No Sex Please, We're Teachers
By Kamal
Sunavala
I
know, I know. The
popular title has always been No sex please, we're British.
These days English teachers are up for grabs as well. I have been teaching
a wonderfully diverse bunch of students in Prague for about six months now.
Lawyers, security managers, financial geniuses, you name it. And all of them
are the average decent man with a family or the sparkle of one gleaming in
their eyes. Lessons everyday are really a fun time because they are almost
always had over coffee and the latest office gossip. It's all about conversation,
isn't it?
One bright Tuesday afternoon I walk into
the office of one of my top legal students and announce
to him before he
plies me with excellent coffee that he has to take a test
in a couple of weeks. He waves the notion away with a laugh
but somehow in the next fifteen minutes I do manage to
get the foreign idea across. At which point, he slowly
starts to circle the room like a vulture, takes off his
suit jacket slowly, sexily, I am surprised to notice, tells
me I smell wonderful and that I should come away with him
for a weekend at his cottage in Karlovy Vary so we can
make mad passionate love and forget all about this silly
test. I protest mildly, tell him to stop making propositions
and get on with the prepositions. He tells me that once
I get there I won't be able to resist his charm and his
cottage and then it won't matter whether he fails or passes
the test. I protest once again although my voice is a notch
louder this time. He pours me heartbreakingly fresh coffee
and gives me a slice of the freshest goddamn apfel strudel
this side of the German border.
I take a bite and shake my head at him. He strokes my arm
and kisses my knuckles one by one. Not unpleasant if one
thinks of the action by itself. But when I think of the
reason why he gallantly offers his toned body to me I wonder
if he is actually planning to prostitute himself for the
sake of a few phrasal verbs.
Adjourn to the high rise offices of my student
who is just about to earn his PhD in an unpronounceable
but nevertheless
very important financial subject. I spring the news of
the test on him and he tells me that he has no time for
it. So sorry. I am flexible and suggest he tells me when
he would be free to take it. He glances at his calendar
and taps his pencil consistently upon his desk. At this
point I am thinking, how wonderfully professional he is
and dedicated too. He looks up and says one word. Radisson.
I am confused. I am aware of what it is but I don't see
the connection. He explains to me in dulcet tones that
he would love to buy me brunch this weekend and then drive
me out to his 'country house' for a weekend of tennis and
horse-riding since I love both activities so much. I thank
him kindly for his offers and ask what the occasion is
and he says it is nothing more than an expression of his
appreciation for my endeavours. I am almost weeping with
joy when, in passing I hear the word test. So I wait expectantly
for the date only to hear him ask me if I wouldn't mind
forgetting about the test. After all, a weekend of tennis
and horse-riding and perhaps a night cap would do anyone
in. Maybe we wouldn't be able to return until late Monday
evening. Oh yes, that irresistible offer again.
As I sat around our Bohemian flat and discussed
these two episodes with my friends, I was surprised to
hear similar
stories. One colleague had received the interesting offer
of a threesome, the other had been kissed without so much
as a by your leave and had to consequently leave herself,
the third had been offered a weekend in Hradec Králové
for an 'interesting time' and the fourth had been offered
a body massage in exchange for the list of exam verbs and
tenses.
Is it moral depravity? Or is it merely a
'cultural difference'? I would be hard pressed to choose.
Without embarking upon
the prudish wagon, I admit that all the offers have been
good ones. The students are attractive and the teachers
are young. Tourism and willing tour guides are naturally
welcome as are brunches and massages. Although technically
students and teachers are not supposed to be bed partners,
I can even stretch the legal loophole far enough in the
interests of lifelong love. However, there are two unanswered
questions.
What about the wives and the girlfriends?
And most importantly, what about the English test?
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