Mrs. Longworth Cabot was descended from a long line of American patriots. She was the chairwoman of the Washington Daughters of the American Revolution, a member of the Society of the Cincinnati, latter day Pearl Mesta of Georgetown, and a scintillating noteworthy of Capital society.
Cabbie, as she was called by close friends and family, was of early middle age, a bit doughy but still attractive made all the more so by her elegant wardrobe. She wore only designer dresses, Cartier jewels, Manolo Blahnik shoes, and had her hair done once a month at Jean-Pierre of Fifth Avenue.
She had been married twice, both disastrously. The first to a minor British count, and the second to a Texas oilman, both of whom grossly underestimated her character, fierce loyalty to her legacy, and unquenchable sexual desire.
So when she met the Congressman from an important Midwestern district, she was diffident. There was really nothing that a politician could offer her by way of money (her fortune was immense and secure), social standing (she was in Who's Who in America), or glamour. Politicians are and always have been a dour, lumpen lot.
But never one to let an opportunity pass nor a chance for a bit of fun, she returned his glances, accepted his offer for a drink, and promised to meet him again - this time someplace not so predictable and ordinary as the the Mayflower Bar. She suggested the Lady Lay Lounge in Petworth, a gentrifying neighborhood still black around the edges, far enough away from downtown to cover both their tracks and an ideal place for a cinq-a-sept.
The Congressman was as expected - toothy, earnest, and simple - but there was something in the fact of his willingness to go off the grid with her suggested something more; and when he asked her about her preferences, referring not to Chablis or pinot noir but to something far more delicious and tempting, she was surprised, delighted, and willing.
One has to keep in mind that Mrs. Cabot was not just anyone. Bred of impeccable English royal stock, American aristocratic forbears, and with the blood of kings, she was noteworthy - a woman whom one would suppose to be careful about her associations and passe-temps - but her legacy, wealth, and untouchable privilege gave her unlimited license. Being who she was, anything she did was factored, parsed, and written off as perks of high standing.
It turned out that the Congressman was as queer as a three-dollar bill - not queer in today's modern, sexual sense (the man was as horny and bull-riding a male as any), but 'unusual'. 'Preferences' it turned out meant any number of sexual curiosities that one might find in the redwood forests of Coeur d'Alene or the San Francisco Folsom Street Fair.
The kicker is this - the Congressman simply got off on the patrician likes of Cabbie Lodge. He could have cross-dressed, done himself up in rubber and leather, and whipped himself silly for a hundred Marges from Accounting, but the idea of doing the unspeakable with a member of one of America's first and finest families was irresistible. It was like fucking Martha Washington.
How the Congressman had gotten this far, given his sandy quirks was a story in and of itself. Everyone in Congress was diddling someone other than their spouse, enjoying the perks of power; but all were hewing to a rather straight line - an afternoon tryst, a weekend in the Bahamas, a getaway to New York. None, as far as anyone could tell, had crossed that line and gone over to the unheard of side as far as Cabbie's Congressman had.
It was only because of his patience, discipline, and political instincts that he kept clean and his real desires cloaked and closeted. Now that he had influence - he had become a member of the powerful Ways and Means Committee - he could afford some outing. He had the power to consign even ranking members to holy hell if they called him out for sexual impropriety.
So the affair between Cabbie Lodge and the Congressman was made in heaven - exactly the woman that the representative from _______wanted, and the plaything the lady from Beacon Hill had always imagined.
Petworth was only the beginning. Their escapades went far afield, always at the edge of official Washington to give the affair pique, but not too far out to feel cornfieldy and removed.
He was finding it a bit tricky to explain his absences from office and home - the best philanderers are always caught with their pants down - but Cabbie had no such tying responsibilities and goaded the Congressman to ever more challenging meetings. Whereas he had always brought the paraphernalia, the sex toys, whips, fetters, and chains, she began to reach out and surprise him.
The episodes thanks to his perpetual desire and her irrepressible playfulness remained incomparable. The two of them rutted like barn animals and came back for more.
The telling difference was that while Cabbie could care less about Congressman X, he was becoming deeply dependent upon her. She had tapped some underground resources he never knew he had and once discovered, could not do without.
Why not up the ante? thought the marvelously devious Cabbie, extract some national secret and put him on the rack with threats of full disclosure unless he capitulated and gave her everything. The lasting, complete sexual conquest.
Strindberg's Miss Julie is a story about such demanding influence. The aristocrat Mis Julie is brought up by a proto-feminist, man-hating mother who encourages her daughter to engage and then dominate men. She decides to seduce and entrap Jean, her valet. She treats him like a trained animal jumping through hoops while he enjoys - like the Congressman - sexual to-dos with her. He falls short, cannot resist the age-old call to service, and returns without her to the role of faithful, dutiful valet of the Count.
It was in the oversized bathtub in the bridal suite of the Waldorf, that she grabbed the rubber ducky, brought him to ecstatic climax, climbed out, wrapped herself in a soft, multi-ply bath towel, dressed, and said goodbye.
The Congressman was disconsolate, disheartened, and felt absolutely alone. What had happened? and why? Everything was going along swimmingly.
The story would not be complete unless the denouement - the revealing of state secrets attributed to the Congressman - had not been made public. 'Taking down the citadel of Boston', Fergie says to his crew before their audacious robbery of Fenway Park, 'priceless'; and it was with this same pride and joy that she saw the unravelling of the Congressman happen before her very eyes.
A true Nietzschean, Cabbie Cabot. Why did she do it, she might have been asked. 'Because I could', would have been her reply.
A remarkable woman, none like her, a genius, a brilliant conniver, a one of a kind.






