This showed up on Salon.com.  Cute.

-Julius

My prom date, the spy 
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By Lisa Zeidner | 

It must have been 1970, 1971. My copy of Joni Mitchell's "Blue" was already 
badly scratched, the navy of the album cover faded into a pretty patina. If 
I'm not even sure of the year, I certainly can't be expected to remember his 
name, which wasn't anything obvious: Misha, Boris. Whenever I tried to 
pronounce it, I was sternly corrected.

I remember absolutely nothing about his face or body, although I can safely 
assume that he was, like all of my subsequent boyfriends, tall and thin. He 
wore a strong adult aftershave, which I found both repellent and sort of 
interesting. To make out with him was to be surrounded, almost visibly, by a 
mushroom- (or chef's-hat-) shaped cloud of this aftershave. 

He was very serious, with good posture and impeccable manners. He was always 
careful to tip gas station attendants a neatly folded dollar. "Thank you so 
much. I appreciate your service," he would say, bowing slightly and rolling 
those Transylvanian R's. His father had instructed him in this American 
gratuity custom. I told him that, to the best of my knowledge, no one in the 
history of Silver Spring, Md., had ever tipped a gas station attendant, but 
it was clear that he didn't value my input as a cultural insider.

His parents were both journalists who had traveled around the world; I was a 
bureaucrat's daughter with a set of Encyclopaedia Britannicas that were 
outdated before we even unpacked them. "Journalists," my father said. "Sure. 
'Journalists.' They're spies, you imbecile. Spies!"

I thought this was enormously funny. "The Russians are coming! The Russians 
are coming!" I would squeal, running away and flapping my arms as if I were 
on fire. This much I knew about the world in 1970: My father was a jerk.

But of course the parents were spies. In the den off their living room, they 
had, instead of a TV in front of a Barcalounger, an entire wall of 
state-of-the-art transmission equipment with headphones, dials and clocks 
indicating the current time in Washington, Moscow and London, site of their 
last posting. The equipment was heavy metal and Buck Rogers-looking, with 
bad-ass welding joints such as you might find on primitive space shuttles. 
This equipment, the son told me proudly, was capable of sending a message 
anywhere on the planet.

Since his parents never appeared to be home -- in fact, I'm not sure I ever 
even met them -- he demonstrated. He let me type in a message to send to 
Moscow.

"Eat Shit and Die, Pig Honky," I typed, letter by letter, into the little 
scrolling window they still use for stock quotes.

That was the current hip expletive: I would guess it was a corruption of 
something Linda Blair spluttered in "The Exorcist," except that didn't come 
out until 1973. He pressed a button, and the window informed me, "Message 
Transmitted."

Or rather, it informed him, in Russian, and he translated.

"If they were spies," I parried to my father, "do you think they'd teach 
their son how to use the machine? Do you think he'd let me tell Moscow to go 
fuck itself?"

"He didn't send the message, you moron. He was just trying to impress you, to 
garner sexual favors."

The rest is at: 
http://www.salon.com/mwt/feature/1999/09/10/spy/index1.html

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