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.

The Good Guys: Jay and Michael Revisited

ChrisGibson

JUB Addict
Joined
Jan 18, 2019
Posts
4,143
Reaction score
323
Points
83
Location
South Bend
The Good Guys

Part One


At Nick Fabian’s funeral I sat in the pew beside my best friend, Michael Cleveland, and listened to him telling me that he had been about to kill himself when I had called him with the news that Tony was dead. Michael had explained it. He explained it all the way back to my house.
“It was like he’d done it so I didn’t have to. Like it was just too much death. He had taken my spot, and because he couldn’t go on, I had to. Or…” Michael looked doubtful about what he was saying, “Because he had given his life, I didn’t have to. And I know that sounds stupid… But…. it’s how I feel. When you told me about Tony,” Michael looked at the empty spot on the floor where Tony’s shiny casket had been, “I felt lighter. Not happier. But lighter. Like the weight had been lifted. It’s so strange.”
And I know I’m not one of the good guys because I thought how right now there was a large and long funeral procession for a nineteen year old football player who had succumbed to depression and killed himself, and I didn’t give a fuck because I really kind of hated him, and I would see him die a thousand times to save Michael Cleveland, and Michael was standing there next to me in his old school sports jacket that was a little too big, with his rumpled curly hair, and he said, “We’re getting late. I mean. The burial’s probably about to start. They must be at the cemetery. Are you ready to go?”
And I said, and my voice felt louder than I’d meant it, “Neither one of us liked him, we paid our respects. He’s dead. Let’s go home. Anything else would be…” What would my father say? “Pretentious.”
Michael drove us home, to his house, where he stayed with his Dad. My home with the shaded back yard where light glowed shiny through the broad leaves, and the den was beautiful and dimly dark in the afternoon would never be my home because it was full of my parents and their drama. The bleak two story Michael lived in with his father was full of space and housed by two barely connected bachelors, and so that bland space made it free. We went there.
“You thirsty?” he said.
“I am. A little.”
“But he didn’t serve because I knew where everything was. I got the water. He said, “Could you get me one too? While I go get chips.”
He said, “You wanna get high?”
I said, “Not especially, not now.”
He said, “Me neither.”
With our drinks and chips, we went upstairs.
He had a west window, and it looked over the backyard that didn’t have enough trees. And I remember his room was so clean that day.
“I felt like,” Michael said, “and this is stupid, “that I could clean my room today, have the cleanest room in honor of someone who couldn’t clean it anymore. You know?”
Michael shut the door and took off his jacket. He is long and tall and awkward, his back is long in that long white shirt. He put the blazer on a hook and then loosened his tie. He kicked off his shoes.
“I promised to never wear a blazer and tie again,” I said, draping my jacket over the chair, and also taking my tie off. Placing one and then the other Florsheim under the desk.
Michael turned to me, half smiling.
“Let’s try to keep those promises from now on.”
It was early summer, and Michael took off his dress shirt. He began to unbutton it, and he had on a wifebeater underneath. I thought what a sexy name for it, and why was it sexy? Beating your wife wasn’t sexy. And while my mind was on that path, I took off my shirt. But I never wore an undershirt and didn’t even look very good without a shirt on. Michael looked at me. Now, he took off his wifebeater and we stood there looking unimpressive, pudgy and too think, ungainly, his hair tousled, mine a little nappy, both of us in front of each other.
And then I took off my pants, and I took off my underwear and slipped off my socks. Michael undressed quickly. He came to me, suddenly, and I pulled his face to me, I kissed him and thrust my fingers into his thick hair. Our faces were fused together and then I pulled him to the bed. We tangled together, holding to each other, touching each other as much as we could, rolling back and forth so now the sun was hot on his back, now on mine, now his hands were all over me, now mine on his. We had to be together. We always should have been. As I held him in my arms and his head traveled down my body, as my fingers threaded through his thick curly hair, and I thrilled to the touch of his mouth I nearly wept for the memory of when he was away from me, when he was in the asylum and when he had gone off to Whittier, and when he was lost himself, and in all the nineteen years when I had felt no romantic way for anyone, and in the last four years when I had not known that We needed to be together in every way, possible, that I would give anything to keep him, and that he would do the same for me. So that afternoon, while across town Tony Fabian was being buried and others were weeping, my hands opened and closed and my legs lifted, and my hands reach town to stroke his hair as my thighs closed around him, and I cried out and my mouth was closed with his wet kiss, as I have myself to Michael Cleveland and he gave himself to me.

As the afternoon turned to evening we lay naked, face to face on his bed and touched each other lazily
“Did you plan this?” he asked.
“I don’t know,” I said, honest. “When you told me you almost died, when you told me that you could be right there where Tony was and gone from me, I knew I wanted you the opposite. As close as you could be to me. That’s all I knew.”
I looked on his red lips, the dark soft eyelashes, the last of the sun on his thick hair, before speaking again.
“That’s all I know.”
He looked on me, his mouth half open. Michael had been fat, and some of that was on him so he was long and tall, but with large thighs, with a boy’s body growing to a man’s, his thick thighs, his long long legs, took me in and he pulled me to him and kissed me deeply. He placed is head in my chest.
“This is what we are now,” he said. “This is us.”



Michael



Oh, my God, the first time we meet I think, He gets me. He gets everyone. He has thick glasses. He is the first black person I’ve ever been friends with. I would say he’s different from the other black kids, but he is different from every kid. I don’t even know what that means. What I do know is he listens to me. We listen to each other. When I am with Jay, the rest of the shit doesn’t matter. All your life you wait for that, a best friend.
I thought I wanted to talk about some things, but now I realize they aren’t worth talking abut. Those first years at Saint Ignatius, they aren’t worth talking about at all. And it’s not worth talking about the crazy house. Though I will. I’ll tell all about it real soon, and how I read The Bell Jar when I was there, and that was a mistake.
But what is worth saying right now it how I felt when I got out, when I was junior at Whittier, lonely as fuck, and the phone rang, and there was Jay on the other end of it. I’d like to say I was smart, was so smart that I would know how sad I was and how Jay was the end of that sadness. But when he came back into my life it was like I was dead and didn’t even know it, or it was like I was two dimensional and then someone blew me up like a balloon, and once he was back in my world, he had to stay in my world. I was three dimensional when I was with him.
Jay does not understand that whatever he tells me to do, I’m going to do. I would burn down a bridge if he said, in that calm voice of his, “Michael, I need you to burn down that bridge.”
We’re sitting at Tony’s funeral, and it’s sad, it’s real fucking sad, but when it’s over, Jay stops us from getting up, from going into the car. Everyone is leaving. He makes to pray, gets on his knees. I join him. People are filing out. Now they’re all gone, and we’re just sitting and suddenly I don’t want to go, and I wonder why I thought I should.
“They’ll never miss us,” Jay says. “They don’t even like us.”
A half hour later we are together. The first time I had sex was when I was sixteen, junior year at Whittier High School, really about a few weeks before Jay came back into my life. We did it a few times. Being with Jay is not like that, and it’s not that being with her was bad. It was just less. People will say Are you gay? Are you bi? Are you sleeping with your best friend? But none of that shit works. Jay is not my best friend. Jay is my Jay. Jay is the person that nothing can be between us but our skin and sometimes even that is too much. When he takes off his clothes, when we come together, it’s like, it’s like a fever breaking. It’s like a spell breaking, I have to goddamn be with him. I have to kiss him. I have to have his tongue and my tongue together. I have to have my legs tangled with his. I needs his hands in my hair. I need to feel his soft skin, kiss his body. His body is my body. I need him to own mine.
We don’t fuck, not the way that some people think of fucking. We press together, and my dick is pressed to his, and we press as much as we can rub, as much as we can hold on as tight as we can, glide across each other, kiss and sweat in that bed till the sheets are fucking soaked. They’re soaked, damnit. If what I am about to say sounds crazy to you, then I feel sorry for you, when I tell you I feel his dick pulsing under mine, and when we’re in bed I feel not like I’m making love to him, but like I am him, like I’m in his body feeling what he’s feeling, and he’s in me, and when he comes I’m going to feel it, and he’s going to feel me. Our orgasms are going to be the same. When he shakes and his eyes go wide it will be all I need. Same from him, and I can feel we’re coming together, and I can feel him shooting out, and there is heat like honey exploding between us in a pool, and we’re shaking and we don’t stop coming and I feel like it’s so strong, so violent I’m going to get knocked out of my body if he doesn’t hold onto me, and the same thing is going to happen to Jay if he doesn’t hold onto me, so we’re just there in bed, our bodies shaking and arching up and apart, and we’re holding onto each other, cause we don’t want to get lost. It’s strong enough to kill us almost.
When it’s done we can’t talk, we can’t move. We’re wrung out. It’s like the Holy Ghost, and it was holy, and we’re shaking and still twitching, our body jumping like we’ve been shocked. Our body, not bodies. We can’t say shit for a long time. We love each other, our fingertips touch, we keep doing that to remind each other we’re still here, we’re here, even though we can barely move, and we cannot speak.
` Jay knows everything. He’s like God to me. He knows and so, finally, when we can move, when we can hold onto each other and breathe even, I ask him.
“Did you plan this?”
After a long time he says, “I don’t know.”
He tells me that when I told him I was about to kill myself, that I could be the dead body in the casket he knew he wanted me to be the live body heaving right here next to him.
“I wanted you as close as you could be to me,” Jay says, touching my hair. “That’s all I knew.”
He is looking ae me, touching my lips, my eyes, stroking my hair.
He says: “That’s all I know.”
I am looking at him. Shorter than me, not fat, but not thin, brown, like… gold and chocolate and sweet with his brown eyes that can’t see shit without his glasses, with his nipples I want to touch, his little belly. I pull him in to me, wrap my thighs around him and kiss him as deep as I can. While my head is on his chest I hear him say:
“This is what we are now. This is us.”
 
A great start to a new Jay and Michael story! That was a hot scene and I am glad both of them acted on their feelings for each other! It was interesting to see it from both of their points of view. I hope there is more!
 
There will be more tomorrow night. This is really my favorite story, and though for us it's been a couple of weeks since the last story, for them it's only been a minute.
 
PART TWO




Michael



Oh, my God, the first time we meet I think, He gets me. He gets everyone. He has thick glasses. He is the first black person I’ve ever been friends with. I would say he’s different from the other black kids, but he is different from every kid. I don’t even know what that means. What I do know is he listens to me. We listen to each other. When I am with Jay, the rest of the shit doesn’t matter. All your life you wait for that, a best friend.
I thought I wanted to talk about some things, but now I realize they aren’t worth talking abut. Those first years at Saint Ignatius, they aren’t worth talking about at all. And it’s not worth talking about the crazy house. Though I will. I’ll tell all about it real soon, and how I read The Bell Jar when I was there, and that was a mistake.
But what is worth saying right now it how I felt when I got out, when I was junior at Whittier, lonely as fuck, and the phone rang, and there was Jay on the other end of it. I’d like to say I was smart, was so smart that I would know how sad I was and how Jay was the end of that sadness. But when he came back into my life it was like I was dead and didn’t even know it, or it was like I was two dimensional and then someone blew me up like a balloon, and once he was back in my world, he had to stay in my world. I was three dimensional when I was with him.
Jay does not understand that whatever he tells me to do, I’m going to do. I would burn down a bridge if he said, in that calm voice of his, “Michael, I need you to burn down that bridge.”
We’re sitting at Tony’s funeral, and it’s sad, it’s real fucking sad, but when it’s over, Jay stops us from getting up, from going into the car. Everyone is leaving. He makes to pray, gets on his knees. I join him. People are filing out. Now they’re all gone, and we’re just sitting and suddenly I don’t want to go, and I wonder why I thought I should.
“They’ll never miss us,” Jay says. “They don’t even like us.”
A half hour later we are together. The first time I had sex was when I was sixteen, junior year at Whittier High School, really about a few weeks before Jay came back into my life. We did it a few times. Being with Jay is not like that, and it’s not that being with her was bad. It was just less. People will say Are you gay? Are you bi? Are you sleeping with your best friend? But none of that shit works. Jay is not my best friend. Jay is my Jay. Jay is the person that nothing can be between us but our skin and sometimes even that is too much. When he takes off his clothes, when we come together, it’s like, it’s like a fever breaking. It’s like a spell breaking, I have to goddamn be with him. I have to kiss him. I have to have his tongue and my tongue together. I have to have my legs tangled with his. I needs his hands in my hair. I need to feel his soft skin, kiss his body. His body is my body. I need him to own mine.
We don’t fuck, not the way that some people think of fucking. We press together, and my dick is pressed to his, and we press as much as we can rub, as much as we can hold on as tight as we can, glide across each other, kiss and sweat in that bed till the sheets are fucking soaked. They’re soaked, damnit. If what I am about to say sounds crazy to you, then I feel sorry for you, when I tell you I feel his dick pulsing under mine, and when we’re in bed I feel not like I’m making love to him, but like I am him, like I’m in his body feeling what he’s feeling, and he’s in me, and when he comes I’m going to feel it, and he’s going to feel me. Our orgasms are going to be the same. When he shakes and his eyes go wide it will be all I need. Same from him, and I can feel we’re coming together, and I can feel him shooting out, and there is heat like honey exploding between us in a pool, and we’re shaking and we don’t stop coming and I feel like it’s so strong, so violent I’m going to get knocked out of my body if he doesn’t hold onto me, and the same thing is going to happen to Jay if he doesn’t hold onto me, so we’re just there in bed, our bodies shaking and arching up and apart, and we’re holding onto each other, cause we don’t want to get lost. It’s strong enough to kill us almost.
When it’s done we can’t talk, we can’t move. We’re wrung out. It’s like the Holy Ghost, and it was holy, and we’re shaking and still twitching, our body jumping like we’ve been shocked. Our body, not bodies. We can’t say shit for a long time. We love each other, our fingertips touch, we keep doing that to remind each other we’re still here, we’re here, even though we can barely move, and we cannot speak.
` Jay knows everything. He’s like God to me. He knows and so, finally, when we can move, when we can hold onto each other and breathe even, I ask him.
“Did you plan this?”
After a long time he says, “I don’t know.”
He tells me that when I told him I was about to kill myself, that I could be the dead body in the casket he knew he wanted me to be the live body heaving right here next to him.
“I wanted you as close as you could be to me,” Jay says, touching my hair. “That’s all I knew.”
He is looking ae me, touching my lips, my eyes, stroking my hair.
He says: “That’s all I know.”
I am looking at him. Shorter than me, not fat, but not thin, brown, like… gold and chocolate and sweet with his brown eyes that can’t see shit without his glasses, with his nipples I want to touch, his little belly. I pull him in to me, wrap my thighs around him and kiss him as deep as I can. While my head is on his chest I hear him say:
“This is what we are now. This is us.”



Jay



That first night we lay together, and my hand was in his curly hair and Michael said, “I’m afraid.
“You make me want to get it together. Get it together for you.”
“You are together. You can’t blame yourself for…”
“Being crazy? No, I guess not. But I can blame myself for exacerbating things, not taking my meds, putting myself in situations I know it’s hard to come out of it.
“And yet… I can’t blame myself, and that’s why I’m scared. You’re getting something broken. I’m afraid I’ll fly of the deep end. I’m afraid I won’t be what I wish I could be for you. I lived today. But what about tomorrow. I am so frightened that I won’t make it. One day.”
I don’t have it in me to say all the lies. To say it will all be alright. It’s never alright. Or to promise him nothing will happen. In the end everything happens.



I don’t mention again how all this happened because Tony died. After all, once we made the decision to come back to his house, we never saw all those others guys who went on to the burial. We never saw them again. And we had barely seen them before. It does make me wonder though, how many starts to life begin by the ending of life? I once heard a man say that one of his children died, and when he was at his wife’s side while she gave birth to their son, he felt the presence of his departed daughter, as if the boy was coming from the same place the girl had gone, and for that moment they were together. So maybe it is like that, how the moment of life given back, and life departed are together. And maybe, in the end, it doesn’t do to speak of it too much.
Michael asks me if I want to stay with him that night. Of course I will. There isn’t anything else I want more. I need decent clothes though. We need food, though. When he says there’s a frozen pizza in the refrigerator, I just look at him.
We shower together and then get dressed again. It is night now, the gentle warm, soft night of summer where the sky is a rich blue that still has sun in it, and even though the stars are a billion years old they look newly polished. It is not warm enough to ruin the effects of the shower, not like it was a month ago, in the worst of July. We cross town and come into Mom and Dad’s house. Dad says little. Mom asks about the funeral. What can I say? It was sad. I’m going to stay with Mike. Hi, Michael, Mom says. She’s always liked him. He follows me back into my room and get clothes.
At every turn he is so close to me. He is breathing at the back of my neck, every move we make, his fingers gently touch my hand. His shoulder is just a little against mine. We are never apart. I love it, this closeness. It’s everything I can do to not be lie down and have sex with him in this room, after these four years where, really, honestly, truly, I never knew we were this too each other, after the black time when we were parted, me with bandaged eyes and temporary blindness, and him in a crazy house.


One night we sat near the quarry lake smoking cigarettes.
“What was it like to be blind?” he says.
“Dark. What was it like to be in the Manor?”
“The same. Darkness.”



I have the strangest dream that night. It’s all darkness. My dreams are usually in semi darkness at least. I am traveling with my father, and my mother has left us to join the circus. But my mother is not my mother. My father is not my father, and I am not me. We are traveling on the road and we come to Kentucky. But Kentucky is a college dormitory, and we come in there and there are boys and many boys. I have been here before. I’ve dreamed about half dressed boys, and there’s even a boy on the john. I apologize as I pass him.
I do not know how I end up in the large dorm room with all the boys. They are all white. They have Oxford blue shirts on, khakis. They look like the nineteen fifties, like Tab Hunter or Dobey Gillis, but not in black in white. There is this one boy. He’s so white and pretty with blue eyes and shaved blond hair. And he is my best friend. We take all of our clothes off and lie down together under a blanket.
“We will travel the whole world,” he tells me.
“Why do I feel like I know you?”
“Because you’ve always known me, silly,” he says, grinning, and looking so in love with me.
We begin traveling, and it is only after a long time that I realize that I am a rabbit, or a hare. The boy looks at me and says, “You have the longest most beautiful ears.”
He kisses them and then kisses me on my rabbit mouth, and it does not hurt even though he has a beak and is now a bluebird. We travel to the hole where we live. I look in there are the spider eggs, all the shape of little glass marbles. Waking, I’m not sure that spider eggs look like that at all, but in the dream I say, “We’ve got to get the eggs and take them with us. Winter is coming. We have to travel back up north where it’s warm.”

When I wake up I am tangled with Michael. Who is not pale or blond or blue eyed, who is the only man I’ve ever wanted and who, somehow is still this boy and this bluebird I have dreamed on. I am at home in his slumbering body, in his arms that are never too warm to hold me despite the summer. I can smell his breath a little, which smells like milk, and he says, his eyes closed, “You were moving and talking in your sleep.”
While I am awake enough to tell him the story, I do, and when we get to the boy he says, “But was he me? I mean, did he look like me?”
I am about to lie and then I say, “No,” and describe Dobey Gillis. I tell the rest of the dream and Michael says, “If I was the bird I must have been the boy.”
“What in the world does it mean?”
“I don’t think it has to mean anything. But if you want it to,” Michael says, “It means that it doesn’t matter where we go or what form we take it, we’re always together. Maybe Dobey Gillis was right. Maybe we’ve always been together.”
“We’re not the only people like this,” Michael says.
I want to be facetious, to say I know that there are gay couples, guy on guy couples all over the world. You see them on TV, white middle class, sort of rich and sexless. I know they’re there. But when he says it I also feel like we are alone, like I don’t know any other couples first hand, living this life, fueled on this superheated love.
So I say, “Whaddo you mean?”
“I didn’t understand it when I heard it,” Michael says. “Didn’t even understand how it made me feel. But I got this cousin up in Rhodes—”
“Near Sandusky?”
“Yeah. He’s from the Jewish side of the family, and he was married to this nice girl, Catholic like us. But he had this best friend. Black. I met him. Even a little like you. Anyway, apparently they’d been secretly in love for a long time, and after my cousin was married to this girl, they both realized they wanted other things and my cousin Isaac… he got with this guy, with his best friend. Now they’re together, and his first wife is with someone too, and shit seems to have worked itself out. I didn’t get it back then, but…. It’s nice how shit works itself out. How love will work out. If you let it.”
 
I really loved writing it too, and I'm not sure why I love them so much. What do you like?
 
I love it too. I think it's about the pain they shared. I feel like this whole story was written under the covers. Did you get the Easter Egg?
 
Oh, man, it's not an Easter Egg if I give it to you, and it certainly doesn't stop your enjoyment of this story... It's just something Michael says in passing about his family. By the wa I made a mistake. This story will continue Saturday night (Sunday for you), so I can post Rossford tomorrow.
 
The Good Guys: Conclusion


Michael’s father came home at eight, and he was glad I was staying. So when we start making love, I was worried about waking him. Michael does not care. He says his dad sleeps deeply. He grins at me with that lopsided grin. It’s a cool night, but it grows hot as we screw hard under a sheet, the backboard hitting the wall again and again, the mattress creaking furiously. Michael grits his teeth and almost shouts Goddamn! as he comes. I am so caught up in his coming, trembling with his coming, feeling the slick heat of his semen flood between out stomach, his long hot limbs splay out, across me, bunch to me, I have scarcely realized that I have come too.




winter


It is the first cold day. Mom has already made her coffee and I am making my cup, mixing a little bit of cocoa powder into it. The sky has a different tone when it is autumn, a little clearer, and I reach across the little island and take one of her cigarettes.
“Where’s your lighter?”
She hands it over.
“Now you’re not working too hard?” she said.
“No,” I said. “I mean, I can have a job and go to school. But we need to pay rent.”
“Well, you need to finish school too.”
“We can do both at the same time.”
My mother nods.
“Curtains,” she said as she took a drag from her cigarette and exhaled.
“Huh?”
“Curtains. You all need curtains. That apartment should look like a home.”
“I don’t disagree with you.”
“That might be a Christmas present.”
“How about for a Christmas present you get me a Christmas present, and not something you decided I should have that I didn’t ask for?”
“Well,” my mother says in a tone I know.
We’ve been having a lot of these wells lately, since I left home. I realize for nineteen years she’s said ridiculous things, and I’ve simply listened to them. What else could I do? I realize… but right now it doesn’t really do to rehearse grievances and near grievances, to go over shit that’s driven me crazy when soon Michael will be here to pick me up from his job at the furniture store. We will go back home, and all night on opposite ends of the living room we will read for class the next day, work on papers. We will put together something like a meal, but probably not until ten.
I love my mother, but she will never understand what I was about to say, so I inhale the cigarette and exhale from my nostrils.
What I want to say is, “I am happy. I am so happy now.”
What she would say was, “You weren’t happy before?”
I would say, “But you knew that I wasn’t,” and she would say she did the best she could and things would become all about her. She can’t help herself.
Dad comes in and says, “Is that Michael’s car that just parked outside?”
“Who’s getting out it?”
“Michael.”
I don’t want to sound like a smart ass, so I don’t say a thing. I get up and go to the the thin black stone foyer and open the door that hangs off the driveway to let him into my parent’s ranch house. He doesn’t kiss me. That’s so much explaining. He just grins down at me, and I say, “I’ll get you a cup of coffee.”
We sit with Mom and Dad drinking coffee. It’s always weird because Mom and Dad never act like themselves around white people. They are never rude or tired. They are always proper and Mom’s voice raises an octave and she repays lame stories with operatic laughter. They sit up straighter. I have an urge to belch out loud or fart in my seat. We’ve been here a while when Mom says, “Michael, do you want some dinner?”
Knowing me very well, Michael says, no and that we need to get home.
“Did you know,” Michael says, as he puts his hand on the door and outside we see evening sky turned pink and violet, “this is the sixth month since Tony died.’
“Tony,” my mother says.
“The guy who killed himself, who went to our school.”
“Oh!” Mom says. “My heart breaks for that poor boy.”
This is why I do not call myself a good guy, because Mom, whose heart doesn’t break for very much in front of her eyes, always has her heart breaking for some asshole she has never and will never and in this case can never meet. Whatever she means by this phrase, it doesn’t have any relation to action, and I know I’m kind of cunt for thinking this.
“Yeah,” Michael says. He gives a small grin that only I can see, “I ran into Ted Landford.”
“Ted Lanford?” I frown.
“Yep.”
Well, now he was an asshole too. But I say, “What did he want?”
“To say hi,” Michael said. “He’s changed. I guess some people do. He said he wished he’d known what was going on inside Tony. That if he had know underneath that… attitude—that’s not the way he phrased it, but that’s what he menat—what was going on, then maybe he could have reached out, been a better friend. Maybe Tony would still be alive.”
I think, four months since Tony’s funeral is four months since Michael just barely avoided suicide. This is four months since I lost my virginity, four months since the first time Michael and I made love. Four months since he stopped being severely depressed and we became instead of drowning friends, lovers moving toward a real and happy life. And let me be very clear, this wondrous power of two nineteen year old boys who love each other and have sex all night has not saved me from my old sadness. My radiant smile has not saved Michael from that exhaustion which is beyond despair. An arsenal of drugs and a lot of steady therapy is there too, but he never got serious about that shit, he never resolved to live until we knew each other, and I never resolved to make a life for myself either until I knew I could love. All of that, all of this shit began four month ago, since Tony died, since I got the phone call, since we knelt in a church looking at his casket. Four months have passed since the world was born.
“I bet,” my mother said in that slightly sentimental voice that only comes out in front of white people, “you two also would have done something to keep him alive if you could.”
And I am not one of the good guys because instead of even pretending to a yes, I kiss my mother on the cheek, touch my father on his shoulder, and say:
“Goodnight.”
 
I am glad for them, but I also wanted to be realistic about them. They came together in time, but they have to keep on coming together, and of course, the decision to stay alive has to be made over and over again. I'm also glad we got to resolve what happened with Isaac and Efrem in the last story.
 
Back
Top