Read Don't Read in the Closet: Volume Four Online
Authors: Various Authors
Tags: #Don't Read in the Closet, #mm romance, #gay
feeling, now, clenching muscles releasing all that built-up tension,
sharply sweet as each spasm hit him.
Jurgen thrust against his ass hard, grinding against him and
groaning, and the idea that Jurgen had come in his jeans was enough
to make Nik’s balls pull up one more time.
Nik was still trembling and jerking from aftershocks when he laid
his forehead on the screen door and looked down at their hands,
covered with cum.
Penis sundae.
He should probably be grateful he hadn’t said that aloud, either,
but he just couldn’t be bothered to care. Jurgen’s forehead was resting
on his shoulder, hand still gripping his shaft, stroking gently, slowly.
Nik pushed back a little when he got too sensitive and couldn’t take it
anymore. Jurgen dropped his hand. They breathed together. Nik let
the night come back in tune around him. After a couple of minutes
Jurgen kissed the back of Nik’s neck, once, straightening up.
“You said my name.”
Shit.
He shrugged.
There was maybe two inches, max between their bodies, but Nik
thought the chance of more contact was slim. He could feel Jurgen
getting all distant back there.
“Let me know if you want to do that again,” Jurgen said. He
hesitated. “I better go. It’s gonna be a sticky ride home.”
Then he walked off.
If Nik had just gotten the hand job he’d always deserved, why did
he feel like a slut? He rocked his head back and forth against the
screen, cum slowly coagulating on the door and him, trying not to
think about it.
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****
apartment. He looked around. All the windows were open. Sam’s
room was right over the porch. He couldn’t see anything, but he’d
damn well heard it.
“Do I want to know what you’re doing in there?”
“No.”
“Great,” Nik muttered. He wandered into the bathroom to clean
himself up. When he came out in just his boxers—miraculously
clean—Sam was on the couch with a glass of wine. He was wearing
his robe and nothing else. Another glass and the rest of the bottle were
on the table in front of him.
Nik poured himself a glass and sat in his favorite chair. They
sipped in silence a while. It was almost too cool up here, now, but Nik
didn’t have it in him to shut any windows.
“I let my inner slut have control.”
Sam nodded at him solemnly. Then he grinned, showing what had
to be all his teeth. “Windows were all open.”
“I saw that when I came back in. Good show?”
“Oh, yeah. Better than porn.”
“Glad I could liven up your vacation.” Nik meant for it to come
out snarky, but it just sounded flat. He let his head fall back onto his
chair.
“You shouldn’t feel bad. Jesus, I would have climbed him like a
cat tree given half a chance.”
“A
cat tree
?” He lifted his head and stared at Sam.
“You know. They’re covered in carpet and cats climb them.”
Nik let his head flop back. “I know what they are, I’ve just never
associated one with hot sex.”
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“Lots of white guys come on to you and you’ve never accused
them of wanting to fuck you because you’re not white.” Sam was
looking at him, Nik could feel it. The sudden comment—apropos of
nothing—snapped Nik back to reality. God knew what he’d been
thinking about.
Certainly not motorcycle cops.
Sam sighed and sat back, sipping wine and scratching his balls.
Sam was so suave. He clearly knew Nik wasn’t going to answer.
Perversely, it made Nik want to answer. “It’s just different, here.
I’m different. You know how whenever your brother comes to visit
you and sleeps on your couch, you spend the whole time bitching at
him about being a slob?”
“Yeah.” Nik caught Sam’s nod out of the corner of his eye.
“And you know how, whenever your brother isn’t visiting, your
place is a disaster? Dirty dishes on the couch, piles of laundry, pizza
boxes everywhere. Vermin.”
“It’s not that bad.”
Nik turned his head to the side to look at Sam. Sam looked back at
him. He sighed and turned away. “Okay. Yeah. But there’s no
vermin.”
“What about your ex?” Nik looked back at the ceiling.
“Fine. One vermin.”
“It’s like that. This place pushes my buttons. I got stared at when I
was little, and then as I got bigger people got used to me, but they all
had to make comments. ‘You sure play ball good for a kid from India.’
Stuff like that, it didn’t even make any sense. Even Mom still has a big
old chip on her shoulder about how I was treated. And then, when I
came out, it was like everyone had been waiting for it. Waiting for me
to show how I was different.”
“You played ball?” Sam stared at him in amazement.
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Nik lifted his head, made his eyes big, and stared back. “Can we
try to focus, here?”
Sam nodded. He fell silent. That wasn’t going to last. He fidgeted
and squirmed, but Sam finally got it out. “Are you sure you aren’t
reading something into it?”
“No. I’m not sure. I have issues about this place. So I try not to
come back here much. If I didn’t like my parents, I’d never see this
place again.”
Sam was silent a while.
Another long silence. “Why did they raise you here?”
Nik sighed. “It’s complicated. Dad knew how to farm, and he had
a farm sitting here waiting for him. So when they got out of the Peace
Corps this is where they came.”
This time the silence was much, much longer. Nik poured himself
another glass of wine and drank most of it before he finally felt Sam’s
equilibrium returning.
Nik could almost see the smile growing inside of Sam. Sam was a
hard guy to keep down. So to speak.
“So. Gonna do him?” Nik heard the huge grin in Sam’s voice
before he looked.
“No.” Nik stood up, chugged the rest of his wine and set the empty
glass on the table. “I’m going to bed.”
Sam gave him that grin again. “Night.”
“Asshole,” Nik muttered on the way to his room.
In spite of differences of opinion with his inner slut, Nik slept
better than he had in months.
Three days later, Sam drove back to the city to see his family
before the summer break ended. He looked pretty gloomy about it,
and he bitched up a storm.
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For his part, Nik was kind of relieved. He liked Sam, but nothing
had been normal since The Hand Job.
It was the most ridiculous thing ever, but… that weird little shift in
the world he’d felt during The Hand Job? It was possible—only
possible—that it had some lasting effects. Like, Nik had something of
a different perspective on things.
Once Sam left, Nik went in to talk to his Mom in the store. During
a gap in the morning rush (snort), she worked up the nerve to broach
the subject she always broached. “Nik. I know you feel like you don’t
really fit in here,” she paused for a micro-second, since this was where
Nik usually interrupted her to say, ‘You mean I feel like a circus
freak?’ He didn’t. She looked startled, but she went on, jumping on the
opportunity. “But you know people like you, here. They even love
you. Hard as that is to believe.”
Instead of arguing with her, asking for specific examples and
picking them apart (it was sort of like a family game), he smiled
weakly and shrugged.
It was the best he could do.
His mom frowned and felt his forehead. “Are you feeling alright?”
Nik knew she was right. It wasn’t the affection people like their
neighbor Maggie Sales had for him that was the issue. It was the other
stuff. The stuff he could never quite name. Like when he overheard
one of his classmates proudly telling her out-of-town cousins that he
was ‘the guy in town adopted from India.’
Circus freak, right?
Just maybe not malicious. Or even one-sided.
Nik shook it off for the moment. He was doing too much deep-
thinking at once. Bad for the skin. He got himself another cup of
coffee and went to sit on the front porch yet again. (Seriously, should
he invest in striped overalls and some chewing tabaccy?)
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Just in time to see Trooper Dammerung go by, code three. The
lights washed out in the bright sunlight, but the siren was loud no
matter how bright it was. It was the first time Nik had seen him since
The Hand Job.
Were those heart palpitations?
Nik sat there for a while, trying to journal but mostly thinking
about men in tight uniforms, before he noticed the change in the color
of the sunlight. He looked out into the parking lot. It seemed darker.
And the gravel was a little brown-looking instead of basalt gray. He
looked at the formerly golden grass. Orangey.
Now he could smell it. That sweet charred smell.
Shit.
Nik had it
figured out just as his dad was coming out onto the porch.
“Grass fire,” Dad said shortly. He was usually a pretty talkative
guy, but grass fires were serious shit. He was wheeling a hand-truck
with boxes stacked on it.
“Was there lightning last night?” Nik hadn’t noticed any. It was
pretty common this time of year, though, and over 90% of the wild
fires around here started from it.
“I don’t know,” Dad said, still short. “Help me get this stuff in the
truck. You wanna go change while I bring it around?” His Dad went
from short to diffident. He wasn’t going to make Nik pitch in at the
fire, but hell, Nik had to. There just weren’t enough paid fire crews
that could muster quickly enough to attack a fast-moving grass-fire.
Everyone had to pitch in or people would lose their wheat crops. At a
minimum.
Nik looked at the boxes of water, energy bars and sports drinks his
dad had in the stack. There’d be more inside to load. Dad was good
with the hand-truck, but it was work for a one-armed man to load
boxes into much of anything. He’d need Nik’s help for that.
He ran upstairs to change while his dad got the truck. Nik tossed
his suitcase looking for jeans and a long-sleeved shirt. Had he even
brought any? And boots. He knew he didn’t have those. He didn’t even
Don’t Read in the Closet – volume four 819
own work boots anymore. Who needed work boots to teach a bunch
of undergrads how not to write?
Didn’t matter, his boots from high school would still be around
and should fit.
By the time the truck was loaded they could see the smoke
column. It was southwest of town, blotting out the sun and a good half
of the sky. “That got big damn fast,” Dad said. Nik’s stomach started
aching.
Nik spent the morning and afternoon in a swirling haze of brown
smoke, low-flying aircraft and flashing lights. He got used to
breathing in strangled breaths again, and wiping soot boogers out of
his nose. His eyes stopped stinging after a couple of hours, and he
knew they were as bloodshot as everyone else’s around him.
Sometimes he could see fifty feet. Sometimes he couldn’t see five. A
couple of times the only way he knew where his hand was was by the
flame at the end of the drip-torch he was carrying to light back-burns.
He and his dad got to the fire about 9:45 in the morning. Nik got
released from the back-burn crew around 7pm. Just before enough
contract and government crews arrived to start relieving the first
responders, Nik got caught by a load of retardant dropped from an air
tanker. It knocked him on his ass—somehow he’d missed the
command to hit the deck. Fortunately, he wasn’t hurt.
Nik now looked like he’d puked up pepto-bismol all over himself.
Murphy, the crew boss, laughed at the three guys who’d gotten nailed
by retardant and told them to go home. Nik was at that point where