copyright ©2003
by
Keith Morrisette
All Rights Reserved.
The
Boyfriend
Prologue
We sat there in the dark, when Jamie’s hand came under the armrest – again
–
and I edged away and pushed it off.
“Not
now,”
I hissed.
He
folded
his arms and slumped back into his seat, muttering. “All I wanna do is
hold your hand. Jesus, Chris, there’s only three people in the whole
theatre,
and they’re all on the other end. Who’s gonna know?”
I’ll
know, that’s
who. And I’m pissed off at you, and I ain’t in the mood. But that’s
not what I said. “Later okay? You know how I am about stuff in public.”
Jamie
grunted
and sat back, his head propped up on his hand now, leaning on the other
arm rest. He had a point. The theatre really was almost empty. That was
a commentary on the movie, too – another Bruce Willis flick. Jamie’s
turn
to pick, and he liked the guy for some reason. I sighed, checked my
watch.
I figured another fifteen or twenty minutes left. I stole a look at my
boyfriend. Great, now you’ve got him pissed off, too. This just
gets
better and better.
The
movie
staggered to its obvious end, even though they billed it as a chiller,
another Sixth Sense. Uh-huh. Yawn.
The
lights
came up slowly, and I pulled on my new leather coat and we moved into
the
tiny lobby. The Salem Tri Cinema was never a fancy place, even when it
was new. Mostly it got movies wrapping up their run from the big
Showcase
Cinema in Lawrence, or disasters no one wanted to see. Well, this flick
lasted a week at the Showcase, so I guess that said a lot for it.
We
looked
out the windows, at the almost-empty parking lot. The mild drizzle had
gotten worse, and the temperature must have dropped like a rock. It was
sleeting now, badly.
I
sighed.
November. Cold, wet, and miserable November. Everything was just dead,
not even snow to pretty it up. And now, just to make it worse, a sleet
storm.
“I’ll
get
the car,” Jamie said, eyeing my new leather jacket. Then we argued
about
that, too, but I gave up and always the hero, he charged into the cold
and wet. I decided I needed the men’s room.
Jamie
didn’t
know it, but he and I were headed for some big problems, if I could
ever
get up the balls to start talking.
Huh.
There’s
a thought. Like I ever had a hard time talking.
Chapter
One
I always thought
of myself as the romantic.
See,
with
both parents working, my sister and I got farmed out to my gran’s after
school and in the summer. Granny Irene was pretty cool, but she was
addicted
to old movies – and with all the cable stations, we got to see a lot of
old Hollywood potboilers when the weather sucked, and I decided love
was
pretty cool. I liked the idea of life on a twenty-five inch screen,
watching
MGM’s film library; maybe there was a lot of crap leading up to it, but
everything ended with sunshine, sweetness, and lollipops forever. I
wanted
to grow up faster so I could be in love.
Then
I’d go
out and meet up with Toby Weston and a bunch of the guys and I’d put
that
stuff into the back of my mind. Toby said stuff like that was faggy, so
we’d have mud-ball fights or something in the woods. At least, we did
until
they built houses there. So life was easy – until I hit thirteen.
That’s
when
one morning the hormones took over and I woke up with sticky sheets,
and
things began to take on a little edge. It was helped along when I found
my Dad’s magazine collection in the garage (in the loft, behind the
pile
of old cedar shingles at the bottom of the tool box with the broken
lock).
Dad didn’t waste his time on Playboy or even Hustler; he went right for
the gold when he bought porn. Lots of action shots in there. I
showed
all my friends, and they thought it was great. But the funny thing was,
they kept talking about all the chicks. I kept looking at all those
guys,
and actually kinda found myself envying the chicks.
Hmm.
They
had a name for guys like that at my school. Lots of names, in fact; so
I figured it was good idea not to mention that I paid more attention to
the dicks than the tits. And now that I started to understand what it
meant,
I got a little nervous when Toby Weston called me a cocksucker. Of
course,
he’d been calling me and everyone else a cocksucker since he was five,
so after thinking it over I decided not to take it too personal.
Besides, Toby
had his uses. He explained you didn’t have to wait to crust up the
sheets,
and taught me how to do a ‘pre-emptive strike’, as they say in the
military.
I liked those. I took to launching pre-emptive strikes about four times
a day until I found out too much of a good thing could make the payload
scarce and the canon pretty sore, so I learned about limits too.
I also
learned
about keeping my mouth shut about what I was thinking when I pre-empted
things. Toby Weston wasn’t too bright and he may not have been right
about
most stuff, but it looked like he was right about me. Especially since
the more I heard convinced me I had most of the ‘signs’.
Take
sports.
I was
never
any good at them, and it bored the hell out of me to watch. I mean, I
can play
baseball and basketball thanks to gym class, I just never gave a damn
about
them. And forget football. I’m the scrawny type, and now that the last
of my growth spurts are long past I still don’t measure up much beyond
five feet six inches (with my shoes on and standing at
attention),
and weigh in at about one-twenty-five. I never could understand why
some
guys thought having some slob twice your size tackling you was supposed
to be cool.
Well,
yeah,
actually I could see that, but just not with all that equipment or
clothing.
And certainly not with anyone else watching.
Then
there
were the girls themselves.
Not
only wasn’t
I interested in their bodacious tatas (yeah, Toby again), but every
last
one of ’em treated me like I was just another friend. Melanie Malloy
always
told me I was the ‘safe’ type – she didn’t have to worry about me
grabbing
something I shouldn’t be grabbing when we went out on dates. We started
dating when I thought (briefly) I could re-program myself for
mainstream
if I worked at it; but the one time I made a play for something, she
just
looked at me in shock and said, “Since when?”
There’s one
for the ego.
I
mean, maybe
I wasn’t that interested – but there’s still that part of me deep down
that likes to think I’m a little bit dangerous.
Well,
that’s
what was starting anyway, and the short version was that I gave up
trying
to re-track myself and let my fantasies spin off the way I wanted them
to. I was what I was, there was no way to get around it. But I wasn’t
suicidal,
so I was gonna be damn careful about anyone finding out before I was
ready
to announce. I figured the day after I finished college and moved to
California
or something would be the best time to talk about it.
Well,
it may
be safer that way, but it doesn’t make it suck any less.
Day
in, day
out, I watched the kids I grew up with pairing off, hanging on each
other,
being couples… And all I could do was sit, try not to get caught
checking
out the boys, and pretty much be by myself, because if anyone got too
close,
I’d be dead meat. Haverhill, Mass., ain’t a politically correct town.
Around
here, you were a homo if they felt like being polite, and a lot of
other
words if they weren’t. Life can suck.
And I
still
wanted the romance. I really did want to do the dumb stuff like hold
hands
and cuddle.
Yeah,
I wanted
all the hot stuff I heard about, but I wanted the “sweet” stuff, too,
but
everything I heard and saw seemed against it.
Television,
magazines and what you heard all said guys like me only wanted one
thing.
A lot of church leaders did too. And when I got my first computer, the
evidence seemed all over the net. All those pictures on web sites told
me all I really needed was sex. I found gay chat-rooms for
kids,
and all they talked about was sex. And I became a champion
one-hand
typist thanks to chat room cyber. But the chats told me about other
sites,
and that helped.
You
see, I
found a treasure trove. I found the Neato Archive.
Tens
of thousands
of stories. Gay stories. Stories about sex, romance and sex,
adventure
and sex, boy-bands and sex, history and sex, and science fiction
stories.
With sex.
Some
of them
were even good.
And
did I
mention they had sex in them?
The
Neato
became my net home as I prowled through the index, reading about how
guy
after guy met the true love of his life by age fifteen, fell hopelessly
in love, faced the school goon squad together fearlessly, and had
wonderful
adventures. They lived happily ever after, usually with one moving in
with
the other kid’s understanding family so the boys could be together.
I
liked the
idea of happily ever after, with that One Special Guy. My parents
buying
into me having a live-in lover seemed like a different story.
Ah,
well.
So at age fourteen after I found the Archive, I figured all I had to do
was wait a year, maybe two, and then the boy of my dreams would find
me.
Afternoons of sweet hand-holding and telling each other how much we
loved
the other – and nights of lust where we outdid porn stars. I knew some
of it had to be exaggerated a little, because unless there was
something
wrong with me there was just no way you could do it six times
in
a row and not take a rest.
So I
waited.
And, yeah, I bumped into a few guys at school in the hallway who were
new
just like in about ninety-percent of those stories, but if any of them
had any interest in me they had a damn good way of hiding it.
Okay.
Mrs.
St. Jacques’ only son Chris may be a bit slow sometimes, but eventually
he figured out that life wasn’t exactly like the stories on the net.
So,
my nights were passed cuddled up with my hand and my days were filled
with
stray random fantasies as I made my way through high school, living a
full,
rich fantasy life if not much of a real one. My time would come, I told
myself. Give it a chance.
Then
it was
the summer before my senior year at Haverhill High, and I figured I’d
given
it enough time. If I couldn’t have romance and lust, well I
knew
you could do something about the lust part. Before school started that
fall, I was going to get laid.
And if
I couldn’t
do it with a lover... well, at this point, anything would do. I had all
the basic necessities to make it work.
I kept
my
ears open and heard things. And I continued to study at the Neato
Archive,
but now more in the Encounters section.
Bar
pick-ups
were out. There was only one in my area, and God knows I didn’t have
the
balls to go there even if I could get in, which was doubtful. I might
have
an adult sex drive but my ID still said I was seventeen and my face and
size said less. Bars don’t let you in unless you’re twenty-one and can
buy a drink, preferably lots of drinks.
Other
things
were out too. I didn’t buy the bit about all those long, lonely camping
trips where you find someone in the woods and you do it on the banks of
a mountain stream, especially since my idea of roughing it was basic
cable
at the motel. The city parks were way too well patrolled thanks to the
drug dealers and the punks, so they were out. And again, it was all a
bit
too close to home.
But I
could
drive. And those Neato stories were big on public places as cruise
areas.
There were plenty of beaches nearby, there was the Rockingham Park Mall
(uh, and the only mall for thirty miles), and there were rest areas.
And
besides, I’d heard first hand stories going around school that
these
places were real. There must have been at least twenty guys claiming
they’d
been approached at one time or another (and all of them swearing they’d
punched the guys lights out after he made the offer). I knew there was
a lot of imagination working there, but I also figured there had to be
something in it.
So I
came
up with a plan which was very simple, very basic, and completely in
character
with everything I’d read, heard and watched.
I had
a driver’s
license, a rusting Toyota, and trusting parents who went away a lot.
Add
in an older sister who’d finally married and moved off. I even had a
job
to finance my cruising – I got a spot at Barrier Books up at The Loop
in
Methuen. Now, I know working at a book store doesn’t sound all that
cool,
but Barrier’s also has a great music section (can you say discount on
CDs?),
a small but trendy clothing section (ok, accessories and caps), and a
reputation
for a great gay magazine and literary section.
That
meant
plenty of gay guys, right? And some of them had to be young. Maybe not
as young as me, but close enough. Besides, I’d be eighteen in the fall
anyway. Why couldn’t I hook up with some cool college stud who dropped
by for the latest issue of XY or Genre? It was an option, and like I
said,
I’d already decided this summer I was going to explore all my options.
Barrier’s was one step in my master plan of Getting Laid.
With a
mix
of days and evenings, I could maximize my opportunities. I figured if I
had a day shift, I could use the time in the evening to hit the big
mall
up in Salem and do a little looking around there. An evening shift gave
me time to hit the beaches in Salisbury or Hampton, and I had a modest
selection of Speedos to attract attention as I strutted my stuff. I may
be short and slender – wow, that does sound better than skinny – but
I’m
toned. And I may suck at most sports but I do like to run, and that’s
always
kept me tight and given me a reasonably good ass and great legs to show
off in a Speedo. And as for the front – well, I won’t have a career in
porn, but there’s enough to show off. Besides, I love the beach. Short
and skinny yeah, but at least I’m one of those guys that actually
bronzes
nice with only a mild sunscreen, and my normally dull, light brown hair
gets great natural golden highlights running through it.
So
each day
I combed the beach, hanging out at the pavilion at the state
reservation
– notorious in popular myth for what I was after – and checking out the
Rock Barrier Reef that protected the mouth of the Merrimack River. I
spent
hours sunning myself in those tight little suits and trying to look
sexy.
Lots
of chicks
around and looking, but not much else. The attention was nice but the
gender
was wrong, and I wondered where all the gay men were that supposedly
came
here looking for young guys. If they were here, they didn’t seem to
notice
me much. The closest I ever got to a pick-up was an invite for
volleyball.
Aside from that, about the only male attention I got was from Officer
Paul
Cayman, who’d seen me three days a week for the month of July. He never
seemed to pay any attention to me, so I figured it was safe to ignore
him.
Uh-huh. Never
a good idea to ignore a cop, especially when you’re on the prowl. And
when
he sort of wandered over to me one afternoon, I wasn’t paying much
attention
as I searched the passing faces to see if anyone was interested.
“Go
easy,
kid.”
That
pulled
my attention away from a passing well-rounded one and I noted the black
shoes and socks, followed up a pair of muscular legs to the navy shorts
and then the built rest of him until I looked into the non-committal
glare
of his sunglasses.
“Huh?”
He
stared
down, thumbs hooked around his belt buckle, his mouth twitching like
Clint
Eastwood. “Just a word of warning here, kid – go easy. If you’re
selling,
move on. If you’re giving it away, that’s cool, just don’t get caught
in
the wrong place – like a public one. Because if you get caught, I
promise
you the lock-up and a call to your parents.”
I know
I turned
red, and I started to protest, but he just turned and walked off. Yeah,
and call me stupid too, but there I was with the crap just scared out
of
me and I still took the time to check out his backside. Which was worth
the time.
I took
his
word to heart though, and decided to spend some extra time up in
Hampton,
not just that afternoon but a few other afternoons as well. There were
a lot of guys up that way too. But every now and again I’d still go to
Salisbury – hoping – and avoiding Officer Cayman. I was a little more
cautious
of showing up in the same places too regular after that.
Just
over
the New Hampshire border at the Rockingham Park Mall in Salem became
one
of my favorite stops, too. How many stories had I read about pickups at
malls? You dressed cool, shopped, hung out on the benches or played in
the arcade and sooner or later some hot stud moves on you and the two
of
you head off to his place. That’s one of the rules, right? Someone
always
notices you.
Yeah,
well,
I was finding out there were a lot more myths than there were rules
about
cruising and stuff.
A
couple of
times I did sense some eye contact and flirting from a
distance,
but damned if I didn’t start running into almost everyone I knew when
that
happened. Timing was everything, and mine sucked.
Well,
my three-pronged
assault on losing my virginity seemed to fizzle. I saw a lot of copies
of gay magazines and books pass over the counter at Barrier’s, but
mostly
the guys were either too old or just plain not interested. Most of them
were too embarrassed to do anything but stare at the counter while I
rang
up the sale and acted like I didn’t exist. Or maybe they hoped I didn’t
exist so no one would know what they’d just bought.
The
only bright
spots at Barrier turned out to be Karen, an assistant manager who was
just
plain cool, and Dave Sciuoto. Now, I’ve known Dave since grade school
when
we both did time with the nuns at All Heavenly Souls School, just not
well.
He was a good-looking guy with black hair and eyes almost as dark. Dave
was short but still taller than me, and a slender build without
dropping
into my range of skinny, but it all seemed to go together a lot
different
with him. David had one of those bodies that clothes hung on just
right,
whether they came from Macy’s or Wal-Mart. His features were fine and
even,
his eyes twinkled, and you always knew when he was in a good mood,
which
was most of the time. Not that he was the annoying ‘sees some good in
everything’
type, but he was really a sweet guy. I was surprised when he turned up
at Haverhill High; his family had money. Not heaping piles of corporate
cash, but his father was a lawyer and they lived in a way better part
of
town than I did. I’d just assumed he’d be one of the kids that split to
one of the private schools in the area – Austin, Lawrence Catholic, or
maybe even Brooks.
Anyway, Dave
was a sweetheart with a stunner smile exposing teeth that never needed
an orthodontist and an even better laugh. He was Italian (like Sciuoto
could be anything else, right?) with that slightly olive skin. Years of
high school gym classes and showers told me he was almost hairless, way
different from the other Italian kids in the school who were already
turning
into hair rugs by the time we were freshmen. Oh and hey, I know what
you’re
thinking here, and yeah, I do look around in the locker room. And I’ve
caught more than one other straight(?) kid checking to see how he
compares.
The difference between them and me is they don’t have to give the cold
water an extra twist in the shower.
Dave
also
had something else that was terrific. Dave had the best ass I’d ever
seen.
I
mean, it
was the perfect picture of young male butthood. It rode high, curved
where
it should, and whenever I saw it I thought – well, never mind what I
thought.
His ass could have been carved in marble by Michelangelo. And it was my
appreciation of that perfection of natural growth that betrayed me to
Karen.
In
retrospect,
how the hell could she miss me checking? I stared at it whenever he
walked
by forgetting about whatever I was supposed to be doing, so I
guess
it was just a matter of time before she said something. One afternoon I
was supposed to be going over some order lists at the main counter
while
Dave worked on a display, bent over and just fifteen feet away. I must
have had that dazed stare I sometimes get when I’m outside of reality.
And reality had very little to do with the fantasy I was having.
Sure
enough,
Karen not only saw me but she busted me for it, just like she never
missed
a chance to bust something else on me. I was worried for awhile because
she loves to tease but I knew she’d keep her mouth shut.
She
slammed
a handful of magazines down and I jumped. “For God’s sake, why don’t
you
just ask him out?”
That
required
a witty answer on my part, of course.
“Huh?”
Karen
let
out a sound of exasperation and leaned close to me, careful to keep her
voice low. “I said, ‘ask him out’. What have you got to lose?”
My
mouth got
small and my eyes grew wide. “You mean Dave’s—”
She
laughed.
“I have no idea, but what the hell? He’s cute. He’s nice. And like I
said,
what have you got to lose?”
I
slumped
down and looked up at her. “How long have you been out of high school,
Karen?”
She
didn’t
answer of course, just narrowed her eyes and gave me That Look some
women
use when their age comes up, but I wasn’t letting it go. “Okay, try and
think way, way back to your one-room school house days. What happened
to
the gay kid when you went to school?”
She
did that
Dana Scully thing with her lips then let out a breath, shaking her head
sadly. “He got the shit kicked out of him.”
I
nodded.
“I go to school with Dave, Karen. He might be like me, but if he isn’t,
when I go back this September and he drops the ‘g’ word, I spend nine
months
in hell.”
Like
that
would stop a woman who envies a lawyer the ability to argue anything.
“Massachusetts
has laws, Chris. Schools are declared safe havens for gay youth.”
I
snorted
and looked her over coolly. “Did they have laws against criminal
assault
when you were my age?”
“......” sort
of approximates the look on her face and the sounds in her mouth, so I
kept going. “Make no mistake about it, Karen. Some things don’t change
just because the governor signs a bill – and a teacher or guidance
counselor
can still use the term ‘gay youth’ in front of an assembly and make it
sound like ‘fuckin’ faggot’.”
She
sighed,
scowling. “I guess some things never change. High School still sucks, I
guess.”
I
leaned forward
on the counter and nodded my agreement. She rubbed the back of my neck,
and her voice had that low, soothing sound some women do. “Your time
will
come, Chris. You’re cute and cool, sweet and nice. One day, if you play
your cards right, it will come.”
I
leaned my
jaw down into my hand, propped up on the counter. “Oh, I play my cards
often enough, and it comes all right. It’s just my right hand is
getting
worn out playin’ solitaire.”
She
laughed,
and swatted me. “There’s a new shipment loaded with stuff for the Gay
Studies
and Literature section, and I saw this really hot looking pair of
college
boys browsing over there a few minutes ago. Why don’t you go over and
do
some stock?”
My
eyebrows
shot up.
“Just
remember
though, take ‘em into the back room for the orgy, okay? That’s new
carpeting
over there and I don’t want stains all over everything.”
I was
very
mature, and stuck my tongue out at her.
She
grabbed
my arm before I left and leaned in again. “And Chris? You’re right.
Dave’s
is great,” she said, and took my place leaning on the counter
pretending
to go over the order sheets while Dave was still bent over his display.
I sniggered as I went off and busied myself unpacking a box of stuff
while
the two college guys looked everything over with interest except me,
but
all they did was giggle and leave.
And
that’s
where things stood all that summer – me looking and wishing, hanging
out
and peeking. And the best I could do was day-dream about David Sciuoto.
Plus
my level
of frustration wasn’t getting any help from my hormones. Summer
heightens
the need for sex. Hot air outside stirs up heat inside.
Then
one Friday
I just couldn’t take it any more.
I woke
up
with a pounder, took care of it, but before I finished my shower it was
tapping against the glass slider. I got to work and it was a steamer,
and
I swore every guy that came into or walked by the store had on less
clothing
than the one before. And you looked at these guys and you just knew
there
was some guy-model show in town. I toted a half-rock in my Dockers all
day at work, and every move I made just seemed to make it worse. Then
about
an hour before my shift ended I decided I was going to do more than
just
hang at the mall or wander aimlessly at Hampton that night. I mean, I
really
couldn’t take it any more, I had to do something, and it was a perfect
opportunity.
My
parents
were gone for the weekend and I was on my own, so I had a perfect
situation
going for me if I could just find someone else to share it with. I knew
this time my hand and the few improvised ‘toys’ I’d acquired weren’t
going
to cut it. I at least had to try something different, or I was gonna go
out of my mind. Thank God Dave was off that day or I probably would’ve
jumped him in the stock room the first time he bent over.
I
raced home
in my beat up Tercel and threw my clothes off as I made my way up the
stairs,
headed for the shower which I immediately cranked up to cold hoping to
take the edge off things. It worked for a while, but after slipping on
a pair of shorts and a tee and some flip flops, I could feel it
stirring
by the time I got down to the kitchen. I managed half a bologna
sandwich
when I just said, “Screw it!” and hoped I’d remembered to lock the door
and my parents hadn’t suddenly made a U-turn on the highway.
My guy
business
didn’t take long.
Chapter
Two
Early evening
on Route 3 North. And here I was, taking my last desperate chance.
The
dumbest
chance, too, because it’s the one that put me at risk – and not just
the
risk of being outed. I’d avoided this because of the physical danger
involved.
Why? Because if something went wrong... well, I already told you, there
isn’t that much of me.
The
August
sun finally slid down, and it was gradually beginning to darken and I
was
sitting in a rest area. It was one of the old style ones, just a sharp
ramp off the highway with plenty of woods around it. Picnic tables and
a big map, but no ‘facilities’ as they call them except for a quick
step-off
to the side and behind some trees.
It was
a Friday
evening, and the highway itself was packed with vacation travelers
headed
for the mountains of New Hampshire and shoppers for the ‘bargains’ in
the
no-sales-tax state, where prices were 5-10% higher than what these same
people would have paid in Massachusetts.
I sat
in the
car and looked around me, the woods blocking the sight and a lot of the
sounds of the highway. It was just that hour they call twilight, when
the
shadows begin and things start becoming a little less distinct.
I took
it
all in. There were half a dozen cars in here already, including my own.
One
guy who
was maybe forty walked slowly up and down the cracked asphalt sidewalk,
thumbs hooked on his pockets, casually checking each car over and
presumably
the occupant as well. According to the website that led me here, this
rest
area was one of the crusiest spots in northern Middlesex County. I
don’t
know how they polled it, but they guaranteed that ninety percent of
those
stopping would be gay men looking for – companionship.
Companionship
sounded good to me.
And I
was
tired of being in the minority every place I went, so it was nice
having
someone else be the ten-percenter for a change. Anyway, the old dude
was
checking things out and taking his time. Eventually it was my turn to
be
checked – I’d taken the first spot I saw when I came in, which made me
the last in line. That way I figured I could keep a better eye on
things.
It was
my
turn, all right. He paused, looked straight at me, and smiled.
I
froze in
my seat with my head aimed straight ahead, shaking more than a bit and
desperate not to show it. Shit, what if he started to hit on me? What
was
I going to say? Yeah, yeah, I thought I might be approached by some
older
guys; but somehow when I thought of ‘older’ I pictured some guy in his
twenties, not someone almost my Dad’s age. I mean, he wasn’t bad to
look
at really, no gut or anything, and he was dressed nice and all, but
damn
I didn’t want my first time to be with someone who could have been a
friends’
father. Bisexuality exists, right? The potential was there. If I had to
meet a bi-guy, I’d rather he was out of the Daddy Danger Zone.
I
heard a
quiet laugh and saw him move back up the row. He approached one of the
other cars, and leaned forward to talk to someone. Just the way he
stood
and talked told me they knew one another.
First
the
walker looked back at me, and then a head stuck out the window and this
other not-so-older guy looked my way, and I could see them both
pointing,
hear them both laughing.
Great.
Now
even the other queers thought I was a joke.
I sat
there,
fuming. Just what was so damned funny? Were they so old they couldn’t
remember
what it was like the first time? Weren’t they ever seventeen and so
horny
they didn’t know what else to do? Or maybe they did remember, and it
was
the memory of their own nervousness that triggered their laughter. I
smiled
then, and shook my head.
I
checked
the face and hair in the mirror. First strike was the nose – long and
pointed.
Not deformed but – well, if I had to get something from my father, I’d
rather have his nose than his hairline. Great tan, I thought, and those
highlights in my normally dishwater hair were sweet. I’d worn a white
A&F
polo (not too baggy, and not too long I hoped; I had enough problems
trying
to look over fifteen) and I had spent some time picking out a pair of
shorts
that were just right. Not the long, baggy, shapeless cargo shorts
everybody
wore; these were a pair of red running shorts, cut a bit high and snug
in just the right places.
I’d
skipped
underwear, but these had a nice jock in the crotch to keep the goods
from
flopping around too much, and still loose enough to allow for easy
access
if The Moment ever came. Cotton, too. That silky, synthetic stuff
manufacturers
use looks good and feels nice, and lets things hang right in all the
best
places just the right way, but God damn they hold in the heat and
sweat.
I didn’t want someone to catch a whiff and gag on me. Well, yeah,
gagging
was okay maybe, but I didn’t want them doing it because of the smell.
Sandals
sounded like a cool idea and looked good, until I thought about the
woods
and stumbling around in the dark. I dug out a pair of plain white Nikes.
I
rehearsed
my “casual” act in front of the full-length mirror at home, leaning and
standing different ways, trying out different expressions that would
make
me look cool and sexy: everything from Aguilar Sultry Sex Pot to
Brendan
Behr naiveté.
Yeah,
well,
better to look ridiculous at home with no one looking. If nothing else,
I knew what not to do.
I’d
tried
out a sock in the crotch thinking that might help, but that just made
me
look ridiculous and deformed. In the end I decided it was pointless
trying
these things out, so I just settled for what I thought would make me
look
kind of hot – just how I was now – and aside from a pair of small,
silver
hoop earrings (I won’t get into the parental bitching when I came home
with those on the first time), left everything the way it was. I
figured
if I could walk and talk and not trip over my tongue, I would do just
fine.
Except, I
wasn’t doing just fine.
The
only thing
in sight were those two old farts, and they were laughing at me. Well,
the hell with ’em. They were as close to me now as they were ever going
to get.
The
twilight
turned to night, and the cars came and went at a steady stream but the
place filled up. I heard doors slam and I could see shadows slipping
into
the woods. A few times I heard someone let out a deep moan not more
than
a few feet from me. I could see guys walking, leaning against the hoods
of cars, sitting on picnic tables. Sometimes they paired up and talked
and moved into the woods. Sometimes they got into each of their cars
and
drove off. A few just got into the car of one or the other and then
you’d
see a head disappear. Others drifted into the woods, while some came
out
hurriedly and drove off. Me, I sat in my cramped Tercel trying to get
up
the nerve to open the door and step into the night. I’d been thinking
of
doing that for over an hour now.
The
two old
farts met a third and they took over a picnic bench, pointing at my car
and laughing again. I’m sure if they could have seen it they’d have
shuddered
at the look I gave them. Then something in me clicked and I jerked up
the
door handle.
Suddenly I
was standing beside my car, kicking the door shut. One of my tormentors
whistled, and the other two applauded. I responded in a single-digit
salute
that only made them laugh more, and I shuffled over to the front of my
car and plopped myself down on the hood.
There
must
have been twenty-five cars in here now, all single occupancy, parked on
either side and pulled up onto the grass when the strip narrowed down.
I glanced at the woods, but decided I wasn’t that nuts – yet. Like I
said,
ninety percent of the guys in here were supposed to be gay. I didn’t
much
want to wind up running into one of the minority who thought it might
be
fun to beat up a small gay guy. Yes, I have heard of Matthew Shepherd,
thank you. And while what I was doing wasn’t all that smart or all that
safe, there were limits to just how dumb I was going to be. I wasn’t
about
to wander from my car. And no matter how horny I was (and believe me, I
was) I was not running into those woods, or jump at the first guy who
made
a move. I had standards.
We’d
talk
first, get to know each other a little. Being friends first is
important,
right?
Oh,
sure,
I was looking for friendship. And out of the darkness my first friend
showed.
A
silhouette
stepped out of the darkness; then some of the moonlight hit him, and I
started to see some details. Strange build – muscular arms and chest,
real
narrow at the waist, but skinny legs. Tats and no shirt. Very
small,
snug cut offs that didn’t leave much to the imagination, and – work
boots?
His hair wasn’t much more than stubble on his head, but not because he
was trying to hide a lack of growth.
Weird,
but
kind of cute. Not bad, I thought. Bigger than me, but who
isn’t?
As he
got
closer I assumed once he got a better look, he’d just turn around and
walk
back, but he didn’t. I heard a little chuckle. He had a cocky walk and
a deep voice to match it. “Hey, stud.”
“Huh?”
God,
I’m quick with the conversation.
He
stood in
front of me, and I felt like a piece of meat in a window while his eyes
raked over me before he spoke, but in a grating voice with a touch of
contempt
I didn’t much like.
“Jesus,
baby face, you just out of grade school or somethin’?”
I
stood on
my principles and forgot to lie. “I’m not a baby. I’m seventeen!”
Just
enough
moonlight to see his lips twist into a sneer and followed by a second
chuckle.
“Uh, huh. Almost legal,” he said, and a calloused hand brushed over my
cheek. I jerked back, and I saw his lips twist. “Sweet little new boy,
huh? Well, I like ’em young. Young, hung, and full of—”
His
hand shot out and grabbed the full package. Right then if I were
thinking,
I could have pushed him off, rolled either way and gotten away clean.
But,
um, well
I wasn’t thinking. Instead of lunging and rolling to the side, I
scampered
back onto the hood of the car, my feet dangling. It was just what he
wanted,
and he leaned into me with his long arms, pushed me back hard and
pinned
me down, my feet off the ground, trapped. He’d managed to get in
between
my legs so I couldn’t even kick – or try to slide forward and get away.
I
panicked,
but all I could do was squirm. Maybe I should have yelled, I don’t
know.
He was all over me and his big hands had my wrists pinned to the hood,
and he leaned down until we were almost face-to-face. He liked that I
was
scared, I know that now. He licked his lips, chuckling, his dark eyes
burning
down into mine. I could smell beer, sweat – and something else,
something
ugly. No, his face wasn’t ugly, not at all. But everything else about
him
was.
“C’mon
baby,”
he cooed, mocking, when he felt me shaking. “Let’s go into them woods,
okay? I can show you the best time you’ll ever have,” he said, grinding
himself into my crotch.
And
me? I
tried to struggle, but fighting was out – that already registered. I
still
didn’t know if I should scream like a wuss for help, or let myself get
used for a plaything. I couldn’t think it through that far yet.
“Whassa matter,
baby?” he said with a sneer, his face inches or less from mine. “Poor
little
chicky-boi afraid of the big, hung stud?”
“Look—please—”
He cut
me
off, leaning closer. I never saw such malice in anyone’s face. “Yeah,
you’ll
be saying please,” he said, and took a swipe of my nose with his
tongue:
“Please sir, go deeper,” nipping my chin. “Please sir, go harder,”
biting
my lower lip. “Maybe I should take you home for a party, huh? I can
call
a few friends – and then it’ll be ‘Please sir, pass me to your
friends’.
So, how much real action are you up for, kid? Come on, chicken
boy.
Give your new Daddy a kiss.”
I was
scared,
more scared than I’d ever been of anything else.
His
face was
suddenly out of mine, and my hands were free. He was gone.
Then I
saw
him. Airborne for a second, then slamming face first into a
forty-gallon
steel trash barrel.
I
didn’t know
how; I didn’t know why. I didn’t care either.
I
rolled off
the hood, stood shaking for all of two seconds and came to one of the
few
good decisions I’d made that night. I dove into my car and did what I
could
to make a Tercel leave rubber. Aside from a quick check to see if I’d
wet
myself, the only thing I did was drive the thirty odd miles back to
Haverhill
with my foot to the floor, screeching around the curve where Route 3
met
the Interstate. Every muscle in my body was tense, and my right leg was
rigid pushing to the floor boards. I had to remember when I took my
exit
to ease up, this was in-town driving and I could kill someone if I
drove
too fast. That’s when I realized how sore I felt, and I started to
loosen
up… and the shaking started, and didn’t ease up even as I drove too
fast
through town, ignoring the usual rule of fifteen over the twenty-mile
speed
limit. It’s a good thing it was late.
I
screeched
to a halt in the drive-way and hit the ground before the engine died
and
ran inside, fumbling the lock and looking over my shoulder.
Common
sense
told me the freak was still back on Route. 3, wondering what the hell
hit
him – kind of like I was starting to. But so far that night common
sense
hadn’t exactly been my companion, so why change then? Besides, another
part of me wanted the safety of my house, of my bedroom, of my bed
with the covers pulled up over my head.
I
slammed
and locked the front door behind me in one move, and leaned against it,
panting. Then I staggered into the kitchen, shaking, and opened the
fridge
and grabbed a beer. I never did much care for the stuff – still don’t –
but I wanted something that might give me a buzz and I didn’t have a
clue
about mixed drinks. Beer you just opened and swilled. I’d learned that
from my friends behind the stadium when I was fourteen. Swilling got
you
buzzed fast and that was good.
I
guzzled
down one, eyed the dwindling supply and took another. Let my parents
bitch.
I
checked
the clock on the wall and it wasn’t much past ten-thirty. A few hours
ago
I’d looked at that same clock and swore the next time I saw it I wasn’t
going to be a virgin any more. Well that didn’t work. But right now I
was
thankful about not bleeding, so I sat and drank. I’d almost stopped
shaking
when I heard a gentle knock at the door behind me.
I
froze.
Jesus,
how the hell did he find me?
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