Read A Christmas Carl Online

Authors: Ryan Field

Tags: #Erotica, #Romance, #Fiction

A Christmas Carl (19 page)

 

Then Joan crossed toward Carl and handed him the keys to his shop. “All the

 

paperwork from the chair is on your desk, Mr. Smite. I gave the check to my boss, the

 

director of this shelter. And thank you again for such a generous donation. We really

 

needed it.”

 

“I told you to call me by my first name, Joan,” Carl said. “After all, we are

 

neighbors.” Then he put his arm around her and patted her shoulder.

 

Joan gave Able a look, then smiled and said, “Okay, Carl.” There was an

 

awkward hesitation—she pronounced the C in Carl longer than she should have.

 

A minute later, Victor was standing in the kitchen doorway. He was wearing a

 

white shirt, faded jeans, and a dark blazer. The same white cane Carl had seen with the

 

Ghost was in Victor’s right hand and he held the door frame with his left. The scarf that

 

Carl had given him so many years ago was around his neck. Victor looked so good that

 

Carl suddenly felt awkward and inferior. He hadn’t shaved that morning, his socks didn’t

 

match, and he hadn’t even bothered to see what his hair looked like all day. For all he

 

knew, it was sticking out on the sides. He knew Victor couldn’t actually see how he

 

looked, but if he’d had more time he would have at least combed his hair.

 

Carl moved to where Victor was standing. He smiled and wiped a tear from his

 

eye. When he reached out to touch Victor’s arm, he cleared his throat and said, “Merry

 

Christmas, Victor. It’s been a long time. You haven’t changed much at all.” Victor lowered his eyebrows. “It
is
you, Carl,” he said. “When they told me the

 

name on the check and that you were actually Able’s boss, I wasn’t sure. I thought it

 

might have been a coincidence. It has been such a long time.”

 

Joan leaned forward and tilted her head to the side. “You two know each other,

 

Victor?”

 

“I didn’t want to say anything, Joan, because I wasn’t sure if it really was the

 

same Carl Smite,” Victor said. “So I decided to remain quiet, hoping this mysterious Carl

 

Smite would eventually show up so I could thank him in person.”

 

Carl gazed at Victor and smiled. He was still holding Victor’s arm, and he

 

couldn’t stop staring at his handsome face. “We go back a long way, Joan. We grew up

 

together,” Carl said. He wanted to tell her Victor was the only man he’d ever loved. But

 

he thought it was too soon for that. He wasn’t sure how Victor still felt about him, and he

 

didn’t want to embarrass Victor by putting him on the spot in front of his workers. Also,

 

he didn’t know whether or not Victor was living his life as an openly gay man. He didn’t

 

want to “out” him in public and go against the unspoken rule that gay men didn’t do that

 

to each other.

 

Able reached for the dirty dishes and placed them on a tray. He shook his head

 

and said, “Weird. You two were actually friends.”

 

Victor smiled. “We were more than that, Able. We were lovers in college, and we

 

haven’t seen each other in fifteen years.”

 

Carl smiled; he wanted the entire world to know he’d been Victor’s lover. He

 

stared at Victor’s soft lips and said, “We were the best.” Able almost dropped the dishes. Joan pressed her palm to her throat and gasped.

 

They both looked at Victor and Carl, then at each other. “We should finish up these

 

tables,” Joan said. “C’mon, Able, let’s leave them alone for a while.” They already knew

 

Carl and Victor were gay, but from the shocked expressions on their faces, it looked as if

 

they couldn’t picture a gentle man like Victor Briarwood making love to an obnoxious

 

man like Carl Smite.

 

Carl and Victor weren’t paying attention to them anymore. They didn’t even

 

notice Joan was practically dragging Able out of the room because he couldn’t stop

 

staring at them. Carl reached for the scarf around Victor’s neck and said, “I can’t believe

 

you still have this old thing. It’s falling apart. I’ll have to get you a new one.”

 

“It makes me feel warm,” Victor said. “Sometimes, when I hold it to my face, I

 

think I can still smell you.” Then he leaned the white cane against the wall and reached

 

for Carl’s hand. He touched Carl’s ring finger and smiled. “You still have the ring I gave

 

you.”

 

“Yes,” Carl said, “This is the first time I’ve worn it since that last night we were

 

together. But I’ve kept it in a safe place for years. For a long time, it hurt too much to

 

look at it. So I put it away for safekeeping.” When Victor touched his finger, Carl felt his

 

pants getting tighter. His breathing increased. He wanted to wrap his arms around

 

Victor’s wide shoulders and wrap his legs around Victor’s waist.

 

Victor released Carl’s hand. “When Joan told me about the check, I was afraid to

 

even consider the possibility that you were the same Carl Smite that had given the

 

donation. And when Able said you were his mean, vicious boss who wouldn’t let him leave early, I was certain you couldn’t be the same man that I once knew. The Carl Smite

 

I knew was kind and generous to a fault.”

 

Carl shrugged his shoulders. “I’m afraid everything Able told you about me is

 

true. I’m not proud of the way I’ve been. But I’m hoping I can get another chance.” Then

 

he put his arms around Victor, hugged him tightly, and asked, “Can we go for coffee or

 

something? I’d like to be alone and talk.”

 

Victor hugged him and took a deep breath. When he stepped back, he shouted,

 

“Able, can you and Joan handle things around here? I’d like to leave now.”

 

Able shouted from the kitchen, “No problem. We’re fine. Have a good night, and

 

Merry Christmas.”

 

* * * *

 

They walked to a small diner a few blocks away from the shelter. Carl put his arm

 

through Victor’s and they talked the entire time. In the diner, Carl told Victor about

 

Donna Fratelli and his son, but he couldn’t go into details for obvious reasons. He

 

couldn’t start talking about ghosts. He just said he’d lost touch with Donna years ago and

 

he’d only recently learned he had a son. And when he spoke about his past, he didn’t go

 

into great detail there either. He just said that he’d worked hard to become a successful

 

antiques dealer and that he’d made a few mistakes along the way. And now he wanted to

 

correct the mistakes. He also told Victor he’d had no idea that Victor was the director of

 

the homeless shelter until Christmas Eve. He said Able had mentioned Victor’s name in

 

conversation and he knew it had to be the same Victor Briarwood he’d known. Able

 

hadn’t mentioned Victor’s name, but Carl had to say something convincing. Victor didn’t go into detail about his past either. He told Carl about his accident

 

and how he’d lost his sight. He said he hadn’t spoken to his father or anyone in his family

 

for fifteen years. After the accident, while he was still in the hospital recovering, he came

 

out of the closet and openly admitted his sexuality. He was contentious about it, doing it

 

to get even with them for sending him to England. His family refused to accept his

 

lifestyle. His father had wanted to send him to a psychiatrist and his mother had wanted

 

to send him to a monastery. So Victor cut off all contact, moved to San Francisco alone,

 

and built his own life without his family or their money.

 

When they were leaving the diner, Carl stopped walking. He faced Victor and

 

asked, “Why didn’t you get in touch with me after the accident? I would have been there

 

for you. I would have dropped everything and I would have gone to England.” He had to

 

ask. The question kept turning in his mind. “All it would have taken was one letter.”

 

Victor lowered his head and frowned. “It was a very dark time, Carl. I felt cheated

 

and worthless. I didn’t want you to see me that way. And I didn’t want to ruin your life

 

with my blindness.” Then he sighed and said, “It was a huge mistake, though. If I could

 

go back and do things again, I wouldn’t do them the same way. You would have been the

 

first to know. It’s just that when you’re young, you tend to take things less seriously then

 

when you’re older.”

 

Carl smiled and reached for his arm. “There’s always another chance, Victor.

 

Let’s not talk about the past anymore. Let’s talk about the present and look forward to the

 

future.” Victor frowned. “We can’t ignore the fact that I’m blind, Carl. I’ll never see

 

again. My blindness rules my life. There aren’t many people who would want to deal

 

with that.”

 

Carl stopped walking. He pulled Victor’s arm. “It’s
not
an issue with me. And

 

don’t
ever
say that again. You’re still the same wonderful man whom I fell in love with

 

years ago. You’re still the same man with whom I’ve been in love with all my life.

 

Maybe it’s too soon to say that after all these years. But I don’t care. I’m not letting you

 

get away again.”

 

Victor reached for Carl’s hand and smiled. “Where are we right now? I’ve lost

 

track of everything tonight. I’m usually more aware of my surroundings. I’m totally self

 

sufficient.”

 

“We’re only a few blocks from my shop,” he said. “I own the building and I live

 

upstairs. Let’s go there tonight.”

 

Victor laughed. “It doesn’t sound like your intentions are pure, Carl. It sounds like

 

you’re trying to embrace
coitus
with me.”

 

When Victor said the word
coitus
, Carl laughed so hard he started coughing. He

 

hadn’t heard that ridiculous, awful word since the last time he’d been with Victor. He

 

reached for Victor’s arm and said, “You’ll just have to judge my
coital
intentions for

 

yourself in the morning.”

 

Chapter Fifteen

 

On the way to Carl’s building, it felt as if no time had passed between them.

 

Victor put his arm around Carl’s waist and he kept trying to put his hand down Carl’s

 

pants. The first time it happened Carl’s eyebrows went up and he blinked. Carl knew he

 

was horny, so he put his arm around Victor’s waist and leaned into his warm body. He

 

pressed his palm on Victor’s chest and said, “If you keep this up, people are going to

 

think we’re a couple of perverts. And we haven’t seen each other in years. We
should
be

 

acting like strangers. At least that’s how most people would react in a situation like this.”

 

Victor grabbed his ass and said, “But we aren’t strangers and we’ve never been

 

‘most’ people. We were intense lovers. All you had to do was touch me with one finger

 

and I got aroused. Besides, I have to hold on to you. I have an excuse. I can’t see and you

 

have to lead the way.”

 

“Then why does it feel as if you’re leading
me
?” Carl whispered. But he wasn’t

 

complaining. There were other people walking on the streets, and Carl didn’t care what

 

they thought. With Victor’s arm around his waist, he felt safe and warm, as if nothing bad

 

could ever happen to him again.

 

By the time they reached Carl’s building, Victor’s arm was under Carl’s coat and

 

his hand was working its way down the back of Carl’s pants. Carl reached into his

 

pocket for his keys and said, “Be good now and get your hand out of my pants. There’s a

 

long flight of steps and I don’t want you to fall. What if Able and Joan saw us? Her

 

tearoom is right across the street.” Victor rubbed his stubble on Carl’s neck and kissed his earlobe. “I think Able has

 

a crush on you. He said he thinks you’re very attractive.”

 

Carl laughed. “Able has been making advances toward me for the last year. But

 

he’s not my type. Besides, I’m already interested in someone very special.” He opened

 

the door and said, “Be careful. The stairs are steep.”

 

Victor pulled his hand out of his pants and said, “Just give me directions and tell

 

me what to look for. Tell me how many steps there are. I know how to get around very

 

well. I won’t fall.”

 

Carl unlocked the front door, counted quickly, and told him there were fifteen

 

steps. Victor went first; he didn’t waver and he didn’t miss a single step. When they

 

reached to top, Carl took his hand and walked him to his bedroom. He explained where

 

they were going, which way to turn, and how to navigate around furniture. There were no

 

rugs; the floor was hardwood. Victor reached for door frames and walls without making

 

it look difficult. Carl watched closely to make sure he didn’t trip, and he was amazed at

 

how independent Victor had become. If he hadn’t known Victor was blind, he would

 

have had to look twice to actually detect it.

 

When they reached the bedroom, Victor said, “I was expecting to climb more

 

steps. This was easy.”

 

Carl led him to the edge of the bed and said, “There are two more floors to the

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