Office hours were over. Lucy wanted to get home. She tried not to sound halfhearted when she asked, “Do you want to talk about it now?”
“No.”
Sylvia’s head was still down.
“Okay then,” Lucy said, making a production of looking at her watch. “I have a staff meeting in ten minutes.”
Sylvia stood. “Thank you for meeting with me.”
“My pleasure, Sylvia.”
Sylvia looked as if she wanted to say something more. But she didn’t. Five minutes later, Lucy stood at her window and looked down at the quad. Sylvia walked out the door, wiped her face, set the head high, forced up a smile. She started walk-skipping across campus. Lucy watched her wave at her fellow students, fall in with a group, and blend with the others until Sylvia became an indistinct part of the mass.
Lucy turned away. She caught her reflection in the mirror and did not like what she saw. Had that girl been calling out for help?
Probably, Luce, and you didn’t answer. Nice work, superstar.
She sat at her desk and opened the bottom drawer. The vodka was there. Vodka was good. You didn’t smell vodka.
Her office door opened. The guy who entered had long black hair tucked behind his ears and several earrings. He was unshaven, fashionably so, handsome in an aging-boy-band way. He had the silver stud in his chin, a look that always detracted, low pants barely held up by a studded belt, and a tattoo on the neck that said, “Breed Often.”
“You,” the guy said, gunning his best smile in her direction, “look immensely doable.”
“Thanks, Lonnie.”
“Nah, I mean it. Immensely doable.”
Lonnie Berger was her TA, though he was her age. He was permanently caught in that education trap, getting a new degree, hanging on campus, the telltale sign of age around the eyes. Lonnie was getting tired of the PC sexual crap on campus, so he was going out of his way to push that boundary and hit on every woman he could.
“You should wear something that shows a little more cleavage, maybe one of those new push-up bras,” Lonnie added. “Might make the boys pay more attention in class.”
“Yeah, that’s what I want.”
“Seriously, chief, when was the last time you got some?”
“It’s been eight months, six days, and about”—Lucy checked her watch—“four hours.”
He laughed. “You’re playing me, right?”
She just stared at him.
“I printed out the journals,” he said.
The confidential, anonymous journals.
She was teaching a class that the university had dubbed Creative Reasoning, a combination of cutting-edge psychological trauma with creative writing and philosophy. Truth be told, Lucy loved it. Current assignment: Each student was supposed to write on a traumatic event in their lives—something that they would not normally share with anyone. No names were to be used. No grades given. If the anonymous student gave permission on the bottom of the page, Lucy might read a few out loud to the class for the purpose of discussion—again keeping the author anonymous.
“Did you start reading them?” she asked.
Lonnie nodded and sat in the seat that Sylvia had occupied a few minutes ago. He threw his feet up on the desk. “The usual,” he said.
“Bad erotica?”
“I’d say more like soft porn.”
“What’s the difference?”
“Damned if I know. Did I tell you about my new chick?”
“No.”
“Delectable.”
“Uh-huh.”
“I’m serious. A waitress. Hottest piece of ass I’ve ever dated.”
“And I want to hear this because?”
“Jealous?”
“Yeah,” Lucy said. “That must be it. Give me the journals, will you?”
Lonnie handed her a few. They both started digging in. Five minutes later, Lonnie shook his head.
Lucy said, “What?”
“How old are most of these kids?” Lonnie asked. “Maybe twenty, right?”
“Right.”
“And their sexual escapades always last, like, two hours?”
Lucy smiled. “Active imagination.”
“Did guys last that long when you were young?”
“They don’t last that long now,” she said.
Lonnie arched an eyebrow. “That’s because you’re so hot. They can’t control themselves. It’s your fault, really.”
“Hmm.” She tapped the pencil’s eraser against her lower lip. “That’s not the first time you’ve used that line, is it?”
“You think I need a new one? How about: ‘This has never happened to me before, I swear’?”
Lucy made a buzzing sound. “Sorry, try again.”
“Damn.”
They went back to reading. Lonnie whistled and shook his head. “Maybe we just grew up in the wrong era.”
“Definitely.”
“Luce?” He looked over the paper. “You really need to get some.”
“Uh-huh.”
“I’m willing to help, you know. No strings attached.”
“What about Ms. Delectable Waitress?”
“We’re not exclusive.”
“I see.”
“So what I’m suggesting here is purely a physical thing. A mutual pipe cleaning, if you catch my drift.”
“Shush, I’m reading.”
He caught the hint. Half an hour later, Lonnie sat forward and looked at her.
“What?”
“Read this one,” he said.
“Why?”
“Just read it, okay?”
She shrugged, put down the journal she’d been reading—yet another story of a girl who’d gotten drunk with her new boyfriend and ended up in a threesome. Lucy had read lots of stories of threesomes. None seemed to happen without alcoholic involvement.
But a minute later she forgot all about that. She forgot that she lived alone or that she had no real family left and that she was a college professor or that she was in her office overlooking the quad or that Lonnie was still sitting in front of her. Lucy Gold was gone. And in her place was a younger woman, a girl really, with a different name, a girl on the verge of adulthood but still so very much a girl:
This happened when I was seventeen. I was at summer camp. I worked there as a CIT. That stands for Counselor In Training. It wasn’t hard for me to get the job because my dad owned the place…
Lucy stopped. She looked at the front sheet. There was no name, of course. The students e-mailed the papers in. Lonnie had printed them out. There was supposed to be no way to know who sent what paper. It was part of the comfort. You didn’t even have to risk having your fingerprints on it. You just hit the anonymous Send button: