Authors: B.G. Thomas
Tags: #m/m romance, #Novella, #Holiday, #2010 Advent Calendar, #gay, #glbt, #romance, #dreamspinner press, #b g thomas
boring face—light brown eyes, big nose, lantern jaw—and it
surprised me when a trick told me it was my looks and not
my body that had gotten them interested.
Shawn reddened again.
“Did you have a Coach Brennermyer?” I asked.
Shawn smiled, then nodded slowly. “He was my art
teacher, though. Mr. Finsecker. He was also the track coach,
and I became his assistant for the chance….”
“To see him naked? Or was it the team?”
Shawn hid his face behind his hands. “I can’t believe I’m
talking to you about this.”
“Sweetie, you’re thirty-two, not fourteen,” I said. The
kid—no, the young man, I reminded myself—was charming,
no doubt about it. His man, whoever he was, was lucky.
Shawn peeked from between his fingers. “I guess I am
naïve,” he said. “The thing is, I didn’t know I was gay. I didn’t
know why I wanted to see guys naked. In retrospect, it
boggles my mind that I didn't know. How could I have not
known? I hung out as long as I could in locker rooms and…
Oh God!” Shawn closed his fingers over his face again. “I
can’t believe I just admitted that!”
“You’ve never told anybody that? What about the guys
you’ve had sex with? Or your boyfriends…?”
“You’re a stranger,” Shawn said and all but giggled.
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I smiled once more. I hadn’t stopped smiling around this
guy. He was just that charming. “You’re a sweetheart. Your
man is lucky to have you.”
Shawn dropped his hands and revealed a shy smile.
“Thanks.”
I took a big swallow of my coffee, and then gave Shawn
a level look. “You can’t really afford that bed, can you?”
Shawn looked down at the table, and then slowly back
into my eyes. “I’m going to, if you let me. I got some money
out of my savings to start. My boss said I can have all the
overtime I want. I figure if I work ten to twenty hours a week
extra, I can do it.”
I whistled. “That’s a lot of hours.”
Shawn shrugged.
“But then I’ve worked that many hours on many a week,
and I’m salary,” I admitted. Of course I also earned a
percentage and got some very nice bonuses. “You must really
love this guy.”
Shawn smiled, and it was a sweet smile. He was this
mix between man and boy, and that smile was all boy.
Happy joyous boy. “I do. He’s perfect. He’s everything I ever
dreamed of and more. He holds doors open for me, pulls out
my seat at a restaurant!” Shawn got a faraway look on his
face. “He calls me ‘Baby’,” he said, and then he sighed.
Shawn looked up at me. “He doesn’t have as much time for
me as I wish he did. But that’ll be easier when I’m working
more. I won’t notice as much.”
The guy didn’t have enough time for him? Shit, if Shawn
were mine, I’d never let him out of my sight, despite the fact
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that he was probably as vanilla as hell in bed. Häagen-Dazs
vanilla bean maybe, but vanilla nevertheless.
But wasn’t I tired of vanilla? Isn’t that why Steve
appealed so much?
“And if he likes the bed as much as I think he does,”
Shawn continued, “it’s all he talks about—then maybe I’ll be
sleeping in it on a more permanent basis. If he asks me to
move in with him, I’ll be able to see him as much as I want.”
Whoa, I thought. Shawn had it bad. I remembered
feeling that way. How much I’d longed for love. Someone to
call my own, to come home to each night, to wake up with
each morning. But years of disastrous relationships had
made me stop believing it was even possible. I’d exchanged
dreams of love for a lustful reality of hot sex.
Shit. I’d come here to lay out to this kid that I was going
to buy the bed. Period. But now? It was confusing. I looked
into his face, shining with an innocence I’d lost years ago,
and heard Shawn’s passion, and I was tempted to just let
him have it. Yet for some reason, I was also feeling like I
should be responsible and talk the kid—man—out of it. Not
so that I could get it for Steve, but because I knew that
trying to pay for that ancient thing was going to put a
ridiculous financial strain on Shawn. He was a big boy; he
was a grown man and could make his own decisions.
However, I found a strange protectiveness rising in my chest.
What to do?
Maybe find out just how much Shawn really did want
the damned thing?
And that led me to an idea.
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“I’ve got a thought,” I said. “Let’s you and me go back to
Derringer’s and buy the bed together, fifty-fifty. Then we’ll
have a little contest.”
“What do you mean?” Shawn asked. “Fifty-fifty? What
kind of contest?”
“Well, we buy the bed, and that way it isn’t going
anywhere. We don’t have to worry about someone else going
in there for a Christmas present.”
Shawn nodded warily. “Ah, okay…. And the contest?”
“We figure out a series of little challenges and see which
of us wins them. In the end, whoever has the most wins, gets
the bed.”
“Like some kind of reality show or something?” Shawn
asked, eyebrows raised.
I laughed. “Yeah. Except we won’t be on TV.”
Shawn gave a half-shrug. “Weeeellll….”
“You can even figure out the first challenge,” I said.
“This is really weird,” Shawn said.
“Yeah, maybe. But it’s better than me telling you that I
am going to get that bed.”
“Why do you want it so damned bad?” Shawn asked,
exasperated.
“Because I do,” I told him. Like he was going to
understand I was doing it for the sex. He’d get all romantic
and tell me I could get sex anywhere. And I could. But Steve
was special. It might not be love; I’d given up on that before
I’d given up on the idea of finding a wild sex partner. And
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Steve was all that and more, plus he didn’t charge. Why
should Shawn’s romantic reasons outweigh my sexual
needs?
“And you usually get what you want?”
I nodded. “I do,” I confessed. “If you win our little
contest, I let you pay for the rest of the bed, and you take it
home. If I win, I pay you back what you put into it, and I get
the bed.”
Shawn didn’t say anything for a minute, just stared at
me. Finally, “Fine,” he said.
“What’s your sweetie’s name?” I asked.
Shawn shook his head. “You know, let’s leave their
names out of it. It makes it too personal. I don’t want to start
feeling guilty when I whip your ass at this.”
He was joking, but I could also see the sincerity in those
pretty eyes of his.
“Fair enough,” I replied. “So, what is the first
challenge?”
“The Male Box. Tonight. They’re having this charity
thing. You sell tickets for people to get their pictures taken
with Santa. Except he’s some leatherman. I volunteered to go
through the crowd and get people to buy tickets. So you be
there too. Whichever one of us sells the most, wins the first
round.”
Charity, I thought. Fair enough. I only hoped Shawn was
as good as he seemed to think he was, because this was
right up my alley. I’d raised enough money through the
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years. Shawn may have bitten off more than he could chew.
“You got it,” I said.
THE MALE BOX was packed, music boomed from hidden
speakers, and there were men everywhere. I had met Shawn
at the main bar and insisted on buying him a drink. I knew
he was going to buy himself the cheapest thing he could, and
if he was going to do that, I figured he might as well start the
evening with something good. Get a little buzz on, and he
wouldn’t care that the cheaper alcohol didn’t taste as good.
So I told the bartender to put Appleton Estate in his
coke, and I asked for Lagavulin. It surprised me that they
had it and impressed me as well. The Male Box was more
upscale than I would have imagined. Kansas City had come
a long way in the last decade, but it would never be New
York. It was nice to see a gay bar with good taste. Most
queens don’t know a ten-year-old, single malt from Black
Cat. I was usually lucky to get Laphroaig, which was another
favorite of mine.
Then Shawn took me to this bear of a man who was in
town from Maine and who was in charge of the event. We
were each given ten tickets and told that we could come back
and get more if we needed them. I planned on needing them.
“And there is no buying the tickets yourself, Mr.
Moneybags,” Shawn said.
“What makes you think I would do such a thing?” I
asked, giving Shawn my best innocent look and wondering
how he’d known exactly what I’d been thinking of doing.
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Shawn just laughed and vanished in the crowd.
I finished my whisky and went back to the bartender for
another. Looking around the room, I enjoyed my drink
leisurely, taking my time. A Lagavulin ten was not to be
rushed.
Neither was making money.
I watched the crowd, watched what people were buying,
and then made my move.
The gentleman I approached looked to be at least sixty-
five. There was a look to him that said old money, and there
was no ring on his finger. Two young men sat on either side
of him and were giggling up a storm. The gentleman had a
short glass with a small amount of a dark liquid. Scotch?
Whisky? I wondered. I walked up and introduced myself and
asked what he was drinking.
The gentleman looked up and smiled. “Whisky,” he said.
“You?”
“Lagavulin,” I replied, and the older man smiled even
wider.
“Excellent.”
“May I get you one?” I asked.
“Indeed you may!”
A few moments later, I had sold my tickets and the boys
were off getting their picture taken. Not only that, but the
gentleman and I had exchanged business cards as well. The
evening was bearing all kinds of possible results already.
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Just as I went to look for Shawn, he appeared at my
side. “I hope you’re selling tickets ’cause I’ve sold mine and
am going for more.”
“How fortuitous,” I said. “I’m ready as well.” And why
was it that the look that passed over Shawn’s face brought
me no pleasure? I’m not an asshole, like some people—
especially at the office—liked to think I am, but I did take
pleasure in beating the other man in business. Yet the
almost stricken look that had passed over Shawn’s face
didn’t give me the little charge I usually got in such a
situation.
That’s because this isn’t big business, some damned
inner voice told me, and I just gave it an inner shrug. Yes, it
is, I told myself, and I followed Shawn back for more tickets.
“Maybe we shouldn’t talk again until this Santa thing is
over?” I asked. If I got to feeling guilty, it might hinder my
ability to go in for the kill. The idea of Steve, tied to that
antique bed, was calling after all.
“Yeah,” Shawn nodded. “Sure.”
There was a brief moment of excitement when this
bearish-looking guy who was about to get his picture taken
got all pissed off when he didn’t get to sit in the leatherman’s
lap but instead had to pose with some big heavy guy who
actually looked like Santa. Besides that, the evening went
pretty uneventfully.
As it turned out, I won the first round by only six
tickets.
Again, for some reason it didn’t feel so good.
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THE RADIANT CUP; the next day. It was Sunday and neither
of us had to work, not even with Shawn needing the
overtime.
“The place I work isn’t open on Sundays,” Shawn
explained over his coffee. “Whoa!” he said.
“What?” I asked.
“This coffee! It’s really good.”
I smiled. I couldn’t help it. Aldi’s indeed. “It’s Peruvian,”
I explained. “They roast it here themselves, probably within
the last couple of days. It was ground today, right before
they brewed it.”
“Shit,” he said. “Who would have thought there was
such a difference?”
“Vive la différence?” I asked.
Shawn smiled that smile of his and nodded. “Touché,”