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EDEN: A Sex Story

ChrisGibson

JUB Addict
Joined
Jan 18, 2019
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Location
South Bend
CHAPTER ONE

In the dark living room, Frey opened the door before the man could knock. He was, by his account, twenty eight, so barely a man, still a boy, and they were almost the same height, though this stranger was a little taller.
“Hi,” he said, his voice a little high and breathless.
“Good evening,” Frey said.
They were seeing each other, if only dimly. The young man closed the door behind him. They stood in the dark, doing nothing, and then Frey said, “Do you want anything? Like… I’ve got water…” because this seemed like manners, but Frey had no intention of giving up his beer.
“No,” said the stranger, and his voice was still high and breathy. Frey knew at moments like these men got afraid, maybe changed their minds, maybe thought you were afraid. The young man said, “You nervous?’
Frey lied because he thought it would be better.
“A little,” he said.
“Yeah,” the young man said.
Frey went to his knees, and unzipping the boy’s pants and yanking them down, he pulled the boy’s cock into his mouth.
“Oh…” the boy made a murmur, and Frey began sucking him, feeling his penis, once flaccid, begin to lift, to fill his mouth, to become firm, feeling the ball of his penis and the thickness of the long shaft, feeling more and more of it. The boy lay against the door, lifting his head and moaning and then pushing his hands to Frey’s head which he’d shaven a day ago. Frey held the boy by the hips and this stranger fucked his mouth, grasping his dick in his hand, catching his breath, Frey said, “Do you want the bed?”
“Yeah.”
Frey took him by the hand, and they weaved through the short maze of the darkened house. He had already pulled the curtain over the window, blocking out the moonlight, and in the darkness of the room they feverishly undressed and came together, and now Frey understood what this man had meant. This desire, this need was easier in the dark,. He needed to kiss a man and be held by a man and hold him so close, so intensely that he might bruise him. Men were such different creatures. On the bed, they kissed and humped, moaned and sucked in every way could.
“I want to you fuck me,” the boy said. He was asking, not demanding, and there was a tenderness and a need and a decisiveness that could only have come in the dark.
He had already eaten him out. He had already been unable to keep his face from the the tight roundness of his ass, the intimate space inside of this boy while he clung to the bed post. There was nothing like lubricant. In the dark Frey had used his saliva, spat into him before pressing his stiff penis inside of him. They had moaned together at that moment, fusing into something like one, the tightness of this boy and the stiffness of Frey. Neither of them spoke or made noise at the moment of entry, at the soft rocking together. While they fucked in the dark, only occasional breaths escaped.
“Come inside of me,” the boy pleaded, and almost as soon as he had pled, Frey felt something losing inside him, felt his breath go high, a high song escape his lips, his hands fly up, his whole being seized his cock and he flooded him. As he shot inside of him, the boy rose up, his ass clenching on Frey’s cock, pulling him in deeper, pulling every drop of seed from him. It didn’t stop, as Frey trembled, spilling, his knees buckling in the dark, he felt like he was dying ,like he would never be free of this coming, of this spurting of the tight heat with which the boy held him. He had spat on his hand and reached around and his hand was rhythmically stroking him so that, as Frey came, thick and slick he felt the boy’s semen on his hands, on his bedsheets, groaning, shouting, both of them unashamed of their helplessness, the two of them collapsed, exhausted and wrung out.
For a long time, like shock victims, they did nothing but tremble, stop, tremble again and breathe. This is what sex was supposed to be, Frey thought when he could think at all, when his soul wasn’t still flying about the tilting room.. This is why men feared it even though they wanted it and needed it. This feeling of being crushed and half destroyed, this aching and this dissolving, this dissssociation that happened after the orgasm.
They lay like that. Thighs and limbs sprawled together, sweat rag dolls abandoned by orgasm. Frey heard his companion swallowing, breathing shallowly. He heard him say, “Is it alright if I don’t leave right away?”
“I don’t care.” Frey was still breathing heavily. “I need a cigarette, though.”
He was about to get up when the young man said, “I’ve got Newports in my jacket.”
Frey’s eyes had adjusted for the dark. Climbing up out of the bed he was medium, white and narrow, his ass soft round hills.
The boy, white against the grey darkness promised, “I’ll be right back.”


The day he heard about Adam’s upcoming wedding, was the day that Isaiah Frey, aged thirty-seven decided enough was enough. and it wasn’t that he had loved Lorne so much. He was long over that idiot. It was just that, somehow, this ws the straw that broke the camel’s back.
“Only my back isn’t broken,” Frey said to himself. “And I’m not a camel.”
It was summer, and school was out. No more books, no more children’s dirty looks. Even as Frey packed his bags he did an assessment of those who would need him. Sharon was a grown woman. DJ was seventeen and communicated in grunts half the time. Javon was nineteen and in college, no longer the needy little nephew. Dad was semi senile but had Mom who was… not entirely clever, almost devoted to being dull. He did an assessment of it all, and decided that all of it could live without him for a little while. He told no one, except that he had paid rent up for the next two months, and then he got on his bike and rode out of the courtyard of his apartment building. He rode through downtown and then he loaded his bike up on the Number 4 Bus that stopped beside the gas station on the western end of downtown, and he let the bus take them both to the train station. He had a carton of Marlboro Blacks that said that biking was not for health, but simply for transportation.
The only friend he had talked to was Deborah. She had said before, “My family has places all over the state, and if you ever need one I can make that happen. Given the lack of success Deborah often had in getting her family to do what she wanted, Frey had his doubts regarding this, but that day, when he’d received the wedding invitation from Adam, he’d gotten on the phone and called her, and now he was on his train, on his way to one of those ltitle whistle stops he always passed between here and Chicago. He would get off at that whistle stop, and he imagined, “I will climb out, break a limb off a tree, use it for a staff, buy a six pack of beer and brave the hillbillies. I will make myself a temporary home away from everything.”
A voice whispered into his head, and he imagined it to be a white woman’s, “You will find yourself.”
“Fuck that,” Frey told her, “I don’t want to find a goddamn thing.”
In fact, he was more than happy to lose himself, and everything else for that matter.

“I wanted to travel light,” He mumbled to himself as he got on the four o’ clock train. He remembered that now that it was summer, it wouldn’t be dark for another five hours.
“I want to be light as Henry David thoroea.”
He had said that before, written it in a poem. But he had taken his laptop, and it wasn’t that slim Apple of his dreams. It was a shitty old Dell PC, and because it was awful to type on and the keyboard aside from being unappealing was also defective, he had brought along an external keyboard as well, and after this a printer and so this was the beginning of his not being so light and frre.
As the train began to lurch forward, the promise of travel having been denied the passengers for the last twenty minutes, Frey thought of the homeless people downtown, rolling their possessions in wheeled suitcases, carrying their whole lives on elaborate wheels. As he grunted, shifting his bags, he realized, “I cannot afford to travel light. Even traveling lightly is a luxury.”

This had seemed like a good idea. It was still plenty of daylight when he got off the train, strapped his bag to his back and over the saddlebags of the bike, then began the careful riding over the tracks and onto a tree bordered country road with only the occasional truck. The directions to the house were good, but Frey thought, “Maybe I should have stayed in a hotel for the night.”
There was very little out here, power lines through the green trees, an summer sky whose blue was beginning to thicken with a heat he was unaccustomed to, the sparkling glass of filled reservoirs and little ponds. The house was at the edge of town, but the town was at the edge of everything. The house was little and brick and one storied and built off the road, at a lower level so that’s its front yard was reached after traveling down a low stair, and behind it was a large yard, and just through the fence he could see a further depression that did not lead to an alley, but to a defile that led to more grass and train track and then across it more filed.
For just a moment Frey felt peace. He had an irrational sense that everything was going to be more than all right. He stood outside of the house, opening the door, and then after working with the locks, which gave way, rolled the bicycle into the house, let down his heavy backpack with a sigh of relief, and looking at the walls as he entered the fustiness said, “Thank God. Air conditioning.” He hadn’t thought much about it, not consciously. But now he realized how miserable he would have been without it.

He had done it, and he had done it with little thought. There was no food and no drink in the house. Frey had most wanted to make sure there actually was a house. The sun was still very much up, and he got on his bike and rode to the convenience store he’d seen near the train tracks. He didn’t know where any other stores were, and Frey got a pizza for the night, a pizza for the morning, beer and Pop Tarts for dessert. Cigarettes were not necessary. He already had them. Before he checked out of the fluorescent lit store, he made sure there would be no other need to come back here tonight, and then turned around and went back to the house.
The sky was beginning to darken, but not like winter which he could still not get out of mind. It was the summer darknening, as if God were slowly turning a dimmer down on everything so that the sun was still sunny, but less so, the sky still blue, but not as brilliant, the grass a darker green until all settled into night. The phone was plugged into the wall, and the speaker was plugged into the phone, and Frey realized he had not asked if there was Internet. He had doubted, coming in, that Internet reached this place. But it did, and BBC Radio 4 made him feel connected to the world, less alone. He needed to be on his own, but not completely alone, and tonight, over pizza and beer, hearing about bombings in Sri Klanka and the kidnap of African girls by bands of hostile Muslims he was strangely comforted.
Maybe it was time to reevaluate. Maybe a city was what he needed most of the time, but this is what he needed now, what was available, what was right here. His friends, his white friends, always talked about how scared they were in the city, how dangerous the city was, how nice it would be to be out in the country. His parents could say the same stupid shit, but this is what comes from living around white people and running away from your own for so long. Frey had gone to school in the country. Cornfields and pale faces were not unknown to him. He had gone to a college in Michigan with eight hundred people in a town where the only attraction was a Wal Mart and an abandoned theatre, and he had not felt unsafe. But he had been aware. The country lacked much, like stores, for one, good hospitals, a reliable fire department or police department. It had wild animals. It had wild white people. His best friend Deborah had declared, “Out in the country, people are free to do what they want, and there isn’t as much interfering.”
Yes, Frey had said, that was the problem. No one who had ever seen Klan meetings, or passed a shady looking VFW with a Confederate flag hanging from it, no one whose parents had fled Alabama to avoid lynching could smile on a place where white people were free to do, unchecked, whatever they saw fit.
“Fear….” Frey murmured. “No.
“Caution?”
Well, yes, always.

After caution, after the feeling of rest that comes from sitting in the early night with British voices coming from the radio with the comfort of air conditioning, he gets in the shower and then lays out naked in the bed in the dark. He opens a window, and the moon comes through. It’s almost full and it stays in the bedroom, blue white. This is not like those normal nights back in town where he stays up till three in the morning, until four sometimes, waiting to be exhausted by work, and he doesn’t want to work tonight. He lays there on his back, drifting in and out of sleep, and now and again his cock rises and falling as he drifts in and out of lust.
He rolls over and turns on the app on his phone. Here he is far from any chance of meeting a man, and when he drifts to sleep, for just a moment he sees Adam. He sees Jason too, and that winter day when, red cheeked and red lipped he first went out with Jason Henley, and thought, at last, he might have found someone to love, and now Adam is getting married and Jason is on the other side of the world, though his son is sitting in Frey’s house. Frey does not like to dwell on pity. He thought he’d finished mourning his love life a long time ago.
He is hit up before he gets to hit on anyone. The red light says someone has messaged him.
“What are you looking for?’
“I don’t know.”
The usual lie. Only its not totally a lie. “I’m open.”
“I’m open too.
“I just want to meet someone,” Frey says, which isn’t very eloquent. He doesn’t feel like being eloquent.
“I do too,” the response comes. “But I don’t want to be anyone tonight.”
This almost makes sense because where there whould be a face picture or any picture there is just, in the black icon space, a slightly less black grey shape of a head and only the age of the person, 28. He needs to stop meeting these babies, but then, tonight he’s not really trying to meet the love of his life, and at any road, this guy found him.
Frey reads again.
“But I don’t want to be anyone tonight.”
Frey is about to write, Alright. Instead he types: EXPLAIN
“I don’t want to be anyone.”
The response comes after a space of blackness.
“I don’t want to explain anything or have any story. I don’t even want faces. I want to meet a guy in the dark and just do things.”
“Cause you’re in the closet?”
“I’m not in the closet.”
` The response comes back quickly
“I’m just really tired of being me.”
A minute later, while Frey is still thinking about this, the typing continues, “If you like it we can do it, if not, I’m sorry, I’ll move on.”
But Frey hasn’t looked down, lying their naked in the semi darkness, he is already hard at the idea of this anonymous sex coming. He is already hard with the idea of the simplicity or it, the lack of morality, the lack, even, of good sense.
“Where do you want to do it?”
“We could do it my truck.”
There is an option. Frey doesn’t now how he feels about the option, though. He hasn’t said yes or no.
“We can’t do it in my house.”
“Wife and kids?” Frey says. He tries not to put disdain into this because, after all, he might consent to this shit anyway.
“No. Sick mom and dad.”
“Oh, sorry.
“Thanks.”
“Doing it in a truck is trashy,” the guy writes back.”I just don’t know where else.”
“This house,” Frey types a moment later. “I’m just visiting. I don’t live here. I’m here for the night so it’s not really anyone’s home. This house.”
“Where?”
“Uh…”
Frey gets up, and he moves out of the bedroom and into the living room. He thinks for a moment before opening the door and comes out naked to read off the address “24613. The State Road, down from the convenience store. Don’t know if you know it.”
“I know it. I can be there in less than ten minutes. Can we do it in the dark. No lights?”
He has just lectured himself about living out in the country where strange white people do strange things, where his black body could be left for dead and no one be the wiser for some time and now, having left the city, with no one he loves knowing where he is, he is inviting some strange white boy, with no face, to show up and have sex with him in the dark.
“Do you need to shower or anything?” Frey speaks into the phone and watchs his words sail into print in a yellow bubble on a black conversation screen.
“No, I just showered when I got home from work. I wanted this tonight. I’m ready.”
“Well, then I’ll see you soon.”

It was with the same sex thrill that always struck him, that he heard the truck roll up to the road a little ways off, saw the red lights glare and then go out, heard the door crash, and saw the form of him, not too tall, obscured by the dark, make the low tip into the yard which was below the level of the road, screened in by a hedge, and walk the ways up to the door.
 
A great start to this new story! I like Frey, he seems to be an interesting character and I look forward to reading more about him. The sex scene at the start was hot! Great writing and I look forward to chapter 2!
 
For some people I think it is just they don't really have the ability or the desire to know anyone, so I'll just get that out of the way, but I also think it's just the elemental nature of it. That's why I called this a sex story instead of a love story. They are looking for the sheer power of sex without all of the things we wrap it up in, morality, relationships, love or hate or shame for that matter. Do you know what that's like?
 
For some people I think it is just they don't really have the ability or the desire to know anyone, so I'll just get that out of the way, but I also think it's just the elemental nature of it. That's why I called this a sex story instead of a love story. They are looking for the sheer power of sex without all of the things we wrap it up in, morality, relationships, love or hate or shame for that matter. Do you know what that's like?

Yeah I do.
 
Well, that's what I wanted to look at. Two people coming together for sheer desire, no back story, not even any identity as far as the other is concerned, and see what springs from it.
 
CHAPTER ONE CONTINUED


“Come inside of me,” the boy pleaded, and almost as soon as he had pled, Frey felt something losing inside him, felt his breath go high, a high song escape his lips, his hands fly up, his whole being seized his cock and he flooded him. As he shot inside of him, the boy rose up, his ass clenching on Frey’s cock, pulling him in deeper, pulling every drop of seed from him. It didn’t stop, as Frey trembled, spilling, his knees buckling in the dark, he felt like he was dying ,like he would never be free of this coming, of this spurting of the tight heat with which the boy held him. He had spat on his hand and reached around and his hand was rhythmically stroking him so that, as Frey came, thick and slick he felt the boy’s semen on his hands, on his bedsheets, groaning, shouting, both of them unashamed of their helplessness, the two of them collapsed, exhausted and wrung out.
For a long time, like shock victims, they did nothing but tremble, stop, tremble again and breathe. This is what sex was supposed to be, Frey thought when he could think at all, when his soul wasn’t still flying about the tilting room.. This is why men feared it even though they wanted it and needed it. This feeling of being crushed and half destroyed, this aching and this dissolving, this dissssociation that happened after the orgasm.
They lay like that. Thighs and limbs sprawled together, sweat rag dolls abandoned by orgasm. Frey heard his companion swallowing, breathing shallowly. He heard him say, “Is it alright if I don’t leave right away?”
“I don’t care.” Frey was still breathing heavily. “I need a cigarette, though.”
He was about to get up when the young man said, “I’ve got Newports in my jacket.”
Frey’s eyes had adjusted for the dark. Climbing up out of the bed he was medium, white and narrow, his ass soft round hills.
The boy, white against the grey darkness promised, “I’ll be right back.”

“This is a good cigarette,” Frey said, lying on his back and blowing smoke to the ceiling while he watched the cherry glow red. He pointed it away from him, toward the wet paper cloth they’d put on the bed between them.
“Why thank you, sir,” The young man said, with a little laugh.
“It’s strong as fuck. You said Newports?”
“Yeah. Reds.”
Neither one of them spoke for a while, and then the redhead said, “I had to get out. I couldn’t go home. At least not right away. I couldn’t stay home. You know?”
“I do know,” Frey said. “I know so much I got on a train and came here.”
“Right,” the boy blew smoke out of his nose, and then Frey said, “Do you have a name. So I don’t keep calling you ‘him’ or ‘the guy’ in my head.”
He laughed again and said, “Rob.”
“Alright, Rob. Well then, Frey. Or you can call me whatever.”
“Frey,” Rob nodded and ashed his cigarette. “Cool.”
They were quiet a while, then Rob said, “What did you come here for? Or do you leave town a lot and then meet guys?”
“I… Well, if you must know, my ex commited sucide and they found his body in the river today.”
“Oh, fuck!”
“Not really,” Frey said.
“What?”
“I lie a lot,” Frey said, negligently. “What really happened is that someone I loved, still loved, who I thought, one day, I would be with, had found someone whose one day is today, and they are getting married. I didn’t know I thought we’d be together one day until now. When I realized we wouldn’t be. Isn’t that crazy?”
“No,” Rob said. “And to tell you the truth, your first story was better. That really sucks. I’m sorry to hear that.”
“He wasn’t even really by boyfriend,” Frey said. “Not really.”
“But still.”
“Yeah,” Frey supposed. “I guess. So I just came out here to clear my head.”
“That’s deep,” Rob said.
“You could have killed me,” Frey said, suddenly.
“I had thought about that,” Rob said. Then he said, taking another inhale, “Not the killing you part. I thought, ‘Here I am, going to meet this guy, and he could kill me or something.’”
“But you came.”
“And you invited me.”
“What is it with us?” Frey said. “You hear about it happening. Guys who get killed, found out. They say it was a gay crime, but you know he was going to hook up or something and got his head chopped off. What is it?”
“Whaddo you think it is?” Rob said. “You’re asking a question you can answer yourself.”
Rob shrugged and Frey turned on his side. “That’s too easy.”
The cigarette glowed bright orange with Rob’s intake and then, exhaling, he said, “The need to bust a nut? You think?”
“Nope,” Frey said. “Cause you can do that safely by yourself and lots of people do.”
“I just needed to be with someone,” Rob said.
“That’s it.”
“I needed to be with someone. And I even needed… the danger. The danger of meeting another person. Sex with yourself is always… you know how it will turn out. It’s always good. But… To be with someone else. Just the whole someone else. To be touched by someone. To touch someone. That’s why we do it.”
“Then why do they do it?”
Frey crushed out his cigarette.
“Who do it?” Rob said.
“The men who kill you. Or the ones who come here, fuck, and then go to Confession or block you or hate you or never speak to you again? Or the men who talk to you online for three weeks and then stop, or decide they’re tired of you. Or any of that? The assholes. Why do they do it? Why are they assholes?”
“Huh?”
“While you think about it,” Frey said, rolling out of bed and standing up on his feet which hurt again from the long day, “I’ll go get some beer.”
When he came back and sat the beer on the bed, Rob said, “Shit, and cold too!”
He pushed his cigarettes over toward Frey in the dark, and as Frey heard the beer crack open, Rob declared, “This is turning out to be quite the night.”
Frey had lit his next cigarette when Rob said, “Because it’s a need.”
“Huh?”
“You asked why. Because it’s a need. We act like it’s a want, but it’s a need. The need to be touched, to feel, to fuck, to be fucked. It’s a need. And guys don’t like needing things.”
They drank and smoked in silence and Rob said, “Can I use your bathroom?’
“If you can find it.”
In the dark, Frey lay on his back and listened to Rob pissing. It was a long stream, and when it sounded like it had ended it began again, and then after the flush, the running of water. Frey went into the bathroom next, and when he came back, Rob was lying on his side. Without asking, they linked their bodies together, touching testing, dozing, at last, making love again, this time with less inhibition, this time, touching tasting, biting even, sweating, shouting out, exploding until they passed out in the night, until the room was filled with sweat and funk and man and must, until the house was filled with their shouts, their moans, their cries, until they lay in each others arms, exhausted, aching, and at peace.

By the graying light he could begin to see Rob, and this was when Rob started to stir and stretch. It must have been four in the morning, the light before light, and Rob yawned, “I need to get home.”
“It would defeat the whole fucking in the dark and not seeing each other thing,” Frey said.
Rob turned around and smiled at him.
“It’s not that,” he said, “I don’t want to wear out my welcome, and I have to leave some time.”
Frey nodded and turned over on his stomach pressing his face into the pillow. He felt the bed lifting as Rob climbed out of it.
“And I have to take my dad to church at six. He goes to Mass every day.”
Frey looked up, shielding his eyes, though there was as yet no true light.
“And you wait outside for him?”
“No, I go in with him.”
Frey watched Rob dress in the semi dark, and then he said, “Are you sure you have everything?”
“I do.”
In the distance there had been a whistle, and now the train came charging past them, and it was the sound of wind and engine and chugging and neither of them said anything while it passed. Rob just stood there, his shirt ouf of his pants, feed cap over his face, his cigarettes in his breast pocket.
“Are you going to be here a while?” Rob asked.
“I think,” Frey said. “I don’t know. I came on a lark. Who says lark anymore? I’m not sure how long I’ll be here, but I’m not leaving today.”
“So you’ll be here tonight?”
“Yes. I’m pretty sure I will be. Yeah.”
“Can I come back?” Rob said. “Would you mind that? I mean, like to try it?”
“Sure. What will we do?” Frey said, a little uncessairly.
“I don’t know?” Rob shrugged, putting a cigarette in his mouth, putting one cigarette on the bed for Frey. “Fuck again. Whatever.”
“When are you free?” said Frey who had had many men ask something like this and never show up again.
“I’m off work at seven.”
“Hit me up then,” Frey said. Standing up, naked, he said, “I’ll walk you to the door.
He only pulled on his underwear. At-the-door protocol was always strange, but this ended in a hug. He thought about kissing Rob, but didn’t. He closed the door and from the window watched him walk the little yard, go up the steps past the hedge, watched the lights of the truck turn on, watched him make a u-turn and head down the road, rolling over gravel. The sky was dark grey now. Frey’s body felt a quiet, tired joy after the night of lovemaking and conversation. He told himself it was unlikely he would ever see Rob again, and satisfied with what had been, made his way to the bedroom, and to deep sleep under the covers.
 
A good continuation of Chapter 1. I know Frey and Rob are only having casual sex but I see something between them that is more than just that. I guess I will have to wait and see what happens next! Great writing and I look forward to more!
 
Well, you know, people are always making sex the end all and be all that you work up to, and I am looking at it not as the end, but as the root from which something springs. Does that make sense?
 
I also think it's the way things often happen, and I want to get people away from looking at how things SHOULD happen, and onto how they sometimes do.
 
CHAPTER ONE: CONCLUSION


The sun was starting to come up when Rob came to the old split level at the end of a row of split levels. He measured that he had about an hour or so before six. He yawned and parked on the street and then walked around to the back of the house. He stood in the darkness of the kitchen for a while, and for a moment forgot who he was. Then he walked down the stairs, pulling off his shoes midway. In his the basement he thought how he didn’t want to shower. How he liked the smell on him of last night, and he longed to return to that man’s bed, to not have this life he had to come back to right now. But even as he thought it, he pulled out clean clothes and then went upstairs to use the first floor shower, to stand under the heavy drops and their low water pressure.
His father had coffee on when Rob was finished dressing. When Rob sat down, his father pushed a cup of coffee then the cream and sugar across the table to him, and they drank in silence until the older man looked at his wrist and Rob nodded and stood up, crossing the kitchen to take the keys from the wall by the old rotary phone.

“When I start driving again I’m going to go back up to that little church in LaPorte,” his father was saying as they drove down Brooklyn Street. “I used to go there when I was a little boy, and I remember one Sunday I went and there was this man, and he lived on the streets. He was always coming 0to the church. And it was communion time, and he was in the line, and when the cup came ot him, he drank the whole chalice and then walked away. He did that a few times a year.”
Rob could tell this story now. He knew it. He could even tell its variations. It shifted. As they turned the corner of Gerald Street, a man was riding his bike and his father said. “I probably need to put more air in my tires. So I can ride my bike again. He sits on his seat. I never sit on my seat when I ride my bike. You think the bike needs more air? I probably haven’t ridden it in about two years. It’s been two years since the stroke, so it would be two years.”
Not that his father was ever silent, but it seemd like the stroke had made him more talkative and certainly less accurate. As they turned the corner and came before Saint Augustine’s, the little limestone Catholic church, Rob thought how the good thing about the stroke was that once his father started talking, he never had to add to the conversation. He never even had to say yes, or uh huh or oh really. In fact, he could say anything. As they parked in a space before the east wall, Rob tested out this out by saying, “Like sandfleas?”
“Exactly,” his father nodded his head and got out of the other side of the car.
Together, his father hobbling a little less stable than he had once done, a lot thinner than he had been before, they came through the side door into the little transept of Saint Augustine’s. Rob dipped his fingers in holy water. The place smelled faintly of frankincense from morning prayer. He crossed himself and genuflected after his father, and they sat in the transept of the quiet church. This is how he liked churches, when they were six thirty a.m. quiet with only the faithful, or the caretakers of the faithful, and the modern lantern lights shining on the terrazzo frloo. He could look to his right and see the the people, most of them old, coming in through the front door, crossing themselves. Rob and his father were to the left of the modern altar, which came out like a slightly raised dais, and had a wooden screen behind it where the tabernacle was kept, and where some people, a couple of African nuns, that old woman who worked at the library, the weird guy at the grocery store, were coming out. Above the altar was suspended a modern crucifix, and while Jeff looked at it, Father Rafferty, Bill Rafferty’s older brother, came out in his white and green robes and announced, as he held the missal in his hand, “Good morning, let’s start out by singing, ‘City of God’.”
It wasn’t so much an annoucnemnt as a friendly suggestion to open up the Glory and Praise, and his father, though old, had been young in the eighties, and was still high on the days of folk guitars and a time when people assumed women would soon be priests, and the church would be a kinder, gentler place. That was still the church his father belonged to, why he had no problem singing very loud and acapella though Rob was put off by it.

“….A new day is dawning for all those who weep.
The people in darkness have seen a great light.
The Lord of our longing has conquered the night.

Let us build the city of God.
May our tears be turned into dancing!
For the Lord, our light and our love,
has turned the night into day!”

The church in LaPorte his father talked about so often was Saint Pancras, and even though he liked coming to saint A’s with his dad, and the gentleness of these morning masses, he longed for a bit of the incense and statues, and the formality of a high mass.
Before they had moved here, they had gone to a huge old church. That’s when Rob was a little boy, and he had been an altar boy in his white robe and served the priest, and at that church they had still rung the bells. They were doing that again sometimes, so many bells, when the chalice was lifted, when the bread was lifted, when it was put down. And Rob had felt important. He was sure that he would be something important. He in his robe, almost a little priest himself. Back then he’d thought maybe he would be a real priest some day. After all, didn’t he love God? And after all, did he really need girls?
It had been some time later he’d discoved he didn’t like girls because he was a faggot, and that maybe the reason he had felt at one with the priest was the priest probably was too. There was that whole time in his life when he was scandalized hearing about priests seducing altar boys, hearing about how priests had often themselves been seduced altar boys. Now he wasn’t scandalized at all. No one was really that special. No one was really holy. But we wanted to believe someone was, that he could be at least a little bit special.
It was time to stop thinking now. That was his problem. These thoughts. All scattered, coming and going and never leading to anything.

“….He asked me, ‘Have you seen this, son of man?’
Then he brought me to the bank of the river, where he had me sit.
Along the bank of the river I saw very many trees on both sides.
He said to me, ‘This water flows into the eastern district down upon the Arabah,
and empties into the sea, the salt waters, which it makes fresh.
Wherever the river flows, every sort of living creature that can multiply shall live,
and there shall be abundant fish,
for wherever this water comes the sea shall be made fresh.”

That was another part of it. Holiness took some sort of stamina, some resolve that Rob had never had. He didn’t have the resolve to try to understand the obscure things in the Bible. He didn’t have the resolve or the curiosity to ask or wonder for very long. He had a general love of shiny things, incense and feeling special. He didn’t have the resolve to pray past “Jesus make me good”, and in the end, he didn’t have the resolve to be good.
The night he’d gotten the phone call that said, “If you ever want to see your father alive, you need to come down to the hospital,” was a blessed night, and he would always look at it that way because it was the time when he finally got to have resolve. When he was being called a faggot in junior high, he didn’t have the resolve to wonder if he was, and when sex presented itself in the shady way it eventually had, he didn’t have the resolve to resist. All of his life was little accumulated surrenders and lacks of efforts, and for the first time, in the hospital sitting next to his father, or walking him up and down a crooked path through rehab, pushing his wheelchair while he farted, Rob learned resolution. When his mother was gone to Chicago and Rob, still living on his own, moved into the house to take care of a man who was just getting his mind back and, without his wife, had sunk into delusions, resolve came. Goodness came.
“God came,” Rob whispered.
“What?” his father, who never heard half of his conversations, but was able to hear things Rob had not meant him to, said.
“Nothing,” Rob said.






Mass was over by seven. He had to be at the store by nine. Almost two hours to lay on the bed and be half in and out of sleep. The rest of his life was normal, was standing behind a counter and stocking beer in freezers, was the same customers, the same fluorescent lights, the same pick up trucks rolling in and out of the gravel lot outside. But coming to Mass with his father he felt something special, like maybe he was special, a little bit, like maybe this life was special.
He had learned how to handle sex by now. Most of his sexual experiences were forgettable. They were part of life, often something that rose and needed to be taken care of and, once taken care of, were put aside. Some sex was best forgotten. This morning, in his house he kept on thinking of last night in that man’s house. Frey’s house. Last night had lasted into the morning, which had lasted so much logner than he’d meant it too, which didn’t have the disappointments of most experiences. He lay on his bed waiting for work, half asleep with his alarm set, his mind drifting between Mass this morning withthe brass lamp light on the terrazzo floor and the darkness and cigarette smoke, the beer and the flesh and the fucking of last night, and his body longed for both.
 
A great conclusion to Chapter 1! It was nice to read more about Rob and his father. Excellent writing and I look forward to Chapter 2!
 
I've seen a lot of gay porn and wondered, so, okay, what happened after that little event, and what happened before. Even if it's amateur, how did those guys get to that place and what do they do with themselves after. To me that's where the story is. It was time to get Rob out of the bedroom and see the rest of his life, because of course, this was the life he was trying to escape and the identity he didn't want to be burdened with for a little while. I did wonder who Rob would turn out to be, and now we're finding out. We already knew a little about Frey, but nothing of Rob? Did you wonder?
 
I've seen a lot of gay porn and wondered, so, okay, what happened after that little event, and what happened before. Even if it's amateur, how did those guys get to that place and what do they do with themselves after. To me that's where the story is. It was time to get Rob out of the bedroom and see the rest of his life, because of course, this was the life he was trying to escape and the identity he didn't want to be burdened with for a little while. I did wonder who Rob would turn out to be, and now we're finding out. We already knew a little about Frey, but nothing of Rob? Did you wonder?

Yeah I did wonder about Rob's back story, so this part was a welcome addition to the story.
 
Well, there will certainly be more tomorrow night. I am thinking of eventually doing too post a night, but I feel like that would be a bit much to read.
 
As you say, once a day is plenty, so maybe on a weekend or something I'll post twice. Too much of a good things... is just too damn much.
 
“'Cause like a princess she was laying there
Moonlight dancing off her hair
She woke up and took me by the hand
She's gonna love me in my Chevy van
and that's all right with me!”

- Sammy Jones














CHAPTER TWO

PART ONE


Frey slept till nine o’ clock and thought he would sleep longer. After a night of lovemaking his body still thrummed. He hugged the pillows to himself, and he could still smell him, smell Rob. He could smell the ghost of his cigarette smoke, the sweat memory of his body in these sheets. And there was the possibility that he would come back. Frey squeezed his thighs together, hugged himself and rolled about in the heavy covers, the covers that were wonderful with the feeling of being in a bed not his own that was his own, in a life that was not his own that was now his too in a place where he had never been. Mother would be okay, Sharon would be okay. The children would be okay, they were grown anyway. Put them all away. That’s why he had left.
He lay on his back for some time, and when Frey looked at the clock he realized it was still not ten o’ clock. But hadn’t he planned to sleep all day, deep into the day? But now he didn’t want to, and the sun was coming through the shades. Now a new idea was in his head.
“But I was going to sleep late, eat pizza, drink beer. Write.”
But instead he was getting in the shower. He was dressing, and drinking a beer while he dressed. This would be so much less energy than when he took the train from South Bend. He loaded his bag, got his keys, locked the door behind him, though he wondereed if that was even necessary, and then rolling his bike across the yard, took it up the hillock and set down the road for the train station. After a quick half mile, he turned and rode past the convenience store and over the tracks. He locked his bike in the station that looked like it saw few visitors, and waited for the train. He could see it tiny in the eastern distance a little before he could hear it, and then there it was coming closer and now, in all of its largeness, here it was, and he climbed on, and just like that, the original plan for the day was gone, and Frey was on his way to Chicago.

Less than two hours later, he was on Randolph Street and it was cooler and greyer than the green place he’d left, Stretching his neck to the buildings above, he rejoiced in the clatter of the rails, and bustle of people walking back and forth. He walked toward Wabash and then State and turned toward Lakewalking up and down the broad lanes and smiling politely, but avoiding canvassers and beggars. Now, as he passed the Chicago Theater, the sun began to peep out, shining over State Street with its cars passing in stately fashion while bikes glided up and down and around corners. He passed the subway entrance and climbed up the network of wooden platforms looking down on the street that was the Brown Line Station. Today he didn’t want to be underground. He wanted to see the Chicago he was coming through. He wanted to see the brick buildings and limestone ones, the high glass buildings, glittering blue from reflected sun and sky, and he wanted to see the river as the El clattered over Wacker Drive and over the blue green water..He didn’t really want to see the city.
He loved the passing backs of the apartments and looking onto the streets stretching out to left and right, but he was not here for them. He didn’t understand that right away, and the train was filled with people who looked busy and tired of life, who were not visiting the city on an outing, not trying to get away from their life. When he got off at Loyola, Frey went up Sheridan noticing how he moved too slow for someone who lived here anymore, and too assuredly for a visitor, and then he turned into Arondale and made his way to the beach where the world was in three stips, the tan earth of sand and cement, the deep blue of the everlasting water, and the pale stretching blue of the sky, and he sat on a rock, took out his pad and began to write.
This water, so huge, so blue, so don’t leave me stay with me, changing in its colors, was speaking, and now everything he had felt did not matter. He didn’t understand how he hadn’t quite been able to breathe, how since hearing about Adam’s wedding, his heart had been living somewhere in his throat, now looking down into the water from the pier he saw the blue to green and then the green to blue, green to glass green and now nothing, and he scribbled as it came to him:

She said yes, be all
She flipped her tail and shimmered
first green to blue,
to pearl to nothing at all
she said be tender
She said, yes be small
She said be little
She said it by saying nothing at all

He walked across the sand, sandals in hand, and looked down to see a stick washed up by the sand, then reached down and tugging it, realized it was a root. He looked all around and up, across the beach to the trees in the park. Was it possible? But it had to be that this root going into the water of Lake Michigan had to be from one of those trees. What a far flung root.

A fat dog, something like a not quite corgie ran up to him, its eyes sparkling and its tail wagging. It barked and he said, “Hello.” It barked again, and wagging, its tiall having said all it needed to say, it ran away. Trudging behind it came a man in black who didn’t seem fun enough for this dog. Frey followed the dog to the beginning of the pier and sat down taking up his phone and looking up the word radical:



rad•i•cal | \ ˈra-di-kəl \
Definition of radical
(Entry 1 of 2)
1: of, relating to, or proceeding from a root: such as
a(1): of or growing from the root of a plant: radical tubers
(2): growing from the base of a stem, from a rootlike stem, or from a stem that does not rise above the ground: radical leaves

He took out his pad and thought of the tough tree root, and while the green blue water lapped beneath him he wrote.


Radical, not farsical
Simple, not quoting the quotable
Stand there in the small breeze
The sand washed up, black and soaked to show
a thick root from a distant tree
It said: be like me
Small, and tough as stone,
Slender and lyrical
it rose from the sand alone
such is the mystery and meaning
of being radical.

Well, then that was what he had to be right now.

On the way back shome, as the train rolled from under the shadow of the Van Buren Street station, he was still scribbling, and all the city of Chicago had finally peeled away and he was looking over the small towns and their bungalows and factories when he wrote:

Oriens

You cannot forget him
So learn every line of his face
He will not complete the story
So tell a new one in his place
Learn to absorb him
Like the sun into the sea
Like light now twinkling dim
On the night stream running free



He was half asleep when his phone buzzed. At first he thought it was someone from home, but the noise the phone made told him it was his dating app. He turned it on and there was the darkened icon and then a message that said, “Are you around tonight?’
Rob.
From last night.
Rob who had left this morning asking if he could write again.
Frey stirred from his sleep and typed
“I went to Chicago. I’m on the train coming home now.”
“To your home home, or home back here?’
That was a good question, but Frey realized he hadn’t even though of going back to Calverton.
He said, “Back where you are.”
A few moments passed, and Frey thought of writing something, and then Rob wrote back.
“Are we on for tonight? Or no?”
“Yes,” Frey said, because he didn’t want to turn down… well, anything, really.
He was about to type that he needed to take a nap, that he needed to wash the road, or the train off of him when Rob wrote.
“I work next to the station, in this convenience store. I could just pick you up.”
It almost sounded desperate, but why did it sound desperate? He was so used to men being distant and bad. He thought, and then he said, “Alright then.”
I’ll be off the train in…” he looked at the schedule and then at the clock on the upper corner of the phone.
“About a half hour.”
“I’ll be off work in about fteen minutes. I’ll meet you.”
When Frey signed off he wondered what he was feeling. There was desire, lust too, for tonight he and Rob would go to bed, that was for sure. But there was something else too.
“Hope.”
Frey once heard someone say that hope was too small a word, and he had gone with that. She had been a militant writer, and she had said what people needed was not hope, but determination. But there was no determination here, just the idea of a possibility. He lay back in the seat and let the train rumble through him. Sunlight came in and out as the train passed through trees, Contentment like the contentment he’d waken up with suffused his body.

Last night he hadn’t really gotten a look at him. Or maybe he had just made himself not look too closely. Almost as if, since they were coming together in the dark, to look too well, would be a violation. But when he came off the train, Rob plainly knew him.
“Good trip?”
“There’s a beach near here, right?”
Rob pointed past the train, up the road.
“Then it might have been a wasted trip.”
“It’s not as close as you think. Besides, you got to go to the city. We can put that bike in the back of the truck.”
“I just walked around the beach,” Frey said when they had lifted he bike up and he climbed into the passenger seat of the cab. “Put my feet in the water.”
He shrugged. “Noticed how unhappy all the people looked.”
The truck rumbled under them and Rob said, “My dad used to take me. And we’d go on field trips so to me Chicago’s just museums and dinosaur bones.”
“Well,” Frey shrugged, “it’s a little bit more than that.”
Rob laughed and Frey said, “Like, for example, “it’s got tall buildings and gay night clubs too.”
“I don’t know if that’s my speed.” Rob said. “I mean, not the tall buildings. The tall buildings are fine. I don’t think I’d like the clubs, though.”
“I’m not really a fan, either.
“You know what I don’t understand?’
“If you’re anything like me, a lot.”
“Drag queens. I don’t get drag queens,” Rob said as they were pulling up to the house hidden behind the hedge. Another train was chugging by on the other side of it.
“Like, I don’t get the fun of it. I mean, my mom never liked getting dressed in all that shit but she thought she had to. But men put it on and then they put more of it on than a woman ever wears and… that’s fun, I guess. I don’t get it.”
He stopped the truck and rounded it, and they pulled the bike out and Rob followed him into the house.
“It’s pretty early,” Rob said.
“Yeah, it is. I mean, I keep yawning, but it is early.”
“You wanna do something? Eat?”
“Eating is good. I could definitely Eat. I don’t know if I want to do another frozen pizza.”
“I know just the place. It’s a bit of a drive.
“I got nothing to do.”
Great,” Rob grinned at him. “Let’s go.”
 
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