Authors: Amy Lane
Tags: #Paperback, #Novel, #GLBT, #Contemporary, #Romance, #Contemporarygay, #M/M Romance, #dreamspinner press, #amy lane
it had been a big furry deal the year before and it loomed no less glorious
now. Varsity. Harder games, harder players—a chance for Xander to run
and run and run and pound out the pain of the everyday on the court with
more fierceness than ever. Varsity. It even
sounded
sexy.
And then it hit Christian. Xander could see the moment that it hit
him, and he almost felt bad for his friend. “Omigod!” He sounded like a
little kid. “Xander, I don"t even know where you live!”
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11
Xander"s bruised lip quirked up, and the entire swollen side of his
face gave an enthusiastic throb of pain.
“You think there might be a reason for that?” he asked simply, and
Chris clapped his hand over his mouth.
“You never said,” he muttered, devastated. “It was so bad, and you
just showed up at my door, and you never said—”
Xander yanked his shoulder around protectively and shoved his
stolen glasses up on his face. “You"ve got a good life, Christian. You"ve
got a good family. Didn"t want them to think I was too much trouble,
"kay?”
“No!” Christian was honestly in pain, and Xander didn"t know
what to do. His hands actually fluttered, until they ended up on his
friend"s shoulders, and he looked around anxiously. He and Chris always
went early, but there was always the chance that someone would catch
them acting like fags on the street corner, and there would go… well,
basketball. He couldn"t imagine playing basketball and having that sort
of thing bouncing around. There would go his teachers" respect and all of
the shit he"d worked for so hard the year before. No. No. He would just
calm Chris down, and they could go back to walking, side by side, on the
way to school.
“Look, man,” he whispered, furiously. “Just calm down! Calm
down! Usually I"m smarter, okay? But I got home late, and he spotted
the money in my backpack, "cause I got paid last night, and, well, I don"t
know what the fuck to say! I was stupid! I got caught! It won"t happen
again!”
But somehow, that just made Chris cry more. “You weren"t
stupid,” he muttered, his voice clogged, and Xander looked around
frantically.
“What?” he asked, distracted. Damn, Chris and his happy family. If
he"d ever had to hide anything about himself at all, he"d know better than
to fall apart on a street corner where anyone might see.
“I said you weren"t stupid!” Chris all but yelled, and Xander would
have smacked his hand against his forehead, but his whole face still hurt.
“Well, we"re being stupid right now!” he hissed, and Chris, being
open, easy, trusting Chris snapped back, “Well someone needs to stand
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up for you!” And Xander saw some more students coming up the walk,
far enough away not to see them, but coming their way.
Dammit! He
knew
they couldn"t see him, but that didn"t stop him
from turning around and grabbing Chris"s hand, hauling him up around
the hedge and dragging him to the little hollow between house and hedge
and the gate to some poor slob"s backyard. They were probably
trespassing, but Xander didn"t give a shit. They were hidden from view,
behind a bus stop bench and behind a hedge. They were safe.
They stood there for a moment, panting, glaring at each other,
while Chris wiped his pretty face with his sleeve and tried to pull himself
together.
“You don"t deserve this,” he said after a moment. He was looking
at the ground, and perversely, Xander missed that moment when they
were glaring at each other.
“It"s not about deserving it,” Xander told him fatalistically. “It"s
about getting it. My mom"s a drug whore, Christian. I don"t know what
else to tell you. My apartment"s a pit. I have to sleep under the stairs by
the dryer if I want some goddamned peace. My best meals are at school
and—” His voice caught, because he couldn"t be defiant and defensive
when he was talking about Christian"s family. “And at your house,” he
finished, embarrassed. “What do you want me to say? I still gotta go to
school. I still gotta play.”
Chris looked at him, outrage sparking those night-dark eyes. “Play?
Play?
Godd
ammit
, Xander! Shouldn"t you be worried about something
else? A place to sleep? A foster family?
Jesus
, how you let me just run
you around this last year, dragging you into the fucking team and
nagging at you about your fucking homework!
Fuck
the game!”
“Don"t you say that!” Xander was horrified.
“I mean it!”
“Don"t you say it!”
“
Fuck the motherfucking game!
”
“Shut up!
Shut up! SHUT THE FUCK UP!”
Xander realized that
he was shouting, but he couldn"t seem to help it. Xander
never
shouted.
He
never
shouted, and he
never
got angry, and he
never
let shit bother
him. He just did what the teachers asked and did what Coach told him
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13
and followed Christian blindly into the lunchroom and onto the court and
into hell if he asked him, because Christian and basketball were the two
things Xander had locked into the laser scope of his brain that he would
never change up for another target. Ever. And Chris was just going to
smear those images, throw them away, take away the only two things
that had ever meant a fucking thing, because Xander hadn"t been able to
sneak quieter or duck quicker, and it wasn"t any fucking fair.
“Shhh!” Chris said frantically, looking up at the small window
above their heads. With any luck, Mr. and Mrs. Side-yard had already
gone for work, but you could never tell.
“You can"t take it from me!” Xander half-gibbered. “Dammit,
Chris… you… the game… it"s all I got!” He meant “You and the game”
but he was never sure if Chris heard that part.
“But… your face, Xander! Dammit, your face, man! Have you
even seen it?”
Xander shrugged, trying to ignore the tears pooling in his glasses.
“Wasn"t that pretty anyway,” he muttered.
“Shut up,” Chris snapped, and his complexion grew even blotchier.
Xander watched in wonder as, in the midst of everything else they were
doing in this stranger"s side yard, Christian Edwards blushed.
There was an awkward, flustered, and blushing silence between the
two of them, and Xander looked away. He was surprised when Chris
reached out with two fingers and pulled his chin back, forcing Xander to
look at him.
“Now take off your glasses,” Chris commanded, and Xander sighed
and did it, because he really would follow Chris into hell. Chris"s thumb
came up, gently grazing Xander"s ravaged cheek, and Xander, about to
snap “Get off me!” or something equally macho, brought up his hand to
yank Chris away.
That"s not what happened, though. What happened was that he
trapped Chris there, and then his hand started trembling, and then…
then… his eyes locked with Chris and they were frozen, Chris"s hand
against his bruised face, his own hand keeping it there.
“I"m not pretty,” Xander whispered, unable to let go. He knew he
wasn"t. He had high, Slavic cheekbones, an overly long jaw, and a broad
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Amy Lane
forehead. At fifteen, he had to shave every morning, or he"d be
shadowed by the afternoon, and his chest already had a patch of hair in
the middle, between his nipples and running from his belly button down
under his jeans. He often thought he would look good as one of those
cavemen in a comic strip; all he had to do was bend his back and carry a
club. But that"s not how Chris was looking at him now. Not even a little.
“You"re my friend,” Chris whispered back, and his other hand
came up so he could rub Xander"s lower lip with his thumb. “That makes
you beautiful.”
They stood there, transfixed by each other, until they heard the
voices coming up the walk. The kids that had sent Xander running for
this private spot in the first place had finally wandered down, desultorily,
and were passing their spot, chatting loudly.
Xander and Christian froze, staring at each other in fear of
discovery and wonder at what it was they were doing that would be
discovered. It was Chris who made the first move; maybe he knew that
Xander wouldn"t put up a fight when they were so close to other people.
Maybe it was the way Xander was staring into his eyes with wonder and
hope and terror all mixed in. Xander had never asked him, not even in all
the years that followed, what made him do it, for fear that his answer
would be that it had been a whim, or a game, or for the hell of it. It
would have been just too cruel if the most magical moment of Xander"s
life had happened for the hell of it.
Slowly, Chris raised himself on his toes and pulled Xander"s head
down for a kiss.
It was nothing, at first. Just a bare brush of lips to lips. Xander had
never kissed a girl, and to his knowledge, neither had Chris, so at first
just the taste of the other"s breath as they rubbed lips was enough. And
then Chris pressed a little harder, and Xander"s lips parted, and Chris"s
tongue slipped in, gently, licking at the inside of Xander"s mouth until
Xander had no choice. He opened his mouth fully, and welcomed Chris
in.
And Chris, for all he was six inches shorter than Xander, groaned,
pushing at Xander until his back was pushed up against the gold stucco
of the house. (Xander would be wiping pale yellow stucco dust off the
back of his gray sweatshirt all day.) The inside of Xander"s mouth was
The Locker Room
15
tender and sore, and Chris was inexperienced. A clumsy foray by an
enthusiastic tongue made Xander whimper and had Chris pulling back,
looking both exhilarated and frightened.
“You… you don"t want?”
Xander"s chest was heaving and his hands were shaking, and
without meaning to, he clenched his fingers even tighter over Chris"s
hand. “I want,” he muttered, shocked. His life had been… running.
Running, finding shelter, finding food. Brushing his teeth had been a
challenge. Clean laundry had been a difficult priority. Taking a shower
was a matter of stealth and strategy.
In all of this, he"d not been listening to his body"s other priorities.
He"d followed Chris because he had to, because Chris was all that was
light and kindness, and Xander craved him. He"d never thought that
Chris"s body—his
male
body—was something else to crave.
Chris"s smile was blinding then. “You want? Me? It"s—” He
flushed. “I mean, you know, that means we"re… you know—”
Yeah, Xander knew. He knew the regular word and the street
words. He knew the word the teachers would use and the word the
students would use. But none of those words mattered, not the politician
word and not the taunts that would be leveled at them if anyone found
out. All that mattered was Chris.
“Chris,” he said, marshalling his thoughts, his runaway heartbeat,
the aching surge in his groin. “You understand, right? A foster home
would mean I"d leave.”
Chris brought his shaking hand, the one that had been cupping
Xander"s chin, to his own mouth, and he shook his head. “Aww…
Xander. Christ. You… you can"t stay… not if—” His eyes started to
water, and Xander
finally
dropped their clenched hands to his side and
brought his other hand up to wipe away Chris"s tears with his thumb.
“I can do anything if it means I don"t have to leave you,” he said
honestly. “If I can play basketball, it will all be okay.”
Christian leveled him a mutinous, angry look, and Xander
recognized it. He"d shown it to his parents when they told him that if he
didn"t bring up his math grades he"d have to quit the team. He"d shown it
to their dumbfuck World History teacher (
soooo
much less cooler than
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Coach had been the year before) when she"d commented on Xander"s
torn and oft-worn jeans. He"d shown it to kids at lunch when they
suggested (none too subtly) that maybe he"d want to stop tagging along
with the poor kid, when they had better parties to go to.
“You can"t live there, either,” he said with determination, and
Xander looked at him helplessly. Chris"s parents probably
would
let
Xander sleep on their couch for forever, but Xander didn"t want that.
Chris… Chris sort of
respected
him. Xander didn"t want to be some