by Doug Hawley
Under The Sheets
After a string
of losses, at last something good was coming my way. My wife of fifteen years had left me a month
ago leaving me a financial and emotional wreck.
Rather than a home cooked meal and a glass of wine for dinner as it was
early in my marriage, I’d been eating bar food and drinking too much. My new assignment at Multipor magazine at
least meant that my boss hadn’t decided to fire me.
In fact, it was
much better than that. As much as my
other woes were dragging me down, I could see some kind of award, maybe even a
Pulitzer if I did a good job. I suppose
that some didn’t see the potential in the story that I did. The research arm of XHSU had received a huge
grant to find a cure for or more likely cures for cancer. I was to report on their progress, but more
importantly, divulge the personalities of the leaders. Multipor magazine depended more on scandal
and celebrity than science.
“It’s no cure
for cancer” has been a cliché for something which isn’t too difficult, but
curing cancer has been the unattainable holy grail of medicine for as long as
there has been medicine. There are both
skeptics and optimists about the chance of XHSU getting there. It had already made significant progress and
had great funding and doctors. Still,
progress was incremental.
The institution
gave us full access. Their stated
objective was to get more funding. My
suspicion that it was also to get more press for some of the prima donna doctors
was quickly confirmed.
I met Sheila
Hopkins, the project leader first. Of
course, I have to tone it down, when writing my article, but she is the coldest
fish that I’ve ever met, and that includes real fish. The body language, her talk, her dress and
her body all said loudly “I’m all business and I won’t waste any more time with
you than I absolutely have to”. As
quickly as she could, she outlined the approach that she and her staff were
taking – find a way for anti-bodies to attack and kill any cancer cells. The problem was that the cancer cells
‘wanted’ to survive and had clever adaptations to hide from those
anti-bodies. The approach that XHSU was
taking was the same general one that had limited success with other cancers –
‘educate’ the anti-bodies with modified bacteria or viruses to break through the
cancer defenses. No one approach would
work for all cancers, but under her direction, team doctors would attack the
worst cancers – lung, breast, ovarian and prostate first.
Hopkins was such
a cliché of a frigid, anti-social woman that I thought that I must have gotten
the wrong impression from our first meeting.
Later interviews confirmed that my first impression was the right one.
After a couple
of interviews with more or less normal doctors, I had the misfortune of
interviewing a self-promoting asshole “Hi, I’m Jason Jensen, but call me
JJ.” How was he an asshole? Let me give a partial inventory. As nearly as this ink-stained wretch could
determine, his suit cost over a thousand dollars, and his haircut, maybe only a
hundred. He subtly or not so subtly ran
down every other person on the team. He
called Hopkins “his associate” when she was clearly his boss. Because he must have felt that was
inadequate, he mumbled something about her “playing on the other team”, not that
he objected. I believe that comment came
from his alleged attempts to get next to her. He claimed that his two divorces were caused by work pressures, but the
majority opinion was that he couldn’t keep it in his pants. Have I mentioned his cologne? Quantity over quality.
It was easy for
me to invent an excuse to turn down dinner with him. I didn’t need any more of his wonderfulness
and everyone else’s inadequacy.
Back at home I
backgrounded the two most interesting interviewees. Hopkins came from a middle class family. At every level in school she was freaky
smart. The only thing unusual outside of
that was that her only sibling, a much younger brother, had died in an
accident. That was the only thing that I
could find that could possibly explain her blandness and lack of affect. Jansen was much easier to explain. His father had been a state representative
with unrequited ambition for higher office.
His mother had been the state attorney general. Hopkins earned everything that she got the
hard way. Jensen made it by his parent’s
influence and money. The twice divorced
doctor profile resembles one of our former governors in some ways. I would bet money that he’s hoping for a
repeat of that former governor’s success without repeating the part about
resigning in disgrace.
Something was
nagging me about the interviews, but try as I might I couldn’t bring it to the
surface.
The next day I
only interviewed Hopkins. I had decided
to try to break her of her ‘just the facts’ attitude. My bait was to taunt her with criticisms from
doctors at the University Of Spokane Medical School. They claimed that what she was trying had
only had limited success and no potential. Grim-faced as always, she said “They can kill you, but they can’t eat
you.” As soon as I heard that, my puzzle
was solved. She could see it on my face
and told me “You know I’m really busy. Can we finish this over dinner
tonight?”
I agreed and we
set the parameters. I wasn’t surprised
that she mentioned a place known for its discretion and privacy.
I must back up a
little. Wife Ellen and I had grown apart
after fifteen years. She had her part
time accounting job, her social circle and two or three volunteer activities
that I don’t even remember. Yes, you can
say bad husband. I mostly drank into the
night with reporters and sometimes availed myself of hookers before and after
the divorce. Even though I deserved it,
and maybe hadn’t loved her for years, it hurt a lot when she left.
A year after
Ellen divorced me I was solicited by an unbelievably attractive prostitute
while I was out drinking. Tall, blonde,
hourglass figure, husky voice, she had it all.
I spent the most exciting night of my life with her. On our way out of the door, a drunk almost
knocked me down. She shrugged and said,
you guessed it, “They can kill you, but they can’t eat you.” It struck me at the time that in some cases
they do eat you, but that’s not the point. Remembering that night, I realized
that Sheila is Sephora.
At dinner, the
first thing that Sheila said was “Before I talk anymore, you must agree to two
things. First this is all off the record
and second, you won’t try any two bit therapy on me.” I didn’t have much choice, so I
agreed.
“If you are any
good as a journalist, you did a background check on me for your article. You probably know that my only brother died
in an accident. If you were really
thorough, you know that I was really close to Bobby. I was even kind of a second mother to him
because I was ten years older. He really
looked up to me and I got a kick out of helping him with schoolwork. Ah shit, that horrible day. For some reason, he was really bugging
me. ‘Sheila’s got a boyfriend. Sheila’s kissing Johnny. Suck face. uck face.’ At least that’s what
I remember. I got annoyed beyond reason
and yelled at him ‘Go play in the street, you little shit’. He gave me a really hurt look and ran out
into the street without looking and was hit and killed.”
“I never told
anyone why he ran into the street. I
claimed that I couldn’t explain it. They
made me go into counseling which is where I learned to hate the shrink
industry. ‘How do you feel about
that?’ ‘Do you have feelings of
guilt?’ So much helpless, hopeless,
useless bullshit. Of course I felt
guilty, but I never told them the depth of my guilt.”
“You may think
that my slut side is an attempt to punish myself. No one really knows why people do
things. Usually we rationalize decisions
and behaviors rather than understand them.
No one knows what I would be doing now without watching Bobby die. My interest in curing cancer may look like
I’m trying to balance my life by saving lives, but I was interested in biology
well before the incident.”
As she went
through her story, I was thinking just what she imagined I was thinking, but she
was right about reaching easy conclusions.
“Do you have any
questions now?”
“Quite a few
now, but let me start with a simple one.
I paid for your services. Why do
you charge for sex? Not that it wasn’t
worth it, but you don’t need the money.”
“Fair
enough. In case you don’t remember, I
didn’t ask for anything. You and some
others think that I’m a whore and leave various amounts of money. When that happens, the housekeeper gets a
very good tip. Next.”
“Sheila and
Sephora don’t look, smell or sound much alike.
How do you do that?”
“Smell is
easy. Sheila is fragrance free and
Sephora goes in for exotic fragrances. I
lower my voice when I’m Sephora. Looks
require a little more work. Underwear
makes Sheila stick-like and Sephora voluptuous.
I’m 4 inches taller as Sephora with stiletto heels and the wig makes me
blonde.”
“How do you keep
your lives separate?”
“My lives are
separated by the clock. On the nights I
decide to be Sephora, I usually am her from about 10pm to 2am. I never stay away from home all night. I live in a neighborhood where we all lead
anonymous lives. We don’t have block
parties or anything like that. I suspect
that I may have some very kinky neighbors but they don’t pry into my life and I
don’t hang out with them.”
“Are you Sheila
or Sephora?”
“I don’t have
multiple personalities if that’s what you think. I’m Sheila and Sephora is an act. That isn’t quite honest. I’m a little bit Sephora.”
“Have you ever
had any continuing interest in any of your pickups?” After I asked this, I blushed a little bit
when I realized why I'd asked it.
Sheila paused
“Rarely. Nothing I’ve ever acted
on.”
I hope that I
kept my optimism at her response hidden.
“Have you ever
been close to having your cover blown?”
“Once that
asshole Jason Jensen was at the same dive bar that Sephora was. I had to leave, because if he hit on Sheila,
he definitely would hit on Sephora, and I couldn’t risk being
identified.
I wrapped up the
article a little later. While attempting
to appear objective, it was easy to use quotes and information from various
sources to make Sheila clearly the genius that she is and Jason the dick that he
is. The words of others supported
Sheila, but Jason’s own words sank him.
The article suggested, but did not say, that cancer would largely be
eliminated in about five years.
My article was
controversial with a lot of supporters and detractors about my prediction of a
cure. It ended up collecting a couple of
local awards, but no Pulitzer, and I got a raise.
I’m drawn to
Sheila / Sephora, but don’t know what to do.
I don’t even know if it is Sheila’s brilliance or Sephora’s sensuality
that obsesses me. I have the faint hope
that I’m one of the rare ones that Sephora liked. I’ll call Sheila tomorrow and hope for the
best. Maybe knowing both of them will
give me an edge.
This story previously appeared in
Scarlet Leaf.
About the author
The author is a little old man who lives in Lake Oswego Oregon USA with
editor Sharon and cat Kitzhaber. Besides writing, he hikes, snow shoes,
collects music and volunteers.
More
here https://sites.google.com/site/aberrantword/ and
here https://doug.car.blog/
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