Whore or Saint? That has been men's dilemma or women's depending on who's asking. Women, caught between biological imperatives and natural sexual desire, give both a whirl and, confident of their ability to sort right from wrong, good from bad, decide who they are.
Nancy Potter was no different except that she was a nymphet, Vladimir Nabokov's delightful invention of a young girl, precocious beyond her years, aware of her sexual allure and sexual destiny, and determined to explore every nook and cranny of this demanding, remarkable, nature that she didn't choose but which was nevertheless hers.
She experimented early on. She was no more than eight or nine when she asked Bobby Vale to join her in the woods. The poor boy, barely out of emotional diapers, clueless about everthing except Legos, Pokémon, and basketball, and still very much of a mamma's boy stood there as Nancy helped him out of his pants.
The squirrels chattering in the trees knew more about what was happening than he, but as deaf and dumb as he was about sex, he had an inkling that what Nancy was about was verboten, in a class by itself, reserved for adults if then.
She was a tigress in middle school and a Mata Hari in high school, but only at Oberlin, a small liberal arts college in the Midwest did she follow another track. While no one ever thought that pert, cute, devilishly sexy Nancy would sail beyond safe harbors, she turned out to be a whiz at numbers. Not just 1+1 kinds of numbers but negative numbers, imaginary numbers, number series, mathematical projections, and number theory. For four years she 'kept her knickers on', more interested solving Fermat's theorem than removing her panties.
This early adventurism, said Harvard Professor of Psychobiology Adam Brookings, is not atypical of the prematurely sexual female, nor is its particular hibernation:
Nabokov was on to something, writing as he did of the fictional nymphet, a pre-pubescent girl of primal sexuality. There are such girls, endowed with a special extra-sensory ability that is fine tuned for sexual adventure and gratification. There are such real girls, in the shadows because of a persistent sexual obscurantism - girls who are women from the day they are born; women born to mate, to reproduce, and to thrive.
The particularly highly-evolved woman is multi-dimensional, curtseying, trading, diverting, but always returning to form. Such reproductively ur-females are rare but permanent fixtures on the asymptotes of the bell curve.
What Professor Brookings did not say was that the trajectory of such complex females can include regression, a pulling in of sexual antenna and growing other, more traditional sensors of womanhood.
And so it was that Nancy turned ingenue, sexual innocent, woman of virtue, fidelity, and hearth-and-home desires. The third phase of her sexual history had begun. She married and married well; but for her, now the very prehistoric image of a fertile, reproductive, full-bodied woman, social status was unimportant. It was the giving birth, the ultimate expression of femaleness and femininity which mattered. The sexual act, always enjoyed, became indescribably potent and passionate for it was the means to reproduction. That in itself was destiny.
However after a decade of childbearing, childrearing, and sexual fidelity, the quieted, banked sexual energies returned with a vengeance. The years of mommyhood and dutiful second fiddle were over and she was on her own once again.
The string of lovers was little more than irrelevant strands, thread come loose from the garment, bothersome trailers. Like Portia in Shakespeare's Merchant of Venice, she entertained her male suitors, dismissing each in turn. They were a pompous, self-absorbed, immature, ignorant lot, and she toyed with them, played with their hopelessly infantile assumptions, and finally settled for the pick of the litter, the importuning Bassanio.
Nancy would be damned if she settled for a Bassanio or any other of his toadying ilk, at least not before she stepped out a bit, exposed that inexplicable sexuality within, and took as many lovers as possible - not for marriage but for the simple, pure feeling of being had - the female receptacle, the sought after, the desirable.
Belle de Nuit is a film about such a woman as Nancy Potter - an aristocratic woman whose ordinary upper middle class married French life is nothing more than a purgatory of good intentions. Lovers are no anodyne to the desperation and the sexual desuetude of her marriage and she becomes a call girl -inanimate, dutiful, roll-over sex for a fee.
Nancy was equally disaffected with the life for which she had been programmed and was following. She, like Belle de Nuit would become available to all and would revel in the anonymity and the pure femaleness of her enterprise.
She became once again her own woman with a growing reputation for sexual pleasure - she was the primus inter pares of Washington call girls, in demand, la creme de la creme.
This wanton, uninhibited, anonymous, unattached sex was what she always had wanted - the ultimate sexual freedom, the defining exercise of free will and female distinction.
The Belle de Nuit syndrome is but a temporary phase in the sexual life of the pre-pubescent sex queen - an exuberant excess, correct, and inextinguishable validation of womanhood. Once a woman has passed through that exuberant, defining period, she can return to anything more prosaic.
In Nancy's case it was Kinder, Kirche, Kuchen. There was nothing more satisfying after an interlude of uncompromising sex than returning to an adoring farm family in Iowa - her family, dismissed and ignored during her exploratory phase but who welcomed her back after her fugue.
She was the Mrs. Tyler Blanding of Ames, mother of four, marvelous cook, wife, and choirmaster of the First Methodist Church of Christ. What goes around, comes around; and after a hejira more defining, powerful, and transformative as Muhammed's crusade from Mecca to Spain, she settled down. The sexual genie had been satisfied.






