Reading Online Novel

Exiles in America(26)



GMHC reached out to all communities—and learned how confused and

frightened everyone was.

Meanwhile Daniel continued to paint and teach. His MFA from Penn led

to an instructorship at Parsons, then one at Pratt. He enjoyed teaching. He

liked the give-and-take, the public performance, the occasional sense of ac-

complishment. He slowly understood that he liked teaching more than he

liked painting. He felt so smart when he taught, and so stupid when he

painted. Painting offered a strenuous, masochistic kind of pleasure, but it felt

private and trivial, especially when no major galleries showed interest in his

work. He changed his style again, and again, and yet again, and still nobody

bit. He began to lose faith in the future. Around the time he turned thirty-six,

Daniel decided he was never going to be a successful painter. He would be

only a teacher, a good teacher maybe, but only a teacher. He became very un-

happy. This was when he went into his tomcat phase.

Right from the start, during their first year together, Zack and Daniel had

agreed that monogamy was neither important nor realistic. AIDS didn’t scare

them off sex, but it made them more careful. Not that they did very much—

they were usually too busy. They tried a couple of threeways early on, as the

high of requited love wore off and they wanted new thrills. But affection and

voyeurism didn’t mix. Each felt silly watching the other take his turn with a

happy, horny florist from New Jersey; they both became terribly self-

conscious over what they could and couldn’t do with the cute young transla-

tor from Finland. So they dropped the threeways but allowed each other to

mess around when one of them was out of town, so long as he was safe and

told the other. Zack enjoyed hearing the stories; Daniel didn’t. Daniel didn’t

enjoy telling stories either, so their reports became short and simple: twenty-

five words or less.

When his crisis struck, Daniel no longer waited for one of them to be away.

He told Zack what he was doing and began to go out regularly to bars and sex

clubs and back rooms. This was 1991, when gay men rebelled against the epi-

demic and openly played around again. There was a renaissance of raunch, an

era of safe sex sleaze. Zack stayed home and enjoyed the peace and quiet. He

E x i l e s i n A m e r i c a

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understood what was driving Daniel, but his show of sympathy only made

Daniel feel worse, feeding his frustration and guilt. Daniel tried having an af-

fair with a student but found there is nobody more calculating and heartless

than a young artist who has just moved to New York. He told Zack it was only

sex, and maybe it was, although unrequited lust can often feel like unrequited

love. No, it was better to stick to strangers and the occasional fuck buddy.

It was during this tomcat phase that the job at William and Mary opened

up. Jane Morrison, his good friend from Penn, was teaching down there and

reported that they needed someone for next year. It was a short gig, although

the job could lead to a tenure track position. Daniel applied. It’d be good to

escape the ugly art world and easy sex of New York, he said, if only for a year.

But he did not want to live away from Zack, not for an entire year. He had a

couple of months to mull it over before he heard if they wanted him or not.

While he waited, Zack met Eugene Thomas.

This was E. G. Thomas, the social historian and critic. A fifty-three-year-

old professor at Boston University who wore old-fashioned horn-rims and big

bow ties, he spoke at a mental health conference that Zack attended in At-

lanta. A friendly argument about Foucault led to an invitation up to Thomas’s

room to find an old article about Quaker asylums. There Thomas confessed

that, since his wife died a year ago, he’d been “reconstructing” his sexuality.

“I find you very butch and humpy. Please don’t take this the wrong way, but

I’d very much like to go to bed with you.”

Zack flew back to New York the next day feeling foolish and guilty and

oddly fond of Thomas. It wasn’t the sex, which had been nothing much, just

a friendly wrestle with a bulky, middle-aged man. But Thomas had made Zack

feel young and lively; Zack usually felt only old and dull.

“So did you behave yourself in Atlanta?” asked Daniel.

“Oh. I went to bed with one of the guest speakers.”

“Cute? Young?”

“In his fifties.”

“Ugh. I don’t want to hear about it.”

So Zack told him nothing more.

A week later, at his office, Zack got a call from Thomas. “I just wanted to

say hi and see how you were doing. And tell you how much I enjoyed meeting

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C h r i s t o p h e r B r a m