Henry
T
his one has a foot-and-shoe fetish. He told me so on the phone. I have no idea what to expect.
I check my watch. It’s three minutes to four. Three minutes to showtime. Only briefly do I reflect on the irony of the date, on the fact that here I am, sitting in the parking lot of some motel, on Valentine’s Day. Here I am, selling myself to a stranger, while all over the world sweethearts are opening boxes of candy and popping bottles of champagne.
I laugh a little to myself. In a few months I’ll be twenty-nine years old. I’ve never had a boyfriend last longer than a few months. My record-holder is Sean, an Irish boy with red hair from South Boston, who’d stuck around for four months and sixteen days. Sean’s pubes felt like a Brillo pad, and he had a disgusting addiction to Cheetos. His lips glowed a perpetual orange. After polishing off a bag, he had the rankest breath I’ve ever encountered. I wonder briefly how Sean is celebrating Valentine’s Day, then conclude I really don’t really care.
I pop a mint into my mouth and step out of my Jeep, lifting a heavy black traveling case from the backseat. I don’t feet lonely, or depressed, or sorry for myself—not with my dick already lengthening down the leg of my jeans. Not with the prospect of some guy paying me big bucks just for the privilege of being with me.
The guy told me he’d be in room 215. The motel is U-shaped, with an outdoor staircase leading up to the second floor, where the rooms are accessed off a wraparound landing. An elderly couple passes me on my way up the steps, the wife looking at me oddly. And why not? My jeans are practically spray-painted on, I wear a silver latex tank top under my leather jacket, and just
what,
she must be thinking, is in this
case?
I can hardly suppress a smile. This is all just so totally unlike me. At least, so unlike Henry Weiner, insurance claims specialist, who just this morning sat glassy-eyed through his weekly staff meeting, attired in his usual tweed sportcoat and Bass Weejuns. Every five or six minutes I looked at my watch, chewing idly on my pencil as my supervisor droned on about projected earnings. When it came time for me to give my weekly report, I straightened my papers against the table, cleared my throat, and read off my figures in my usual efficient monotone. To my coworkers, I’m a reliable, competent, even skilled claims manager, whose drab clothing and serious demeanor merely reflect a studious commitment to my work.
Or rather, that’s what they
think
it reflects. But there’s another Henry Weiner, and you don’t have to scratch too deep to find him. This is the Henry Weiner who, as a horny teenager, regularly swiped
Blueboy
and
Honcho
magazines from the drugstore in my hometown of West Springfield, Massachusetts. I’d read them with a flashlight under my covers late at night, jacking off one, two,
three times
before falling asleep. This is the Henry Weiner who, as a University of Massachusetts student, was one of the loudest and most flamboyant members of my campus gay group, whose first sex with another guy was outside and in broad daylight, behind the student union. This is the Henry Weiner my coworkers don’t know. This is the Henry Weiner who takes chances. This is the Henry Weiner who had closed himself down, hidden himself under a guise of respectability—read,
geekiness
—until Jeff O’Brien rescued me and set me free.
Few at my job suspect this other side. A few months ago, I brought a hip young secretary out to Avalon with me on Sunday night. Veronica’s a real fag hag. “I just know you’ve got muscles under that jacket, don’t you, Henry?” she’d gushed. I suggested she find out for herself on Sunday night. She agreed, and found out a lot more than that—though none of our other coworkers would believe her tales when she got back to work on Monday. She’d been astounded watching me on the dance floor with Jeff and Brent and the other shirtless boys, the transformation almost too drastic for her to comprehend. For the rest of the week, all Veronica could do was stare at me in my cubicle as I demurely processed claim forms.
If she thought that was drastic, she should see me now
. I laugh to myself as I head for room 215, lugging the traveling case at my side. I feel my dick swell almost to its full size.
I rap on the door. A good, hearty
man’s
rap, no girly knock-knock. The door is opened by a man in his sixties: gray hair, glasses, thin, in white collar shirt and beige polyester slacks. He stands in his socks, about eye-level with me.
“Hank?” the man asks breathlessly.
I nod. I’d ditched the “Brick”—it just sounded too funny, making me want to crack up every time anybody referred to me that way. Instead I chose “Hank.” It’s a derivative of Henry, after all: my grandfather had always called me Hank, much to my mother’s dismay. As a boy, I’d never liked “Hank”; it sounded too much like “wank” or the sound you made when you blew your nose. But now it seems absolutely
perfect:
still a part of myself, but different. Manlier. Studlier.
“And you must be Gilbert,” I say.
The man nods, stepping aside to let me in. The room is standard motel fare: two full-sized beds against the wall, separated by a small table with a phone and a clock. On the opposite wall is a desk and a small bureau, above which hangs a large mirror. I set the case down on the floor.
“Oh, your pictures don’t do you justice,” Gilbert says, falling to his knees. “You are a god, sir! Thank you for allowing me to lick your boots!”
They’re Jeff’s. Old Doc Martens from his ACT UP days.
“And you
did
bring the others, too, sir?” the man asks without looking up.
“Open that bag,” I command.
The man crawls over and unzips the case with his teeth. A nice little touch; I should’ve ordered him to do it that way. I do my best to stifle a laugh.
“Oh,
thank you,
sir!” The man lifts a pair of beige work boots out of the case. They’re Shane’s. He told me he wears them to shovel snow. Shane has a size-twelve foot, and Gilbert had wanted the
biggest
shoe size I could find, even if my own foot was nine and a half.
There are other goodies in the case. Dirty sneakers. Dirty socks. A pair of aviator boots (also Jeff’s) with the zipper up the side. A pair of shiny patent-leather tuxedo shoes which I’ve owned since high school, not worn since my senior prom. And finally, my Bass Weejuns from work. Gilbert had even wanted
those.
He kisses and caresses every single pair. “I want to worship your feet and your shoes, sir!” He presses a Weejun to his face, sniffing the inside.
I fold my arms across my chest. “Yes, you will worship your master’s feet and shoes.”
“Yes, sir. Oh, yes, sir!” Gilbert goes back to licking my boots.
I can’t resist the smile that stretches across my face. My eyes move around the room. On the table, ten crisp new twenties are fanned out. I love it when clients leave the money in plain sight. It’s such a turn-on. I spot the man’s keys next to the cash. On the key ring I discern a Star Market value card, just like the one I have myself.
I sit down on the edge of the bed. I watch the back of Gilbert’s head as he licks my boots. I imagine him buying TV dinners and frozen pizzas and kitty litter for his cat. I don’t know if he even has a cat, but somehow I imagine he does. In our brief phone conversation, he’d told me he was a retired appliance salesman. Where had he worked? I wonder. Sears? Or possibly his own little shop, in one of those working-class towns of central Massachusetts. Maybe he’d been Gil the Appliance Man, the Washing Machine Guy, the Stove-and-Refrigerator King. Housewives from Gardner to Fitchburg knew they could count on Gil!
I smile to myself. Why does this happen, every time? Why do I always imagine scenarios for every guy I meet? I wonder if all escorts do that, or if eventually they become so jaded every guy looks the same.
It’s been with such remarkable ease that I’ve fallen into the escort routine. All so excruciatingly simple. My AOL profile had led to an online escort bulletin board with my own Web site, complete with several photos. Most nights now when I get home from work, I sign on, click my way into an escort chat room, then go about making dinner, doing laundry, watching TV. The ring of instant messages brings me back to the computer, and I’ll either tell pic collectors to buzz off or I’ll make a connection. Legitimate guys get my cell phone number, and we arrange our dates over the phone, sometimes for that evening, more often a day or two in advance. I’m insistent that I only make out-calls, for I remain uncomfortable about letting anyone into my space.
Most of the guys meet me in hotels or motels, but a few take their chances and invite me to their homes. I shy away from any South End addresses, fearful I’ll end up hired by someone I know or recognize. I prefer guys from the suburbs, because I know practically no one out there. In the past few weeks I’ve traveled out to Woburn and Melrose and as far north as Methuen. A few inevitably turn out to be no-shows, but most come through. In all, I’ve made twenty-five hundred dollars, including tips—and every cent tax-free, with no overhead except for the gas in my Jeep.
Jeff just laughs. “It doesn’t gross you out to see big rolls of flesh?” he asked. “Saggy tits? Little pink dicks that can’t get hard?”
It
is
odd, I have to admit that. On the dance floor, if a guy has even a little bit of a fleshy overhang, I never took twice at him.
Maybe that’s why you haven’t found a boyfriend
, I think now, scolding myself. But as an escort, it doesn’t matter what they look like. It only matters what
I
took like.
I can’t explain it. There’s just something
happening
for me, meeting these men and having sex with them. Every one of my clients seems so exquisitely
satisfied
when we’re done, many tucking an extra twenty or fifty or even a
hundred
into my back pocket. I’ve started getting repeat calls. Business, as they say, is
booming.
That’s it.
That’s
what turns me on to this whole enterprise. I’m not only good at what I do, but I
enjoy
doing it. For the first time in my life, I really
like
my work.
Gilbert has by now removed my boots and my socks and is busy cleaning between my toes with his tongue. “That’s it, slave,” I say. “That is your purpose in life. To service my feet.”
I lean back on my elbows on the motel bed. How did I learn it? How do I know just what to say?
Instinct.
I just fall into it naturally, as if I were
born
to do it.
I can feel Gilbert’s warm, slippery tongue slide between and around my toes. It feels awesome. No circuit boy ever gave me a toe-sucking job like this.
“Master, please put on
these
shoes now.”
I lean my head forward to see what Gilbert is offering. Shane’s work boots. I nod and the man slips them on my feet. They feel enormous.
“Walk in them,
please,
sir! ”
I oblige. The boots are so big, they nearly fall off my feet. I feel like Donald Duck flapping around the room. I can’t help but let out a laugh.
“Tell me how
big
those feet are, sir,
please!”
“Size—twel—” I have to cover my mouth to keep from hysterics.
“Please don’t laugh, sir,” Gilbert says, momentarily reminding me who’s paying the bill here.
“I’m not laughing, slave.” I hide my amusement and summon Hank’s butch voice. “They are size
twelve,
you puny runt!”
The man seems near faint. “Oh, they are
bigger
even than that,” Gilbert says, jacking himself now, looking intently at the oversized shoes.
“They are even bigger than that!”
I catch his drift. “Yes!” I bark. “They are size fourteen! No,
fifteen!”
“Ohhhhh!”
The man falls to the ground, his mouth eagerly lapping at Shane’s scuffed boots. I picture Shane wearing them, shoveling snow off the sidewalk in front of his house.
“Size-sixteen!” I intone.
“Ohhh, yes!”
“Size—
twenty!”
“Ahhhhhhhhhhhhhh!!!” The man screams as if he’d been shot in the heart. He falls over onto his side, cum dribbling over his fist.
He doesn’t move. For a moment I worry he’s had a heart attack, that he’s dead. What would I
do?
But then he opens his eyes and looks gratefully up at me.
“Oh,
thank
you, sir,” Gilbert says, nearly in tears. “Thank you!”
I smile. Ah, yes. One more satisfied customer.
I love this job.