ChrisGibson
JUB Addict
SUNDAY CONTINUED
Lance Bishop was a tall, narrow, employee at the Abercrombie
and Fitch in the mall, and he looked like an employee of the
Abercrombie and Fitch at the mall: tight faded jeans, tight
faded shirt, too small hoodie. He stood at the entrance of
Dylan’s room and said, “What’s up?”
“My cousin just published her first book.”
“Cool,” Lance said. Jamming his hands in his pockets, he
slinked into the room and sat at the desk chair. “You gonna do
some of that too? Or keep playing trumpet?”
Dylan shrugged. “I dunno,” he said. “Maybe. Probably
trumpet, though.”
Again, Lance said, “Cool.”
Dylan was about to say that Lance was a man of limited
words, but then Lance said, “It’s been a dull weekend.
Weekends are always boring when you go to your other
Dad’s.”
“It’s not like you couldn’t come over there.”
“I know,” Lance said. But this didn’t seem to effect
anything. Dylan wondered where half of his questions and
conversations went with Lance.
“Ruthven called last night.”
“Really?” Lance looked up.
That had pricked something.
“I didn’t talk to him,” Dylan said. “He called. It was for my
goddad really. So I just said I didn’t want to talk to him.”
“Well, good,” Lance said. Dylan wondered, if Lance weren’t
so good looking, then would it be so apparent how insecure he
was?
Lance sat with his legs wide apart and put his hands
together, cracking his knuckles. He furrowed his brow and
Dylan knew he was about to make a pronouncement.
“He never treated you very well. I don’t think you should
talk to him at all.”
And there was the pronouncement.
Lee came out of his office.
“Yes?” Tom looked up at him.
“Fuck it,” Lee said.
He came and sat down beside his partner.
“What did you have to say to me, Tommy?”
Tom smiled triumphantly at him, and then twisted around
and said, “Just that I really don’t like Lance, but not because
he’s bad.”
“No?”
“No,” Tom said. “Because he’s stupid. I think that Dylan
could do better.”
“He’s not Dylan’s boyfriend. Just because your son is gay
doesn’t mean every boy he knows is his love interest.”
“I know,” Tom said, though Lee wondered if he really did.
“But he could still do better… Whatever he is.”
“Um hum,” Lee nodded. He got up and went toward the
window.
“By the way, Tom.”
“Yes?”
“Ruthven called last night.”
Well, Lee thought, that would shut him up for a while.
Layla started out of her nap, and Will was chuckling as she
awoke.
“You!” she said, sitting up, and pulling his face to her,
kissed him.
“Is my breath too bad?”
“I should be asking the same thing,” Will said. “I should be
asking if I smell like the road?”
“The road? You only traveled from Chicago.”
“That’s enough road.”
“And did Milo get that popcorn from the gas station and lie
to Dena about it?”
“Not the gas station,” Will said, sitting on the bed beside
Layla, while she wrapped an arm around him and stroked his
hair back. “The Walgreens across from Loretto.”
“Oh.”
“Yes.”
“And Bren and Kenny?”
“They ought to come home.”
“Brendan doesn’t want to give up on Chicago.”
“He wouldn’t be giving up,” Will said.
“I agree. But Brendan doesn’t. He thinks he’s got to stay in
the big city. Conquer it or something like that.”
Will said: “I think it’ll make Kenny miserable.”
“Again, I agree.”
And then Will said, “But this isn’t supposed to be about
them. What about you? What’s your news?”
“You didn’t see it? It was on the desk.”
“On the desk?”
Will got up and left the bedroom. Sitting on the edge of the
bed, Layla waited, eagerly. And then she heard a shout and a
few moments later Will came running into her room.
“Lay-Lah!”
“Yeah,” she nodded while he displayed the book.
He jumped on the bed with her and hugged her. They
rolled around. She said, “And it’s so glossy. Isn’t it? And it’s so
pretty.”
Will opened it up, stuck his face in and smiled at her over
the corners. “And it smells good!”
Layla nodded. She loved that her man loved the smell of a
new book.
Will kissed her. He kissed her again and then he put the
book down.
“Layla… I think we should…”
She smiled at him, pulling away.
“I think we should too. After—”
“After I shower?”
“After you shower.”
Layla remembered lying on the bed, watching Will come back
into the room, Will unwinding the towel from around his loins
and moving through the ritual of combing his hair, rubbing
down his flesh with oil, rolling deodorant under his arms. He
lay across the bed while she scribbled words, and then they
loved each other, and when it was done they didn’t hold onto
each other. They never did that. They lay side by side and Layla
closed her eyes savoring the memory of him, her clenching and
unclenching her hands and feet, squeezing that inside place.
She drifted off to sleep like that, and when she came to, Will
was still snoring beside her, his head turned away.
She climbed out of bed and wrapped herself in a robe. She
thought of putting real clothes on, but not right now. Layla
went downstairs and into the kitchen, enjoying the feeling of
being Mrs. Will, of having him back here. The phone rang and
she picked it up quickly.
“Layla?”
Out of the voices she knew, Layla had to check her mental
register to see whom it was.
“Meredith?’
“Yeah.”
“I heard you had some huge news.”
“What?” Layla had actually forgotten about the book. And
then she said, “Yeah.”
“I think that’s great, Layla. I think you’re my new hero. Not
that you weren’t before.”
“Well, of course,” Layla’s hip bumped the refrigerator door
shut after she pulled out a yogurt.
“But I have some news to run by you. I mean, I have
something important.”
“All right?” Layla said.
“I’ll tell you when I get there. It’s one of those ‘tell you
when I get there’ sort of things.”
“Yes,” Chay answered while he was washing the dishes.
Sheridan was on the bed with books and papers spread out,
and he put his pencil half down and said, “Yeah, what?”
Chay frowned.
“To your question. Earlier. Don’t you remember?”
“Huh?”
“Well, if you’re going to be that way, I think I’ll change my
mind.”
Sheridan was being that way. His head was full of French
and history and only now did he remember what Chay might
have been talking about.
“Is this about us?”
“Yes,” Chay said, shutting off the water.
Sheridan stopped for a moment. He smiled and said, “Is
this about us moving in together?”
“It was going to be,” Chay said, feigning injury. “But if you
don’t care as much as it seems you don’t care, all that packing I
was thinking about doing, I just might unthink.”
Sheridan jumped up and came across the room, catching
Chay’s wrists.
“Ouch! Abuse! Abuse!”
Sheridan kissed him tenderly on the lips and let him go.
“Don’t you even think about not packing. I’ll go home and
tell your folks myself. We’re gonna be roomies.”
Lance Bishop was a tall, narrow, employee at the Abercrombie
and Fitch in the mall, and he looked like an employee of the
Abercrombie and Fitch at the mall: tight faded jeans, tight
faded shirt, too small hoodie. He stood at the entrance of
Dylan’s room and said, “What’s up?”
“My cousin just published her first book.”
“Cool,” Lance said. Jamming his hands in his pockets, he
slinked into the room and sat at the desk chair. “You gonna do
some of that too? Or keep playing trumpet?”
Dylan shrugged. “I dunno,” he said. “Maybe. Probably
trumpet, though.”
Again, Lance said, “Cool.”
Dylan was about to say that Lance was a man of limited
words, but then Lance said, “It’s been a dull weekend.
Weekends are always boring when you go to your other
Dad’s.”
“It’s not like you couldn’t come over there.”
“I know,” Lance said. But this didn’t seem to effect
anything. Dylan wondered where half of his questions and
conversations went with Lance.
“Ruthven called last night.”
“Really?” Lance looked up.
That had pricked something.
“I didn’t talk to him,” Dylan said. “He called. It was for my
goddad really. So I just said I didn’t want to talk to him.”
“Well, good,” Lance said. Dylan wondered, if Lance weren’t
so good looking, then would it be so apparent how insecure he
was?
Lance sat with his legs wide apart and put his hands
together, cracking his knuckles. He furrowed his brow and
Dylan knew he was about to make a pronouncement.
“He never treated you very well. I don’t think you should
talk to him at all.”
And there was the pronouncement.
Lee came out of his office.
“Yes?” Tom looked up at him.
“Fuck it,” Lee said.
He came and sat down beside his partner.
“What did you have to say to me, Tommy?”
Tom smiled triumphantly at him, and then twisted around
and said, “Just that I really don’t like Lance, but not because
he’s bad.”
“No?”
“No,” Tom said. “Because he’s stupid. I think that Dylan
could do better.”
“He’s not Dylan’s boyfriend. Just because your son is gay
doesn’t mean every boy he knows is his love interest.”
“I know,” Tom said, though Lee wondered if he really did.
“But he could still do better… Whatever he is.”
“Um hum,” Lee nodded. He got up and went toward the
window.
“By the way, Tom.”
“Yes?”
“Ruthven called last night.”
Well, Lee thought, that would shut him up for a while.
Layla started out of her nap, and Will was chuckling as she
awoke.
“You!” she said, sitting up, and pulling his face to her,
kissed him.
“Is my breath too bad?”
“I should be asking the same thing,” Will said. “I should be
asking if I smell like the road?”
“The road? You only traveled from Chicago.”
“That’s enough road.”
“And did Milo get that popcorn from the gas station and lie
to Dena about it?”
“Not the gas station,” Will said, sitting on the bed beside
Layla, while she wrapped an arm around him and stroked his
hair back. “The Walgreens across from Loretto.”
“Oh.”
“Yes.”
“And Bren and Kenny?”
“They ought to come home.”
“Brendan doesn’t want to give up on Chicago.”
“He wouldn’t be giving up,” Will said.
“I agree. But Brendan doesn’t. He thinks he’s got to stay in
the big city. Conquer it or something like that.”
Will said: “I think it’ll make Kenny miserable.”
“Again, I agree.”
And then Will said, “But this isn’t supposed to be about
them. What about you? What’s your news?”
“You didn’t see it? It was on the desk.”
“On the desk?”
Will got up and left the bedroom. Sitting on the edge of the
bed, Layla waited, eagerly. And then she heard a shout and a
few moments later Will came running into her room.
“Lay-Lah!”
“Yeah,” she nodded while he displayed the book.
He jumped on the bed with her and hugged her. They
rolled around. She said, “And it’s so glossy. Isn’t it? And it’s so
pretty.”
Will opened it up, stuck his face in and smiled at her over
the corners. “And it smells good!”
Layla nodded. She loved that her man loved the smell of a
new book.
Will kissed her. He kissed her again and then he put the
book down.
“Layla… I think we should…”
She smiled at him, pulling away.
“I think we should too. After—”
“After I shower?”
“After you shower.”
Layla remembered lying on the bed, watching Will come back
into the room, Will unwinding the towel from around his loins
and moving through the ritual of combing his hair, rubbing
down his flesh with oil, rolling deodorant under his arms. He
lay across the bed while she scribbled words, and then they
loved each other, and when it was done they didn’t hold onto
each other. They never did that. They lay side by side and Layla
closed her eyes savoring the memory of him, her clenching and
unclenching her hands and feet, squeezing that inside place.
She drifted off to sleep like that, and when she came to, Will
was still snoring beside her, his head turned away.
She climbed out of bed and wrapped herself in a robe. She
thought of putting real clothes on, but not right now. Layla
went downstairs and into the kitchen, enjoying the feeling of
being Mrs. Will, of having him back here. The phone rang and
she picked it up quickly.
“Layla?”
Out of the voices she knew, Layla had to check her mental
register to see whom it was.
“Meredith?’
“Yeah.”
“I heard you had some huge news.”
“What?” Layla had actually forgotten about the book. And
then she said, “Yeah.”
“I think that’s great, Layla. I think you’re my new hero. Not
that you weren’t before.”
“Well, of course,” Layla’s hip bumped the refrigerator door
shut after she pulled out a yogurt.
“But I have some news to run by you. I mean, I have
something important.”
“All right?” Layla said.
“I’ll tell you when I get there. It’s one of those ‘tell you
when I get there’ sort of things.”
“Yes,” Chay answered while he was washing the dishes.
Sheridan was on the bed with books and papers spread out,
and he put his pencil half down and said, “Yeah, what?”
Chay frowned.
“To your question. Earlier. Don’t you remember?”
“Huh?”
“Well, if you’re going to be that way, I think I’ll change my
mind.”
Sheridan was being that way. His head was full of French
and history and only now did he remember what Chay might
have been talking about.
“Is this about us?”
“Yes,” Chay said, shutting off the water.
Sheridan stopped for a moment. He smiled and said, “Is
this about us moving in together?”
“It was going to be,” Chay said, feigning injury. “But if you
don’t care as much as it seems you don’t care, all that packing I
was thinking about doing, I just might unthink.”
Sheridan jumped up and came across the room, catching
Chay’s wrists.
“Ouch! Abuse! Abuse!”
Sheridan kissed him tenderly on the lips and let him go.
“Don’t you even think about not packing. I’ll go home and
tell your folks myself. We’re gonna be roomies.”



























