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The Skin of Things: A Sort of Love Story

ChrisGibson

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Originally, in quite altered form, a rougher version of this story appeared here some time ago. Some read that one, and some did not. No one on this forum has read this version before, so here goes...



There are so many stories that teach us that what we go through in life, and our battles and confrontations will lead us to have more strength and fortitude and be more victorious in the end, and I don’t think that’s true for the majority of people on this planet. Sometimes what we go through just makes us weaker and sadder and more pathetic, and we don’t necessarily gain any fortitude or strength from it.


-Patjim Statovici




Shall I part my hair behind? Do I dare to eat a peach?
I shall wear white flannel trousers, and walk upon the beach.
I have heard the mermaids singing, each to each.

I do not think that they will sing to me.

I have seen them riding seaward on the waves
Combing the white hair of the waves blown back
When the wind blows the water white and black.
We have lingered in the chambers of the sea
By sea-girls wreathed with seaweed red and brown
Till human voices wake us, and we drown.



-T.S. Eliot, The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock , 1917









THE SKIN OF THINGS







FIRST
ESSAY








O N E




“I was too sleepy, too worn out from the days, too obsessed with trying to get beneath the skin of things. “


- Donovan Shorter’’



IT’S no good if we’re not honest. That’s the thing. After the last book was finished, the one that nobody read, I convinced myself that it was fine if I never wrote again, but that was bullshit, and even as I said it I was looking for the next story. I thought, how nice it would be to write about dragons or witches, maybe produce the next Lord of the Rings. And this is not so that I could escape. I never want to escape the world. I want to climb right inside it. The truth is the world is a magical place, and most of us simply don’t have the eyes to see it.
I was looking for the magical country, the one to start the new book in. I looked for two days. I walked in circles, up and down the neighborhoods outside of downtown, late at night while only the ivory colored moon floated like a lozenge in the black sky. I burned incense and candles when the same full moon made the whole city crazy, and the children at the school kicked each other, held up a knife to one teacher and broke into another teacher’s car. That was the same time when Grindr and Adam4Adam and every other sex app suddenly blew up with men desperate to fuck in strange places, and I’d like to say I was too wise or maybe even too moral to take them up on strange offers, but the truth is I was too sleepy, too worn out from the days, too obsessed with trying to get beneath the skin of things.
I was still looking for the root of this thing, the little sand grain in the pearl that makes one tell the story. And it was as I drifted off to sleep, with a memory of sand and grey blue water that the root came. Or the grain. And grain is a better word. For that grain of sand in the oyster is nothing but an irritation, and it is that irritation that causes the story.
I have heard the old phrase, I do not know who said it, that writing is easy, open up a vein and bleed. I have also heard someone dismiss this and say writing truly is easy. Between these two lies there lies the truth. The difference between the idea of writing and actual writing, is the five hundred feet I must walk from the steps of the Masonic temple where I am watching the moon, to this toilet where I am clicking away. The space between thinking of writing and writing is taking that little grain, which is longing, which is something next to sadness, which could quickly overwhelm you, and creating the book from it. There isn’t any other way to create something worth making. The book is filled with a whole maze of shit you just don’t want to see, or that you do not know if you can bare the full sight of. The book is a horror piece.
Now that I’ve said all this, let me set my sights on the very first thing, and you will wonder what is so horrible about it. I set my sights on Cade, and the horror of him was knowing almost right away that I loved him, knowing that he was the first interesting thing I’d seen in a long time.
Cademon Richards is tall, with a head of curls and very deep blue eyes. Deep blue eyes are a trope, and they are a white person’s trope. Not something I’d cared too much about before. Not until his, and his smile, and his slight beard, and his knitted cap and the whole business of me wondering if I was just interested in a type, a sort of white boy I had never known, but only seen in videos and comedy sketches set in Oregon. But I saw him at work. He was one of the few men in the elementary school, and I was in the kindergarten. We were the only males working with tiny children, and maybe there was some ancient mammal thing in me that is attracted to good providers, but I saw him dandle a four year old and laugh as he swung him about. I saw him leading them into the cafeteria for snack time, and pushing open their little milk cartons, poking their juices with the little straws, taking the cellophane off of their fruit cups, and I was… in love seems the wrong word. But it is not far off.


How do you tell the truth of the story of us and leave the boring parts out? Even as I tell our story, we are surrounded by half stories and half people, and it’s not nice to say, but it’s true. Oprah and everyone who ever wanted to make money out of saying it tells you that everybody has a story and everybody is interesting, but neither of those things is true. Our lives are filled with the dull and half dead, and I want to leave them out. See, coming to Cade was the opposite of the dull and the half dead. The day I saw all six feet of him him in a tee shirt over a long sleeve tee shirt, in corduroy, missing only a knit cap and perhaps a bong, laughing and taking care of those children, was the day I began to hope something interesting was about to happen.
But I should back up. This was already turning out to be the most interesting year of my life. I have to say that, and so I was primed for it to become more interesting, and here the summer was finally coming with longer, warmer days after a winter we all thought would never end, and it was in that coming of summer he looked at me, and laughed, and I laughed back.


The first thing Cade ever said to me was, “You want a kid?”
He was not proposing marriage, he was walking down the hall with a train of tiny four year olds on their way to get snack, all garbling away, and I said, without missing a beat, “Which one do you suggest?”
“Oh, you’ll have to take your chances.”
I put my finger to my chin and looked on them as he looked at me.
“What about him?”
“No,” Cade said, “Trust me. That would be a bad idea.”
Then Cade turned red and said, “I didn’t say any of that. This conversation never happened.”
“What conversation?” I asked as they filed into the cafeteria.
Secretively, Cade placed a finger alongside his nose and said, “Exactly.”
As I headed down the hall, a blond four year old raised his hand and waved, calling, “Peace out!”
I’m not sure you know what that means, I thought, laughing, because it was a quarter past one, and even though the day was over at two thirty, peacing out, was exactly what I was doing.


“There’s really nothing wrong with shoplifting,” Donovan said. “No, listen, hear my point.”
They were all sitting around the table in the teacher’s lounge, but this was the lunch hour for the staff and class assistants.
“Stealing is, say, I walk into Barb’s house. I’m like, ‘I like that clock.’ So I take her clock. It is a personal thing I am taking from a person, right? When a thief robs you, there is this asshole coming into your personal space, violating it, raping it, taking what you worked for, and fucking with your security. That’s theft.”
“Yeah,” Angie said. “But—”
“But wait,” Donovan held up his hand. “Wait, I’m not done.”
“Say there is a neighborhood store, family store, mom and pop. You know who owns it, you know who’s getting the money…”
He stopped talking. Out of the corner of his eye he saw Cade, the man from the pre school down the hall. He had come into the room, and he had the look of someone who was not looking. He had just passed through a minute ago, and it seemed like there was no reason for him to pass through again. He was walking slowly.
Donovan continued. “That is theft. But, what about when it’s a corporation?”
“What difference does that make?” Angie said.
“Because I don’t care how many evangelicals get behind some Republican bill, corporations are not people. Wal Mart, by its very existence, is cheating and stealing from us and from the government everyday, so when you walk out with twenty to thirty dollars of shit hidden away in your bags, well good for you.”
“But what about if everyone did it?” Angie said.
Donovan could feel Cade’s eyes on him. He chose to ignore them. Or maybe he was playing for him.
“But everyone doesn’t do it, Ang. That’s the thing. And even if they did, you don’t think Wal Mart has already figured that out? No, when you think about that, think you’re stealing from Mr. Wal Mart, you just don’t know how rich Mr. Wal Mart or Mr Kroger or whatever is.”
Cade was gone now, and Donovan said, “Too bad about that. He’s like the only man in this building besides me.”
“There really aren’t any men in here,” Pam said in a tone of discovery. She frowned and began to count them on her hand while Amanda went scrolling over her phone and Barb said, “If you can count him as a man. He’s more like a baby.”
“I do,” Donovan said, meaningfully. “I very much count him as a man.”
“Oh,” Amanda raised an eyebrow, the same time Barb threw back her head and snorted.
“Isn’t he a bit you—” Angie started.
“Shut your mouth,” Donovan said. “And eat your chips.”

Donovan began very much to look forward to his chance sightings of Cade and the preschoolers. He told himself that there was something nice about the little kids and the teachers, but he didn’t stop telling himself there was something nice about the thinnish, tallish, vaguely bearded guy in the sweat jacket with the khaki pants and mellow half dreamy way about him as he took children to snack time, and marched them down the hall. It never occurred to him to wonder if he was gay. No man who made his living caring for little children would be otherwise. The same way that some people drooled over muscles, Donovan admitted he was turned on by seeing Cade reach for little hands and lift up little bodies, take away their cookie wrappers and rejoice in their tiny discoveries.
His duties took him all over the building. Half the morning he was with kindergarten and the other half upstairs with fourth grade. He would come down the long stone steps of the old building to sit at the landing and look at the pre-k for just a moment in the hopes that Cade might see him for a moment, or at least that, in the roughness of the day he might see Cade and feel a little better about life.
So when he learned that pre-k ended a week or two before the rest of the school, that Cade would be gone, he was plunged into a minor misery, until the next day when he saw, in brown pants and a tee shirt hanging over his thin torso, Cade Richards.
“I would never have pictured that for you,” Barb said, reaching for a slice of the pizza that was the latest gift of the school during teacher appreciation week.
“Well, stop picturing it.”
“Well, you stop looking and make something happen.”
Donovan put his head into Cade’s room, there was Cade sitting at a desk, looking more official than a pre school teacher usually did, and Donovan said, “There’s pizza. So… yeah… You can come and get it.”
“Oh, yeah,” Cade smiled up at him. “Yeah. I think I’ll do that.”


“So, it’s Teacher Appreciation Week.” Donovan said. “Teacher Appreciation Week is, by the way, also the week when the principal evaluates all the teachers, and the teachers evaluate all the aids, so essentially it’s like, “Here, have some pizza. and by the way, this is how you’re fucking up week. You all leave a week before us?”
“Yeah,” Cade said, “I think we got two or three weeks and you all have four or maybe five.”
“Four,” Don said. “When do you all If you all come back?”
“Oh, Head Start is closing,” Cade said. “Like, for good.”
“What?”
“So are they going to put it in another location?”
“Head Start?”
“Yeah.”
“I’m sure they will. But I won’t be there. I don’t think. There was one in all the schools, and that’s about to change. Why do they do stuff like that? Things work out too nice, and so they change them.”
“Because school boards, all boards, all they care about is money. They may talk about education and the children, but it’s the money that matters, and whatever makes money is what they’re going to do.”
“I need a cigarette.”
He turned to Cade.
“Do you have a cigarette?”
“In my car?”
As the principal walked through the lounge, Donovan murmured, “Can I get a cigarette?”
“Yeah. Let me finish the crust and let’s go.”
 
I had forgotten about the rougher form of this story so this was completely new to me! A great start to what looks to be a very interesting story. I look forward to reading what happens with Cade and Donovan. Great writing and I look forward to more of this and more of your other stories soon! I hope you are having a nice night!
 
I don't think you ever read the original draft at all. It was some time ago. I think you will enjoy it, and I'm glad to share this story with you. This night has been quite interesting so far. I hope yours will be too.
 
CADE


I was named after someone who may have never existed. I mean, maybe he’s real. If God is real, and I’m not saying that I don’t believe in God, only that I believe in God most of the time. The man who I’m named after believed in him all the time. I guess.
Long ago, in Saxon England, at Whitby—the same place where Dracula takes place—there was a great monastery run by a nun called Hilda, and all of the learned monks and nuns sang around the table at night, but the common people didn’t know Latin and they didn’t know the Bible. And then, one night, an illiterate cow-herder called Caedmon was suddenly singing in honor of God, using words that he had never heard before.
Those are the bare bones of the story, and out of curiosity I tried to find out more, but there isn’t much more. Saint Bede…someone I’m glad I wasn’t named after, wrote about Caedmon in his Ecclesiastical History of England. Wikipedia said the song was written between 658 and 680 and is the oldest recorded Old English poem. 658 to 680 is also the time I have made up for the life of Saint Caedmon.
I am not like him. I taught myself to read music and play guitar. I read so much people tell me I live in my head. When I first met Justin, he told me I lived too much in my head, but he’s not who I’m talking about right now. And Caedmon, I suppose, was a believer. He completely trusted in the goodness of Jesus. He was a good Christian. Neither of those things apply to me, and though I know I have faith, it doesn’t belong to any church.



“Now we must honor the guardian of heaven,
the might of the architect, and his purpose,
the work of the father of glory!”


“What was that?” Donovan asked the first time I came over to his second floor apartment, and I was playing guitar on the screened in porch overlooking the street.
“That,” I said, trying to hold the smoke in my nose while I passed the joint, “is Caedmon’s Song.”
And of course he knew all about it, except back then I didn’t know how much he knew.
“It’s not a song I expected to hear—”
“While watching a beautiful sunset?” I gave him a cheezy grin.
“While getting high.”
In reply I just continued:

“As he, the Eternal Lord,
established the beginning of wonders;
he first created for the children of men
heaven as a roof, the holy creator
Then the guardian of mankind,
the eternal lord, afterwards appointed
the middle earth,
the lands for men, the Lord almighty.

“Middle Earth, but no hobbits,” Donovan added.
“Isn’t Middle Earth supposed to be England or something?”
“I think. I did a paper on it.”
“I wonder,” I wondered, “would I have more faith if my name was spelled differently.”
“Huh?” Donovan had put the joint away for a cigarette.
“Bede. Like Saint Bede?”
“Yeah?”
“His name means prayer. That’s where beads come from, because the original beads were prayer beads. A bead was a bede was a prayer. But now we spell it differently, so all the prayer is gone. I wonder, did all the prayer leave me when the spelling of my name changed?”
“If you were high would you wonder?”
“I’m not that high,” I said, “and you know, people always talk about pot head talk when you’re being reflective, but have you ever reflected—”
“That most pot heads aren’t that reflective?”
“Yes.”
I laughed because I sounded pompous to myself. And then he laughed too.
After a moment, Donovan said, “So Caedmon was a Saxon. Like, an uneducated Saxon. With no theology. Right?”
“Yeah. That’s the story.”
“What if,” Donovan said, taking a cigarette from me, “the joke on everyone is his song wasn’t about Jesus at all? What if he was singing about Odin?”
“Oh,” I said, almost coughing on smoke, partly from amusement, but also because it sounded like an awesome discovery.
“I think I’d like the song better.”

But the one thing Caedmon and I had in common—it was not the spelling of our names—was the water. Whitby was by the sea, and I was by the sea. Well, by the lake. Lake Michigan is part of the Great Lakes, bigger than many seas, and all my life was spent next to it, running barefoot from my house in Everett to the beach, walking over the rocks that dimpled my feet, delighting in the blue sky over it, the wetness of it, how the water stretched out hazy blue grey into nothing.
“That’s you?” I said when we were in Donovan’s living room, and I pulled down a book. I had read the name of the book but on the spine it said Donovan Shorter.
“That’s you.”
“It is,” Donovan said, simply.
“Oh, wow.” Then, “Why didn’t you tell me?”
“I’ve only know you for two days.”
Then he said, “I like the beach too. We should go. I love the water. I don’t understand people who stay away from it. There’s something about this place. People come to die here. They come to get small here. They stay small here. And then the same people who are too tired and lazy to drive a half hour to the beach, or forty five minutes to the old antique shops or the Amish villages are the same people who whine about how there’s nothing to do around here, and then pay a thousand dollars to fly out on a plane and do the same thing somewhere else.”
And suddenly I say, “I saw a mermaid once.”
Donovan has not looked at me. He has registered no reaction and so I say, “I thought I did. Then… No, I saw one.”
It’s like that day after I had seen this guy, broad chest, medium height, head shaven, with a calm, slightly mischievous face, eyes blinking from behind his glasses, and said, “You want a kid?” and then wondered, “What the hell am I doing? Is he gonna think I’m nuts?”
Donovan says, “That is strange.”
I wonder if he’s saying it the way you would talk to a crazy person. But he continues, “You’d really expect them to live in salt water.
“However, my niece saw one once. And you probably think its odd because they should be in the sea and not in freshwater. But she saw one in a water fountain. Me and her mother were walking past the downtown water fountain, late at night. It was full of lights. She pointed into it and insisted she saw a mermaid. “Mermaid, mermaid,” she said. Her mother told her it wasn’t, but then I said she was always seeing all sorts of things, so who knew what she saw that we couldn’t?”
And that’s when I said, “Would you like to come over for dinner on Sunday?”
And Donovan said, “Yes.”


“Do you have to go?” Donovan asked. “I mean right now. Do you have to go or do you wanna stay for a while?”
“I’m going on a job interview for a daycare tomorrow,” Cade said. “And aren’t you going to work?”
“Hope to be out by one. But yeah.”
“Well, it is still sort of early,” Cade said. “It’s just an interview. What time it is?”
“Ten.”
“Let’s go walking.”

“I always walk alone,” Donovan said as they went up the street. Down the hill behind them was the brick school building, but to either side were the old two story houses of Moore Street. They were coming up toward the hospital and the Scottish Rite. Up the street past the trees was the Reform synagogue, built like stacked gift boxes. Further ahead, just barely visible, was the all night, fluorescent lit gas station that divided downtown from the west side where late night shoppers came in for cigarettes or peanuts or cough medicine and where, in cars floodlit by night light, some stopped for gas or drug deals were made.
But none of that mattered. It was all nothing under the velvet black sky, and everything was dwarfed to a little light under the great light of a waning gibbous moon and the bright points of the stars.
“That’s Mars,” Cade said.
“Where?”
“Right there. You can’t miss it.”
“It looks like a little point of copper. Burning.”
“It just burns there, out of the black sky,” Cade said. “Reminds you of how big things are. They say that we should feel small knowing how big the universe is, but I don’t. I feel just right. Part of something. I don’t know.”
“It makes me want to be bigger,” Donovan said. “When I see how big everything is. I just want to be bigger.”
Then Donovan said, “After all the winter this warmth is so good. In May I don’t know how I can face another winter.”
“Let’s not think about winter right now,” Cade said.
“That’s a great idea.”
“Can we go back to your place now?”
“Sure.”



Here is the kitchen, and here is the living room I never use. One day if you need to crash, there will be a place for you.”
“Just for that I want to be homeless right now.”
“It’s not that great.”
“Ha!” Cade declared, “I love a man who keeps candles in his bathroom.”
“The bathroom’s one of the most important rooms in the house.”
“And you keep a bookshelf in it! And I love the kitchen.”
“And there is the bedroom.”
“I will turn on the light. If you don’t mind? I should have asked.”
“Don’t worry about it.”
Don hasn’t seen him in shorts before. His legs are hairy, but Don thinks the hair is soft. He is looking around at the books and the sculptures.
“Did you do those?”
“I did.”
Someone is looking at Donovan’s life, and he isn’t ashamed, nor is he proud. He’s just sort of offering himself.
“I’m tired,” Cade says.
“Me too.”
Donovan plops down on his bed, watching his new friend look around. At last, Cade joins him and they lay down looking at the ceiling.
“I feel so at home here,” Cade says.
“Me too,” Donovan says, and they both laugh.
“I don’t know,” Cade says. “It’s just… I feel at home with you. I don’t feel that way with that many people.”
“It’s too bright,” Donovan says. He gets up. Flips off the light.
“I want the moon,” he says and opens the curtains.
Back on the bed again, Donovan feels the weight of it as Cade turns over and looks at the ivory disk in the sky.
“I think,” Donovan says, “the reason we love the moon is because it’s the only way we have of staring into the sun.”
“What kind of underwear do you have on?” Cade says just as simply.
Donovan pulls down his shorts, and Cade runs his hand over Don’s briefs.
“You’re soft you know. So soft,” Cade breathes, pressing himself against Donovan.
Fairly swiftly, Cade lowers his shorts and then they pull off their tee shirts and lay together in their underwear. They lay side by side in the light of the room until, at last, Cade’s hands slip through the soft waistband of Donovan’s briefs and Donovan begins to stroke and massage Cade at the same time Cade touches him. They don’t look at each other, just at the ceiling, then at the blackness of their own closed eyelids, and, at last, Cade rolls over to kiss him, and, in the end, the underwear is gone and their limbs link.
Oh, he is soft, Cade thinks. Oh his kiss is just what I wanted. I could gather him up and be in his arms and feel his body, these thick thighs, this soft, sweet skin, this warmth, oh God, the beauty of a shaved head, of cheeks not shaved for a couple of days, of those eyelids and the mouth, the generous mouth, oh, those hands up and down me.

And oh, the hair on his legs, so gentle, the perfect length of legs, the firmness of his ass, the dent in the small of his back, oh his back, Donovan gathers as much of him as possible between his thighs, pulls his face down to kiss him in the dark, to luxuriate in his kiss, in his kiss, in his firm kiss, in his tongue thrust into his mouth, tasting gently of beer and the memory of cigarettes and spearmint gum, in the tangling curls of his hair.
“I love you.”
It slips out of his mouth like a surrender. He never tells it to a lover and has never believed it from lovers in the past.
How tender it sounds when Cade says it too.
“Be inside me,” Donovan says.
The whole apartment is quiet and dark. The only sounds are small, the small creaking and giving way of the bed, of little moans and gasps. If one was there to watch you could see them, burrowed into the corner of the bed like a ball, Cade, white assed, on hands and knees, dark thighs bunched as he kneels, gathering Donovan to him, his thighs around Cade’s waist as, piston like, Cade fucks him.
“I’m about to come,” Cade tells him. “I’m about to come.”
“Come inside of me.”
“Are you…?”


But Donovan is pulling him in, and Cade has not stopped, and he cannot stop. His body freezes and then jerks, and Donovan feels him pumping, pulsing, feels the slick semen coming between his thighs. He cradles Cade’s damp head to his, kissing his face, feeling his own hardness, knowing he will do the same to Cade before the night is over. He cannot say he’d always wanted to do this because he cannot say this was planned. Cade, gasping, reluctantly unlinks from him, and they hold each other, lying face to face, unable to speak.



DONOVAN



I mourn it, and I don’t know why. I understand the regret that comes from things you’ve done that never get repaired, but not the regret from things that, in the end turned out quite alright. I know everything that was going on that night on Cade’s side, but what in the world was going on with me? What did I expect? When we said, let’s go to the bedroom, when I turned off the light, surely I knew what I was doing. Or did I just want to lie next to him and feel the heat of his body? And what is the difference, really, between wanting his presence and wanting to make love?
It was almost one in the morning when I walked him down, his guitar over his shoulder. We held hands, his thumb rubbing the inside of my palm, I his. My apartment is on the second level and a stair whose smell I can’t quite describe leads down to the little foyer or whatever where there are two more doors to other apartments, and the glass door leading to the street. There we hug for a long time, and then he kisses me, and says, “Don’t forget Sunday.”
As he gets into his car and heads down the street, I feel the regret of not asking him to stay. Maybe I thought it would happen on Sunday, or maybe I’d been with so many men I didn’t want to stay that I couldn’t realize how much I wanted to wake up with this one until he was gone. All through the night the regret was an ache that turned into yearning and longing. Even after I had showered and lay in bed thinking of work in the morning, I could still feel Cade Richards inside of me.

END OF CHAPTER ONE
 
That was a great chapter! I like how descriptive this story is, it really gets in your head! I hope Cade and Donovan continue to get to know each other. That was some excellent writing and I look forward to more soon!
 
Cade and Donovan have only just begun, and there will be more with them tonight. I know what you mean about this story, it felt very different for me when I was writing it.
 

TONIGHT THE DRAMA, THE TROUBLE AND THE PASSION RAMPS UP



T W O


“It’s not about shame. There just actually isn’t a place and time to reveal your whole self.”


- Cademon Richards





DONOVAN Shorter believed
Cademon Richards would be the love of his life for precisely three days. For three days he imagined a world where he was a kindergarten teacher and Cade was his aide and together, the male duo changed the face of education, walking their children out to recess, halving their duties, becoming closer and closer, raising children together that were not theirs and went home to other people by 2:30.
He rode his bike down Moore to Indiana, then across the river, and knocked on the door of the two story limestone brick described by Cade with the number described, and when it opened, Cade said, so quickly it almost came out as one word, “Great, you’re here. Don, meet my boyfriend, Simon.”
And that was when whatever fantasy had been developing in Don’s head was neatly packed away, and he smiled into reality, shook Simon’s hand and walked inside the house. Real life was full of little disappointments that had to be covered over, assumptions that had to be readjusted, and as soon as Donovan knew Cade was not single, he didn’t feel the need to conceal anything, including that he was forty, no matter what a good looking forty. Forty years was long enough to adjust one’s perceptions and be able to have a good night being social with a couple.
“You don’t know how much this matters,” Simon said. “Cade never brings anyone home, and he’s not out to anyone.”
“How do you be out at school, at a day care?” Cade said. “I love those old women, but… yeah, not a lot of talking about life with them.”
“Is it that way with you?” Simon asked Donovan.
“No, it’s not,” Cade said before Don could answer. “They talk about everything. I could have sworn one of them was hitting on me.”
“That would be Barb,” Donovan said. “No, it’s different with us in kindergarten and the upper grades.”
The night moved on in an ordinary fashion except that Donovan kept wondering what the hell had been going on. He needed to talk to Cade. They had fucked three nights before, all night. Cade had started it. Hadn’t he? But, damnit, here he was doubting himself, and there was nothing to doubt. In fact, Don was so sure that Cade was flirting with him right now, and Simon was like that too. As it grew dark, Don said, “I have school in the morning. Time to get to bed.”
“Are you sure?” Simon said, sitting on the couch with a beer. “I couldn’t interest you in another?”
“I would be very interested in another,” Donovan said, “And I’ve loved coming here, but I really do need to get my ass up and go.”
Cade stood up and said, “I’ll walk him to the door.”
“Well, not until,” Simon said, standing up, “I give you a big hug.”
It was a lingering and halfway sensuous hug and Donovan thought, they must just both be like this.
On the porch, as the sky was turning a darker blue and the air was cooling, Donovan said, “What the fuck?”
When Cade said nothing, Don said, “We slept together. We had sex.”
“I know. But… It’s not like that. It’s… We have a complicated relationship,”
“I don’t,” Donovan said. “I don’t have complicated relationships. You didn’t bring him up. You didn’t say anything.”
“I thought maybe you wouldn’t mind.”
Donovan stared blankly at him.
“Okay, that’s not completely true,” Cade said.
“Then why?”
“Because I wanted to!” Cade said, almost angry. “Because I wanted to be with you.”
Cade continued, “I still do.”
Then he said in a different tone, “Simon really wouldn’t mind. He wouldn’t. It’s different with us, you know?”
“Yeah,” Donovan said. “Well, I don’t think its different with me.”
“You’re not…” Cade began, then said, “It’s not fair to ask if you’re mad at me. That’s childish. I know what I did. I just really wanted to be with you that night. I told myself it was alright.”
“Yeah, well, I think I knew something was up, but I ignored it too. I didn’t ask you to stay.”
“I would have, you know?”
“I’m too old for you anyway,” Don said.
“You’re not,” Cade said. “God, you don’t look forty.”
“I do. I am forty, and I look like myself.”
“I feel like an asshole for even saying this, but we’re still friends, aren’t we? I’d hate it if we weren’t.”
“We are,” Donovan said. “But that’s all we are.”
Cade nodded his head. He reached for a cigarette and before he lit his, handed one to Donovan.
“I would appreciate it if you didn’t tell Simon we fucked. Unless you told him already.”
“No,” Cade said. “We don’t tell each other about who happens. Not unless it happens together. It’s very complicated. I at least hope you had a good time. Tonight I mean.”
“Simon’s a good man,” was all Don said.
“He really likes you,” Cade said. “A lot.”
“He’s kind of flirtatious,” Donovan said because he couldn’t say, “Cade, you’re kind of flirtatious.”
“Yeah, well,” Cade said. “We can be that way. I mean, Simon wouldn’t mind it if…” Cade was quiet a moment. “What I’m trying to say is, we’re sort of open. We’ve shared. We do share. Is what I’m saying.”
“Oh,” Donovan said.
“So,” Cade continued, “if you felt something… I mean, it’s not made up.”
“Oh,” Donovan said. “Okay.”
Then Donovan said, “Did you, possibly, in the back of your mind, think I would stay tonight, and just sleep with both of you.”
“Or even just me,” Cade said, quickly. “I really do… Everything I said that night was true, Don. It’s complicated, but my feelings aren’t. They really aren’t.”
Donovan removed Cade’s hand from his leg. It was harder to do than he thought, and he realized Simon must be waiting inside, must know something of what was going on now.
“I…” Donovan shook his head, “I respect couples doing whatever makes them work, but I am not that evolved. I couldn’t share. Not ever I don’t think.”
“Oh,” Cade said.
“I’m going to go now,” Donovan said, “I really do need to rest.”
Then he said, “Fuck. I need to process all this.”
“Of course you do,” Cade said as Donovan stood up, “but it’s late. I’m putting your bike in the back of my truck.”
“No, that’s fine.”
“Don, be mad at me in the morning—”
“I’m not mad at you.”
“You should be. Be mad at me in the morning, but for now… please. Let me take you home.”
“Alright.”



CADE


I am watching a video with me and Simon. We made it driving across the country. It was his idea. We were in New York, visiting his cousins, and we were on our way to his sister in California. We had been together for a few months, and it was right after Simon said, “We should do interesting things. We should push the envelope if we want to keep things fresh.”
But this is why I loved him. We met when he was working for the mayor. This town is such a strange place. Every one is on a different level of evolution, but no one’s really very evolved. We have a gay mayor. He’s even got a husband. They had a wedding at the Episcopal church downtown during Pride Week, then waved at the town from a float. This doesn’t change the fact that when I walk into that school, kids are always calling each other gay, and you know it’s an insult, and you know they don’t know what it means. But then they’re also black and they call each other the N word, and I don’t know what that’s all about either.
When I met Simon he was in grey dress pants and a red dress shirt, a vest, a tie. Very proper, and very proud. He was the image of a gay progressive Democrat, and we talked about a little bit of stuff, but it wasn’t until one night when I was playing with my very occasional band at the Pub that we talked again. I didn’t notice him at first. His hair was a little in his face. He was sporty looking in a v necked snug long sleeve tee and black jeans and he said, finally, “We should go out together.”
The first time we went out he introduced me to single malt Scotch and said he knew he was a dork for that and for smoking a pipe. We were in the Oyster Bar next door to the Pub, where there were pipes and hookahs, and I took out my cigarettes.
Simon said, “I guess gay marriage is great, but does it seem like we’re just trying to be like them? Trying to catch up with the straights? I don’t want to catch up with anyone, and I think they’re behind, not us. We ought to have something more.”
“Like what?”
“I don’t know,” he said, “But not like what already is.”

And so I am sitting here, watching this video, and in the video there is a camera already set up so that I am watching Simon fucking me. I am lying on my back on the bed, and he is kneeling, licking his lips, his blond hair falling into his face, and a small handheld camera in his hand as he films the close up of my face. He offers for me to film him.
“No,” I say, “you just do it.”
To me this is the beginning of our relationship becoming what it became. But it is not the first tape. The first film was when he set up a camera while we were driving across Ohio, late into the night. He starts sucking my dick, and he was good at it. He was amazing. I’m surprised when, driving, I’m about to come. Later I watch it. His face sweating as he crams my dick down his mouth, my voice sounding panicked as I say, “I’m about to come. I’m about to come.” His cheeks bulging, his mouth moving, my own penis, looking like someone else’s, spewing a geyser of come, his mouth coming down on it again, lifting to watch another geyser as I hear someone who is me moaning. And then he moves away, opens the window, and spits and, in the night, my semen spews across the back window like so much snot or bird shit. At the time I felt drained, and like I’d had the best blowjob of my life. Looking at it now, I’m not entirely sure how I feel. I would be lying to say I felt completely happy, but I’d really be lying to say I felt bad.



“If you meet anyone,” Simon said, “and you want him, you should have him.”
“You want to do that?”
“Yeah,” Simon said. “I think we should do what we want. Push all the envelopes. Sex parties. Threesomes. Meeting other couples. I want to be free.”
And then Simon said, “I want to be free with you.”
After that we are in an open relationship, which essentially means we have to use condoms all the time. We set up the rules. No, we don’t have to tell each other if it just happened or talk about it. We can assume it happened if one of us comes home late, but we don’t really have to say anything. Simon comes home late all the time, but then he always did. I feel like its all a lot of energy. I mean, I don’t want to sound lazy, but the whole reason you get a boyfriend is so you don’t have to spend every night on Grindr looking for someone else to screw. Four weeks after Simon has made the announcement that we are in an open relationship, and he comes home very much later, I finally get up, go to the Wal Mart parking lot and get blown by someone. Again, it’s one of those things where I would be lying to say I felt good or particularly liberated for doing it, but I’d also be lying to say, in the dark, in that parking lot, with that guy down on his knees for me, I wasn’t relieved and didn’t enjoy the release.

*************

THAT NIGHT BACK at home is the roughest one Donovan has had in a long while. Anger competes with other thing. Loss, the sadness that this love will not happen. Rage, the feeling of being used, the knowledge that he should have been told. Joy at seeing him the next day.
Donovan Shorter can barely keep his mind on work the next day. Luckily, there is no one to report to for the most part. He walks down the long bright hall and then down the old heavy stairs to the first floor, and passes the little alcove the descending stair case makes, where there is a bird cage and the half open door to one of the staff restrooms. Directly across the hall from the wide stair is the door to Cade’s classroom. He can already hear his reedy tenor singing, as he strums his guitar:


The itsy bitsy spider climbed up the waterspout.
Down came the rain
and washed the spider out.
Out came the sun
and dried up all the rain
and the itsy bitsy spider climbed up the spout again.


It does not even do to say, sarcastically, if only the kids knew. Kids live in another place, a graceful place where understanding nothing, not knowing nuance or contexts, they accept everything for what it is. If they knew everything about Cade, or about the love Don felt, it would not scandalize them. Scandal is a word little children may be able to spell on rare occasion, but have not been ruined enough to understand.
Donovan sits down on the stairs, and waits till Cade sees him, till Cade comes out into the hall.
“I need to talk to you.”
“I know,” Cade says, his voice pregnant with apology.
Donovan nods toward the bathroom.
“Good a place as any,” Cade says, still sounding sad. “Give me,” he holds up a finger, “less than thirty seconds.”
Cade taps on the door, but enters without waiting, and Don locks it behind him.
“I know what I did was wrong,” Cade begins.
But Don unzips his pants the same time he goes to his knees and begins blowing him.
“Oh my… God.”
Cade closes his eyes and wishes he could turn out the light, keep the fluorescence from passing through his eyelids. He presses the back of his hands to the door. He wanted this again. He wanted Don, and he wanted to put his hands on his scalp and massage it and feel that particular mouth on his particular cock, pulling him in so deep, making him swell, his tongue touching everything.
Don stands up and pulls down his pants, and so hard it almost hurts, Cade moves to the sink. He watches his own face while he fucks Don, and then has to stop watching because he feels like he is violating himself, like he’s violating this moment and turning it into porn. They don’t say anything, though now and again Cade rubs his phlegm on his cock to make things smoother. They are pressed together, and Cade’s bearded cheek is rubbing against Don’s.
“You make me so helpless,” he groans as he fucks him.
Then he pleads, “Please, let me come in you. Please.”
Don reaches back for a handful of hair and Cade closes his mouth, grunting as he comes. He feels himself shooting and shooting past the tightness into the space and the peace that is the heart of Don, even as Don feels the slickness, the pump pump of his semen. They remain pressed together Cade embracing him, never wanting to let him go.
“Turn your head,” Don says.
Cade obeys. Don sits on the toilet.
“You see the thing is I love you,” Cade whispers, head still turned as he hears the running of water, the unrolling and tearing of toilet paper.
“As my friend… as my love. As whatever. I’m really loving you more and more.”
Unromantically, the toilet flushes and Don goes to wash his hands. When he has, he turns around and pulls Cade’s face, red and wet after sex, to him, and kisses him.
“This is you getting back at me?” Cade says. “Isn’t it?”
“Yes,” Donovan says. “though I didn’t know it till now, because I didn’t intend this when I got up this morning. But this is me having something I want, the person I want for the last time, and knowing it’s the last time. This is me getting to have you again and then being able to move on.”
As Cade takes a deep breath, buckles his pants and moves to the sink to wash his face and hands, he says, “How do you think that’s going to work?”
Donovan Shorter confesses:
“I don’t know.”

MORE AFTER THE WEEKEND
 
Wow this story just gets more complicated! I can't believe Cade has a boyfriend. Poor Donovan! I don't know where this story is going but I am enjoying it! Great writing and I look forward to more in a few days!
 
Cade did that? Cade did that? Yep, Cade did THAT. So much more to unpack and so much more coming on the other side of the weekend!
 
CHAPTER TWO CONCLUSION


Cademonsingerboi: I’ve screwed up everything.

Barnstormer: What do you mean?

Cademonsingerboi: I screwed things up with a friend. And when I say screwed up I mean sex screwed up.

Barnstormer: Did you let your lust get the better of you?

Cademonsingerboi: Yeah.

Barnstormer: Did you have sex with a friend who should just stay a friend?

Cademonsingerboi: In a way. A little bit.

Barnstormer: Did you get horny and have sex with him even though you don’t love him?

Cademonsingerboi: No. That’s not it. I love him. I’m just not ready for him. Does that make sense?

Barnstormer: Yes. I’m not sure I’m ready for anything.





CADE


When I was very little, the water meant everything to me, and so when Simon tells me he’s scheduled this weekend where we will meet a couple, and it will be in the beach town of New Union, with the Craftsman style houses, with all its resort hotels, and the Amtrak station stopping through, I don’t even think of saying no. I think of sand and the smell of grey blue water, weeds in the sand. Oddly, the invitation to sex had sex being the last thing on my mind.
I forgot to add that by now, me and Simon were living together. We were on the other side of the river from the school, in a beige building like Don’s but newer, a little more modern, and Simon was planning all this in our very large kitchen. He made a good living. I’ve also forgotten to say that, like many people, like me I guess, Simon lead a double life. Respectable Democrat working in the mayor’s office, giving speeches about progressive gay rights, a member of the Freemasons with the dorky pictures to prove it, very devoted to his pressed suits and the older men whose favor he cultivated. He was two years older than me, a graduate of Notre Dame, and I thought, maybe he’s too posh for me. Maybe I’m beneath him. But one night, before we moved in together, I got a phone call from the police station, and I had to bail him out of jail for drunk driving.
“This is your second DUI, kid,” the officer told Simon as we were leaving. “Third is the charm.”
He looked so miserable in his mug shot. His famous hair seemed a little greenish, and it was in his face. Under his eyes was green too. In my truck he put his hands in his face and wept.
“This is who I am. This is me.”
Instead of holding him I just said, “Does that mean you don’t mind if I get high?”
So we got high that night and then even drunker, and even more fucked up. We got in the shower and fucked, then went to bed. We were at my old place, and the lease was almost up.
“Move in with me,” Simon said.
When I moved in, I learned that Simon was a functional drunk, but I wasn’t bothered. It made him, so I thought, more like me. The morning we were planning our trip, like chalk dust and almost as carelessly placed, was a quantity of coke on the kitchen table, and we were both snorting it. So this was my world. Or, this is my world. And in the morning, we would rise, shine, shower, and he would go to the mayor’s office, and I would go to pre school to sing for kids, and open up their little drinks and fruit snacks.
And now that I think of it, that doesn’t mean we were leading double lives. Simon was always talking about freedom, and he was being free, and we were leading an unconventional life. But leading a life that has no limits, when other people are very, very limited, means you just can’t tell everybody everything. It’s not about shame. There just actually isn’t a place and time to reveal your whole self.



“Oh fuck! Oh fuck! Fuck! Fuck me!”
“You like it? You fucking like it?”
“God!” he growled. “I love it.”
The hard clapping, Andrew slamming into his asshole over and over again, his balls and hips clapping against him, as he pushed his ass out. He loved it, and he loved how they called him by his name.
“Take it, Cade! Take it, Cade! Take it, Cade. Take it.”
Andrew, deep in him, leaned over him, kissing his back, pushing his cock deeper, and biting his shoulder, kissing the round bone at the base of his neck, running hands up and down him while Cade reached out, high and hungry for Cory’s dick, taking it in his mouth while he cupped the other boy’s ass, and pulled his cock further down his throat. One fucked his ass, the other fucked his face. After a while, who pulled his hair and made his eyes water, he couldn’t say. He didn’t want to say. He’d met them on the beach. Andrew and his boyfriend had talked to him and Simon on Grindr, but, once they’d reached New Union, Simon had ended up with some other guy. For a moment, Cade had been afraid that everything that was supposed to happen wouldn’t happen, and then Andrew, with the musical, slightly nasal voice, with the small waist and Mediterranean features, touched his hand and said, “Cademon? That’s a beautiful name.”
So, Cade had shown up alone. He had wanted to be with these boys, and after all the shadowy and often half hearted hookups, this was the first one he’d actually wanted.
As he had touched his hand, he wondered who the cute boy with the dark features, the big ears, the nasal voice and the slightly big nose was in all of his other lives, here suave and twinkish on the beach, but what about Monday through Friday, and right now, tonight, he was fucking the shit out of him.
“Oh MY FUCKING GOD!” Cade cried, each syllable fucked out of him by Andrew. Cory fucked his mouth, and in a few moments he would take Andrew and fuck him again.
The fucking had started well into the night, after they had snorted up all the cocaine and smoked the majority of the pot, they began to make out in the hot tub. Cade sat there watching Cory and Andrew make out, and it was just when he was starting to feel sad and jealous that Andrew said, “We haven’t forgotten about you,” and swam a little to press his mouth to Cade while on the other side of him, up and down his back and neck, Cory kissed him, his mouth going down, down and further down. He reached behind him to kiss Andrew’s mouth and while they were all loving each other in the warm water of the hot tub, Andrew said, “Cade, why are you crying?”
“Am I?” Cade said.
Then he said, “We all ought to love each other. All the time.”
That last time, they had moved to the bed, and none of them talked, though occasionally something like a sob escaped Andrew’s mouth. Cade closed his eyes and gentle mouthed Andrew’s ear while he fucked him slowly, massaging his back, kissing him up and down while he moaned. Cory pounded him tenderly. That last time, when the climax came, gentle, but insistent and body rocking, Cade’s hands opened, closed, opened, and his body shook. He stayed for them all to finish up, all to lie in the bed naked. He stayed until that moment right before he was there a moment too long, and then Andrew said, as Cade stood up, “You should shower before you go.”
“No,” Cade said. “It’s a good night. I can shower when I get home.”


Outside he could look all up and down the street, passing the brightly lit apartments by the marina, fairy lights strung over them at midnight, watching the stragglers go through the stores still open this late. Beyond was the rich blue darkness, and the beach with the lights of a few boats. Cade passed over the train tracks past another row of beach apartments until his sandaled feet, in the increasingly cool night, crossed the last empty street and came onto the beach.
Cademon Richard’s eyes had to adjust to the darkness to see the stretch of sand on the water, to see, of all things, geese floating on the lake, and one small motorboat setting out toward the pier. Across the water, lights twinkled from Michigan City. Cademon took off his sandals and laid them on the wet sand, walking further into the water, sinking his feet into the silt that passed through his toes. He walked in further until the water was around his calves and then, not quite knowing what he was doing, he took off his shirt and then undid his shorts and next pulled off his underwear, and balling them all up he threw them on the sand near his sandals, and then sank into the water, swimming out a pace, where he buried himself in the cool water and thought about never coming up.


The hotel room was empty. Wherever Simon was, it wasn’t here. After showering and being bored and that odd feeling that always comes after you’ve been having sex and now you’re all alone, Cade got online. His friend was on.


-You’re up awfully late.

-Couldn’t sleep. Didn’t really want to sleep. Still sort of wired.

Cade sat back from the computer. It was easier than using a phone.

-I don’t know if I can’t sleep, I just know I don’t really want to right now. I’m in one of those moods.

-Are you religious?

-No

Cade was almost put out by the question.

-My grandma was. But I think everyone’s grandma is, and she used to say, don’t let the sun go down on your anger. Sometimes I feel like I can’t go to sleep until I don’t feel like shit.

This sounded familiar, and Cade typed back.

-Are you feeling like shit tonight? I thought you and your boyfriend were on this awesome vacation.

But then, Cade thought, that was his story as well.

-It’s not like we’re in Florida.

Cade waited a few minutes and more words came up

-That sounded ungrateful. It’s actually beautiful around here. Beautiful place, great beach. All of that. Excellent hotel. Hot tub and all that.

Cade typed:

-I sort of want details. I know I shouldn’t. I mean, was it fun?

-It was wild.

-Well, that’s a good thing? Right?

-I’m actually sort of tired of doing wild things. Not all the time but right now I am. Say, have you ever met anyone online? You know, date wise?

-A couple of times.

-How’s it go?

-It’s alright. I try not to talk to people too far away, people I know I won’t meet.

-You’re in Gary, right?”

-Willmington.

-Exactly where is Willmington? I sort of forget where stuff is.

-Well, sort of southeast of Gary is Wallington, and then east of Wallington is Willmington. It’s kind of like west of Lake Station. If you know where that is.

-Sort of. We stay right around Chicago.

Cade felt that, because it was very late, he could be a little more honest than he sometimes was. He was, after all, sitting in his apartment in shorts and tee shirt, freshly washed after coke and fucking, feeling lonely and wondering where his boyfriend was.

-Part of me thinks I ruined my last relationship because I was jealous. I thought it would be sort of neat to have a relationship where me and my boyfriend saw other couples, traveled out of town and had wild weekends. Maybe it would have brought things to life.

-Maybe.

When his friend didn’t respond, Cade thought of typing more, but then thought that would look desperate. He got up, walked around his living room, and then came to sit back down. All of a sudden a whole paragraph popped up.

-I know exactly what you mean. The truth is I’m starting to realize that the guy I thought I’d be with for the rest of my life gets off on seeing me fuck other people, and the only time he wants to touch me is when seeing someone else having sex with me gets him hard enough to pay me any attention. The only time he even wants me is on a weekend, when he’s high, and someone else’s dick is in my mouth.

-Where did you guys go?

-We’re in New Union.

“Fuck!”
Cade almost threw his laptop across the room. As his heart thumped, Cade tried to absorb this. Was it possible? But.. And even while Cade was trying to type:

-I’m sure that’s not—

Suddenly, in blue, was written

-Sorry to be such a downer. I’m going to bed. Goodnight.

His friend was offline, and Cade felt worse than he had a moment before. He kind of really didn’t know anything, and it was late Saturday night, Sunday really, which was always so weird, and then Monday and back to work, and the world seemed like such an ugly little place sometimes.

Cade typed:

-Good night, Barnstormer.

And then he sighed and sat staring at the laptop, telling himself it was time to go to sleep.


CADE


Simon doesn’t come home until the next morning. When he does, he is green faced and lank haired. He looks beaten up. His nose is red, his lips pale.
For a moment I wonder if a man did this to him, but as he looks up at me, I know that isn’t true, and he says, in a kind of defeated voice:
“I think we need to end this. I think it’s time to break up.”

Let me be clear. I’m not a victim. This is not a story about how badly Simon treated me. Everything he suggested, I did. The things he said we should do, I agreed to. I liked the threesomes. If he was the one to go through the work of planning them, I liked the orgies and the meet ups. I liked them until I didn’t. Until the very last night when talking to one of the guys I’d just been with, I realized how exhausted and bruised I was. And when Simon came into our room I realized he was bruised too. I didn’t have the sense to resist him, and a good lover would have done that. A good boyfriend would have said, “Maybe this isn’t a good enough idea.”
So you see, I was no victim, but when it was over, and I knew it was definitely over, it did not stop me from feeling absolutely crushed.

MORE TOMORROW NIGHT
 
Wow I was not expecting Cade and Simon to break up! I wonder what this will mean for Donovan? Cade has some deciding to do. Great writing and I look forward to more soon! I hope you are having a good weekend!
 
Do you know I opened this up to read comments, and then something took me away and Ijust realized five minutes ago I never got back to this. So yes, Cade and Simon are no more, and it's not really Cade who has some thinking to do so much as Donovan.
 
T H R E E


“What we need to know, more than love to know, more than enjoy knowing, is that our painful state is not ours alone.”


-Cademon Richards



WHEN YOU WERE DEFEATED, there were only so many people you wanted to tell, and names came quickly to the top of one’s list, and so it was, coming back into town from their weekend that Cade texted Donovan.

I just broke up with Simon.

Almost as quickly as Cade had typed, a reply came.

Where are you?
In the car with Simon. On my way back from New Union.
Oh shit.
Yeah. That’s where we broke up.
When do you get back?
In about an hour.

And Don simply typed.

Come over.

When Cade got to the apartment, Donovan already had cigarettes and a bottle of bourbon out, and they didn’t talk, they just drank.
Don got up and made sandwiches, and then brought them back.
“I couldn’t eat a thing,” Cade said, sitting up.
“Well,” Don acknowledged this with a shrug before saying, “I could.”
But then Cade realized he could eat a thing, and he was in the middle of his second sandwich when Don’s phone began to ring.
“You can get that,” Cade said, stuffing ham in his mouth.
Don looked down and said, as his finger swiped over it, “I don’t think I will. It’s one of those people who’re only around when they want you to do something and… I’m sorry, I just feel like too many of us live our lives for all of our straight friends and married siblings and then end up alone. I might end up alone, but tonight, I’m going to end up with you.”
By the time the bottle of bourbon was gone, and they were into a second, Donovan said, “It is quite clear no one is going home tonight. If you want you can take the couch. I, of course, will sleep in the bed.”
With that, Don gingerly made his way to the bathroom, where he quickly washed and then, wrapped in a towel, climbed into bed.

Cade had listened to Don moving through the house, the water from the sink running, the toilet flushing, heard him go into his room, half shut his door. Not shut all the way. That would have been too much. It would have killed Cade.
He lay on the couch for a long time looking at the shadows on the ceiling before finally he got up, went to the bathroom where Don had laid out towels and cloth and a soap, and helped himself to a shower. He thought he would become sleepier under the water, but instead he became, even as he yawned, more restless. He could not go back to the couch or back to the loneliness he was feeling. He needed Don as he always needed him, and wrapping the towel around himself because all of his clothes from the past day were dirty with that day, he went into the darkened room, and lay beside this man.

In the night Donovan awoke to see Cade beside him.
“I don’t want to be alone,” Cade said to him.
Donovan nodded, and made more room for his friend.
“Well, really,” Cade amended, “I don’t want to be in one room when you are in the other.”
Donovan wrapped his arms around Cade and the long tall man pressed into him.
“This is how lovemaking starts,” Cade said.
Donovan was naked, and the towel was still draped over Cade. Donovan removed it so that their bodies came together. He felt his penis stiff against Cade’s own erection, the veins of life down the middle of both their cocks jumping. Their legs went firmer about each other.
They kissed.


CADE


I had heard someplace that we are all broken, every one of us. The first time I heard this it made me feel good. Some people say this is schadenfreude, a very fancy German word meaning: pleasure derived by someone from another person's misfortune. It’s a variation of misery loves company. I think both things are cruel to say, especially if you are in misery. What we need to know, more than love to know, more than enjoy knowing, is that our painful state is not ours alone. It isn’t pleasure in the misfortune of others or even loving other people’s misery, but the relief of knowing you aren’t alone, and that your suffering doesn’t mean you’ve failed, just that you’re here, in this suffering world.
And yet now there is no relief and no need. I wish no one suffered. I look back on certain parts of my life, and I don’t wish them on anybody. I think about the other night, playing guitar, when I started crying and hoped you were asleep, Don, when I felt like I was less than a man. I think about the many times when all of a sudden, out of nowhere, despair hit, and I felt like, please God. I hope no one ever feels like this.
“When I was about twelve my parents divorced. This wasn’t really a tragedy, at least I don’t remember it that way. We were Catholic.
“You didn’t tell me that.”
“Yeah, but Mom stopped going to church except for my Confirmation. She said she was bored by church and, this is going to get ironic in a moment, she was tired of priest scandals.
“Then my Aunt Patty started talking about this evangelical church, and my mom was all into it. My brother wasn’t interested, but I was okay with it. Mom started reading her Bible and listening to Christian music, and she seemed happier, and I wasn’t that happy myself, so when she asked me to go with her, I was like, ok. I went. The music was cool. The people were different, and Don, I can’t tell you how much I needed to be different.
“I have noticed something. The people who become devil worshipers and atheists and Christians are all pretty much in the same crowd. The burn outs and the born agains. Did you ever notice that? I think, now, it’s because none of us likes the world the way it is, and we are all waiting for it to burn down.”
“Jesus even said he came to set the world on fire.”
“And I really wanted him to. So I went to the church with mom. It was in an old abandoned theatre on the east side, or at least, it was abandoned until a church started in it, and everyone was excited about building this new church.”
“I didn’t understand Protestant churches, or evangelicals, and I heard how beautiful it was, but the first time I saw it, I was like…. It just looks like a big theatre. I was still expecting….”
“Incense. Stain glass?”
“Something like that. Actual beauty.”
“But I got saved in that church. I devoted myself to that church. There was only one problem.”
“That you were gay.”
“I thought I might be gay.”
Don says, “It took me a long time to realize the problem wasn’t homosexuality, but sexuality, and that straight people were just as troubled by their desires as I was by mine.”
“Yes,” I say, “but I didn’t know that at the time.
“I went to Pastor Skip.”
“Pastor Skip?”
“Yes.”
“Was he the cool pastor that was down with all the kids? Did he have blond hair that was gelled and shaped into wings?”
“He was all of that,” I said, “and now I realize I was attracted to him and now I even realize I was attracted to him because he was gay. I couldn’t see any of that at the time. I went to him and told him I was gay and he said I couldn’t be because it was a sin and I was saved from sin by the blood of Jesus. He told me to pray about it and come back to him in a few days. He gave me some shit to listen to.
“That weekend I listened to this awful ass Christian radio show where basically teenagers called in about all the shit a real person with brains should have given them advice on, sex stuff, and the host said all this stupid Christian shit, and I listened to all these kids crying about…. Basically…. Sex.., And I’m in my room crying about how my secret burden that God has given me, that I cannot give into, is homosexuality and… it’s all so stupid now. But I didn’t know that then.”
Don is saying nothing. I am just lying there with my head against his chest, and his heart is beating slowly.
“So, I went to Pastor Skip, and I told him all this. And he’s like, but how do you feel about guys? About sex? And I tell him, honestly, I still like guys. I still think about them. I still think about sex.
“We’re both standing up. He’s facing me. He’s already closed the door and without much warning he puts his hands down my shorts. It’s like the moment he does that, half of me leaves my body and the rest of me just freezes. I mean, I am… I don’t know what to do. He starts jacking me off and when I come it’s all over his hands, and he tells me, ‘Now, you’ve just had sex. How do you feel?’
“But I don’t say anything. I pull up my shorts and I’m all sticking to myself, and I can see his hands are sticky with my come, and I’ve never even masturbated before. I just feel weird. I feel dizzy. Like you do. But… the way you feel when someone touches you where no one should. I’ve never had an orgasm, and he just stands there, my come on his hands, and tells me to think about how I feel right now.
“‘That’s what sin feels like. That’s homosexuality. Go home and pray about it.’
“He wipes his hands off on some paper napkin from McDonalds, doesn’t even wash them, and I just walk home. I can still smell that burger, the grease. I’ve got my bike, but I don’t ride it. I don’t trust myself to. I only make it two blocks before I double over and throw up in the bushes.
“When I get home I don’t tell anyone about it. But every time I think about sex I think about Pastor Skip doing what he did to me, and me feeling helpless and scared and I want to cut my dick off. I want to cut off what he touched and every time I get an erection or think about sex I want to cut out… the feeling. The desire. I’m so sick. I don’t even like being touched.”
That’s when Don moves away from me.
“No. No. I don’t mean it like that. I like being touched by you. Anything that asshole did to me that fucked me up… I love it when you do it. Don’t worry about that. With the right person… with you, it’s almost like when you touch me you change things, make everything that felt dirty clean again. You know?
“But he wasn’t done with me.
“Next week he asked me how I felt, and I told him. I told him everything I told you, the throwing up, the wanting to castrate myself. He said… He said, well that means it’s working. And then he told me to kneel. I did. But this time he put his dick in my mouth and made me blow him. When he came in my mouth I choked and almost threw up. This shit went on for a few months until mom got tired of church and we just never went back.”
“Did you ever tell her?”
“I never told anyone. Except a few not very helpful therapists. I think it’s one of the reasons I like the water, and the beach. I would go out there and it was only looking at the water I felt okay. I’d sit out there for hours and hours.
“So much happened to me, Don. I even slept with girls. A few, so I wouldn’t feel gay because feeling gay made me feel like I was being molested again. It wasn’t until KJ in college that I started to really be a little bit healthy and get over Pastor Skip.
“They say you never get over stuff like that. They even say you don’t have to. But you do have to. The place he put me in… I’m still so angry that it screws me up now. But I can’t stay in it. I will fight like fuck not to stay in it.”



“No, let me hold you,” Cade says in the dark. “I like to be held and protected, but I like to hold and protect you.”
He says, “You can tell me anything.”
“I know.”
“Or not,’ Cade says. “It’s like… have you ever been with someone who tells you every fucking thing, just honesty diarrhea?”
Don laughs, “Yes. Actually yes.”
“I don’t want that for us. I just don’t want to be a liar, and I realize that I’m starting to be one, not telling everything, editing the truth. I don’t want to do that Don. I don’t want to edit myself into the person I should be. I want to be the person I should be.”
Don turns around and touches his face.
“I get it.”
Cade clears his throat.
“That first time we slept together was me being deceptive, and I never apologized for that, and I don’t like being that person—and,” he said as Don opened his mouth, “before you say that you sort of knew, or that I was traumatized from being abused or… any of that… I want to say that I take ownership for everything I’ve done, and… I’m going to be a better person. I’m going to be the person you believe I am. Okay?”
“Okay,” Don said.
Don lay on his back before speaking.
“And you need to know that whatever happened before we were together is in the past, and what matters now is the promises we make here, with each other.”
“Then we are together?”
“We certainly aren’t not together.”

MORE ON TUESDAY NIGHT. TOMORROW NIGHT WE WILL BE DOING SOMETHING A LITTLE DIFFERENT., SO STAY TUNED
 
I liked this portion and it was informative to read about some of Cade's past. I hope him and Donovan end up together but who knows. Donovan definitely does have some thinking to do as you said. Great writing and I look forward to more of this in a few days and whatever surprise you have coming tomorrow!
 
Yes, there is a lot more to learn about these two, and they've got a real journey ahead of them. I'm glad the story did something for you, and this should be quite an adventure. We'll have another sort of surprise tomorrow night.Have a great afternoon.
 
CONCLUSION OF CHAPTER THREE



CADE



“Thanks Dad,” he said.
As he stuffed the money into his pocket, more money than he’d ever had, and the bills almost came out, Cademon Richards thought how awkward this whole thing was.
“Well, you couldn’t go to your mom for that,” his father said. “She wouldn’t understand.”
“No,” Cade said. “She wouldn’t.”
There was a little more awkward silence, and then Cade stepped in and hugged his father quickly, turned around and left the house, heading down the porch and crossing the dry lawn to the car.
When he got to Ashley’s house, he said, “Here it all is,” and she said, shaking her head, “You didn’t even put it in an envelope?”
“I… I didn’t think.”
“No,” Ashley said, dismally. “I guess neither of us did.”
“Uh,” Cade pulled the knit cap off his head, and was wadding it in his hands, “do you want me to come with you? I mean. I’m coming with you.”
“That’s very nice of you,” Ashley said. “But… I don’t need you to.”
Cade wasn’t sure what to say next and while he was thinking, she said, “I really don’t want you to. Angie’s going with me. She’ll drive. And all that.”
“I’ll be here. When you need me.”
“I won’t need you, Cade,” she said.
That was the most certain break up he’d ever had though, looking back, Cade was never sure how together they were. She must have resented him. Even if he’d been good about the whole thing, she would have resented him. They’d only been together a few times and when she had come to him, he’s said, “You’re getting rid of it, right?”

It had just sort of flown out of my mouth, and on the other side of things it’s hard to believe I would ever say something like that. I’d like to say I wasn’t myself back then, but you’re always yourself. right? There was just something different, cold, unloving about me. And I’m not saying that only unloving people don’t go through with pregnancies, but it was unloving of me, how I handled it. And when I walked away from Ashley after giving her the money, I felt relieved, a little guilty, because good people are supposed to feel guilty. But mostly I felt relieved about the whole thing.

When I drove to the lake, I don’t know what led to what happened next. I mean I don’t know if it was the whole business of Ashley or that Ashley was the last in a long string of weird things. I had been sleeping with girls for the last couple of years, making myself do it, hating the feelings I had about guys, and now I felt like I was being punished the other way around. Want guys and a pastor jacks you off, get with girls and they get pregnant. And then there was the business of taking responsibility. When we had left that church I’d had several acts of rebellion, going into my backyard and burning my Christian CDs, pissing on my Bible, and fucking girls, fornicating. I hated God. Fuck him. And anything good, any innocence, any ability to see beauty or wonder, or be seen by them, was gone.
Ashley didn’t have to get pregnant. I just didn’t care about what I was doing, and even after I gave her the money and walked away, I didn’t give a shit about her. She was taking care of her problem, my problem, and that was all that mattered. It was just a very expensive mess, and the truth is I was more upset about how much it cost, how it made me have to go to my dad and ask for money and tell him about everything than anything else. I told him I’d gotten Ashley in trouble. He gave me the cash, and as I got in the car I thought, “You’ve done this shit before.”
They tell you that when you stop caring it’s insulation. I used to think that not feeling was the way to prevent all the horrible things that happened when you felt too much. So why did I drive ten minutes past New Union to that distant spot I always see, and walk onto the abandoned gravel beach and then sit on the pier—it was so fucking desolate—no one was there, just lonely sea gulls—and start taking pills and drinking my dad’s vodka until I felt sufficiently fucked up, and then, roll my ass into the water?
I had the sense to fill by pockets up with rocks—Virginia Woolf style—and for a moment, under the choppy water, there was just this peace. I just felt icy with the water, and when I opened my mouth, the dirty lake water came into it, and after a while my nostrils gave way. For a moment there was panic, the shudder of this happening, and it being entirely too late to do anything about it. I was drowning. The water was too choppy and I was too fucked up to help myself.
Then the dark water was like the water in movies. I mean, that undersea water that’s blue and green, and full of light. And it was still, and warm, and I thought, well, this is heaven. And then I saw the fish, and I saw the biggest fish I’d ever seen, and then. well, then I saw it was not a fish. It was her. Or one of them. I feel like I can’t ever describe her, or them. Even under the water I felt the tears coming to me. There she was, hair streaming, breast bared, face grave, and she lifted me up and up and then I was gagging on the ground, throwing up water, and I tried to turn over and look for her, but she was gone. It was just ordinary stormy water, and cold fall rain was coming down. I knew I’d be sick, and I was for three weeks, but that evening I just kept crying because I was sure that after everything that had happened to me, and that I had done, grace was gone. And now I knew that I wasn’t beyond it.

*********

“I don’t know what to do next,” Cade said one morning.
“What do you mean?” Don said.
“I can see behind me,” Cade said. “But I can’t see in front. If that makes any sense.”
“It makes lots of sense,” Don said.
When Cade said nothing more, Don asked, “What would you do? If you were not here? With me?”
“I’d go away. I’d go away with you.”
Don nodded, got up and went to the kitchen. He was gone for a while before he came back.
“I think you’re being courteous. You aren’t mine you know? We aren’t a couple. I think if you weren’t here and we hadn’t been sharing a bed, I think you would go away.”
“It would be nice,” Cade said, “to go on a trip.”
Then Cade said, “Would you come on one?”
“It can’t be like that,” Don said. “It’ll never be like that.”
“Whaddo you mean?”
“Me. Taking up your space. Me needing to go everywhere you go. No, you need to go and sort some things out, have some time to yourself. You can’t really do that with me.”
“Well, shit,” Cade said.
“What?”
“When you say it like that then its real.”
“Where would you go?”
“All the old places. Home, but I wouldn’t want to see anyone. The Lake. And then new places too, probably.”
“When will you leave?”
“I hadn’t really planned to leave at all.”
“If you’d stayed it would have been me holding you.”
“I wouldn’t have blamed you.”
“It doesn’t matter.”
Cade sighed.
“I guess I could leave tomorrow.”
“Will you be gone long?”
“No,” Cade said. Then, “I don’t think so.”


Cade left the next morning, and that night he called Don to make sure he was fine. He called every day, and then Don noted the first day he didn’t call at all. He felt petulant about the whole thing, but remembered he was an adult and called Cade himself. They talked a while, but there wasn’t much to say. Nothing was really happening in town for Don, and Cade was only sitting by the edge of a lake, and then hiding out in motels. They were speaking every couple of days, and then once a week, and Don began to wonder if that time when Cade had lived with him, and they had spent whole hours together was an illusion.
In the newly private apartment, Don spent his free summer days reading and sculpting, writing in his journals and preparing for a new story. Ideas fled him, but the friends he had not seen in some time returned, and when the Muse returned, he was finishing up as much writing as he could before the school year started back up. It would be nearly the end of summer before he saw Cade again, and then, toward the end of July, there was a knock on the door and there, tall and slender as ever, silver in his hair, stood Brian Vaughn.
“I’ve been waiting for you,” Don said, embracing him, and then taking one of his bags, Don brought him inside.




MORE TOMORROW NIGHT
 
This story is very different to some of your other ones but I like it! I don't know if Donovan and Cade are going to end up together but it is interesting to see their journey at the moment. I wonder how Brian will have an impact on their relationship? I will have to wait and see. Great writing and I look forward to more soon!
 
It is really different, and I'm glad you feel that way. I don't want to always be doing the same thing. This was a strange one because I never know how anyone was going to act, but here we are, and I'll see you with more tomorrow.
 

F O U R



it was in autumn
and this in winter
late december cold


heated when i remember the shine of your face
and the gloss of your face
and the sweat all on your face,


-Donovan Shorter


You’re so guarded about things,” Brian said when they sat on Donovan’s sofa, drinking coffee after dinner.
“I’m not guarded. I’m discreet,” Don differed, “because I don’t think everything has to be talked about.”
“But you’ll talk to me. About this guy?”
Don raised an eyebrow.
“The one you think you aren’t talking about all the time. Who’s gone for the summer. Or finding himself.”
“Yes,” Donovan said. “Then, sure. His name is Cade Richards.”
“And what’s he like.”
“He’s a lot younger than me.”
“So the opposite of me.”
“He’s about sixteen years younger than me.”
“Then actually pretty much our age difference. And we still happened.”
“Yes,” Donovan said. “We did happen. But Cade isn’t happening at all right now. In fact, he’s on the other side of the country coming to terms with himself. As I suggested. I told him he should go. I thought it would be a week or two. It’s turning into a whole summer.”
“That’s awkward.”
“It’s bullshit.”
Then Donovan said, “I have lived like a monk for some time now, and I don’t see the point in that since the person I was with is nowhere around and doesn’t seem to be coming back, so the question I ought to ask is what are we doing tonight?”
“What we would be doing all the time if we lived in the same place,” Brian said.
“So are we happening?”
“Yes,” Brian said, “we’re definitely happening.”




The first time Donovan had ever talked to Brian was online, and Donovan was wistful for those days when meeting someone online actually worked, when you could meet someone golden. Being queer was more of a revelation than people understood. It wasn’t simply that people spent years telling you that you were unacceptable, and then told you, embrace the fact that you’re unacceptable, and then told you that what was unacceptable was now acceptable, you were also almost non existent. After all, how could something seen nowhere else exist? If you could not see yourself in the mirror, how could you exist? And if the feelings that rocketed through your body were full of danger, how could you understand them, speak of them, celebrate them?
The Internet was a boon. All the networks to meet men on a computer in your parents’ house were a boon and this day, when Donovan was barely eighteen, typing to Brian was the biggest boon of all.
The first time he had met Brian, he was waiting for him in a restaurant back home.
“You look just like I thought you would, just like your picture!” Brian announced, sitting down in front of Donovan.
“You look better.”
Brian burst out laughing. “I knew I’d like you. What should we get?”
“I’m not hungry.”
“I’m not hungry either. Or thirsty. But we’re supposed to get something. Right?”
“Water?”
“Will that make them mad?”
“Do you care?” Donovan asked.
Brian discovered he did not.
When the waters came, they talked about this and that only for a little while before Donovan said, “This is awkward. Isn’t it? Just sitting in this café, chatting like we’re on a date.”
Brian leaned across him and said, his voice quieter. “The two of us have chatted everyday. All the important stuff I know. I feel silly sitting here shooting the breeze.”
Donovan smiled at him and reached into his bag. He took out a notebook, ripped out a scrap of paper and wrote on it:

Would you feel less silly if we just went across the street and got a room?”

Brian blinked at the paper. He smiled. He took the pen from Donovan’s hand and wrote:

Yes.




Everything Donovan Shorter had learned in Catholic school he had jettisoned. He had learned it too late anyway. There was this glorious prize, more or less between his legs, and it wasn’t to be given to anyone but a spouse. This, of course, meant a woman. For a long time this hadn’t been a real issue in his life. Most of his teen years were spent reading books, sketching, sculpting, praying, living in his head. But after seventeen, he and Andy had come closer and closer, and then, after eighteen, one day at his house, he and Andy had begun to kiss, and when they knew they liked it, Andy got up and locked the door and they kept at it. They took off each other’s shirts and kept at it until Donovan closed the blinds and locked the door. They took off their pants and kept at it. They took off their underwear and kicked off their socks, wrapped their arms around each other, pressed their bodies together and kept at it. They discovered love and fell asleep together.

“We weren’t supposed to do that,” Andy said, later on, in the darkness.
“I don’t really care,” Donovan told him. “And I don’t think God does either.”
“No,” Andy said. “I feel the same.”
He and Andy were a none too steady item, and even before they had broken up forever, there had been a few others. Donovan knew who to stay away from. For many people sex was a shameful thing. They tried to keep it tamped down and then now and again it exploded in some crazy and dangerous manifestation. They walked away hating themselves or in some cases murdering you. In school, Donovan had heard about how some people were celibate for love of God and gave themselves to the world that way, but this made no sense. When he wanted to give himself to the world, he gave himself to the world. When he wanted to make love he did it.
He sensed that Brian was much the same. In the motel across the street. when Donovan took out his credit card, Brian said, “Don’t you dare,” and he handed his to the man at the desk and then, with no shame at all, walked Donovan up to the room. He opened the door, closed it and grinned down at him.
“We should have just done this,” Brian kissed him on the mouth, and Donovan flung his arms around his neck.
“My old friend,” Brian said, his voice half a gasp. They stood there, kissing and running their hands through each other’s hair, down one another’s backs, over belt buckles, back up again. Donovan held Brian’s face in his hands.
“You are so beautiful.”
“Thank you,” Brian said. And they kissed again.
And then Donovan began to undo his shirt, and Brian helped him. Brian undid his pants and Donovan helped him, and soon they were naked and coming to the bed, kissing and tasting and touching, and then lying there linked together.
Donovan lay on his side, looking at Brian lying on his side. He ran his hands over Brian Vaughn, stopped at his hip. He kissed Brian, his chin, his throat. Don sucked his nipples and Brian moaned. Don kissed down his belly. He placed his face in the softness of the hair under Brian’s stomach and then, tenderly kissed the shaft of his penis, kissed down, while Brian shuddered, tasted, licked, took him slowly in his mouth.
Down below. Donovan Shorter was pulling light and fire from him tip of Brian’s cock. Gently, letting a cry escape his lips, Don felt Brian’s hands in his hair, kneading messaging, stroking his neck and Don swallowed his cock. Don rose up, kissing him up his body again till they were face to face and Brian pulled him forward and kissed him.
They stopped, breathing lightly, Brian’s body across him.
“What?” Brian said.
“Nothing,” said Donovan. “Only... I’m so happy now.”
“I know what you mean.”
Brian’s penis, tapered, was firm between Donovan’s thighs. Donovan rubbed his hands through Brian’s sweat damp hair. Brian’s longer, taller, body was warm and moist on top of him.
“Brian?”
“Yes?” Brian’s voice was soft.
“Fuck me.”
Brian sucked on his throat, and then kissed him, thrusting his tongue deeply into Donovan’s mouth. He pressed his body hard against Donovan, hugging him. He placed his cheek on Donovan’s chest.
He said, “Yes.”

When it was over they both lay trembling and shaking, Donovan’s thighs around him, his hands deep in Brian’s hair. They didn’t want to leave that position. They didn’t want to stop holding each other. Slowly, Brian turned over, lying on his back, his side pressed to Donovan’s. They didn’t speak right away.
“I haven’t been with… anyone. Not for a while. not like that,” Brian said. “People don’t understand. They think…”
He stopped talking.
Finally he turned around and looked at Donovan.
“Are we friends, or are we not? Because I think we are.”
“I think we are too.”
“I’m just saying there’s nothing casual about casual sex. People don’t understand, you’ve got to be comfortable with someone to do what we just did. And I don’t really know who I can talk to about this and they’ll understand.”
Donovan turned on his stomach, and he put his chin on Brian’s stomach while Brian grinned and tapped out a piano tune on Donovan’s head.
“They will say, oh my God, you met someone online, and then you all just went back and had sex. Oh, my!”
Brian laughed.
“I figure, who cares. If we’re both having a good time. If we’re both giving each other pleasure. God knows no one on this earth wants to give anyone pleasure anymore.”
Donovan could still feel Brian in him. He kissed his stomach, and his navel and his right hip and his left hip, saying:
“Well, you did. You gave me great pleasure, and as long as you’re here we can keep giving each other pleasure. We will pleasure the hell out of each other.”
“I like that,” Brian said.
Donovan came back up and lay his head next to Brian’s.
“How long are you free?” Brian said.
“Till seven.”
“It’s nearly six. Will I see you again?”
“I just said you would.”
“People say so much. Men are so brave… For all of thirty seconds.”
“I’m always brave,” Don said.
Brian, hair rumpled, looked at him with deep consideration.
“Of course you are,” he said.



How are you?

I’m great. What about you?

Good. Happy.

How did whatever you had to go to last night turn out?

It turned out great. Everything’s really great right now.

Are you in class right now?

I am between classes. I am about to go to Eighteenth Century British Lit in a moment.

Oh, that’s good. I should have gotten more lit in my system.

Speaking of lit, I really enjoyed yesterday. I’m glad it happened.

What?”

Donovan typed quickly.

We should get that out of the way, if you were wondering. I’ve actually been thinking about it all day, since it happened.

Me too.

Then, a moment later:

I haven’t been that free with someone in a long time. I keep thinking about it too.

How much longer are you in town?

I don’t know. I shouldn’t have been in town, anyway. I was headed to Maine.

For?

It’s a long story. I could tell it. If you wanted to hear it.

Do you want to get together again?

Quickly the response came.

Yes.

Donovan added:

I wasn’t sure if you would. Or how to ask. Or anything. But yes.

When?

I’m staying with a friend, and he might not be here, but then also, he might

Right.

Then Donovan typed:

My home.

You don’t live alone. You can’t.

I live with my father, but he should be keeping the store. And if anything unexpected happens. then I’ll just have to make you climb out the window. Don’t worry, I’m on the first floor.


The next day, from where he sat on the porch, Donovan waited for Brian’s car, and when he saw it, waved. A moment later a tall, dark haired professional looking man in silver grey slacks and white shirt crossed the street and climbed the porch. Donovan opened the door and let him in. Now, in his father’s house, Donovan was aware of how tall Brian was, and how he smelled of good cologne, and how he was no child, had to be at least thirty-five. He didn’t dare ask his age. He thought, I will always be with someone much younger, or someone much older.
They looked at each other for a time, and then Donovan brought Brian’s face to his and began kissing him, feeling Brian’s tongue thrust into his mouth, feeling the stubble of Brian’s cheek, Donovan’s hands went to Brian’s gelled hair, down his sides. Brian pulled him tight to him, and through his thin slacks, Donovan felt the hardness of Brian’s penis.
“Come on,” Donovan said, taking Brian’s hand and leading him through the front room, through the dining room, down the hall, and then into his bedroom where, kissing him again, he pushed Brian a little against the door, shut the door, and then locked it.


MORE AFTER THE WEEKEND
 
That was a great portion! This Brian seems like an interesting character. It sounds like that Cade and Donovan being together is looking less likely. Excellent writing and I look forward to more in a few days!
 
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