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

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

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

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

Watching Brad

Neil, congratulations on reaching the 100th chapter milestone with your wonderful story. Your characters have taken over both you and all your many readers. Ted is stronger now than he ever was before with all his family around him for support. Please let him give Connie her cumuppance !!!!
Peace & Love
Harry
 
Thank you Neil for a wonderful story. I was afraid Connie was going to pull off something (she still can) and make life go south quickly. I am glad Ted stood up to her and did not give in.
 
OK, now i'm getting a little verklempt...tawk amongst yerselves...i'll give you a topic...Lincoln's 'Gettysburg Address' is neither in Gettysburg nor an address!!...Discuss!!!!!!...LOL

I just finished Chapter 37 and it really got to me when Ted met the two little blond identical twin boys he's planning to adopt...somebody get me a case of Puffs!!!!!!
 
WATCHING BRAD
Part 102​

I drove home through the streets of Toronto, tired after a long day at work and anxious to get home to be with my wife. I had been on pins and needles all that day, wondering and worried about the outcome of the tests. She wanted to tell me in person. I would know in a few minutes what my future was to be.

Our apartment was small, nestled into the third-floor attic of one of the old, war-time homes on one of the tree-lined back streets of the city. The kitchen was tiny - barely enough room for one person to move around in. There certainly wasn't room for a table of any sort. We ate our meals on the coffee table in the living room while we sat on our small, two-seat sofa and watched our black and white television which could pick up only two stations with the help of a coat hanger hanging off the antennae screws at the back. Money was tight. We couldn't afford cable, especially when we were saving all our money so we could start our family.

I remember the night we found that coffee table. We had splurged and gone out to dinner at a small restaurant and, later, to a live play at the O'Keefe Centre. On the way home, we saw the coffee table lying legs-up on a small pile of trash bags. It had four legs intact, which was much better than the current coffee table we were using which required two books placed under one broken leg in order to keep the table level.

The table had a lot of nicks and dings in it and three water rings on top, but it was solid and didn't require books for balance. We laughed and giggled so much as we stealthily stuffed the table into the back seat of our car and drove away with our prize. Returning home, we retired the books to the milk crates which served as our book shelves and set our brand new coffee table in place. I took the old table outside and dropped it on the ground near our own garbage bags. We were so happy then. Life was good, and it could only get better.

We didn't have a big bed. There wasn't room in the tiny bedroom for anything bigger than a twin. We didn't mind. It was soft and comfortable, and it was very, very cozy.

I pulled into the driveway without even remembering the trip home and ran inside and up the two fights of stairs to our apartment. Connie was waiting for me inside the front door. She had the most beautiful and excited smile on her face and I knew without her having to say a single word what the test results were. I was going to be a father!

I grabbed her in my arms and I spun her around and around in the small hallway, kissing her over and over again. We loved each other so much.

Connie took care of herself throughout the pregnancy, not allowing anything to possibly injure the child growing inside her. She never smoked, but I did, and she wouldn't let me smoke in the apartment anymore. She wouldn't even let me smoke in the house or anywhere around her. Getting dressed against the cold and the wind and the snow just to walk down two flights of stairs to have a cigarette certainly put a damper on my cravings for nicotine.

We began looking for a new apartment and found one in early Spring and we bid our farewells to our tiny attic apartment forever. The new apartment was still small, but larger than our old one, and there was room in the kitchen for a table and room in the bedroom for a crib and changing table and all the things a baby would need. There still wasn't room for a larger bed for us, though. We didn't mind. We were too busy being soon-to-be parents. Sacrifice was the name of the game. Our child came before anything else.

The birth was difficult for Connie, and she would have had every right to complain, but she didn't. She refused any drugs which would make her more comfortable for fear that they might injure her child in some way. Her labour continued for thirty-seven hours before Lindsay was born and the very first sounds of crying from our new daughter washed away all the pain and worry and frustration in a single flood of emotion for both of us. We were a family, and we would live happily ever after.

The very first time I held Lindsay in my arms, I was hooked. My job in creating her had been easy. The job of providing a life for her would be much more difficult, but I devoted myself to just that. I would do everything I could to give my child everything she needed and I would do what was necessary to keep her safe and free from harm.

Connie was an excellent mother. She loved our daughter more than she loved anything else. I remember all the nights she would let me sleep as she stood beside the crib, tending to our daughter when she suffered one of her many bouts of colic. Nothing was more important to her than Lindsay.

My mother gave me a rocking chair which had belonged to my grandmother. Grandma used to rock my Mom to sleep in it when she was a baby, and my Mom had rocked me to sleep in it. Now, it was mine, and I spent many happy hours at home sitting in the rocking chair with my little baby daughter in my arms, rocking her to sleep as well. Nothing in the world felt better to me than to feel that tiny life breathing and living against me. My daughter was the most precious thing in my entire life. There was nothing I wouldn't do for her.

Connie was a different woman then - much different than the woman she would become. The Connie I spoke to on the telephone just now was much more like that woman from long ago. But she was different at the same time, and that is what disturbed me. Was she sincere? Was she truly repentant? She had changed once. Could it be possible that she could change back again? I suppose anything is possible. After all, I had changed so much over this past year as well. Did she deserve the benefit of the doubt?

A knock came lightly to the door and I looked up at is as it slowly opened and Brad's handsome and worried face appeared in the crack. His eyes quickly found me as I still sat there on the bed. "Can I come in?" he asked softly.

I nodded.

Brad entered and quietly closed the door behind him. He came to the bed and sat beside me, wrapping his right arm comfortingly around my shoulders, his hand gently cupping my upper arm. His other hand came to rest on my thigh.

"I saw the light from the telephone go out ten minutes ago," he said softly. "Are you okay?"

I paused for a few long moments before responding. "I don't know."

"What did she want, Ted?" he asked. "Can you tell me?"

I turned toward him and wrapped my arms around him. Brad knew instinctively that I didn't want a hug. He knew that I wanted - needed - to be held, and that's what he did. He held me, soothing me and rubbing my back gently and tenderly with his fingers and rubbing his cheek against my hair.

I would have liked him to hold me much longer than he did, but he soon leaned back and said gently, "The kids are worried, Ted. They're scared. They know something's wrong. What did she say to you?"

I quickly briefed him, telling him everything she was going to do when she got out of prison.

"Do you believe her?"

"I don't know, Brad," I told him honestly. "She sounded sincere, but it could be just another of her performances so she can get what she wants. She sounded like the Connie I once knew, but she was different even than that. She sounded like a nicer person than she was when I met her, and that's what scares me."

"But you just said she was a good actress."

I looked deeply into Brad's green eyes. "You should have heard her when she said she wasn't going to see Lindsay ever again. She's good, but she's not that good, Brad. Unless she picked up a few tips in prison on how to lie better."

"What are you going to do?"

"Nothing I can do yet," I replied. "I'll go to the parole hearing and I'll listen to her. I'll know if she's lying if I can see her. She tilts her head a bit to the left when she's thinking of the lies she wants to tell. Unless someone else noticed it, too, and mentioned it and she doesn't do it anymore, I should know. Right now, though, I've got to get out to my kids and let them know that everything is alright."

Brad drew me in for a real hug this time. "It will be alright, Ted," he said quietly.

I didn't dare tell Brad that I had never been more terrified in my entire life. If Connie was lying, there was no way I could prevent all the damage she could do to my family - and to my own life. Connie had the power and determination within her to destroy everything I cherished.

* * * * *

Lindsay looked up from where she sat with her Grandma de Villiers. The Hayes sat on the settee. The twins looked up from where they knelt at the coffee table. They jumped up and ran to me, their arms raised to be picked up, the worry in their faces very clear and evident. I bent down and snatched them into my arms before carrying them to sit on the sofa beside my daughter.

"Daddy?" Lindsay said softly. "Are you okay? We could hear you yelling."

"I'm fine, Sweetheart," I said as I bent down to her to give her a kiss. "Everything's fine."

"You were gone a long time, Daddy," Justin said.

I hugged them to me and told them, "I know, and I'm sorry. I had a little problem I had to take care of."

"Is it fixed?" Jeremy asked.

"Not yet, but I'll fix it. I promise."

"Can we help?"

"You sure can," I said. "Give me the best hugs and kisses you can and everything will be perfect."

They did just that.

Bernice was a real sweetheart that afternoon. I found out later that Brad had quickly told her that I was talking on the telephone with Connie. She stood up with a large smile on her face.

"I have an idea," she said. "I have a chocolate cake at home and ice cream in the freezer, and I need help eating it. Are there any kids here who would like to help me?"

Three hands reached toward the ceiling and all concerns about Daddy having a problem were quickly dissipated. It was soon decided that Bernice would cook supper for the kids and they would have chocolate cake and ice cream for dessert. She would call when the kids were ready to come home. She could do so much by doing so little.

Within ten minutes, my kids had all been to the bathroom, were washed and dressed, and ready to head out the door. "Will you miss us, Daddy?" Jeremy asked.

"I'll miss you every second."

"Maybe we should hug you again," he added.

I knelt on one knee and got a hug from all three, and all three got a kiss on the cheek back from me. Mom, Dad, and Brad went to the kitchen as I stepped out onto the front porch to watch the kids as they crossed the lawns with John and Bernice. Before they entered the door, the kids turned and waved. I, of course, waved back and blew them kisses, then stepped inside and quietly closed the door behind me.

I joined the others in the kitchen, sitting at my usual place at the table and staring down at it. Brad reached out his arm so he could rest his hand on mine. Dad sat in silence as Mom poured and prepared tea and coffee for everyone. Only when they were served and Mom was sitting beside him did Dad speak: "Say what you must, Ted."

Without looking up, I said, "She can really fuck everything up if that's what she intends to do." And then I didn't stop talking until I had told them everything I could remember of our conversation together.

"That does not sound like the Connie you divorced," Dad said when I was finished.

"No, it doesn't, but it's not the old Connie, either."

"Do you believe she was sincere?" Mom asked.

I looked up at her. "I don't know, Mom. I mean, she even complimented Brad, and she was happy that I'm happy being with him. She's even happy I'm getting married."

"Perhaps she is finally accepting responsibility for her actions," Dad offered.

"She's done that before, Jan," Mom said, "simply to get her own way. I don't trust her. ‘By the pricking of my thumbs, something wicked this way comes.'"

"Well-quoted, my dear," Dad said. "You must prepare yourself for battle, Theodore, whether or not war is declared."

I heaved a sigh as Brad squeezed my hand. "Well, I'll know in three weeks."

"Which date?" Dad asked.

"The thirteenth of June," I replied. "Ten o'clock in the morning."

"Will you attend?"

My eyes flew to meet Dad's. "Damned straight I'll be there! And if I even think she's lying, I'll do what I can to make sure her ass stays there!"

"And if you feel she is sincere?"

Dad was really good at asking all the questions I couldn't answer. I paused for a long time, thinking. "I don't know," I said finally. "I suppose I'll know when I do it."

"You will do the right thing, Theodore," Dad assured me. "You always do." He made me feel quite good, actually, until he added, "Well, almost always."

* * * * *

Brad returned to his studies, although I honestly believe he did more thinking than he did studying. Mom and Dad left me alone to think. I went to Lindsay's bedroom and sat on the side of her bed, staring at her white unicorn on the shelf - the one Bernice gave her - and trying to sort everything out in my head. The twins were safe from Connie. She had no stake in them whatsoever and there was really nothing she could do them, and there was no way she could use them against me. She could make life very difficult for me and Brad, but it was really Lindsay who gave Connie the biggest edge and the most ammunition. She had made the decision to give up all parental rights to my daughter, but decisions can be undone. Even if I eventually won, she could tie me up in court for many, many years if she were so inclined.

Lindsay was my priority, then. She was the one I had to protect first and foremost, and she was the one toward whom I would have to divert all my energies. Connie could easily drain me financially and, if she was still The Bitch she had been when she went into prison, she would stop at nothing to do just that when she got out. She had a lot of money wrapped up in her clothes and jewelry. Her parents, although they had been virtually non-existent in our lives due to them disliking me so much, now had very deep pockets. Connie had access to a lot of money if she could find a way to get her hands on it.

I picked up Lindsay's pillow in my hands and clutched it to my chest, burying my face into it and smelling her there. I gently rocked back and forth on the bed, trying desperately not to cry. An hour ago, my life couldn't have been more perfect. Now, it was balanced on the edge of a razor blade, and it could tip either way. I failed in my attempt not to cry.

"It's too much for me," I thought to myself. "This is more than I can handle." First and foremost, there was my family. Then there was the wedding. Then Warren and my parents. And now there was Connie. I didn't know where I was going to find the strength to see all of it through. Somehow I had to find a way to do it all without my brain going into overload. But the fact that I was sitting there, crying into my daughter's pillow, was a sign that I was no-longer in control, and it scared the hell out of me.

Brad didn't stay in the room studying for very long. Only a few minutes later, he came out of the room and saw me sitting on Lindsay's bed. He came over, sat beside me, wrapped his arms around me, and held me. He didn't say anything. He simply held me.

I continued hugging my daughter's pillow and Brad continued holding me. We sat there in silence until Mom stepped into the doorway to tell us that dinner was ready. We didn't talk about Connie during our meal. I played with my mashed potatoes and don't remember eating a single bite of Mom's meal as I listened to my Mom and Dad banter back and forth with Brad.

They talked to him about the gardens they wanted done in the front yard, and they wanted Brad to do them. Mrs. Grace was still trying to decide which serenity garden she wanted, so Brad eagerly jumped in to gather information and to offer suggestions. He was certain he could give Mom exactly what she was looking for.

Of course, Dad was eager to bring Brad in as well to get help in creating his new English Country Garden in the back yard. "The best way to learn a craft," Dad said, "is to be taught by master."

Brad swiftly replied, "Oh, are you bringing one over from England?"

Dad didn't smile. He looked at Mom and said, "This boy has far too much cheek for his own good." He turned back to Brad, who was still grinning from ear to ear. "Behave yourself," Dad told him, but he became caught up in Brad's infectious smile and his lips curled up. Mine didn't.

We were still sitting at the kitchen table sipping our after-dinner tea when John phoned to tell us the kids were ready to come home.

"You must not let the children see your worry, Theodore," Dad said. "They were frightened enough this afternoon."

"I know," I said. "I'll be alright." I even managed a smile for him.

Dad put his hand on my shoulder and squeezed it gently as he smiled back.

I went next door to get the kids. Bernice, of course, sent back the remains of her chocolate cake. The boys wanted me to carry them home, but I pointed to their feet. "See those?" I said. "They were made for you to walk on. Use them." They walked home.

When we got home, we joined the rest of the adults in the livingroom. Lindsay adjourned to her bedroom and the twins climbed into my and Brad's laps. The boys told us all about their dinner and all about the two slices of chocolate cake Grandma Hayes allowed them to have.

"Two pieces?"

Justin nodded. "But they were really skinny," he said as he held up his hand and showed me the thickness with his thumb and index finger. The cake, apparently, had been sliced to about the thickness of three sheets of paper.

Lindsay returned with one of her favourite picture books and sat beside me, putting the book into her lap and leafing from page to page. The twins climbed down from our laps to play on the floor until it was time for their bath and I put my arm around Lindsay's back and turned my attention to her picture book for awhile. Brad returned to the bedroom to continue his studies. His first exam was the next morning.

I let the twins play for another half hour or so before I carted them off to the bathroom to get them ready for their baths. I prepared the water as they undressed and poured in the Mr. Bubble. Amazing stuff, that. Lots of bubbles and the kids like playing in them. Well, at least the boys do. Lindsay is more into the scented bubble baths now.

If the twins don't need their hair washed, I usually sit with them now until they're washed, then leave them to play for awhile. I'm never far away, though, and I always leave the bathroom door open so I can hear them.

That's what I did that night.

I truly wish I hadn't.

To Be Continued
 
Yep - you're still "King of the cliff hanger" Neil! Thanks for another great chapter!
 
" I truly wish I hadn't" what......................... Gosh what a cliffhanger. Neil, why do you make us suffer like this.... I need the Friday chapter now!!

Zac
 
Yet another cliff-hanger Neil ???
What are you doing to our nerves.... we can't stand it !!!!
Please Ted, have the strength to hold your family together ... in spite of Neil's machinations !!!
Great chapter Neil
Thanks
Harry
 
Oh, My! Two more "sleeps" 'til Friday!! How am I going to do that???! :confused: #-o :help: ](*,)

Keep smilin'!! :kiss: (*8*)
Chaz ;)
 
WATCHING BRAD
Part 103​

I didn't wash the twin's hair that Sunday night. As I had done many times before, I made certain they were clean, then left them to play. I returned to the livingroom and sat beside Lindsay once more, hugging her to me as we continued looking through her picture book. My mind wasn't on the book, though. It was on my daughter and her future and what Connie could do to it.

Brad was back in the bedroom, studying, and Mom and Dad were watching Antiques Roadshow on HGTV. Everything was normal - except, perhaps, for me. The boys were playing in the bathroom. I could hear their cheerful giggles and chuckles and I could hear the occasional splash when they dropped one of their toys through the Mr. Bubble clouds so it could splash down into the water of the bathtub ocean.

The boys were usually pretty good about bathing alone. They enjoyed playing in the water, but they were quite careful about splashing water onto the floor. My mind went back those many months to when they first moved in with me. They didn't even have their own bedroom then. They slept in Lindsay's room, their beds divided by a blanket wall. There was only one bathroom back then as well. There was no Mr. Bubble, and very few toys to play with. Back then, I wouldn't leave the twins alone in the bath. I was terrified they might hurt themselves somehow.

They had splashed me and I had ‘lost my cool'. I had yelled at them. I felt bad for yelling at them over splashed water, but it stopped them from splashing me. They were, after all, four-year-old boys, and that's what four-year-old boys do in a bathtub. They splash.

There was a sudden round of loud laughing from the two which brought my mind to full awareness and away from Connie, and I stood up to investigate. I walked to the bathroom door near the large patio doors and stepped inside. Jeremy stopped walking when he saw me, his little, Mr. Bubble-covered body dripping water and lather onto the floor.

All the anxieties of that afternoon came out in one quick, vicious burst.

"What are you doing out of the tub?" I yelled.

Jeremy's eyes opened wide and round, his small, cherubic face suddenly full of fear. "I was. . ." he began.

"I don't want to hear it! Get back into that tub!"

Justin, still sitting in the bathtub, became as still as a statue and stared at me. Jeremy began crying and screaming. "But Daddy. . ."

"I said get in the tub!!"

Jeremy jumped at the intensity of the anger in my voice, tears running down his tiny face, and then he began to pee as he stood there, his tiny stream of urine arcing to the floor and splashing onto the tiles there.

"What in hell do you thing you're doing!!?" I started forward.

Jeremy began backing away from me, his bladder still emptying itself onto the floor and leaving a trail of urine in his wake. His screams of terror pounded into my ears, echoing off the tiled walls of the bathroom and blasting into my brain and raising my fury to yet another level.

"Theodore!!" It was Dad.

I stopped turned toward the door. Dad was standing right in front of me. Mom was in the doorway and Lindsay was standing behind her, clutching Mom's dress in her hands. She had the same look of terror on her face and tears filled her eyes and began to overflow onto her cheeks.

"This is my house, Dad!" I yelled. Behind me, Jeremy continued screaming and crying. Justin had joined him now and was crying as well. "These are my kids! You stay the hell out of it! If you think I'm going to stand here and let the little runt piss all over. . ."

Dad's hand moved so fast that I didn't even see it coming. His palm caught the side of my face with a loud smack which bounced off the tiled walls like a crack of thunder. It spun my head around. When I looked back, Brad appeared in the doorway. He immediately pushed past Mom and came into the room, bypassing both myself and Dad, and headed straight for Jeremy and Justin.

Dad was staring at me and there was no hiding the fury in his own face or in his voice. His eyes buried daggers into my chest. "Listen to yourself, Son!" he screamed at me. "This is not you! These boys are not the object of your anger! Do not subject them to it!"

My hand came to my cheek. Dad had never hit me like that before, and he would not have done so without a damned good reason. I looked past him toward Mom. Her eyes were filled with concern and disbelief. Behind her, Lindsay's face was becoming moist with her tears as she stared at me. Behind me, I could hear Brad trying to calm down my sons and I could hear sloshing water. I glanced behind me as Justin climbed out of the bathtub and into Brad's waiting arm. Jeremy was already securely clutched in the other arm.

I turned back to Dad. The anger was gone from his face, but he stood there, solidly facing me and letting me know that he was ready to take me on if it was necessary.

"We will clean this up and take care of your sons, Theodore," he said quietly. "I think it best if you leave this room."

"Dad, I. . ."

His hands came to my arms and grabbed them tightly, giving them a slight shake. "Please, Ted, leave this room."

I looked at my family, then turned to look at my sons as they clung to Brad. They were still crying and the water and lather from their bodies were soaking into Brad's clothes. Dark, wet stains spread out around them on Brad's shirt and jeans. Brad's eyes bore into me, and I knew in an instant that he, too, would do everything necessary to protect my sons from me.

"I'm sorry," I said finally. "Oh, God, I'm sorry!" And then I ran past Dad, my Mom and daughter, and into my bedroom where I fell face-down onto the bed and cried.

In only a few hours, Connie had worked her evil magic.

It had begun.

* * * * *

The screams of my two boys slowly faded, but the sobs and whimpers continued. I could hear people moving about outside my room, but I paid them no mind. I was too busy hating myself for what I had done. There had been no excuse for my actions. Not only was I losing control of my life, I was losing control of myself and it terrified me.

Brad came into the room to change his wet clothes. I didn't even look up at him. He said something to me in a soft, concerned voice, but I didn't respond. He finished changing and left the room again.

Gradually my sobbing and sniffling stopped and the thinking began. I remembered my father's words to me: "Listen to yourself." He had been angry, and rightly so. When I recalled what I had called my son, I almost began to cry again. How could I have been so insensitive? How could I have allowed myself to say that to him? I couldn't love Jeremy more if I had created him myself with my own flesh and blood. Yet I had called him a runt. I squeezed my eyes tightly against the rising tears and curse Connie once more. Already, my life and my family were turning to chaos.

There had been a reason for Jeremy being out of the tub. I knew that. He had to use the toilet. That was clear to me now. He had tried to tell me and I had refused to let him. Instead, I had frightened him into doing on the floor what he would have been doing in the toilet had I walked into the bathroom a few seconds later. And I had held him responsible and insulted him by calling him a name I should never have called him.

I deserved the smack on the face I got from Dad. I had lost control of myself and my mind wasn't my own. Dad had to get it back for me. My fingers raised once more to my cheek where Dad had hit me. It was still tingling. He had not been gentle. Yet, had he not hit me, Jeremy's little bum would most certainly have received the same treatment with one very frightening exception. I wouldn't have hit Jeremy only once.

I began crying again at the thought of what I had almost done to my son.

You know, when I was a little boy of Jeremy's age, Mom could fix any hurt on the outside of my body, but Dad was the only one who could fix the hurt inside me. If I was upset, I would go to Dad. He always knew exactly what to say to me. He would hold me in his strong arms and take away all my pain and fear and worry. There was so much strength in him back then.

I mention this now because someone entered my bedroom and sat on the side of my bed, and I felt a hand come to rest on my back. I knew that touch immediately. It was my father. I turned over onto my back and sat up, and then, just like he did when I was four years old, Dad took me into his arms to take away all my pain and fear and worry. There was still a lot of strength in him.

He pulled me against his chest and I rested the cheek he had slapped against it. I could feel his body living and I could hear his heart beating - just like when I was a little kid. This time, though, I was so afraid to let go of him.

"What have I done, Dad?" My voice came out in a raspy croak, barely louder than a whisper.

"What you have done, Theodore, is to allow Connie to win."

I jerked myself away from him. "Oh, no I haven't," I told him sternly. My voice had returned.

"Yes, Theodore," Dad said quietly and he gently nodded his head. "You have." His hands moved to my shoulders. "Listen to me, Son. You have already made up your mind about Connie without knowing her true intentions. You view her as a terrorist intent upon making your life miserable and disrupting your family. If that is her intention, she has already succeeded, and you have done it for her. A frightened man wins many battles for the enemy."

Dad's hands moved down my arms to my hands. He took them into his own and held them as he looked straight into my eyes.

"You are stronger than she is, Ted. You always have been stronger. She tried to beat you down when you went through your divorce, but you stood up to her. It was only through some wild machinations and sleight of hand by her lawyer that you lost custody of Lindsay. You have her back now, and if you intend to fight in order to keep her, you must not allow yourself to lose battles which are never fought. You must keep your head and you must maintain control of yourself. You must not allow yourself to give over to Connie the control that she requires to defeat you."

"But there's too much, Dad," I said in a whimper. "There's the wedding and Warren and you and Mom, and now Connie. There's too much for me to handle. I don't know if I can do this."

Dad thought for a long moment, staring into my eyes as he did so. Then he spoke. "Bradley and his parents and your mother can handle the wedding," Dad said wisely. "You can forget the wedding. There is nothing you can do to make Warren well again. Don't try to deal with his future until it arrives. If your Mother and I are too much for you to handle, we will go to a motel until the house is ready, so forget about us. And, right now, there is nothing you can do about Connie, so forget about her as well. There is nothing you can do about tomorrow. You must do what you can about today."

As if on cue, a tiny voice sounded from the doorway. "Daddy?" Both Dad and I turned our heads to look. It was Jeremy, and he still looked very frightened and concerned. His eyes were still moist and glistening with the tears he had shed. Justin stood beside him, holding Jeremy's hand, while Brad stood behind the two, resting his own hands on their shoulders. The twins were now dressed in their pyjamas.

Dad looked back at me. "This is as good a time to begin as any, Son. Do not allow the moment to pass you by."

I hugged him and said, "Thanks, Dad." I gave him a kiss on the cheek.

Dad stood up as I swung my legs over the side of the bed. He stopped long enough to give each of the twins a kiss, then stepped around them and took Brad by the arm. "Come, Bradley. We are not needed here." As he guided Brad out the door, he pulled it closed behind him.

Jeremy and I looked at each other for a short time before he said, "I'm sorry, Daddy."

I held out my hands to him and said, "I'm sorry, too, Jeremy."

My son looked at my outstretched arms, then into my eyes once more. He didn't move. "Are you going to hit me?"

"No, Jeremy," I said softly, "I won't hit you. I promise."

Justin started forward, still holding his brother's hand. Jeremy had no choice but to follow. I picked up Jeremy, setting him astraddle my right leg and facing me. Justin climbed onto the bed and straddled my left leg by himself. I wrapped my arms around them and hugged them close. Justin came quickly, but Jeremy was a hesitant. He held me, but he didn't hug me back.

When I finally released them, they sat back. Jeremy looked at me, still frightened and still concerned. His eyes stared deeply into mine and he squinted slightly. His hand reached up and brushed at my cheek. He looked at his fingers, seemingly surprised to find left-over tears there.

"Were you crying, too, Daddy?" he asked.

"Yes, I was, Jeremy."

"Why?"

"Because I yelled at you and I almost spanked you when you weren't doing anything wrong."

He thought about that for a long moment, then said, "I'll sorry I peed on the floor, Daddy," he said. "You scared me."

"I know I did, Jeremy, and I'm very sorry for yelling at you. That was very wrong of me."

He blinked away the moistness still in his eyes. "Are you going to give me back now?"

"Give you back?" I asked. "Why would I want to give you back?"

Jeremy's finger hooked his lower lip. "Because I was bad," he said sadly. "The other people always gave us back when we were bad."

I reached out for Jeremy's hand and gently wrapped my fingers around it. I pulled his finger from his mouth and moved his hand toward my lips and kissed it.

"Jeremy," I said as I held onto his hand, "you had an accident and it was all my fault because I yelled at you. I scared you. You're my son now. And so are you, Justin. I'll never give you back. Never. I love both of you very much." I looked directly into Jeremy's eyes. "I'm sorry I called you a bad name, Jeremy."

"I didn't know what it is," he said.

"It was a mean thing to say and I shouldn't have said it. But I promise you, I'll never call you that again."

"What does it mean, Daddy?" Jeremy persisted.

I knew I had to give him an answer. "It's a mean way of saying you're small."

"But I am small, Daddy," he replied. "I'm just a little boy. I'm ‘posed to be small."

"Yes, you are," I smiled.

"We'll get bigger, Jeremy," Justin said encouragingly. "Daddy said we would."

"Yes, you will. Now, I really need a hug from both of you."

They hugged me, and there was no hesitation in Jeremy this time. He grabbed me in his arms and hugged me as hard as his little arms would allow. I wrapped one arm around each of my sons and hugged them back as I kissed their hair.

"I love you," I told them. "Don't ever forget that I'll never stop loving you."

We held each other for a very long minute before I finally released them. They sat back and looked at me.

"Do you feel better now?" The twins nodded their heads and even smiled for me. "I feel better, too." I glanced at the clock beside my bed. It was almost nine o'clock. "Now, it's way past your bedtime. Are you ready to go say nitey-nite to Ouma and Oupa?"

Again they nodded, then grabbed me in another hug.

* * * * *

The three children were in bed and asleep. Brad was once again in our bedroom, studying. I sat with Mom and Dad on the sofa in the livingroom. They were watching some home redecoration programme on HGTV, which seemed to be their favourite station. I wasn't really paying attention. The blondish, Scottish guy with his dark-haired friend grates on my nerves. I have no idea how the dark-haird guy can stand to be in the same room as blondie, let alone share his bed. I turned myself off to them when they began talking about removing the ‘skid mark wallpaper' in someone's poorly-decorated kitchen.

I sat there sprawled out with my legs crossed at the ankles and propped up on the coffee table. My head was propped against the back of the sofa. I had been thinking. I hadn't realized I fell asleep until Mom shook me awake.

"Teddy," she said, "go to bed, Dear."

"I'm not sleepy," I said as I straightened up and reached for my coffee mug. The coffee was cold.

"You were snoring, Son," Dad said. "We could not even hear Justin and Colin talking."

"I don't want to go to bed," I objected. "It isn't even ten o'clock yet."

"Go to bed," Mom repeated.

I was tired - both physically and mentally. I was just too stubborn to admit it. Besides, I was too old to have my parents tell me it was past my bedtime. But I went anyway after giving both of them big hugs and kisses and many, many thanks for their help that afternoon. I peeked in on the twins and Lindsay one last time before making my way to my bedroom. Brad took a short break from studying to help me undress. I let him.

"Are you okay, Pops?" he asked as he put his forearms on my shoulders and cupped my neck in his hands..

"I'm just tired, that's all," I said.

"Do you want to talk?"

"No," I replied. "Maybe later on this week, but not right now. I'll just lie down and think for awhile and wait for you to come to bed."

"You sure?"

I smiled at him. "Yes, Brad, I'm sure."

Brad hugged me hard, our bodies separated only by the clothes he was wearing. I could feel him pressing against me, and his scent filled my nostrils. It felt good to be hugged by him, of course, but I was oddly unaffected by it, and that surprised me. I passed it off as being the yet another result of the stress of the day. Brad sensed it.

He leaned back from me and his eyes squinted as he stared into mine. "Are you sure you're okay, Ted?"

"I'm tired, Brad. My brain is almost fried. I just need some rest, that's all."

He gave me a smile of understanding, but it wasn't big enough to show me his chipped tooth. "Yeah," he said, "I guess it's been quite a day for you. Do you want me to get you anything?"

"No, thanks. I'm fine."

"Well, you park yourself in bed. I'll only be another hour or so." He paused for a moment, scanning my eyes. "You're sure you're okay?"

"I'll be fine, Brad. Don't worry about me."

"It's my job to worry about you," he replied. "You don't do it."

I actually chuckled and I gave him a kiss for it. "Go finish your studying. I'll wait for you in bed."

"Okay," he said. "I'll be right back. I have to take a leak first." He gave me another kiss, then pulled down the sheets.

I climbed into bed and pulled the sheets over me. "Thanks, Tiger," I said as I settled back into the soft, welcoming pillows.

"You're welcome, Pops." He leaned down and gave me another kiss. "I'll be right back."

I blinked my eyes and nodded in acknowledgment and smiled up at him.

Brad turned and left the room on his way to the bathroom. I was asleep before he came back into the room.

To Be Continued
 
That was a little bit scary. Ted kind of went a little psycho. The twins sound all to cute. You make these characters seem like real people. I can almost see them. Great chapter.
 
Yes, scary & dramatic !!!!
Where do we go from here I wonder
Will things ever be quite the same ??
Great writing, Neil. Thanks
Peace & Love
Harry
 
Have I said, "Awesome!", recently?? :confused:

AWESOME!, Neil!! (group)

Keep smilin'!! :kiss: (*8*)
Chaz ;)
 
Oh those poor little boys! :cry:How easy is it for us "adults" to forget how vulnerable they are, and yell at them and scare them? The upside is that Ted genuinely does love them, as do those around him.
I hope Ted sorts himself out....and quickly! I'm sensing that he's withdrawing from Brad, and that cannot be a good thing!
Neal.....thanks for another electrifying chapter...though of course you are responsible for this puddle on my keyboard! [-X Thanks mate!
(*8*)

Trent :D

 
I hate it when we let other people affect our lives like Connie did to Ted. It can turn your world upside-down. All to often we lash out at the people we love so dearly and then it rips all the souls involved to shreds. Only time can heal those wounds and lots of love. The kids show us just how we can be affected.

Trent0n1, I am with you on what might be happening between Brad and Ted. I hope we are both wrong. I need this story to be positive with all the negative we have to deal with in our (my) lives.

Thank you Neil for another wonderful Chapter for our reading pleasure.
 
Back
Top