The Original Gay Porn Community - Free Gay Movies and Photos, Gay Porn Site Reviews and Adult Gay Forums

  • Welcome To Just Us Boys - The World's Largest Gay Message Board Community

    In order to comply with recent US Supreme Court rulings regarding adult content, we will be making changes in the future to require that you log into your account to view adult content on the site.
    If you do not have an account, please register.
    REGISTER HERE - 100% FREE / We Will Never Sell Your Info

    To register, turn off your VPN; you can re-enable the VPN after registration. You must maintain an active email address on your account: disposable email addresses cannot be used to register.

Evolution of Men

blake16

Sex God
Joined
Jul 7, 2003
Posts
564
Reaction score
1
Points
0
Location
Calgary
Hey Guys,

So I've taken the past month or so to develop this three part story. I'll post them all at once, so you can read it beginning to end and not have to check back. Please let me know what you think, either by mail or as a comment. I appreciate and acknowledge all criticism (and compliments, of course)! I'm always striving to get better at this craft.

DISCLAIMER: This is a romantic story based on fictional events. Any characters mentioned as being in High School are assumed to be eighteen or older.

Enjoy, Blake





Chapter 1 – Home Opener

Jesse lay in bed staring at the ceiling as the fog of nine beers slowly lifted with the morning sun. His hand grazed a warm body beside him. A young man with spray-tan skin, and a neatly groomed chest, a mop of blond hair on top of his head. The opposite of who he usually went for. Thoren? Or Tharen? They’d met the night before at a gay dance that Jesse’s friend Myra had brought him too. He continually played Myra’s wingman at these events, and while he tried to resist, perpetually found himself indulging whichever beau found him at the bar.

He breathed a heavy sigh and rolled over to look at the clock. Eleven forty-two. Shit. He was late for an eleven-thirty group meeting at the University. They could wait. He rolled out of bed and scratched his back, standing and turning back around. Thoren was awake.

- Hey mister.

It was something he hated in twinks. The nickname felt so tripe and meaningless, although he was sure it was intended to seem romantic.

- Hey…
- It’s Tharen.
- Right. I have a meeting to run off to. So.
- I’ll just grab some water and get going…it’s fine.

Jesse smiled gently and b-lined for the bathroom. Taken care of.

In the mirror Jesse surveyed the damage. His thick brown hair was a wreck, the pomade Myra had used the night before had warped it into a birds nest. Jesse had played football in High School, and while he still hit the gym at least twice a week, his body wasn’t as fit as it used to be. He yawned and scratched his chest, pulling down his boxers and stepping out of them. He noticed a male arrow symbol on his hip, the stamp from the dance last night. In a flash he remembered a pierced and tattooed man at the door eyeing him, and demanding that he put the stamp somewhere “interesting”. It was a flirtation Jesse could never get used to, being born with the kind of looks most gay men only lust over in magazines. The body he used to admire now shamed him. This wasn’t the man he wanted to be. It wasn’t the man he was.

The gay community in Concordia was a small one, but they were loud. Marches and protests, banners and flags, it seemed every week there was a new cause, a new celebration, a new excuse for a theme and a party. It was a world that Jesse never felt a part of, and was the reason he still felt closeted. He wasn’t, really. His friends all knew, even his mother back home in Hennington knew, it just wasn’t something he felt the need to proclaim from the rooftops. Being identified by his sexuality was a concept Jesse had never subscribed to. Rather than being known among friends as “The Gay One”, he would prefer to be known as the nice one, or the funny one, or the one who was good at football, or freehand. And yet this resistance was turning him into the stereotype he detested: jaded, cynical, and with a new man every week.

Jesse stepped into his shower and let the hot water cascade over his body and hair. He looked down at the male symbol, and took careful attention to wipe any traces of it from his body. Navy blue streaks down his leg, swirling into the water which pooled below.

There was a part of Jesse that wanted a wife. Or maybe the concept alone; marriage, children, white picket fence, in-laws over for Thanksgiving. He would sit in High School and watch as is friends loved and lost, dated just to get their hearts broken, and he was strangely jealous. He wanted to feel that ache for someone, that tinge in his heart that flickered every time they left the room. To belong to someone. It was this need that, even today, often left a man like Tharen in his bed, and the traces of a guilty conscience washed away in his shower water.

In the kitchen, Tharen slung his backpack over his shoulder and finished one last sip of water before turning to the door. The phone rang. He hesitated for a moment, looking back to the shower, considered answering. It rang again, and Tharen turned back towards the door as the answering machine turned on. The muffled voice of an older woman.

- Hello Jesse. It’s your mother. I wanted to—uh. We need to talk. Please call me back, or—no. Jesse it’s your father. He’s…your father has passed away, Jesse. And we need you here. I need you. So…when you get this, call me. Please. I love you.

The soft click, and the kitchen was consumed in silence. Tharen stood in the open doorway, sick. Slowly, he closed the door and stepped back into the kitchen, as Jesse walked out of the bathroom in a towel.

- Hey man…are you good? Need some cab fare or something?
- Jesse. Um. Your mother just called. There’s a message.

When Jesse heard his mother’s voice he knew what had happened. It was the call he’d anticipated since his father had his first heart attack the year prior. He thanked Tharen for staying, but quickly ushered him out of the apartment, knowing that his nonplussed demeanor would strike him as odd. Jesse’s relationship with his father was a rocky one, and the gap that existed between them was widened to a vanishing point when he left Hennington for good.

Twenty minutes and two phone calls later, Jesse found himself on the road in his Jeep, headed back towards the city he hadn’t seen in four years. He breathed heavy as he entered the city limits, seeing the same landmarks, the same signs, anticipating the fact that nothing had changed. It reminded Jesse of something from television, this pop-art world from the 50’s, a saturated underworld of a city, perfect and glossy. The church, the hospital, lush grass on the lawns, signs bright. He expected to see some kind of malt shop, or a drive-in theatre. Something eerie and welcoming about this city that he’d grown to detest.

He got in around eight, the sun had just set. As he passed Hennington High, his eye caught the bleachers at the back. The tall stadium lights on either side of the field. The din of the crowd, the smell of the grass, the night sky pierced with white light that shone down on his team. He pulled into angled parking that faced the rear of the bleachers. A flood of memories rushed at him, and he was there. September 2006. The home-opener.

They were the Hennington High Colts, maroon and gold, first in their division for the past twenty years, a legacy carried on through generations of local families. Everybody made it out to these games, and the pressure was always on. Jesse was the quarterback, and he was a crowd favorite. In front of him were Zach and Carson Mills, twin brothers who were his tackle and guard respectively, though together were his worst nightmare. Far to his left was his best friend Mitch, his wide receiver.

He made the call, and the ball flew back towards him, caught. His team launched into their play, the power of eighteen year old testosterone and sweat battering into their hearts as they tackled one another. Jesse looked for an opening. Mitch was down. Zach was nowhere to be seen, and as soon as Carson was open, he was being side-swiped by an enormous linebacker from the blue and white Saints. A quick glance to the sideline, where Coach Wood swung his arms wildly and screamed ‘Run! Run!’.

Rob Wood had been Jesse’s coach since Grade 10, and was a favorite among students as one of the youngest teachers there. He was able to level with the boys in his gym class because he was one of them only a few years ago. Quarterback at the same school; a part of the legacy. And for this reason, the community had embraced him just the same as their hero, leading their sons to victory. To Jesse, this man was an idol. He’d first noticed his picture on one of the graduate placards from years ago. When he learned that Mr. Wood would be his gym teacher, he was thrilled. It was the older brother he never had. Or maybe the father he wished he’d had.

And so he ran. Sprinting through an opening to the left, fifteen yards out. A Saints guard leaped out from his left, but he darted out ahead, and was in the end zone. The crowd leapt to their feet, as Jesse’s fellow players mauled him from behind, knocking him to the ground in celebration. It was the first game of their senior year, and the first win of many to come. They all knew.

When the crowds began to dissipate and the boys made their way to the locker room, Jesse was alone on the bench, gathering his things. A firm hand on his shoulder.

- You did it, Fletcher. Nice work.
- Thanks Coach.
- Are you heading over to our place now? Alice bought Coke.
- No shit! Coke, what a thrill.
- Well I bought beer for myself, but it’s not my fault if I happen to leave some in the garage fridge and the kids get a hold of it.

Coach grinned and Jesse laughed.

- See you there, Coach Wood.

And Jesse ran off into the lockers. Rob sat on the bench alone, surveying the field. He had been the quarterback of the Colts a decade ago, when he was Jesse’s age. Now at twenty-eight, it seemed nothing had changed. He was still in Hennington, still drove the same car, still went to the same damn school. But he loved it. The field still smelled the same. Still reminded him of the glory he felt winning, a glory that he could still feel when coached his team to victory.

At home, Rob’s girlfriend Alice had set up pop and chips for the boys. Rob had met Alice when she was hired at Hennington High teaching English. Now they’d been living together for eight months, white picket fence, well on their way. He kissed her quickly and set his bag down in the kitchen.

- Hi baby, thanks for getting all this ready. The guys should be here any second now.

Rob took a chip and walked into the bedroom, stripping off his shirt and loosening his belt. Alice followed him in.

- No trouble. Great game coach.

Alice snuggled in behind her man and slid her hands around his torso, running her fingers through his chest hair, down his abs and into his pants.

- Honey, I don’t think we have time. Later though…later.

Alice paused. Then smiled. Patience. They hadn’t had sex in three weeks. A part of her considered that he might be having an affair, but the realistic part of her realized that school had begun, as well as practice, and he was swamped. This happened every year, or so she tried to rationalize. Alice sat on the bed and watched her boyfriend change into clean clothes for the party.

Ten minutes later, the doorbell rang, and a flood of twenty team members in groups of two and three filled the house. First to arrive were the twins, Zach and Carson, through Rob could never tell them apart. Jesse and Mitch arrived together, and were greeted with cheers. Time passed and music played as the group bonded, all the while surveyed by Rob and Alice. Rob even managed to sneak a beer or two into Jesse’s hands while the guys weren’t looking. As the boys played Rock Band in the living room, Rob went to the kitchen to grab some more chips. Alice pulled him aside.

- Jesse has a beer. I think he was stealing from the garage.
- Alice, it’s fine. He’s eighteen.
- I don’t care that he’s eighteen; I don’t want kids in our house getting drunk.
- I gave him the beer, okay?
- You what?
- I…gave him a beer. Kids are different today Alice, it’s fine. Honestly.
- We’re their teachers, Rob. You expect them to take us seriously when we just pal around with them like their buddies? You’re not eighteen anymore Rob.
- What? Look I’m sorry okay?

Alice shot him a stern look like he should know better.

- I’m going to bed. Can you clear them out pretty soon?

Rob nodded and sighed his way to the cupboard as Alice headed out. It was the side of her that he couldn’t stand. This mother that continually breathed down his neck about growing up. Sure, he realized that from time to time he clung to the past, and a part of him probably liked to live vicariously through his students, but it’s not like it was a problem. Frustrated, he grabbed a bag of chips, just as he heard a shout from the living room.

Running in, he saw Jesse on top of Zach Mills, his brother Carson getting up from the floor and throwing a punch at Jesse.

- Whoa! Guys, back off!

Rob ran in and pulled Jesse from the brawl.

- What’s going on?

Mitch sprang to Jesse’s defense.

- Zach was saying Jesse didn’t pass to him because he wanted the glory.
- I was open! Zach erupted.

Jesse loosened from Coach’s grasp.

- You were not! I didn’t see you anywhere. You think I wouldn’t have passed to you if I saw you were there? That doesn’t make sense.
- Fuck you, faggot. Just next time keep an eye out, some of us want to play too.

Rob winced at the word. It was a term he’d used when he was in school, but now seemed antiquated and terrifying. The reality that nothing had changed in a decade was a pang in Rob’s heart. Jesse was an anomaly. On one hand he was the school’s star quarterback, the quickest if not the strongest, older than the other boys, mature and intelligent and ready for the world. On the other hand he was an introvert, who would rather stay home and play Halo with Mitch than go out to a party. He never had a girlfriend, though it often seemed apparent to Rob that he had his pick. It was a point of contention among the team and Rob knew it, overhearing locker room discussion and name-calling. The assumption was if you didn’t have a girl, or you weren’t stalking one in the pursuit of sex, you were gay. Sometimes Rob would intervene, but sometimes would knowingly back off; boys will be boys. Gay or not, Mitch would need to figure things out on his own, for the day when Rob wouldn’t be there to stop it.

And as Rob pushed Zach against the wall, he realized he might have had one beer too many.

- Watch your language Mills. You boys head home.

Zach’s mind raced with something to say, some way to fight back, but he knew from so many other times that when Coach Wood laid down the law, it stuck. Zach and Carson left with the other boys, and eventually Mitch followed after checking in with Jesse.

Rob’s mind reeled as he considered what he’d just done. He’d vowed in the past to let things be, let Jesse learn on his own. As an adult, where is he supposed to draw the line? Let them drink, because they’re going to do it anyway. Let them fight, because they’ll only wait until you’re gone. But Jesse was different. He was his quarterback for the season, something to be protected, like a son. A part of Rob was Jesse, ten years ago, small pride, levelheaded ambition that didn’t care what people thought. But a part of him was Zach. Scraping and scrambling to not be last on the totem pole, frantically searching for a weaker, thinner scapegoat to shove into the spotlight. He hated this part of himself.

Jesse sat on the couch, his hands in his lap, his eyes avoiding Rob’s.

- You have a ride home, Jesse?
- Nah, I can walk though.
- It’s an hour, at least. Just crash here, Alice won’t mind. I’ll grab some blankets out of the closet.

As Rob walked back into the hall, he glanced into his bedroom to see Alice asleep on the bed. Honey I don’t think we have time. Later though…later. Another night gone.

He returned to the living room with a pillow and a navy blue comforter that he tossed beside Jesse who was still silent, contemplative.

- You don’t…let those guys get to you. Do you?
- No. They’re idiots.
- Good. I saw the play, Jesse, I know what you did. You should be proud.

But Jesse wasn’t proud, and Rob could see it. He was shattered. It was a cold feeling that was all too familiar to Rob, a face that he’d seen in himself after a loss. Suddenly the winning touchdown didn’t matter. The power of Zach’s influence was astounding. It made Rob furious to think that one little fuck-up like Zach Miller could get to someone like Jesse so easily. He searched for the words to say to comfort him.

- You were perfect out there today.

Rob stood and walked back towards the hallway, before being stopped by Jesse’s quiet voice.

- Thanks Coach. For everything.

Rob nodded approval, shut off the lights, and joined Alice in the bed, careful to not wake her.

Alice liked to sleep in late on Saturdays, a practice Rob had never gotten used to. So at the crack of dawn, he was up and in the kitchen. The sound of the percolating coffee stirred Jesse in his sleep. Rob looked over at him, the morning light illuminating his outstretched body on the sofa. He looked older than Rob had remembered.

His thick brown hair was a mess on his head, and traces of stubble lined his cheeks. His shirt had been tossed to the ground, and his broad chest rose and fell with each breath. One arm up above his head, revealing a thin patch of hair, the other arm stretched down his body. Rob stepped quietly closer to him, somehow curious to see Jesse in this way, unadulterated and unconcerned. He seemed happier in his sleep.

Rob noticed the blanket shift momentarily from beneath. His eyes darted down to Jesse’s erection, which now rested on his abdomen, tenting the blanket up slightly, pulsing with each heartbeat. Rob smiled, and somehow ignored his impulse to turn away back into the kitchen. This fascinating creature that he had once been, all hormones and heat, growing and shifting before his eyes. He watched as Jesse lowered a hand to his dick and grazed it slightly, his mouth falling agape and his eyes wincing slightly in pleasure. Rob backed into the hallway, glancing briefly into his room to see Alice still fast asleep. Then back to Jesse, whose hand now found its way under the sheet, wrapped around his erection, pumping very slowly, his head tossing to the side. Rob watched on.

In Jesse’s dream, he was in the locker room shower with the other guys. He was the only one naked, as they circled him like sharks, pointing and whispering. In the back, Coach appeared and suddenly everyone else was gone. Coach stood in the entryway to the showers, surveying the scene. He walked in, through the streams of hot water which dampened his clothes, sticking to his chest, wetting his hair. Coach grabbed Jesse’s cock and pulled him in for a deep kiss, and suddenly they were surrounded again. This time the team carried cameras. The flashbulbs went off in a series, but they didn’t care. Coach pulled Jesse in closer as they kissed, wrapped up in each other, electric pleasure shot through Jesse’s body.

He woke up with a jolt. Rob stepped back further into the hall to avoid being seen. He watched as Jesse quickly put his shirt back on, fumbled with his backpack and shoes. He glanced at the blanket which had been tossed to the ground, now damp with semen from the dream. Unsure of what to do, he shoved the blanket under the couch, and b-lined for the door.

After waiting a moment to make sure the coast was clear, Rob went back into the room, which was now thick with testosterone and sweat. He grabbed the blanket, unsure of what to do with it, but sure that he didn’t want Alice to find out. He felt a warm dampness on his hand, and was aware of how unphased he was by this. When he heard Alice shift in the bedroom, he quickly tucked the blanket into the chest where he kept his video games. Alice appeared in the entryway.

- Morning.
- Morning. Eggs or cereal?
- Ugh, neither. This new birth control is making me queasy.

She paused on that, and they both considered the implications. Then she backed into the hall and started the shower. Rob walked into the kitchen and poured himself a cup of coffee. The newspaper on the table, he sat and began leafing through it.

Flashing forward four years to present, Rob still sat at the same table on a Saturday morning. Alice still woke up an hour later than him, and was still taking the same birth control that made her lose her appetite. They still only had sex once a week, and he still felt like he should be somewhere else. Both now wore engagement rings on their left hands. Happy enough.

As Rob leafed through the paper, he noticed a familiar picture. Dennis Fletcher, Jesse’s father, had passed away. Survived by his son and his wife. Rob’s heart was heavy as he remembered that face in the stands, cheering on his son. It was the only time Rob had ever seen Dennis, was at a game. He’d never once ran into him at parent teacher interviews, not at any events, any fundraisers. And most notably, Jesse never mentioned him, would barely even talk to him after the games.

Still, Rob could see resemblance in their faces. He breathed heavy, realizing what this really meant. Jesse was twenty-two now, and his father was dead. Much too young. He hadn’t spoken to Jesse in nearly four years. Now he would be in town. Maybe he would try and find him? Maybe he would avoid the whole thing. Rob’s mind raced at the idea of seeing Jesse again. So much had passed between them, so much had remained unresolved since he graduated. Alice walked into the kitchen, and Rob flipped the page.

- I’m going to head off to Yoga. Are we still meeting with Carol and Mike for lunch?
- Yeah. I’ll…I’ll see you there.

Alice left immediately, and Rob quickly shuffled back to the obituary page, tearing out Dennis Fletcher’s article. He threw the rest of the paper in the bin, and made his way over to the living room, placing the square of paper into the same chest where he kept his video games. At the bottom lay a familiar blue blanket, folded neatly and covered from sight.
 
Chapter 2 – Running Laps

It was their fifth game of the season, and would be their first loss. Jesse was up and the pressure was on as the play was called, the ball was hiked. He took one step back, looking for an opening. Then another. Zach was out, Ben and Seth followed quickly behind. He scanned the sidelines for a moment and saw his father frantically motioning for him to take it and run, take control. Then in a flash he saw Mitch bolt out in front, and he quickly pitched him the ball.

A moment of hesitation, and the ball caught his finger, fumbled to the ground. Eagles possession. It was the moment that ended the game, and the moment that would haunt Jesse for years to come, the eyes of his father from the stands, his mother frantically pleading with him to sit from his side, keeping up appearances. But Jesse knew what he’d done. Football was the only connection he felt with his father, and part of him knew that fumbling every once in awhile was a kind of rebellion. The only kind he could muster.

And as the game came to a close, and the Eagles jumped on each other in celebration, the home crowd vapidly made their way from the stands. Jesse stood for a moment, watching the celebration, at once envious of their triumph and yet secretly glad to be out of the spotlight. And boy would his dad be upset.

A quick blow from behind knocked him from his dream state, as the wind escaped his lungs and he fell to the ground.

- You fucker.

It was Zach, who came around and kicked him in the chest, hard, then down on his knees and pummeling him in the face. Mitch was first to the scene, grabbing Zach and pulling him off and to the floor. Jesse noticed that the team around him simply stood. Some pretended not to watch, and others stood in a kind of solidarity. They were mad.

- What the hell was that? You think you can just change up the play, think you’re a big shot?
- Back off Zach.

Mitch jumped to Jesse’s defense, who crawled back, gasping.

- I didn’t…I’m—
- I don’t give a shit what your excuse is. We all know your queer, faggot. Get up and face me like a man. You fucked this up for us, but it’s the last time.

Then silence for a moment. Jesse winced as blood tricked from a cut above his eye. He saw Rob standing as the team recoiled from their attack. Even Zach. Coach’s face was an expression Jesse had never seen. An anger so internal, everyone could feel it without a word.

- What did you say, Mills?
- Nothing coach. Never mind.

Zach turned to head back to the locker room, but Coach grabbed him by the jersey.

- Not so fast. What did you say?

Zach was silent.

- Because if its what I thought you said, I’ll kick you off his team so fast you won’t know what hit you. We have no tolerance for that language and you know it. Now if it has to do with the game, you come to me.

Rob paused for a moment, and knelt down to Jesse’s side.

- Are you okay Fletcher? Your eye—
- I’m fine.
- Who did this?

Jesse hesitated, but Mitch jumped in before he could answer.

- It was Zach coach, he jumped him.

Rob stood and walked over to Zach.

- This is unacceptable. We lose one goddamn game and you act like seven year olds. This is nobodies fault. And no matter how brave and macho you think you’re being in front of your friends by blaming someone, it’s you who looks like the asshole. Does anyone else have anything to say?

Zach looked to his brother for defense, but Carson’s eyes never left the ground.

- Mills, I’ll see you in my office every lunch hour from now until the end of the season.
- What? That’s bullshit—
- And forget about practice, you’re an alternate now. Hit the showers.

There was a moan from some members of the team, but many stayed silent, secretly pleased that Zach got what was coming to him, and knowing that with Zach out they would get more time to play. The players all headed to the lockers, and Rob knelt back down to Jesse.

- Don’t make him an alternate, Coach. He’s good. A fucker…but good.
- Yeah we’ll see. Are you sure you’re alright?
- Just…my head.
- Yeah you’re cut. Let’s grab the first aid kit from the equipment room inside.

Coach propped up Jesse on his shoulder and they walked towards the opposite end of the field to the equipment shed, which was attached to the school. Jesse was in a dream state. Had this really just happened? Coach had defended him like a son, like a brother. He was this hero in disguise, flown in to rescue Jesse from a world it seemed he would never escape. Nothing could go wrong with Rob around. He forgot about his cut, his bruised body and cracked rib. Suddenly he was healed in the arms of this man. He tried his best to stand his ground and walk beside coach even though it hurt him.

Inside, Jesse took a seat on a chair beside the door, and Coach headed to the back, and through a chicken wire cage where the rugby equipment and footballs were stored, as well as the first aid kit. He found the red tin box, and opened it, fishing for some cotton bandages and tape. He peered for a moment over the box and saw Jesse, who was closely examining a scrape on his elbow.

And it occurred to Rob again how much of himself he saw in Jesse. Concerned and gentle, this compassionate weakling who would prefer to be walked over than to raise a fuss. And in the same moment Rob knew that this wasn’t what he projected, especially when he was in High School. A part of him was Zach, this boisterous monster who could spin any situation his way. Rob watched on as Jesse contemplated the room, remembering what had happened. Jesse Fletcher represented all the parts of Rob that he wished he could have been in High School, and this drew them towards one another in a way Rob would never be able to describe.

As Rob dabbed at the wound with a cloth, Jesse flinched through gritted teeth.

- Are you going to be okay?
- It’s just a cut.
- Yeah. Not the cut. I know they were calling you names.
- They always do. Gay and stuff, because I don’t have a girlfriend.

Rob laughed it off, and instantly regretted it as he saw how Jesse was silenced. His gut reaction in this town was to treat homosexuality as taboo. And even though he knew this sentiment was changing, some responses were too engrained to adapt as quickly. Rob was ashamed as he considered what might be rushing through this kids mind.

Jesse was flushed. He knew he was gay. He had to be. The dreams, the locker room hard-ons, this butterfly feeling he got whenever coach looked him in the eye. He knew what it was, and had reached a point where he knew there was no way to change who he was. While he’d never actually admitted it to anyone, or even said it out loud, he was certain Mitch had caught on. It was a kind of acceptance that drew them closer to one another. Mitch might be too. But now, at this moment, Coach seemed to ask him in his silence. Jesse swallowed a lump in this throat, and his voice caught on the words.

- I am. Gay…

Coach affixed a last piece of tape to the cotton ball, and paused. Jesse continued.

- Just…so you know. I’m not offended by what they call me, because it’s true.

He knelt back in front of Jesse and averted his gaze, his hand absent-mindedly grazing his stubble as he considered what to do. He was sure he’d been taught how to handle a situation like this; thank them for their disclosure, reassure them their secret is safe, give them a resource for information. But this was different. Jesse’s admission awoke something in Rob that terrified him. This intense vulnerability in the eighteen year olds eyes, this trust that he exhibited so explicitly in Rob that sent swirls of anxious vibrations through his body. He didn’t know what do say, but he had to speak.

- Well. Thank you for telling me.

No. This couldn’t be by the book. Something. In a moment Jesse caught Rob’s eye and it was clear. Rob continued.

- You can’t help who you love.

And he paused. They maintained eye contact for a moment. There was a line that had been crossed. Something that made Rob nervous and excited. He stood and went back to the first aid kit before the moment lasted too long and Jesse would notice. But he had noticed. He walked towards Rob in the wire cage and chose his words carefully, slowly. Someone was finally listening.

- Coach I don’t know what to do. A part of me kind of likes it. Being different. Having this secret, it’s exciting. But another part of me hates it. Wishes I could change. Because I can’t be this person. In this town. I can’t.

Jesse’s voice cracked on his final words, and caught Rob’s attention. He was on the verge of tears. A decade of confusion and unrest that Rob couldn’t help but empathize with. He looked up at Jesse with hesitation. He was closer than Rob had realized, smelling faintly of deodorant and sweat. Rob inhaled precariously, ignoring his rational impulse to question this moment and allow himself to listen to his gut. Jesse stood his ground, maintained his gaze. He desperately needed contact in this moment, and they both knew.

And when Rob moved in to kiss him, Jesse’s world spun as it never had before.

His lips were soft and his kiss was firm.

Rob trembled as his hand made its way up to Jesse’s hair, damp with sweat from the game. Rob felt a stirring in his boxers as he pressed himself into Jesse for a moment.

It had been nine days since he and Alice had had sex.

He broke the kiss. Then broke the gaze.

- I need to—we should go back. They’re almost done…the janitor will be in to lock up.

Rob got to the door and Jesse was still standing in place where he was. Rob still resisted looking at the kid.

- You need to shower?

Jesse moved for the door, sensing urgency.

- Yeah I should.

With that, the equipment room was locked, the lights shut off, and not another word uttered. Rob’s mind reeled at the possible consequences of this transgression. He could lose his job, his girlfriend—this life that he’d worked a decade to establish for himself. All for Jesse. Some kid that he happened to feel sorry for. These couldn’t be real feelings. It was done. Any memory from that moment was locked in that equipment room and would stay there.

But for Jesse, that memory would be played over and over again. It would fuel him for the rest of the year, but at the moment it served as a boost of confidence he’d never felt. Even with his scrapes and scars, even knowing he would face his father when he arrived home that night, he walked with a longer stride.

When he came in the front door, his mother stood in the kitchen, scrubbing away at a pot in the sink. As the door clicked closed, Jesse saw her pause for a moment. Then, without looking back—

- He’s already in bed.
- Oh. Okay.

Then she stopped, removed her plastic gloves, and turned to Jesse, leaning back against the countertop. She looked at him for a moment.

- Jesse what happened?
- Zach. He tackled me after the game.

Jesse stood still where he was. Bonnie Fletcher was filled with sorrow and regret for her son, unsure of how to help him, secretly ashamed that he hadn’t defended himself. Jesse continued.

- Dad left. You both left. And I got punched in the face. So.
- I’m sorry Jesse. We should have found you after the game. Your father, he was upset.

Jesse knew his mother hated defending her husband. He knew what she wished she could say. Any other day, Jesse would have persisted, would have tried to guilt her into admitting these feelings, launched another attack on his father. But today, Jesse was superman. Today, he was filled with that piece of himself that had been missing for so long. Confidence.

- Mom. Zach and the guys were calling me a fag again.
- Those boys. I swear, I don’t know how many more calls we could possibly make to their parents before—
- It’s true, mom. I’m—
- Don’t.
- What?

Bonnie cried in an instant. A silent stream of tears that contorted her face in the subtlest of ways, a faintest quiver of her chin, the kind of genuine passion that most people seldom experience.

- Please. For your father. Just one more semester. Please.
- Mom I’m gay.

She paused on this, smiling back more tears, nodding with anxious fervor. This was the moment she’d anticipated since he was eight. With some trepidation and a mysterious optimism. The day had arrived.

- I know.
- And you’re…okay with it.
- Of course Jesse. You’re my son. I love you more than anything else in this world, and who you love is up to you. Just…please. For me?
- He’ll find out eventually.
- I know…I know. Your father is who he is. It’s a different generation, Jesse. There are some things that just can’t be changed. You understand, don’t you?

And he did. As much as it killed him, he knew the grief it would cause to tell his father while he was still living under his roof, while he still paid Jesse’s tuition. One semester of secrecy turned into a summer, then into a year, and then into four. And now Jesse found himself back in the same kitchen, different dishes in the sink, his mother still standing in the kitchen, a new kind of sorrow in her eyes. The sorrow of having lost the second man in her life, Dennis Fletcher.

Bonnie watched Jesse as he flipped through a catalogue that had been given to them by the funeral chapel. They’d spoken barely ten words to one another since he’d gotten in yesterday and spent the night, even through the meeting with the minister about the service. The tension that had always existed between them was Dennis Fletcher, and even in his passing, was somehow heightened. There was unfinished business. Jesse spoke up with indifference.

- The black one?

Bonnie was distant in her own thoughts.

- Sure, yes.
- Mom?
- I didn’t tell him, you know. In these four years, I didn’t tell him about you.

Jesse was unsure how to proceed. His instincts told him to be with his mother, hug her and support her through this time. But he was mad. She had stopped him from admitting the truth. And now he would never know who his son really was. He’d never get the chance to feel the pain that Jesse felt, to know the life that Jesse was living.

- Well mom, some things are better left unsaid. Some minds can’t be changed.
- That’s unfair.
- Is it? You said it yourself.
- Jesse, what good would have come from your father knowing?
- Stop protecting him! God, he’s gone and you’re still his slave. He wasn’t perfect mom, he was far from it. You didn’t want to see him for the bigot that he was.
- You watch your mouth. He was my husband.
- And I’m your son. The Jesse he knew wasn’t me, some quarterback protégé. I can’t sit by and pretend like we knew each other. If he wouldn’t want the real me planning this funeral, then maybe I owe him that. I need some air, I can’t do this.

And as soon as it was said, Jesse was out the door into the crisp afternoon air. He zipped up a grey Colts sweater and walked from the house. His anger wouldn’t let him see how hurt his mother might have been, and overshadowed his usual nature to tend to her when she needed him. Right now he just needed to escape, clear his mind, forget about his father and all this bullshit that had streamed so suddenly back into his life. He went the only place he knew how to think straight; the stadium.

As he climbed the bleachers from the back, the field emerged before him, the lines painted fresher than he remembered, new maroon padding on the uprights. The current junior team was practicing. And on the side, facing away from him, surveying the team was Coach Wood. He stopped at the row he was in and took a silent seat, as Rob glanced back.

It was him. Jesse. He looked different in a way, but how could he not? There was still an essence about him that Rob recognized in an instant, something magnetic, an energy that still quietly fired on all cylinders. Rob couldn’t help but look away, back at the team, unsure of how to respond. A familiar knot in his stomach that only tightened the more Rob tried to ignore it. He glanced at the door to the equipment room across the way, the room where he vowed that initial kiss would stay forever. It hadn’t, and the history that they’d shared extended well past that moment.

For weeks afterwards, Jesse was on the hunt. He knew how Rob felt, he knew that there was something in his kiss that wasn’t accidental, wasn’t simply an experiment. Unsure of what love felt like at the moment, he knew he was close to it with Rob, and exhilarated in the thrill of falling deeper and deeper. Glances in the hallway, lingering after practice, being the last to change out, the last still in a towel when coach would leave his office.

And Rob secretly took notice. From his windowed door he would see Jesse glancing at him, his defined torso leading down to the thin towel that covered him. He noticed him hitting the gym more, being more attentive in practice, sticking around to help out when he could. And all Rob could do was run. There was nothing to be done. He had been dating Alice for over a year now, they had a house together. He loved women, he knew that. This thing with Jesse, it was passing. The experiment that he’d never had in college, the adventurous side of him that wanted to toy with something forbidden. Childish.

But above all else, and all circumstance aside, Rob found himself returning to one resounding thought. You are this boy’s teacher. Sure he was eighteen, more mature than most of the other guys, even looked a bit older than his age. But he was in a position of power. And deep down, even in moments when Rob would let himself be convinced there was an element of truth to his sudden desires, he knew that if he indulged, it would be illegal.

Another glance back at the bench, and Rob saw Jesse again. Silently appealing in his Colts sweater. Rob shook the idea from his mind. Sitting, smiling, he was twenty-two. Rob shook the idea from his mind. He was no longer his teacher. Rob imagined a younger Jesse up there in the stands, and he once was, waiting for Coach to finish school so he could wait for him at his car. Jesse wore his jersey and football pants, and smiled down at Rob. Then he stood, and systematically began to strip, first taking off his jersey and pads, then peeling down his pants until he was in a jockstrap. He waved at Coach, who snapped back to reality and once again saw Jesse as he was, in his grey sweater, observing the game. They would need to talk eventually.

Rob made his way over and up the bleachers.

- Jesse Fletcher. Long time no see, man.

He extended a hand to Jesse, who seemed taken aback by this move, but stood and grabbed his hand regardless. How far had they drifted?

- Yeah. Wish I was back under different circumstance, but…you know.
- I’m so sorry to hear about your father, Jesse. He was a great guy.
- No he wasn’t. He was an asshole.
- Oh…I didn’t—
- It’s fine. It’s over. I just…this is good, saying goodbye. To this place.

Rob paused on this. He knew he was saying goodbye to him. A goodbye they never got to have. Rob wasn’t ready to let it go that easily.

- So you’re at Concordia U now? On that football scholarship.
- Nah, I turned it down.
- You what?
- I turned it down. I’m not a football player. I mean, I was. But it wasn’t me, it was my dad. You know, there was always this part of me that secretly hated it, probably because I knew it pleased him. But I kept doing it just because…well. Way to meet people I guess. But after grad I realized you know, you only get one shot at this life. So why waste it living out someone else’s dream? I went into art, and never looked back. And I love it.

Rob was transfixed on Jesse’s words. He was envious of the man that he’d grown into. This boy who had taken life by the horns and experienced his true potential. At twenty-two he seemed to be more sure-footed than Rob had ever been. A feeling that could have been jealousy was manifested as overwhelming joy.

- I’m so happy for you, Jesse.
- Yeah?
- Yeah. You’re doing what you love. And to know that at your age man…it’s rare.
- Well we’ll see. One more semester to go, and then I have no fucking idea what comes next. Probably slum around Concordia as long as I can. See if I can find some rich guy to marry or something.

The joke fell flat, and Jesse swallowed a lump in his throat. He was suddenly very aware of his words, and stepped back as a witness to this conversation. Who was this man he had become? Sardonic and crass, bitter and jaded. It was this creature he strove so hard to fight against that he couldn’t help but emulate. But Rob knew. He knew that these words were nothing, that the man underneath was still there, intense and vulnerable and the most genuine human being he’d experienced. Rob broke the silence.

- Well I’m really glad to see you again, Jesse. Really.

They looked at each other for the first time since Rob had sat down. That fire, that eye contact that Rob had learned to ignore and Jesse had learned to memorize. Suddenly this flame was relit and Jesse felt a spark more intense than he remembered. Something had changed in Rob.

- I’m glad to see you too. It’s been too long.
- I know…I know that we didn’t really end things in the best of terms. And I just wanted you to know that I still think about you. And hope that you’re well. Happy, I mean.

Jesse watched as this man seemed to crumble. He couldn’t help but notice how their roles had reversed. He was once this stoic, rock of a man that protected Jesse at his weakest and most exposed. Now Jesse seemed to know more about himself than ever before, and Rob was in crisis. His words crackled with regret and Jesse wanted nothing more than his hand at that moment. Four years of forgetting that feeling was enough to stop him before making a move too bold. Jesse explored the waters.

- How is Alice?
- She’s good, great. It’s looking like maybe sometime next summer it’ll be official.

Jesse sat in stunned silence as Rob looked out at the field, at his players. Four years ago, Rob had proposed to Alice. It was the final moment that pushed Jesse to leave Hennington, to get over his crush and move on with his life. And now, in four years, they still hadn’t set a date. Waiting. Jesse struggled to come up with some reason other than what he wished it to be. A family emergency? Alice changed her mind? But he knew…deep down he knew that Rob was waiting for something. Maybe for the money or the time. Maybe for him. Maybe for an absolution that would never come.

And as they both stared out at the field below, they were each aware of the opportunity that presented itself. This longing in Rob to tell what he’d waited four years to say. To end everything and let himself finally live in the shoes he knew would fit. Jesse, finally in a place where he was confident with himself, knew what he wanted, and was sure he could get it. But both still sat, wary of the other, knowing that the slightest misstep could topple the dream they knew they shared. Rob stood.

- I should…get back to the game.

And Jesse waited in the bleachers as he’d waited before. Waited for the answer to come, for Rob to make the move. And when it never came, he solemnly walked back home and once again attempted to forget this man who managed to elegantly destroy him every time.
 
Chapter 3 – Running Back

Rob knew something was up when he came home and the television wasn’t on. On any other day he would stay after school for practice, and Alice would return home just in time to catch Oprah. And when Rob would arrive, not a word was spoken as he entered the kitchen to prepare dinner. A monotony that they both publicly appreciated and secretly loathed.

But the house was silent. In the living room, Alice sat on the edge of the couch. In her hands, the torn obituary, frayed edges. Rob swallowed a nervous lump in his throat as he attempted to keep his pace into the kitchen as he always did, without a word. Alice broke the silence.

- Sad. About Dennis.

Rob didn’t know how to play this off. She knew that he’d not only read the article, but ripped it out and kept it. She’d been in that storage chest. How many times had she checked? Had she noticed the blanket? His mind raced.

- Yeah. So young.
- You…tore out the article? Are you going to the funeral?

Shit.

- I don’t know. I didn’t know if I should. No.
- Oh.

He knew what she was thinking. The only other time Rob had come home to his unnaturally silent house was back in Jesse’s last year of school. It was just after Christmas, and they hadn’t yet returned to school in the New Year. Rob had arrived home to find Alice sitting at the couch in the same way, a small wrapped parcel in her hands. The card on top wasn’t addressed to or from anyone in particular, but was written with penmanship that he instantly recognized, and contained a message that paralyzed him where he stood.

‘You can’t help who you love.’

Alice was perplexed. Rob’s mind sped to find a reason for receiving this gift, but Alice got there before him.

- It’s probably a student. One of those Mills boys in my class, I heard them whispering about sending something to our place. I think they’re trying to flirt with me.

Rob was relieved. She tore open the wrapping paper to reveal almonds. Not chocolate covered, not salted, just almonds. Only four people knew that these were Rob’s favorite, the two in the room, Rob’s mother, and Jesse since last weekend. Alice looked up at Rob, her eyes suddenly impatient.

- Or not.

Rob laughed it off.

- Probably a joke. Maybe Damien or one of the other teachers messing with me.
- Yeah. Probably…

Alice’s mind was wandering. They had begun to have sex again, but she was convinced it was only to appease her. For some reason she felt guilty after it had happened, like he was doing her this favor. Now it made sense. Another woman.

- Rob you…you would tell me. If something was going on.
- What do you mean?

Rob couldn’t look her in the eye. What had Jesse done.

- If there was…someone else.
- What? You can’t be serious.
- Well? Getting presents from strangers? Talking about love. Someone is chasing you down Rob. Can you blame me for worrying a bit?
- Alice…I’m not seeing anybody else. I swear. You know that.
- I know.

She believed him. But in the back of her mind this fear would remain. It was distant enough for her to keep it hidden, but her instincts would keep her on guard.

Rob was secretly furious. He made dinner, and they ate in silence.

And when Rob needed to make an impromptu trip to the school to do some grading, that fear in Alice’s mind grew larger. In a moment she considered following him, ending this suspicion, getting it over with. But a part of her didn’t want to know. Content with the life they had. Maybe some things were meant to just stay a secret.

The door closed behind him and he was out into the snow. She pushed herself quickly away from the table and grabbed her coat.

- Fuck it.

But he did go to the school. He pulled into the teachers lot as she turned off her headlights and drove slowly by, watching him enter the school. She cursed these cautious instincts her mother had passed on to her. She needed to learn to trust him if he was ever going to propose. If they were going to have children. He was her man. And with painful certainty, she drove back home.

Inside, Rob passed his classroom and headed towards the gym. He glanced over at the check in board by the office and saw nobody else was there, nine o’clock on a Saturday. Over the Christmas break Rob had given the team keys to access the facilities, so they could train before the season began again in the Spring. He knew most of them didn’t take advantage of this opportunity, especially on a weekend. All but one.

Through the window Rob saw Jesse on the pec-deck, facing the mirror, unaware he was being watched. Rob was fuming. Jesse held so much of Rob’s life in his hands. Not only Alice, who he lived with, but his job, his future, his name in this town would be ruined. Now he knew, he felt what those Mills boys felt. This boy acted so innocent, so unaware, but he knew what he was doing. This had to end.

Rob rounded the corner and burst into the exercise room, his teeth gritted. Jesse, startled, dropped the weights back onto the machine with a clank.

- Coach.
- What the fuck do you think you’re doing.

He grabbed Jesse by the t-shirt and brought him to the wall.

- What?
- The almonds. The goddamn card. You think I wouldn’t know?
- I…

Jesse hesitated. He wasn’t sure what to say. He was sure Alice wouldn’t have known. Rob held him there in anticipation, unleashing his fury.

- I could lose my job, Jesse. Never mind that, I could lose my girlfriend, my house. Everything. I’d be run out of the goddamn town. All because you got a little crush. This needs to stop. Now. No more notes, no more waiting for me after practice. No more staying after class. From now on, we don’t know each other. You’re a student, and I’m your teacher, and come summer we go our separate ways.

He paused and considered what was coming out of his mouth. He looked at Jesse, whose tears streaked madly down his face. He couldn’t bear to look Rob in the eyes, embarrassed and flustered and utterly crushed by what he was hearing. A moment of silence, and Jesse spoke.

- I’m sorry. I just wanted you to know. I didn’t think—I’m sorry.

And Rob’s fury was reignited. This student, this kid was causing him so much strife with one little move. One little gesture, which in any other light would be seen as a kind act. And what had he done really, besides buy him a gift? A gift he somehow appreciated more than the watch Alice had bought him. But Rob knew why he was mad. It had nothing to do with the note, or the almonds, or even Alice finding out. Rob knew deep down that Jesse’s feelings were reciprocated; by a part of himself so hidden away he wouldn’t dare speak it out loud. And for a moment, Rob let himself fall in love with this boy, destroyed with emotion, finally allowing his heart to feel true attachment.

Short, rapid breaths between them as their faces neared.

- Jesse I can’t…we can’t keep doing this. We…I’m—

Rob struggled for the words as his breath became more frantic. Suddenly he felt Jesse’s lips against his, and his eyes instantly closed, his breath slowed. When the kiss broke, he opened them and saw Jesse looking at him, his eyes still red and filled with tears. This was it, a moment of passion and rage where he couldn’t help but listen to his instincts, couldn’t ignore that part of himself that he’s ignored so deftly for twenty-eight years.

He grabbed Jesse’s head and pulled him in closer to kiss again, their bodies against the wall. He grunted as they spun and shifted, Jesse’s hands, grasping Rob’s back, pulling him ever closer. Shirts off, then on the floor, Rob straddled Jesse as they feverishly explored each other’s bodies with their mouths, kissing and rubbing, out in the open. The dream they’d both had coming to perfect fruition.

Pants off, Jesse followed Rob quickly into the showers where they stripped down, and for the first time Jesse saw Rob’s cock, throbbing from three weeks untouched. As big as he’d imagined, thicker, uncut. Rob watched Jesse remove his underwear as he’d seen before, but now in a different light. A body that he could feel, that he could worship and affect. They grasped at each other’s nude bodies on the white tiled floor, kissing and licking, their hands rubbing and stroking their cocks together.

Rob moved down to suck Jesse’s dick, the first experience with a man. It was Jesse’s as well, and together they shared in the glory they felt. Jesse’s head tossed back, and then looked back down at Coach, not wanting a miss a moment of this experience. This blueprint he’d dreamed of so many times coming true.

- Coach.

Rob stopped and looked up at Jesse, his cock still in his hand. He smiled. Coach saw a permission in Jesse’s eyes, a longing. Safe with each other.

Rob kissed Jesse deep, and proceeded to lift his legs over his head, slowly guiding his cock into Jesse’s awaiting body. Slowly and with care, they made love, each enraptured in the other, wanting to please each other in every way they could. Waves of ecstasy coursed through these two bodies that were meant to be together, meant to be connected this way. Nothing felt more natural in this moment.

And as they both came, Jesse knew this was the beginning of something. A change in his life. A next step that he’d planned so many years for. Finally he was there, in this mans arms. The warm water now on around them, they lay next to one another. Rob stared at the ceiling, and Jesse looked over at him.

- I won’t…say anything. No more notes. Just…student and teacher.
- I’m so sorry. About the things I said.
- I get it coach. I do.
- No you don’t.

Rob couldn’t help but admit this was the happiest he’d been in years. The happiest he’d been since getting this job at Hennington High. Since meeting Alice. Since starting this life he was determined to lead. He was meant to be here, next to Jesse.

- I’ve never felt something like this before. This has never felt so right.

Jesse smiled. Maybe this really was the beginning. He pushed himself closer into Rob and cradled his head into Rob’s chest, closing his eyes. Rob stroked his hair, his eyes still at the ceiling.

And for a moment Rob pictured a conversation with Alice. Where he came out with the truth about everything. Where she cried, but forgave him. Thanked him for telling the truth. And they parted ways. A conversation that would never happen. Couldn’t. There were some things that never changed in Hennington, and as that feeling, that lust for Jesse that Rob allowed to creep up from the depths of his teenagehood drifted back into his subconscious, Rob knew that this couldn’t happen again. It was out of his system, and soon he had to return to reality. But maybe for a few moments he would remain in this bliss, this perfect warmth, with his quarterback nestled in his arms.

Rob could remember that feeling so well now, as he lay in bed next to Alice. The obituary was in the garbage beside them in the dark.

Alice was secretly convinced that Rob was having an affair with Bonnie Fletcher, and while she came close to accusing him several times during their conversation, couldn’t muster the courage. After all, she knew that what they had was rare. They did love each other, and while this recent event only cemented her suspicion from the almond incident, some things were just meant to stay secret.

Rob had come up with some excuse for cutting out the article, wanted to put it up at the school in case any of the teachers wanted to attend the service. He knew his excuse was wafer-thin, but it was the only thing he could muster. He looked over at Alice who slept soundly. They were feet from one another in the king sized bed. His eyes closed and he imagined being back on that tile floor, Jesse’s head rising and falling with each breath, their bodies perfectly intertwined. He tried to sleep, unsure of what tomorrow would bring, replaying his encounter with Jesse, every encounter with Jesse, a smile on his face.


As the service came to a close, and friends and family solemnly made their way out to their cars, Jesse sat alone with his mother in the front pew. He’d remained stoic and composed for the day, although a slew of emotions ran though him. It was a talent he’d picked up after moving to Concordia, after he began dating, began hooking up. Being emotionally removed was a skill, he’d thought. It allowed him to stay tough when he was attacked, or when people needed him. And as his mother wept beside him for what must have been the fourth hour in the chapel, he knew this was the time he needed to be a rock.

- It was a beautiful service.
- It really was. Thank you, Jesse. For doing all this. I know it’s hard, but your father would have appreciated it.
- I didn’t do it for him.

She nodded, and regained her composure. Breathed in a long and soothing breath.

- I loved your father so deeply, Jesse. But he wasn’t perfect. Far from it, in fact. I’m ashamed of him in so many ways. Days when he would come home drunk, days when he’d be late. Staying at the office. Or who knows what. So much that we kept from you. So much that I kept from him. I suppose I should be ashamed of myself.
- No, mom.
- Yes. Our marriage was flawed, Jesse. I can’t count the number of times I wanted to walk away. Restart. But you…he kept me there. We tried at this. Hard. And it worked. But I can’t help but question the effort. It shouldn’t have been this hard.
- It’s never too late to start something new.

And Bonnie knew. She looked at her son, who stared at the casket. A weight had been lifted from her shoulders. Dennis wasn’t a burden, and she did love him. But she somehow looked forward to a change, a natural evolution in her life that would reinvigorate her spirit. This was the acceptance she knew she would one day reach, and it came sooner than expected. She let herself smile, truly, genuinely smile, for the first time in years.

Jesse’s last words to his mother resonated in him as he stood and walked to the casket for the first time today. The last time he’d seen his fathers face was when he’d left for University. They’d had dinner at home. Earlier that weekend Jesse revealed he’d turned down the football scholarship to pursue his art degree, and while the yelling that followed was hard, the silence now was unbearable. His mother had come out onto the driveway to wave him off, alone. This picture remained in Jesse’s mind of his mother in the rearview mirror. And we winced back a surge of emotion, speaking quietly as he neared his lifeless father. Eyes closed. Silent as he’d always been. And for the first time Jesse wasn’t scared of this man.

- Dad. I don’t know how this has taken me this long. You’ll never know the real me, and that stings like you can’t believe. I’m gay.

Jesse felt a tear escape his eye as his words intensified.

- For so long I’ve hated you for that. For making me live in this fear of being myself. For never believing that I could fall in love. You were making me into yourself and I hated you for that. But now…now you’re gone and you’ll never know. I remember when I was seven. Thanksgiving. And you taught me how to throw a football for the first time. And I saw in your eyes this love. Deeper than any kind of love I’d ever seen. And I felt it, this warm love. I’d do anything for that feeling again. Hell I joined the goddamn Colts to see that look. I want to remember you that way. And I want you to remember me this way. As I am. I need…I need you to know how much I love you.

But he wouldn’t know. As this realization dawned on Jesse again, he let another tear fall from his eye. Nodding goodbye, he took a step back from the casket, and looked back towards the doors.

Rob stood in a black suit.

It was the same suit he’d worn to Jesse’s graduation in the spring, four years prior. Since their first encounter, they’d met up three times, each several weeks apart. Nothing as intense as the locker room, but a quick kiss in the equipment room, one time at Jesse’s house when his parents were in Tisdale for the weekend. Jesse had fallen in love. Rob would go weeks at a time without even thinking about it, but inevitably he’d end up in a moment of weakness, when Alice would show her true colors, when he’d had a hard day, and needed to indulge in the safety and comfort that he found in the eighteen year old.

Jesse was in the gymnasium, which had been transformed into a dance floor for the graduates, maroon and yellow streamers hung in arches from the roof. A disco ball spun wildly above them, casting spears of light onto the walls. Jesse’s arms were around Chelsea, his grad date. It was a necessity for everybody on the team to have a date. Even Jesse, who was picked on for his lack of a girlfriend, felt the pressure enough to ask one of his closest friends. He looked past Chelsea as they swayed to the music, and caught Rob’s eye on the side. He stood in that black suit, hands behind his back, observing the students. But Jesse knew who he was observing. And he smiled to himself, imagining that it was Rob in his arms. Everybody else gone. The two of them, safe.

After the song had ended, Jesse went out to the field for air. He sat on the steps of the school. The warm spring air woke him up, as a voice startled him from behind.

- You got some moves, kid.

Rob came up beside him and sat on the steps.

- Ha, hardly.
- What brings you outside?
- Just…thinking.
- About?

Jesse blushed. What did he have to lose now? School was done for good.

- Us. This thing. I’m going to graduate, so…I don’t know. Just thinking about what comes next.
- Yeah I’ve been thinking about it too.
- I’m ready to tell my Dad. I think. I’m sick of being this person who hides. When I’m with you, I am proud of who I am. I feel like I can take on the world. I love it, I love that feeling. It’s something I haven’t had. So I’m ready.
- Jesse—
- And I know…I know that you can’t just up and leave. We can’t start dating or something. But maybe…I don’t know. Maybe if we leave.
- Leave?
- Levitt? Or Kerrisdale? There are schools all over in any of the bigger cities, you could get a job in a second. I know you want this. I know you do.
- Jesse I…proposed to Alice.

Jesse stopped and looked at Rob. This wasn’t a joke.

- No.
- I proposed. And she said yes. Alice is my fiancée, Jesse.

They sat in silence next to one another. This couldn’t be happening.

- I wanted to tell you earlier, but—

Jesse stood.

- I have to…go. Don’t—
- Jesse!

And he walked off, his face red with embarrassment. He thought Rob would be ready to jump. Take some risk for this connection that he knew they both felt. But when Rob didn’t follow him back inside. When he sat out there, considering what had happened, alone, Jesse knew that it was for real. And this was the moment that everything became clear. He couldn’t play football. He couldn’t accept this damn scholarship. And he couldn’t stay in this fucking town any longer.

For months Jesse had let himself believe he had fallen in love. That his love was this tangible, wonderful thing that could only grow and strengthen. But he was wrong. It was something he’d seen in movies. The blueprints he’d thought up for years were something of a fantasy. And he tried his best to abandon these thoughts as he raced back home to begin packing his bags. It was the first defining moment in the new incarnation of who Jesse would become. The version he’d learn to hate. That was the last time Jesse had seen Rob before returning to Hennington. The last time he remembered being his old self.

This rush of memory flooded Jesse’s mind as he stood by his father’s casket. That same suit. That same solemn expression, the same one before Rob told Jesse about the proposal. Jesse forced himself to turn back to the casket, hide his tears from Rob. Moments later, he felt a hand on his shoulder, and knew.

- I’m so sorry, Jesse. How are you holding up?

And for a moment, a cynical joke of an answer passed through Jesse’s mind. The instincts he’d picked up in Concordia to put on this bold front; no harm no foul, another one bites the dust. But he knew that Rob could see right through him. And as he looked down at his fathers face, he felt himself opening up again.

- I hate how much I miss him. Because I know he doesn’t miss me.
- That’s not true. Trust me. I know it’s not.

Jesse nodded.

- Yeah. Maybe you’re right.

Together they walked out the side door and towards the park nearby, strolling next to one another down the pathway in their suits.

- I didn’t think you’d actually come. Where’s Alice?

Rob pictured Alice rifling through the garbage for the obituary.

- I don’t care.

Jesse considered this as they sat on a bench under the shade of an enormous elm. Jesse laughed to himself as he sensed Rob’s eyes on him.

- I feel like nothing has changed, Coach.
- What do you mean?
- Coming back here. The people, the places…you. I feel like—

The kiss silenced Jesse in a second, and they both shared that feeling they’d missed for four years. For a moment Jesse allowed himself to surrender to this man who was thrust back into his life, but he broke the kiss and laughed again to himself.

- See? I can’t—you can’t just expect me to come back and keep this up. This charade. I left because of you.
- I’m sorry. It’s always been you, Jesse.
- Well forgive me if I don’t believe you this time.
- Please, listen—
- No, you don’t get to tell me what to do—you broke my heart.

Jesse stood to leave, but was stopped by Rob’s words.

- Please. I can’t be a gay man at my age. I can’t just restart. You have to see that. For so long I’ve been living a lie. And you came so close to setting me free, letting me be who I really am. That’s why I needed you here. And when I knew you were leaving I didn’t know what else to do. So I clung to the only thing I knew was safe. It was Alice. I’m sorry. I don’t know what to say. I don’t expect you to forgive me, I don’t expect you to take me back, but I don’t know what else to do to make this feeling go away. So just…tell me to fuck off. Tell me you’re dating someone. Break my heart so I can move on. I can’t live like this anymore.

Jesse turned back to Rob, and saw him there, on the bench. Pleading and pathetic. He was the boy that Jesse had once been, after the game, injured. And Jesse was the coach. The only one with the words to make it all better.

- You can restart. You can always change. Life is too short to live with regrets. To not be yourself. To not be happy. Trust me I know. My father is a burden I have to live with now, or forget and move on. I’ve become good at moving on.

They both laughed gently and Jesse resumed his spot next to Rob on the bench.

- Or maybe not. I really missed you in Concordia. What happened at graduation changed me. Into this person. Who might not believe in love. Who settles for what’s easy. And I hate it, but I don’t know how else to live.
- Then maybe we go back. Maybe we take this chance to restart, forget the pain that we caused each other, and let ourselves be happy.
- Maybe.

Rob grabbed Jesse’s hand, and Jesse noticed that there was no longer a ring on his finger. Jesse allowed himself for the first time to feel affection. It was a chill he hadn’t experienced. Unexpected and welcome. This could be the beginning again. Or maybe he was setting himself up for a fall even bigger than before. Either way, he had to take the risk. This life would only be lived once, and even if the happy moments were few and far between, they were better than denying what he knew was natural. And hopefully this time Rob would do the same.

A month later, Jesse convocated from the University of Concordia. He brought Rob to the reception, and he wore his black suit. Together they danced in the middle of the floor, watched by some of the crowd, ignored by others, but blissfully safe in each other’s arms. Finally together, the way they were meant to be.

And from the bleachers, Bonnie watched her son’s smile and couldn’t help but reflect it back at him. The happiness of true love she’d tried so hard to feel in her life. And she knew that somewhere above them, Dennis Fletcher watched, and smiled too. Knowing that his family was happy in his wake.
 
Blake,

As always, a wonderfully romantic story. Probably truer than fiction. How many young men have lived through the same feelings for a coach or teacher, but never being able to reach the relationship that Jesse and Rob found.
You have been one of my most favorite writers in this forum and it is always exciting to see you presenting another story. Good romance in this forum is somewhat of a rarity and it is delightful to come across periodically. Don't get me wrong, I enjoy the erotic as well, but something just tugs a little stronger when I read about the emotional entanglements involved in a romantic encounter. Thanks, also, for bring it to us in a full 3 part series. Cliff hangers can be fun, but it was very enjoyable to read the story in one siting.

Craiger
 
Blake,
I just finished reading Evolution.
It was a heart-wrenching and warming story.
You are a very talented author.
I agree with Craiger that I enjoyed being able to read the entire story at once but, I wonder if it might have garnered you more readers if you'd posted the chapters a couple of days apart.

I sometimes start to look at something and get called away - or, if it's a night, I might pop in to check on something, realize it's more than my tired eyes (and other body parts) can manage at the hour, and put it away, intending to read it later - unfortunately, I sometimes have a mind like a sieve, and don't always remember to go right back.

As I've mentioned to others, I don't always get out to the main story forum every day - I have a lot of subscriptions, since I try to read just about everything that's posted in the stories - both for my enjoyment and to try and provide encouragement for the budding authors. Consequently, if something appears once, and isn't picked up on regularly, I might miss it.

I'm very glad I didn't miss your story. It definitely pulled on my heart strings.
Thank you for taking the time and energy to write this and share it with us.
:=D: :D (*8*) :wave:
 
Thanks for the comments guys!

I usually post my stories in a few parts, posting as I finish. But I've found recently I'll have a concept, flesh out the three parts, and never actually get around to writing more than one. So for these, I decided to finish them all before posting anything. I didn't quite feel that as individual parts they had enough of a "hook" to keep people checking back for updates, so I decided to just post them all at once. Also, because the story jumps back and forth in time and space, I figured some of the more specific elements might be muddled if they were posted separately.

I really write for myself, as cliche as that sounds. It's great if someone connects with my writing, but as long as the story is told and I get out what's on my mind at the time, I'm sated. I so appreciate the comments and suggestions though, I'm always looking to improve.

That and nothing drives me crazier than people who manipulate the forum by posting several very short passages, to up their "Post Count", and ensure their thread is on top of the heap! Ack.
 
For me, the newpost reminder is a great help, though. I don't always have time to read a BIG installment all at once. That give me "digestible" chunks.
 
Enjoyed the story and especially your understanding of the persistence of emotion at Jesse's age.

One quibble: as I understand the rules of football, Zach would have been an ineligible receiver.
 
Back
Top