Being black, the right kind of black, was difficult. It was like being in a cult--a secret society with rules as fluid as waves. . . In the six years that Angela Wright has been with her fiancé Keith Redfield, her life has settled neatly into place. Keith, a professor of African-American history, has helped her become comfortable in her own skin. And Angela's career at Désire magazine is thriving. She's got nothing to worry about--or so she thinks. . . Angela's best friend Mae is always there to ground her, whether they're joking about the importance of good hair or gossiping about their rival Tatiana Braithwaite--a milk chocolate Barbie with beauty, breeding, and an irritating knack for perfection. Mae reminds Angela how lucky she is to have found a successful, single brother. But when a chance meeting leaves Angela consumed with desire for an intriguing stranger, she impulsively decides to follow wherever it may lead--from outrageous underground sex parties to intimate encounters that are both torrid and tender. Now everything Angela has come to believe about sex, love, identity, and race is called into question as this explosive new passion blows her world wide open. . .
Release date:
June 1, 2008
Publisher:
Kensington Books
Print pages:
273
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The day I met Cait, a passing breeze stirred up the warm, thick air as I walked through the campus of New Amsterdam University. That cool undertow, weird on such a still, sunny fall day, felt like a sign that something was about to happen.
As I pulled open the heavy door of the Humanities building and turned down the hall toward the Kenneth Clark African-American studies wing, that’s when I saw her. She was standing on tiptoe tacking a flyer onto a cork bulletin board. It read: “Lesbian Sex Conference: We Want You to COME,” followed by an off-campus location and a date a little less than a week away.
Putting down the flyer, she turned and looked at me quizzically. Then she smiled, raising one eyebrow, a dimple denting each cheek. I stopped, midstride, and took a deep breath, inhaling a bouquet of Sharpie and pine cleaner.
She was strikingly androgynous, and looked like an older version of Ethan, the beautiful fifteen-year-old boy I had been obsessed with one summer at sleep-away camp in New Hampshire. Her light brown hair was parted boyishly on one side, and flecked with bright blonde streaks. As she turned toward me, I could see Pam Grier doing a Foxy Brown high kick on the front of her T-shirt. Sleeves cut off, it tugged tightly across her breasts.
“I’m Caitlin Getty.” Staring at me, her eyes clear gray and steady, she took my hand. Her appraisal was brazen. Thinking briefly about the ring on my finger, I shoved my left hand in my pocket.
“I’m Angela, uh, Wright.” I could feel her fingertips against my palm as we shook hands lightly. I tried to ease my hand out of hers, but she held it. Mine was warm and damp, hers, cool and dry.
“Angela, may I give you a flyer?” She spoke with the trace of a British accent; from her mouth, my name sounded like dessert. “I’d love to see you on Saturday at the sex conference.”
Finally she dropped my hand and plucked a flyer from a stack next to her foot. “Actually, I would just love to see you. My e-mail address is on the bottom.”
As I studied the flyer, I felt a mild electric shock travel from the tops of my thighs and through my crotch, before settling somewhere in the pit of my stomach. I was feeling a pull toward this woman so urgent that it was difficult to nudge aside.
But I had to push away these feelings, as I always had, starting the summer after Ethan. I had been even more obsessed with Adriana, a junior counselor who had a tiny tattoo of a butterfly on her shoulder and wore thick white socks that bunched at her ankles. And in college, when I had had a crush on Laura Chin-Loy, the RA in my freshman dorm. And a few years ago, when I had taken the same photography course twice so that I could stand next to the instructor, Genevieve Britton, in the darkroom, our upper arms touching as we dragged photo paper through pans of developing fluid.
All of those feelings had been free-floating and vague, like a nondescript snippet of music, muffled in another room. I let them drift away; they were un-returned, barely examined. But this was stronger, more urgent. A violent, dangerous delight.
“Yeah, thanks,” I said, stuffing the flyer in my bag. As I walked away from her too afraid to look back, I clutched the top of my arm and pressed my nails into the soft skin, nearly drawing blood. I am not gay-lesbian-bisexual-questioning. I am a straight heterosexual American. I repeated these thoughts until they crowded out the others.
By the time I slipped into a seat at the back of Keith’s classroom I’d gotten right again. Blinking, I focused on my fiancé, who was wrapping up his lecture. Standing in front of the thirty-odd students enrolled in his “Twentieth Century Black Experience” seminar, Keith lifted his palms from the podium, spreading his arms to make a point. He reminded me of the stately prime minister of a Caribbean island. Keith took a breath, mopped his brow with a handkerchief, and looked at his watch. “We’re out of time for today.” Their heads down, the students noisily began to gather their jackets and backpacks.
“Excuse me.” Keith raised his voice to be heard over the sound of students moving out of black history and returning to present. “Let me remind you that by next class, you should be finished with the assigned reading, The Conspiracy to Destroy Black Boys. And remember that the African Diaspora Society will hold its monthly meeting tomorrow at five P.M. in this classroom. I hope to see some of you there.”
I picked up my coat and bag and walked to the front of the classroom. Keith was involved in a passionate discussion about the global mass marketing of black culture with a student. I wished he were just a good friend or even a cousin. Then I could look at him fondly without creeping panic as I imagined myself tethered to this man for the rest of my natural life.
Keith was a good man, really, but secretly, I sometimes tacked on “enough.” He looked good enough, and, in fact, he looked pretty good, compared with other unmarried black men in their mid-thirties who weren’t dogs or players or on the down low. The few others left had pillowy bodies, scuffed shoes and frayed collars. When they looked at you their watery Bassett-hound eyes seemed to say feed me—and while you’re at it, do my laundry, scrub behind my ears, and then tuck me in.
Keith made good enough money with his professor’s salary and fit on the edges of my social circle as my slightly older, straight-laced but cute big-Daddy boyfriend. He impressed my friends by translating the fine print 401K lingo of their employee benefits packages into plain English and explaining why every black person must have a mutual fund in order to move the race forward. And my mother loved him. She nodded her vigorous approval during his toasts at family gatherings, centering on “bettering our people.” My cousins called him Malcolm Gen-X behind his back.
After five years, we fit together like a pair of worn slippers, one stuck inside the other. Each night I felt his belly burrowing into my back, his soft penis pushing against my thigh, and my body softened sleepily against his. He made me feel safe, protected from the feelings like the ones I had had with Caitlin Getty.
“Good lecture, sweetie.” I reached up and placed my hand on his neck and kissed his cheek lightly.
“Thank you for coming,” he said. As he looked down at me and smiled, Keith’s stern Dr. Redfield face faded and the shallow trench between his eyebrows disappeared. I smiled back at him, or at least I tried to make the corners of my mouth turn upward. He was relaxed, in his element and happy to share it with me. I felt suffocated and had a fleeting feeling of wanting to shake things up, make a mess.
As we prepared to leave, the door swung open, and I felt breathless again. It was that Caitlin woman, the flyers tucked under her arm. But something was wrong. Keith had taken a step toward her and was standing uncomfortably close. A vein ran from his jaw down the side of his neck bulging, large, blue and ugly. The purple kente bow tie I had bought him at an African market uptown looked tight around his throat.
“Hello, Dr. Getty. I see you continue to appropriate African-American culture.” His voice was tight and thin as he looked at her coldly, a white woman splashed in Pam Grier.
“Dr. Redfield, you don’t own Foxy, just because she’s black. She’s a woman too, and, if anything, probably a lesbian.” Her smile was mean, and her dimple looked less playful than menacing. The accent was stronger, and she pronounced “anything” like “enna-thing.”
“Don’t be absurd.” Keith seemed to congeal into that spot. Only his fist opened and closed stiffly before he shoved the hand in his pocket.
“So, Keith, what’s new in African-American History? Oh, right, nothing’s new since it’s, um, history, a time way before the present when scientists have determined that biological races do not exist and that race is simply a social and political construct that the world would be better without.” She said it in one sentence, like she was reciting something she’d written. Keith took a step back. The two of them looked like dancers in a vinegary interracial tango.
“Dr. Getty, how’s everything in Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, and, what is it, Transgender Studies?”
“Transgender hasn’t been officially added to our department.” She frowned, folding her arms across her chest so they rested lightly on Foxy’s oversize afro.
“Well, I think Transgender should be a part of gay and lesbian studies, and at the next department meeting, I plan to vote for adding it,” he said, leaning toward her, his arms rigid at his sides. “Or maybe instead we should have courses in bestiality or pedophilia. Or we could make it easier and rename the whole department Perversity Studies.”
She rolled her eyes and turned her body away from Keith, toward me. “Keith, you’re so rude—hi, again, Angela.” Staring at me, her eyes a clear gray, the color of a storm, she took my hand. Keith looked confused.
“This is my fiancée.” He pulled my hand away from hers and put his arm around me. I felt his grip hard and tight on my shoulder. “Angela, I see you’ve met my colleague, Dr. Getty.”
“Really nice to meet you, again.” She continued looking at me, giving me a barefaced appraisal. Why the hell was she doing this? What did she see in me? I squeezed myself closer to Keith. Get the message now? I am a heterosexual woman, locked to my better half. Balling my hand into a fist behind my back, I dug my nails into my palm until it stung.
“Dr. Getty, what do you want?” Keith took a step away from me and shoved a stack of papers into his worn, leather briefcase.
“Here, take some flyers to give out to your classes,” she said as she peeled several from her stack and handed them to Keith without touching him. “We want to make sure the turnout at our sex conference is diverse—as you’ve instructed us to strive for at campus-based events.”
“Black people aren’t interested in this.”
He held the flyers with two fingers. “And nice seeing you—good-bye.” He dropped the flyers into the trash can.
“That’s not very collegial, but I wouldn’t expect anything less.” She turned toward the door. “See you at the Humanities cocktail party, Dr. Redfield. And please bring your beautiful fiancée.” As she opened the door, she turned and caught my eye, flashing me her mischievous grin.
“What was that about?” I asked. At that moment, I felt confused by everything that had just happened, but especially baffled by Keith’s behavior. Generally, he tempered his emotions at the U, careful not to ever “show his ass.”
“I don’t like her,” he answered stubbornly, snapping his briefcase shut without looking up.
“Honey, why—” I stopped. I didn’t want to hear what he had to say about her, and I wished I hadn’t seen their nasty exchange. I preferred to remember the feel of her breath on my cheek.
“It’s not because she’s gay, if that’s what you’re thinking,” Keith answered, looking at me coldly, and shifting back into Dr. Redfield mode. “And I would never condone discrimination of any sort.”
“Yes, I know that—”
“But, you’ve never had to be in meetings with people like Cait Getty, for God sakes.” His voice had risen and he was grinding the toe of his loafer into the tile floor. “Comparing our Civil Rights to their sexual rights.”
“Keith, you sound like Bull Connor.”
“Angela, every time I hear gays whine about being discriminated against and appropriating the language of the Civil Rights Movement, I want to vomit.”
“Okay, I think you made your point,” I answered quietly, taking his arm and steering him toward the door.
“No, I haven’t,” he said with a note of finality. Grudgingly, he allowed himself to be pulled. “It is blasphemous to compare the rights of homosexuals with the struggles of our people. They were never kidnapped from their homeland, forced into chattel slavery, their women raped, their men hung from trees, babies slaughtered. Period. Let’s go.”
Now that the lynching and chattel slavery cards had been pulled from the race deck, there was nothing more to say. As I followed Keith out of the room, I remembered the dangerous feeling of touching Caitlin’s hand. Slipping my hand into my bag I lightly fingered the fold of the flyer.
The next afternoon, I wound my way through the brightly lit tables, keeping my head down to avoid eye contact with any of the other magazine editors, flitting like sparrows through the Brice-Castle Publishing cafeteria. I found a table and put down my tray, looking impatiently for Mae to join me. I hated sitting alone, and I was beyond starving. I pulled a tube of lipstick in a shade called Dubonnet from my jacket pocket and applied it as best I could without looking. I didn’t really want Mae to give me a hard time about “fixing up.”
Appraising myself realistically, I had some nice features—smooth, even skin; brown, slightly slanted eyes; straight, white teeth thanks to braces and a retainer; thick, curly hair. My legs were long and, I thought, cute, and I had a pretty good-looking butt. The package was almost beautiful, though I lacked the bearings, style or attitude of a beautiful person. Despite the intense pressure to look good, beaten into anyone who worked at a fashion magazine and had the guts to sashay through this cafeteria, I never quite pulled it together. I didn’t understand makeup, so I avoided all but lipstick. My clothes, despite Mae’s constant coaching and cajoling, were never hooked up correctly. I was always a couple of seasons behind. I generally thought people who were fashion forward were simply strange, until I found myself—and the rest of the planet—wearing their previously avant garde pieces a year later. My hair was a disorganized tangle of thick curls, springy and random.
Mae had paused for a moment, buttonholed by a woman whose black dress hung off her, like a garment slipping from a hanger. She and Mae were actually wearing the same Calvin Klein dresses, size 2 and 16, respectively. Mae’s dress was orange since she had given up wearing black, because it was now “tired.” The hanger stood on her tiptoes and whispered something conspiratorially into Mae’s ear. “I heard that,” she said, clapping the hanger on the back heartily, nearly knocking the dress off her thin shoulders, before moving on.
Mae was my best friend, my only real friend, at work. She was an associate features writer at Vicarious, a celebrity fashion magazine. I was an associate editor at Désire, another publication in the Brice-Castle stable. We had started at the company the same week and had been seated next to each other at Brice-Castle’s mandatory new employees’ welcome lunch.
“Oh no, they put me at the black table,” she had said loudly as she sat down next to me.
“Welcome, my sistah,” I had replied, smiling at her and ignoring the uncomfortable looks of the other three women and the man seated with us.
Mae had thrown back her head and answered with a raucous, full-on laugh. Right away, her gummy, gap-toothed smile and crinkly eyes felt like home.
Everyone liked Mae. She had created a kind of universal “you-go-girl” black woman persona. She was a magnet to the wispy women and gay men who peopled our company: they were drawn by the confidence and good cheer that clung lightly to her like a misting of cologne. Many felt close to her, though she managed to keep the more textured aspects of her persona secreted away, like an intricately folded dollar stuffed into her brassiere.
Mae had grown up in Iuka, Mississippi, and no amount of New York sophistication could drive out her Southern roots. She was definitely country fried Prada. Two weeks after we’d met, on our way to getting bent on vodka martinis neither of us could afford at the Oak Room in the Plaza Hotel, Mae had revealed to me that just before her fifth birthday, she had announced to her mother that once she was eighteen, she was “outta Dodge.” She vowed to someday live in New York City in an apartment high in the sky, all by herself.
“The first time I said it, Mama wiped her hands on her apron and said ‘uh-huh,’” Mae had confided in me, dragging out the uhs and huhs for five full seconds. “By the second time I said it, she told me to ‘stop the foolishness.’ But when I was still saying it two years later, she said that ‘if you see yourself there, you’re as good as there.’”
The day she graduated from Barnard, her family was there. Ten of them had piled out of an Amtrak sleeper car, greasy shoe boxes of fried chicken and deviled eggs in tow. They spread themselves out on the Lehman Lawn, screaming and holding up signs and banging on noisemakers when Mae walked up to get her diploma. Ignoring the chilly stares of her classmates and their parents, she waved and flashed her gummy smile and shouted “I love y’all,” as she tottered past the podium on itty bitty high-heeled shoes.
“They were so fucking country, but I loved having them there.” Her eyes had gotten round and watery as she told the story, and mine did, too.
After several years in publishing, Mae had finally grown tired of trying to explain her accent, tone down her loud laugh, and justify how some ’Bama had crashed her way into the ranks of Manhattan publishing. Rather than reinvent herself—again—she began to simply withhold parts of herself. Several years ago, she had limited her vocabulary around our co-workers to three phrases: “I heard that,” “I know you’re right,” and “I’m scared of you.” People found her wise and a little mysterious.
“Hey you,” she said, her tray clattering onto the table. The four plates of overpriced haute cuisine must’ve cost her close to thirty dollars. I loved to eat but hated to pay, so the small, expensive portions the cafeteria served were a source of irritation. I secretly believed that the editors at the company’s magazines suffered from disordered eating, so bigger portions made them nervous. They actually preferred to pay more for smaller portions. The few who weren’t anorexic were bulimic, ordering double portions, then sneaking off to a bathroom on another floor—oh God, not their own—to throw up in the afternoon. Until last year, they had favored the fifth floor, inhabited by the company’s accounting department. After several numbers crunchers complained about the smell, HR issued a clumsily worded memo and the problem ceased.
“I got you the salmon Nicoise with extra potatoes and the balsamic chicken and mango stir-fry,” Mae said. She reached into her orange and yellow Pucci tote and pulled out a large bubble-wrapped package. Carefully, she uncovered two pieces of china, delicately painted with green leaves; two sets of silverware; two checkered green napkins and two cocktail glasses splashed with white magnolias, Mississippi’s state f. . .
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