Read Don't Read in the Closet: Volume Four Online
Authors: Various Authors
Tags: #Don't Read in the Closet, #mm romance, #gay
“Don’t tell me,” I said. “Your code name’s Blue Streak, right?
Keep fucking with me and they’ll have to change it to Skid Mark.”
Something in his eyes, the way they absorbed the blue of the sky.
Not scared. Not angry. He was kinda smiling and he looked at me like
he was really looking, y’know?
“Hey, Scar,” he said. “Got your braces off.” His gloves were
fingerless. He actually touched my chin. “You look really good.”
This could
not
be happening. Shock made me forget my training
and I froze up.
So of course that’s when Dano clocked me.
****
cowl was off, which meant no earpiece, no comm. A nearby electric
lantern shed enough light for me to see the way the wall curved to
become the ceiling, like in a subway station – an idea reinforced by
rumblings and muffled metallic squeals in the distance. At the edge of
the lantern’s light, a sign said, “Charing Cross.”
My arms and legs were bound with some kind of thick, plasticky
stuff that didn’t release me when I tried to vibrate through it. Who
would know better than another speedster how to trap me?
And then he was there.
“Thought I heard you trying to get loose.” He had removed his
cowl, and as he knelt over me, the gorgeous red hair I once dreamt of
touching tumbled around Dano’s face. He was still white as snow with
a smattering of freckles. Only his eyes were different, no longer the
green they’d been when I stood a post with him.
“What’s the plan, Dano? Torture, murder, or recruitment?”
He nodded as if I had said a line on cue. “Believe it or not, none of
the above. You were out six minutes, by the way. Fight’s over now.
Your guys won.”
“Those grenades I dropped when you tackled me –”
Don’t Read in the Closet – volume four 96
“Nobody got hurt. Your reputation is safe, I promise.”
Thank God. I sure hoped he was telling the truth.
“So what now?” I asked.
“Now we talk, that’s all. I haven’t seen you in four years. Maybe I
want to catch up.” He seated himself on the floor next to me.
On the opposite side from where he sat, I began to occasionally
vibrate my elbow against the floor. Except for that, I relaxed and
avoided speeding so that in my perception, time would flow normally.
If Dano wanted to talk, he’d have to relax too. I wanted this
conversation to take place at an ordinary human pace.
“I thought the lightning killed you,” I said.
“Nope. I woke up naked in Nevada. Don’t ask how I got there or
why the army didn’t track me, cos I don’t know. I reckon my clothes
and stuff got burned off, but I can’t tell you for sure.”
“That’s stupid! They said you were dead. They wouldn’t have
made that mistake.”
“It’s only a mistake if
they
believed what they told you. Doesn’t
matter to me. All I know is, I escaped.”
He escaped. I was just eighteen-year-old Private Gutierrez when
the army’s experiments called down that lighting. I woke up in the
base infirmary, surrounded by doctors who talked the way molasses
drips. They told me I fled when the blast hit, that I crossed the base in
between frames of the video security feed and only fell when the first
door I touched blew up in my face. They needed to understand, they
said. For my protection, they said.
And when they found out how fast I could move, they called in
Liberty and Justice to recruit me. That’s a lot like being called to the
principal’s office…in a school where the principal is actually God.
Imagine how I shook, standing small before Adonis that day as he
explained to me about the Department of Metahuman Affairs and their
“destabilizing powers” hit list.
Don’t Read in the Closet – volume four 97
Signing up seemed like a better deal.
“Some getaway,” I said. “Now we know you’re working with the
Injustifiers. You’ll have to run fast and keep running forever.”
“Maybe. You gonna give them my real name?”
I held his gaze for a moment of defiance, but I thought about what
the Department might do to get their hands on him. What might
happen to his family, the little brothers whose pictures and letters
Dano had shared with me so long ago. He would know my answer. I
couldn’t lie to him about something like that, not even as a bluff.
“No.”
“No. I remember what a good guy you were. I’m glad to see you
still are.”
Yeah. I wish I’d never learned he was a bad guy. Because I cared
about Dano and his family, I had to warn him. “They’ll be here any
moment.”
“I know. Vibrating a subsonic message through the floor was
smart. Lots of surveillance in this city. M.I.5 will have decoded it.”
“You’re just going to let them come for me?”
“It’ll take a few minutes for the U.S. to get permission to run an op
here. Or for the Brits to send Union Flag or the Three Lions to get
you.”
“What are you up to?”
He leaned over and brought his face close to mine. The shape and
fullness of his lips captured my gaze. “Don’t ask, Private. Don’t tell,”
he said.
Closer. Four years ago, when we slept two bunks apart, I died
inside so many times wishing he would kiss me with those lips.
Closer. Moving slowly enough to torture me now, because I didn’t
want it, and because I wanted it more than anything. I closed my eyes.
Warm breath brushed over my face. The scent of mint, sweat, the
rubber of his suit. Closer –
Don’t Read in the Closet – volume four 98
A crash of crumbling stone in the distance. I opened my eyes and
he was gone.
A crimson-skinned bruiser flew in. His oversized fists were big as
Volkswagens. I imagined how undignified it would be to wiggle away
from him at mach one if he decided to pound me into the deck with
those meathooks, but his words were friendly enough. “Oright,
sunshine, what say we see about getting you ‘ome?”
****
Roughly four years ago, we were on post. The night had been a
long one. We worked together a lot and we knew all about each
others’ families, hobbies, political leanings such as they were, and pet
peeves.
I especially knew two very important things that were foremost in
my mind that night.
The first was, it was killing me to be so close to Dano, day in and
day out, and not be able to touch him.
The second was, he never truly talked about his history, you
know, in love. He talked about being interested in people back in high
school and going on dates and stuff, but he always said “they.” Never
“she.”
I had a clue there was a reason for it, and scared as I was, I finally
decided to risk everything and tell him how I adored him for his
kindness, loyalty, and sense of humor. How his body made me crazy.
How I thought I maybe kinda loved him and I hoped, God I hoped, he
felt something for me too.
I said “risk everything” because I was always for shit in school. I
was a slow learner. Now, before any fuckin “stupid chicano beaner”
jokes enter your mind, let me tell you that my sister Laura is as brown
as me, and she was the school valedictorian. Nobody is smarter than
her. I haven’t seen her in four years, cos it’s not safe, but I know she
Don’t Read in the Closet – volume four 99
works in super-science. She still ain’t pretty – I’ve seen pictures – but
she’s brilliant.
I was always the pretty one. ”
Ay, que lindo!
” the old women
always said, even when I was a teen with crooked teeth. But I was
slow. Slow in body, so I didn’t do sports; and slow in mind, so I didn’t
do grades.
Pobre de mi
, eh? Then the lightning came, and now I’m
quick, smart, and pretty, so you can suck it.
Anyway, after Basic Training nearly killed me, I was in a place
where high school grades didn’t matter so much, but I was about to
risk discharge because standing next to Pfc. Dano Alin Luca – with
his pretty eyes and beautiful red hair and dreamy smile and, god-a-
mighty, the way he smelled – was killing me worse.
So I screwed up my courage and I told him, and he put his hand
on mine right there in the guard shack and started to cry. Cos he was
hurting just as bad as me, and he was only eighteen and scared too. He
said I was all he could think about.
So we made our plans of what we were gonna do on leave and
where we were gonna go, and we even talked about developing little
signals so we could say, “hey, I’m thinking about you” from across a
field with Uncle Sam none the wiser.
And two days before we hoped to get a room in Las Cruces and
set to kissing each other’s lips off, the lightning came and he was
gone.
Ashes.
And I was trapped in a base infirmary, unable to share with the
molasses-talking doctors why I despaired for so long.
Life eventually settled into a new normal, with new training and
recruitment into Liberty and Justice. One of the first training classes
was called “Living Among Humans.” They showed me a video
entitled
Man of Steel, Woman of Kleenex
to explain why I couldn’t go
out to look for love in any of the places an ordinary straight boy might
Don’t Read in the Closet – volume four 100
have tried. My options would be limited to super-women who could
handle my powers.
Not that it was what I wanted, but over the years, I considered it. I
was too chickenshit, though. I imagined that an aroused speedster
would not be the world’s greatest lover. I was afraid a woman who
tried it with me would end up complaining of chafing. And that from
her point of view, it was all over in an eyeblink. Not the kind of story
you want to get around.
So I was lonely for a long time, never knowing that the man I
dreamed of was out there somewhere with exactly the same problem.
And he worked with the bad guys, so it truly was a match made in
Hell.
****
Homewreckers in Atlanta. Demolisha used her wrecking ball to knock
open the SunTrust building’s side, and Harridan ripped into an
“impenetrable” vault with her own two claws. Discordia provided
their protection from Superego’s mind, and of course Maggie Zeen
offered plenty of ballistic entertainment for me.
You know what, I’ll skip the fight scene. The interesting part came
when Blue Streak knocked me away to keep me from stealing
Maggie’s reloads. And before I could get up from my crash landing in
front of the aquarium, he straddled me. My cock swelled up pretty
damn fast when separated from his pubes by just a couple thin layers
of supersuit, him holding my wrists down with one hand and his nose
two inches from my own.
He touched a finger to my earpiece and it shattered. Then he
leaned on in.
I thought he was really going to kiss me this time, but he spoke.
“You couldn’t have saved all those people in New York. Think about
it.”
And he was gone again.
Don’t Read in the Closet – volume four 101
At least I got to finish the fight without having to be rescued like a
nimrod in some other country.
****
York, nearly three hundred people had been on the eighty-sixth floor.
And I hadn’t rescued a single one of them.
Apparently, Dano did. That meant he left his pals behind and
followed me to New York, probably matching my footsteps so I
wouldn’t see two steam wakes as I returned. While I disarmed the
bombs, Dano was up there saving three hundred lives. Blue Streak
was a hero.
That opened up a shitload of new questions, though.
The way we were whizzing around in Boston, how could he have
seen where I went? Or did he have a tap into military comms?
That should be utterly impossible. Liberty and Justice didn’t trust