Helicopters over Inn Leather
Inn
Leather is a men-only, leather-oriented guest
house in Ft. Lauderdale, FL. It is clothing-optional – nothing
beats tanning by the pool in the buff – and
each of the dozen or so rooms features a sling (and a
small kitchenette).
I stayed at Inn Leather for several
days in June 2001, taking a vacation break after a country-western
dance hoedown and before returning to Seattle to start
job hunting in earnest (something which I really should
have started a month before, when I was laid off, but
that’s another tale). I stayed at Inn Leather
again in March 2005, again during and after a hoedown.
One night, at about 3:30 am, I was awakened
by the sound of a helicopter overhead. Once I
came fully awake, I realized that it was right overhead,
and it was playing a searchlight over the compound, indeed,
right outside the door to my room. Poking my head
out the door and looking around, I saw a dark figure
run between two of the buildings, followed a few seconds
later by two others. Then a cop told me “Get
back in your room, and lock the door.” An
escaped fugitive had jumped over the wall into the compound
and
they were looking for him. After
about 20 minutes, the helicopter left, but I think I
must have
sat on the floor under the window almost until dawn,
jumping at every noise, before I could get back to sleep.
(Fantasies about cops and robbers are
all well and good, but real life can scare the crap out
of you. To this day, I’m pretty sensitive
to noises at night, and I get a bit paranoid when helicopters
come
anywhere near my house when it’s dark out.)
The rest of that trip was eventful in
more pleasurable ways, such as having clothespins attached
up the crack of my ass, or going to Gay Days at Disney
World between two night sessions of the Rainmakers of
South
Florida’s watersports and fisting run at the Sawmill
Campground (where I broke a sling while I was in it:
picture me
suddenly hanging upside-down, holding the dangling chain
by one arm, while the top says “I’m almost
in! I’m almost in!”), or seeing
lightning strikes and forest
fires 100 yards off the highway,
or driving across the Everglades in the middle of a
zero-visibility rain
storm,
rolling
into
the gas
station
on the Seminole
Reservation on fumes.
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Date Posted: |
March 30, 2005
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