Read Don't Read in the Closet: Volume Four Online
Authors: Various Authors
Tags: #Don't Read in the Closet, #mm romance, #gay
fly out so he could accompany her on the trip.
“What’s this about?” George’s mother asked.
“George saw an upstart being a smart ass towards me the other
day and fired him.” Patrick grinned. George leaned against him, trying
to get his breath back after being squeezed. George’s firm had hired
Patrick back as a consultant three times over the past year, having him
back each time he had leave.
“George! You fired someone in this economy?” his mother asked.
He faced her disappointment.
“I didn’t fire him only because of that. I was going to fire him
anyway.”
“Patrick used to protect you from bullies,” Patrick’s mother said.
“Sounds like you’ve gone full circle.”
“Speaking of.” Patrick stepped away from George and sank to his
knees. Everyone went quiet.
Don’t Ask Don’t Tell was over. For one year, one month, and three
days, Patrick and George had stuck to the plan and the people on The
List. Patrick had learned what it was like to be loved for who he was
and had even told a few men he served with. George learned the
difference between loving a person who had never been there and
might never be and loving a man who went off to war and might not
come back. He wasn’t sure which was worse. He loved so much now
that he couldn’t think of the adage “to have loved and lost is better
than to never have loved at all” without feeling sick. They’d learned
that despite the myths they’d created about each other being just that,
the man each woke up with was better than a myth because he was
flesh, and present, and returned the love he received.
Patrick pulled a small velvet box from his pocket. “Just so we’re
clear, I didn’t steal this from Mom while I was home.”
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George twirled the ring he’d put back on his finger and worn for
the past one year, one month, and three days, plus twenty-eight years,
minus five days. He swallowed a laugh as Patrick’s mother broke the
silence with, ”
Excuse me?
” Patrick grinned as it cut the tension. The
room filled with laughter. George dropped to his knees, too, needing
to be close to Patrick. He put his head on Patrick’s shoulder as Patrick
opened the box to reveal a silver wedding band.
“George Henry Stuart, I would be most honored if you would
consent to be my husband.”
He was twelve years old, standing in that hidden spot beneath the
road, about to get married so he could lay in bed with the boy he loved
and kiss him. He was forty, on his knees in his mother’s living room,
about to get engaged so he could keep kissing the man he loved as
long as he wanted. “Why, my dear Major Reynolds, I do declare I
thought you would never ask.”
Patrick slipped the ring on its intended finger, George flung
himself into the kiss, and the room exploded in applause.
THE END
Author’s Note
I would like to thank Diana for her prompt. Along with wanting to
read about two men on a long road to love and happiness, she
requested an aspect of Patrick and George’s lives that did not fit into
the story, which was to see “who is watching over them in the world
they can finally share.” The vignettes that follow introduce some of
those people who made Fate’s role easier.
****
Burke slid down the sand dune, landing at the makeshift camp. It
was hidden from view, found by luck and prayer with Hell on their
heels. He tossed the satellite phone to the ground. “Busted,” he said,
“but I got through first. They’re sending someone for us.”
Don’t Read in the Closet – volume four 464
“Nothing to do now but wait,” Logan answered. They’d lost their
Jeep, almost their lives. “You tell them about the Major?”
Between them, the Major moaned in delirium. Burke had First Aid
training, but he couldn’t get the bullet out of Patrick’s shoulder. It
festered there, hidden behind blood-soaked bandages. Logan pulled
the blanket over him, touched his canteen to Patrick’s parched lips.
“How’s he doing?” Burke asked. He crouched too and used his
sleeve to mop the sweat off his superior’s brow.
“Feverish. Keeps shivering, but he’s burning up. Whoever’s
coming better put the lead on.”
“They’ll make it,” Burke said. “They have to.” He clutched
Patrick’s unwounded shoulder when a convulsion rolled Patrick
against his knee.
”
George,” Patrick said.
“He’s on that again?”
“Yeah.” For three days, “George” had been the Major’s only
coherent word. “When we’re out of here, we don’t mention it.”
“Don’t have to tell me that.”
“Not to anybody, including the Major,” Logan said. “And
especially not his wife.”
“As far as I’m concerned, George is his brother.” Burke rolled
Patrick off his knee and eased him back to the ground. The Major
rolled onto his side, shaking.
Logan pulled the blanket over him again. “Keep him warm, or
he’ll never get his family reunion.”
****
George grabbed Saul’s wrist. The look he got in return made him
drop it. “What do you mean you’re breaking up with me?”
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“I’m not breaking up with you,” Saul said, “I’m making way for
Patrick.”
“I haven’t… What are you talking about? I don’t even know where
Patrick is!”
“And yet he’s all you talk about. Christ, George, you’re in a
relationship with the invisible man.”
George touched Saul again, gentler. “I don’t mean to. I promise.”
Saul pulled him in and wrapped him in his strong, reassuring
arms. “I know, baby. The fact that you don’t know what you’re doing
is the only reason I feel sorry for you instead of hating you for making
me believe we had a chance.” He kissed the top of George’s head and
walked away.
George watched him go. Ninth boyfriend he’d lost to a man he
hadn’t seen in over a decade. Every time he thought, “This one will
make me forget.” All they did was make him believe in fate. Trouble
was, he didn’t know if fate was for or against him. Would it bring him
his childhood love or keep him alone forever?
****
He didn’t fuck like most men she’d been with. Irena had soothed
trembling virgins-eager ones, too-and offered herself up to men who
rutted against her as if she disappeared beneath them and turned into a
manifestation of their desperation. For these men, every second
mattered because the next second could be the one that killed. But
Patrick was different. He was confident and polite.
Usually she only got politeness when it came with a harsh case of
nerves. He talked first, and during, and after, once he’d woken up. He
always fell asleep as soon as he spent-the one thing that made him
similar to the others. She padded around the tiny bedroom. A sad
flower on the windowsill attempted to make it homey. Outside,
destruction. Here, reprieve. Picking up his uniform from the floor, she
folded each piece and set it on the table. The picture he kept in his
Don’t Read in the Closet – volume four 466
breast pocket poked out of the top. Patrick and another boy embraced
in faded colors. A hint of blood colored the corner. She pushed it back
in. She’d looked at it plenty before, staring between it and the soldier
sleeping in front of her. Although she never asked about it, she knew
why he carried the photo. She closed the pocket flap over it, locking it
safe so when Patrick dressed again, it would press against his heart.
****
The coffee in the teachers’ lounge tasted like hogspit, but Josiah
lined up for it every day along with his colleagues. He half-listened to
Mr. Devon as he waited.
“Something should be done,” Mr. Devon said, in the middle of a
speech Josiah hadn’t heard the start of.
Mr. Devon was new as well, six months to Josiah’s year. He
taught sixth grade while Josiah had all of ninth. With only fifteen kids
in the year, it wasn’t a great challenge, but he savored it. Molding
young minds, teaching confidence…
“…sinful tendencies ought to be curbed.”
“What’s happened?” Josiah allowed Mr. Devon to distract him as
Ms. Carter in front of him filled her mug.
“You’ve got two boys in your class engaged in homosexual
behavior,” Mr. Devon said. He pointed at Josiah, as if there might be a
doubt who he addressed.
“Which two?” Josiah kept his tone level as he tightened his grip
on his mug.
“Patrick and George.” No need for surnames here. Apart from the
Johns and a trio of Marys, no student shared the same name.
Ms. Carter stepped away from the coffee pot. Josiah took his time
filling his. “I’m sure you’re over-reacting.”
Mr. Devon snorted. “I assure you, I’m not. I’ve seen things at my
preparatory school, let me tell you.”
Josiah had no doubt he would
Don’t Read in the Closet – volume four 467
tell and swallowed a sigh. No other teacher insisted the others address
them by their surnames out of hearing of the children. They’d all been
raised in this school system, too, and most had no idea why Mr.
Devon, the scion of a wealthy farmer upstate, had chosen their town to
begin his teaching career-or why he’d chosen to teach in the first
place since his family had a thriving business and Mr. Devon showed
none of the usual traits that called someone to teach.
“You should speak to them,” Mr. Devon said. “Tell them right off
that what they’re doing will find them a place in Hell. Or do you want
me to? You’ve got a soft hand with your students. I’ll be glad to take
the paddle to their bottoms.”
Josiah left his mug on the counter and turned around. “If you so
much as touch them, I’ll have your teaching license. You stick to your
students and I’ll stick to mine.”
“I was only trying to help.” Mr. Devon raised his hands in
surrender and at last found interest in the stack of exams awaiting his
attention.
Taking his mug, Josiah sat down at the lounge’s other table with
Ms. Carter. She gave him a sympathetic smile. As the only person in
the school-Hell, in the town- who knew Josiah’s secret, she’d watched
the exchange with a worried expression. Josiah offered a weak smile
in return and bolstered himself up with a sip of the vile brew. He had
his Shane at home. Only Ms. Carter knew they weren’t cousins. One
day one of them would marry Ms. Carter to build the pretext up more.
Patrick and George passed notes to each other in class and Patrick
followed George everywhere, supposedly protecting him from the
larger children, but Josiah saw something more in the fleeting touches,
the preening and possessive maneuvers. As long as these children
were under his care, he’d see to it that the Mr. Devons of the world
stayed well away.
And he’d pray they’d grow up to find a society that didn’t expect
them to marry anyone but each other.
Don’t Read in the Closet – volume four 468
****
Jasmine flipped through the resumes on her desk to see if any
caught her eye. As usual, Mr. Supernat had left the task of selecting
the final candidates for the consultant’s job to her. Human Resources
had vetted the initial applicants, and this stack of twenty came from
them. She would whittle them down to five and present them to her
boss.
The candidates were all qualified, but she kept returning to one.
Major Patrick Reynolds. Patrick. Something about that name niggled
at the back of her mind. She set it on the corner of her desk to
consider later, already deciding to add him to the five. Now she had
four more to choose.
“About done?” Mr. Supernat breezed by her desk and swept up
Major Reynolds’ resume. “This the one?”
Jasmine clutched the stack, her fingers separating two resumes
she’d planned to add to the Major’s from the rest. “I have a few others