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Laura Meets Jeffrey

Page 31

by Jeffrey Michelson


  10. Avoid the instant karma of insulting a warrior with condescension. We were in the ring boxing two three-minute rounds on the day before his fifty-ninth birthday—January 31, 1982. I was thinking about cutting him a little slack when he delivered a right that smashed me back two feet, a left jab and another punishing right cross. I growled a silent “TO HELL WITH YOU OLD MAN” and went to work. I had broken two rules of combat and deserved the beating: never insult a warrior with condescension, and when you fight, don’t think.

  * * *

  I visited Norman in the hospital in New York City near the end but he slept the whole time. His sister Barbara was there and said it was OK to wake him but I couldn’t do it.

  I came back a week later. He was awake but couldn’t talk with all the tubes down his throat. I didn’t know what to do so I held his hand and said hello, then told him I needed the men’s room. I called his wife, Norris, for guidance. She said, “He’s interested in your adventures so tell him what’s going on in your life. And ask him yes or no questions he can answer with a nod.”

  I told him about my new horse, Pilgrim. I had him for a year but that morning was the first time I ever told him I loved him. My previous horse, Genius, the horse love of my life, had died suddenly about a year and a half before and it took me a while to fall in love with Pilgrim.

  I admitted I was more promiscuous with my emotions with women than I was with horses. I’d told women I loved them either to fuck them or to make the fuck better but since there was no sex with Pilgrim because he was a horse, and more important a gelding, I found myself adhering to a higher ethical standard. Even with all the tubes I got the big Norman Mailer smile and part of a laugh. Making Norman laugh was always rewarding and up till being in the hospital he had a bellow of a laugh. He wasn’t just a great performer, he was a generous audience.

  I asked him if he was still Norman Mailer in his head and he rotated his hand on its axis, the international sign for “sort of.” I asked him if the doctors were optimistic and he gave me the same sign, this time slower and with a shaking back and forth of his head. He was down to 125 pounds and didn’t look like he was going to get better.

  A nurse came in and asked me to please leave soon so she could give Norman a respiratory treatment. She said it was OK to take a few minutes. She knew his condition and that his clock was running down.

  He pantomimed like you do to a waiter when you want a check with air squiggles. I asked if he wanted pen and paper and he shook his head no. He pointed to me and motioned again and looked at me with stern eyes. I asked if he wanted me to write something down for him. He nodded yes, put his palms together and opened his hands like a book. I asked him if he meant my book (this book) and he pointed his finger at me with emphasis. He kept his finger stuck out and with a hint of strength jabbed it at me until I promised I’d finish it. Then he nodded his head with a smile.

  I grabbed his hand and squeezed and told him that I loved him, even more than I loved my horse. He chuckled and coughed. Our relationship, as were many relationships others had with Norman, hadn’t always been smooth. In the forty years we were friends there were sometimes months and years we didn’t talk. But we always got back on track and it had been smooth for a decade.

  With some torque still left, he squeezed my hand.

  He let go and pointed his index finger at me.

  Then he pointed his thumb to himself.

  Then in the middle between us he made thumbs up.

  “You. Me. We’re OK.”

  I kissed his hand. We both had tears in our eyes. He knew.

  I knew. I kissed him on the cheek.

  That weekend surrounded by his family he passed away. At the very end his son Stephen held his hand as he left this planet, which had benefited from his time here.

  My favorite thing Norman ever said to me was a left- and right-handed compliment: “Jeffrey, you are the most improved person I ever met.”

  What even his genius may not have known was how much of it was because of him.

  * * *

  LauraMeetsJeffrey.com

  Table of Contents

  A note to the memoir police

  Foreword

  Norman Mailer

  Introduction

  Legs McNeil

  The world before Laura, part one

  October 1979

  The world before Laura, part two

  October 1979–April 1980

  Enter Laura stage left

  Late April 1980

  Falling in love in a whorehouse

  Ten minutes later

  My heart gets flushed down the toilet of love

  Early May 1980

  Shake it off. Get back in the game.

  Twenty minutes later to three weeks later

  Anal sex

  The return of Laura

  A Friday afternoon in June 1980

  Emblematic mojos rising

  The hooker, her husband, her sugar daddy, her lovers and me

  Six o’clock on a Friday night in June 1980

  The ‘test spank’ and beyond

  One moment later

  Whip this

  Laura moves in

  Late June 1980

  Our first threesome

  Summer 1980

  What lives in the slime on a porn booth floor?

  Late summer 1980

  Soft-core and hard-core masturbators

  Laura quits the whorehouse, shaves her legs, and becomes a model

  Autumn 1980

  Autumn almanac

  October–November 1980

  John, Yoko, and the washing machine repairman

  December 8, 1980

  Puritan interview with Norman Mailer

  December 28, 1980

  My first orgy

  Flashback to May 1, 1971

  My second orgy

  Three weeks later in May 1971

  A history of the New York orgy

  1971–81

  Laura’s first orgy

  Early 1981

  Hot babe gone wrong

  Flashback to 1972

  The lyrics and music of sex

  Olympic pissing at the Hellfire Club

  February 1981

  The Norman Mailer/José Torres Saturday Morning Boxing Club

  and my war with Ryan O’Neal

  Sex slavery at Club O

  March 1981

  The pleasure of pain

  Relationships and drugs

  Two tricks

  October 1981

  Living weird is the new normal

  1981–82

  Lynne Something or Something Lynne

  Late spring 1982

  Puritan interview with Timothy Leary

  Summer 1982

  Alea Iacta Est

  Two days later

  The cocaine Ponzi scheme

  Mr. Tall and the world’s ugliest swing club

  October 1982

  The art of war

  The beast comes out of the bedroom

  Early November 1982

  Getting stale

  Late 1982

  The S&M pimple comes to a head

  December 1982

  S&M clarification

  December 1982

  New Year’s Eve 1983

  Little Richard meets the Sopranos: The wedding of Silvio Dante

  The final chapter

  Spring 1983

  Epilogue: Only the dead know Brooklyn

  Early autumn 1983

  Afterword

  Since then

  The history of this book

  Acknowledgments A

  Acknowledgments B

  Ten things I learned from Norman Mailer

 

 

 
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