Friends and Lovers (16 page)

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Authors: Tinnean

Tags: #Gay Men, #Gay, #Fiction, #Relations With Heterosexuals, #Heterosexuals, #Erotica

BOOK: Friends and Lovers
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“Bye.”

He was in the trailer at the work site, about to step outside and tell his crew they could call it a day, when his cell phone rang.

“Sweet.”

“Did you call at the ungodly hour of 9 AM just to say ‘thanks?’” It was Tom.

“No, actually, I called to hear your voice.” Jack blinked. Where had that come from? “Just kidding, Tommy.”

“Sure you are.” He yawned.

“You just waking up, buddy?”

“It’s a good thing Mom got the phone, Jack. It isn’t pretty when I get waked up that early.”

Jack laughed, more from the delight of hearing his best friend’s voice than because what he’d said was so funny.

Tom was laughing too. “Anyway, Mom gave me your message.”

“So, what did you think of Julie?”

“Well, I… She’s… Jack?” He sounded suddenly serious. “You sure about this, buddy?”

“I’m sure, Tommy.”

“Okay. I’ll be there on Saturday, then.” He hung up abruptly.

Jack stared at the phone. Was everyone having pre-wedding jitters?

He shook his head, put his phone away, and stepped out of the trailer.

“Let’s pack it in for the day, men,” he called. “I’ll see y’all tomorrow.”

“Sure thing, boss.”

He went to his pickup and drove to Calhoun Elementary School, where Teddy was a few grades ahead of his sister.

He parked outside the front of the building and waited for them to be dismissed. The bell rang, and shortly afterwards, the large front doors were thrust open, and an ocean of kids poured out.

When his own kids spotted him, their faces lit up, and they ran to the pickup. He leaned across the seat and opened the door.

Cath got in first. “Hi, Daddy. I missed you yesterday.” She planted a noisy kiss against his cheek.

“I missed you too, peanut.” He flinched when he saw Teddy’s face. “That ball did break your nose, huh, son?”

“Nah. Dr. Jacobs says it’s just a…” His brow furrowed in concentration for a moment. “… a bruise. Momma makes such a fuss sometimes. I’m okay, Daddy.”

“I’m glad to hear that.” He ruffled his son’s hair. “Buckle up.”

“Where are we going?”

“I thought we’d go to
Jahn’s
.” The ice cream shop had relocated from somewhere in New York, and although they’d all been uncertain originally as to what it would offer, they’d been pleased, even Cath, who was very particular about what was put on her ice cream.

“Banana split! Banana split!” she chanted now.

“Teddy?”

“That’s fine with me, Daddy.”

“Okay, then. We’re on our way!”

 

And then it was Saturday, faster than he expected. His kids, dressed in their Sunday best, did him proud. The ceremony went without a hitch, everyone enjoyed the food, and after the reception, while he waited for his new bride to change from her wedding dress into something more comfortable for the drive to Myrtle Beach, he and Tom had a last glass of wine together.

“We’ll be dropping Teddy and Cath at my Daddy’s house, and then we’ll be off to South Carolina. Julie’s always wanted to see Myrtle Beach…”

“Jack.” His best friend put down his glass. “I’ll be going home to Tallahassee soon.”

“Tommy, no.” Jack didn’t like hearing him call somewhere else ‘home.’ Now that their friendship was on the right track again, Tom should be living here in Savannah.

“I’ve got a life there…” Tom gave him a crooked smile. “… my job.” He handed him an envelope.

“You already gave us a wedding gift, buddy.” A sterling silver demitasse set, including tray, spoons, and tiny cups. Julie had been impressed in spite of herself.

“This is just for you.”

Jack opened the envelope. In it was a card and a quarter. He held up the coin, his eyebrow arched in question.

“Use it to call me collect if you ever need to talk.”

Jack frowned and took out the card. It didn’t read ‘Best Wishes,’ as he’d expected. Instead, written in Tom’s neat handwriting were the words, ‘My condolences.’

“Tom?”

“I think it’s a mistake, buddy.”

“This is what I want, Tom.”

“I know.” Tom’s smile was rueful. He looked as if he were going to say more, but he didn’t.

Tom doesn’t like Julie any better than she likes him!
It hit Jack like a ton of bricks.

“I’ll see you around, Jack.” He gave him a brief, hard hug, then walked out.

Jack stared after him, bemused. He shook himself out of it and was about to go after him and demand an explanation when Julie appeared at the top of the stairs.

The unmarried females gathered below, giggling and jostling each other for position, waiting for her to toss the bouquet.

“You stand down in front, Cathy,” Julie called.

Cath’s eyes grew wide, and she shook her head, her hair a riot of blonde ringlets. “Please. I don’t want to.”

“Oh, don’t be such a…”

Before Jack could intervene, Teddy took his sister’s hand and led her to him. “Daddy? You remember what happened at Miz Tina’s wedding.”

Jack ruffled Teddy’s hair and stroked Cath’s. Tina, who had lived next door to Jack and Sarah while they’d been growing up, was a friend of his sister’s. She’d seemed happy to be unmarried until she’d realized her biological clock was ticking, and then she’d been desperate to land a man. Her daddy had pulled out all the stops for her wedding, inviting everyone – family, friends, business acquaintances. When Tina was ready to throw the bouquet, a melee ensued, with a number of the women actually injured. Cath had seen it.

He crouched down beside her. “It’s all right, peanut. I’m not ready to lose you to some lucky young man. You wait here with me.”

“Thanks, Daddy.” She took his hand and leaned against him. Teddy stood on her other side.

“Oh, all right.” Julie huffed. “Ready, girls?” She turned her back and tossed the bouquet over her shoulder.

Jack looked toward the door and sighed.
I’ll talk to Tom about it when Julie and I get back from our honeymoon next week. I’ll make him understand…

He wasn’t able to though. By the time the honeymoon was over, Tom had returned to Florida.

 

A little less than a year later he ran into Tom again. Jack was driving home from a site and saw him walking down the street. He parked his pickup haphazardly at the curb, hopped out, and enveloped his friend in a bear hug.

“Tommy! I’m so glad to see you! What are you doing here? It isn’t your momma’s birthday.” He grinned

“Jack. Hello.” Tom’s lack of exuberance shocked Jack.

“Buddy?”

“My grandfather died.”

“I’m sorry.” Jack wanted to kick himself. He’d heard that Tom’s granddaddy had passed away. The surprised pleasure of seeing his friend had driven everything out of his mind.

“So am I.” Tom eyes were bright with unshed tears. “He was the best man I knew.”

“Oh, buddy.” Jack patted him awkwardly on the shoulder, nonplussed.

He remembered when Granddaddy Sweet had died. His brother Sam had cried, even though he was a big boy, and Daddy had gotten very red in the face. ‘Don’t you cry! Your granddaddy is safe and home in the arms of Jesus, and that’s something you should be happy about!’ Sam had tried to stop crying, because of course they were happy about that, but he couldn’t, and Daddy had sent him to his room and wouldn’t let him come down to supper for a week.

“How long will you be here in Savannah, Tom?”

“I just took a short leave of absence. I’m staying with Mom until she’s feeling better. This has been hard for her.” Tom cleared his throat. “By the way, Mom got the card and the flowers. Thanks. It meant a lot to her that you sent them. It meant a lot to me too.”

Jack squeezed his shoulder. “I would have come to pay my respects, but I didn’t find out he’d passed until after the funeral.”

“We had to bury him as soon as I brought him home.”

“You brought him home from Florida?”

“Yes. I moved back to his house in Jacksonville when he started to fail. I didn’t mind the commute.”

A two hour trip both ways? He wouldn’t, Jack thought. When Tommy cared about someone…

“I thought we’d have time, y’know? – but he went so fast.” Tom’s voice broke, and he looked away, but not before Jack saw a lone tear spill over. He handed his friend a handkerchief. “Thanks. I was glad I was able to be with him at the end.”

“And you’re going back?”

“Yes. As I said, as soon as Mom feels better. Lizzy’s not able to help much, what with living in Atlanta and…” His mouth tightened, and he shook his head. “She just doesn’t deal well with stuff like that.”

“It’s hard to believe you have a twin sister.” He’d met her once or twice back in the day. “There’s no resemblance at all.”

“For which Lizzy is eternally grateful.”

“Don’t know why, Tommy. You’re a good-looking guy.”

Tom just smiled at that. “Listen, do you have time for a drink?”

“Sure.”

“Julie won’t mind?”

“No. She’s out of town visiting with her cousin over in LaGrange.”

“In that case, why don’t you have dinner with me? Mom’s fridge is stocked, but I’m in the mood for something that isn’t suspended in green Jell-o.”

“Will Miz Honey mind?”

“No. She’s been after me to get out of the house for a bit. Says she’s not used to having someone hovering over her.”  He smiled a little. “Although she doesn’t seem to mind so much when it’s Charlie doing the hovering.”

“Charlie?”

“Friend of hers.”

“Oh, right.” Miz Honey had been a widow for a long time, although from the few things Tom had said, no one had really mourned his father when he’d died, killed in some sort of accident at work. “Uh… do you want to go back to that place on Bull Street?” Jack wondered if that waiter was still working there. He hadn’t been back to
Jimmy’s
since the previous year.

“What place on Bull Street?”

“We went there last year. I’m pretty sure you… dated… the waiter.”

“You mean I fucked him. You’ll have to do better than that, buddy. I’ve… dated… a lot of waiters. Not to mention soldiers, sailors, Marines. Construction workers.”

Jack felt his mouth drop open. Tom had never been so open about his activities before. “Uh…”

Tom raised an eyebrow.

He shut his mouth. “Tell me you’ve had an Indian chief and a cowboy too, and I’ll think you’ve been screwing the Village People.”

Tom started laughing. Jack was pleased. He had a feeling it was the first time his friend had laughed since his granddaddy had passed on.

“On second thought, maybe we ought to go somewhere else. How does
Loueller’s
grab you, buddy?”

“Works for me.”

 

The dinner rush hadn’t started yet, so they had no trouble finding a table. Fern, the waitress who had been at
Loueller’s
since it had opened, grinned at them around her chewing gum.

“Today’s special is chicken fried steak. It comes with okra and yams. Sound good to you boys?”

“Sounds very good, Miz Fern.”

“And a couple of glasses of wine?”

“You’ve got an unbelievable memory.”

“Gets me the tips.” She winked at them and left to put in their order.

“So, how are you doing, Jack?”

“Fine, fine. Julie’s stopped working.”

“Oh?”

“Well, she wanted to concentrate on getting the place ready for a baby.” He’d found a small, two-bedroom house that would do them for the time being. Julie had insisted the second bedroom be for the baby, but he’d told her there was plenty of time for that once they found out she was pregnant, and he’d put twin beds in there for when Teddy and Cath spent the weekends.

“Are you gonna be a daddy again anytime soon?”

“No.” Jack was glad Tom felt comfortable enough with him to ask such a personal question. “We’ve been trying, but… Well, it’s early days yet, and if it’s destined to happen, it’ll happen.”

“You believe that, buddy?”

Jack shrugged. He didn’t tell Tom how disappointed he was each month when Julie told him she wasn’t pregnant.

“Tell me how Theodore and Catherine are doing.”

Jack’s face lit up. “Teddy wants to be a ball player, and Cath wants to be a vet!” He pulled out his wallet, which overflowed with pictures of his kids – dressed up for holidays, in Halloween costumes, in swimsuits when he’d taken them to the beach.

Fern brought them their wine and a basket of biscuits. “Those are handsome kids you’ve got there. Seems to me they take after their daddy.”

“Thanks.” He blushed. “They get their coloring from me…” Teddy was as blond as his sister, and they both were blue-eyed. “… but they get their looks from…”

“Their daddy,” Tom cut in. “Trust me on this. He’s one handsome devil, as you can see.”

“Tommy!” Jack blushed even deeper.

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