I said.

  “Outta town,” Hawk said. “Gino’s opening up something in Cincinnati. Vinnie supporting his efforts.”

  “How long?”

  “Vinnie thinks he’ll be a while,” Hawk said. “He got a lot of people to persuade.”

  “Well, he’s not the only thug we know.”

  “How about the little pachuco from LA,” Hawk said.

  “Pachuco?” I said. “Nobody says pachuco anymore.”

  “Or the tough fag from Georgia,” Hawk said.

  “Tedy Sapp?” I said. “You think he calls you the tough nigger from Boston?”

  “Probably,” Hawk said. “Toughest fag I ever saw.”

  “I’ll make the calls,” I said.

  11

  I talked to Chollo first.

  “You know what a pachuco is,” I said.

  “I used to.”

  “Hawk thinks you’re a pachuco,” I said.

  “We all pachucos at heart, Señor,” Chollo said.

  “Sí,” I said. “You want to come to Boston?”

  “Where it’s eight degrees with thirty inches of snow,” Chollo said.

  “I need some backup.”

  “Mr. Del Rio is in conflict with some gentlemen from my native land,” Chollo said, “and I’m supposed to go down there with Bobby Horse and resolve it.”

  “In the usual way?” I said.

  “Sí.”

  “Take a while?” I said.

  “Not after we find them,” Chollo said. “How ’bout Vinnie?”

  “He’s doing something in Cincinnati,” I said.

  “Didn’t know anybody was doing something in Cincinnati,” Chollo said.

  “I’ve had fun in Cincinnati,” I said.

  “Gringos have fun in Pasadena,” Chollo said. “I’m sorry I can’t help you out, my friend.”

  “Okay,” I said. “Walk careful in Mexico.”

  “I am as stealthy as a Mexican jaguar,” he said.

  “I didn’t know they had jaguars in Mexico,” I said.

  “I think they don’t,” Chollo said. “But if they did, that’s how stealthy I would be.”

  We hung up and I dialed Tedy Sapp. He was where he usually was, at the Bathhouse Bar and Grill in Lamarr, Georgia.

  “I need some help up here,” I said, “in Massachusetts, the only state that permits gay marriage.”

  “Nice neutral presentation,” Sapp said. “Whaddya need.”

  I told him.

  “What’s it pay?” he said.

  “Haven’t established a price yet.”

  “How’s the weather up there?”

  “It’s up to fifteen today, thirty inches of snow. No wind.”

  “Will I be in danger of getting shot?”

  “Some,” I said.

  “Perfect,” Sapp said. “You want me right away?”

  “Tomorrow would be good.”

  “Okay,” Tedy said. “Can you provide me a piece when I get there?”

  “Sure,” I said.

  “So it’s freezing and snowy and I might get shot and the pay is uncertain, but you will provide me a weapon, and if I want to marry somebody up there, I can, and it’ll be legal.”

  “Long as you stay here,” I said.

  “A gay boy’s dream,” he said. “See you tomorrow.”

  12

  April and I were having coffee and watching Hawk play chess with Tedy Sapp in the front room at the mansion. They had been through a small war together out west a few years back, and, within the limits of each man’s emotional range, they liked each other. In some ways they were the exact opposite. Black, white. Straight, gay. But at the core they were almost the same guy. They were smart. Their word was good. They were fearsome. And they knew it. They were both certain that they could kick any ass in the world, and it gave them a kind of ironic serenity…even though I might wish to add a small disclaimer to the premise.

  “Bev is quitting,” April said.

  I nodded.

  “A lot of the girls are talking about quitting,” she said.

  “We can protect them,” I said. “But…”

  “It will put me out of business if many of them quit,” April said. She wore a black cashmere sweater with a V-neck and jeans.

  “Recruiting is not easy. I can’t just go buy ten surplus hookers from some pimp. These girls aren’t really professional prostitutes.”

  “Isn’t amateur prostitute some sort of oxymoron,” I said.

  “This is not like other places,” April said. “I have graduate students. I have teachers; I have housewives whose husbands travel. I have a flight attendant. I have a woman who sells real estate. These are women of substance.”

  “And they do this why?”

  April shrugged.

  “They like money. They like sex. They like adventure. They get a lot of money for doing what they have often done for nothing.”

  “Where do you find them?” I said.

  “You don’t have to find many. Once you start, it becomes sort of networking,” April said. “But we begin by, say, answering personal ads on the Internet or in reputable publications. We send them a discreet query. Would you be interested in escort work. Or we send someone out to dating bars, pick up the right-looking woman, ask the same discreet thing.”

  “Eliminate those who are not…our kind?”

  “Don’t laugh at me,” she said. “This is not a bunch of sweaty people grunting in the dark. This is a first-class private club. I want my girls to enjoy sex. I want my clients to be with girls who enjoy sex.”

  “The real deal,” I said.

  “Exactly. That’s just the right phrase. This is the real deal.”

  “So why don’t your clients just go and avail themselves of women like this for nothing. They are there.”

  “Because it’s troublesome. Because they would have to go through the screening process that we go through for them. We screen very carefully.”

  “You do that?”

  “Yes,” April said. “Men come here knowing they’ll have an affectionate, sexy time with attractive, intelligent, and well-spoken women.”

  “AIDS?” I said.

  “That risk exists in any sexual encounter,” April said, “unless it’s a long-term monogamous one. Short of that, we take every precaution. Our girls are regularly tested. Our clients are from a level of society that is less likely to encounter AIDS.”

  “And the personal services?” I said.

  “Well, aren’t you nosy,” she said.

  “Part of my profession,” I said. “I can withdraw the question.”

  “Sometimes, special circumstances.”

  “I think I won’t explore the special circumstances,” I said.

  She shrugged.

  “No big deal,” she said. “Sometimes a client wants to fuck the boss.”

  “The house mother, so to speak.”

  April stared at me. “Are you being shrinky with me?” she said.

  “Just a thought,” I said.

  “Well, I know you’re with Susan and all, but I don’t buy any of that.”

  “I’m not selling it,” I said.

  “Sorry,” April said. “I’ve just…I tried it for a while…. Most of the shrinks I talked with were crazier than I was.”

  We were quiet. Tedy picked up a chess piece and moved it. Hawk studied the move. Their concentration was palpable.

  “Do you play chess?” April said.

  “No,” I said.

  “Do you know how?”

  “No.”

  “I d
on’t either,” she said.

  Hawk picked up his chess piece and moved it. Tedy nodded slowly as if he approved.

  “Could you come to my office with me for a moment?” April said.

  “Sure.”

  We left the room and walked past the concierge and down the hall to the office. The office staff was busy at their computers.

  “Tell me a little more about Tedy Sapp,” she said.

  “What more?” I said.

  “He seems, sort of, different.”

  “He is different,” I said. “So is Hawk. So am I. We’re all different. It’s why we do what we do.”

  “But…what’s going on with the hair?”

  “Too blond?” I said.

  “And artificial. He looks like some sort of ridiculous wrestler or bodybuilder or something.”

  “Tedy’s gay,” I said. “He fought it for a long time. The bright hair is sort of a statement: I’m not trying to pass.”

  “But can he really do what he’s supposed to?”

  I was quiet for a moment. There were a lot of things to say. But I didn’t say any of them. I just answered the question.

  “Better than almost anyone,” I said.

  13

  I was at my desk, with my feet up, on the phone with Patricia Utley, who was at home in New York. Pearl was spending quality time with me, in my office, on her couch, lying upside down with her head hanging and her tongue lolling. She seemed boneless lying there, and nerveless, as if time and stress were of no consequence and eternity were a plaything.

  “When you brought her to me she was a terrified child,” Patricia Utley was saying. “I cleaned her up and began to train her. I didn’t send her out for a year.”

  “Orphans of the Storm,” I said.

  “Well, not entirely, I am a businesswoman. But my childhood was somewhat turbulent, and I was sympathetic.”

  “And you’re maybe softer than you pretend,” I said.

  “You would understand that,” she said. “She was nearly grown and making good progress when she ran off with that idiot Rambeaux.”

  “Who was not softer than he pretended.”

  “Hardly,” Patricia Utley said.

  “Give all for love,” I said.

  “Give something for love, perhaps. Not everything,” Patricia Utley said. “By the time you got her back to me I had to start nearly all over with her.”