Authors: Amy Lane
Tags: #Paperback, #Novel, #GLBT, #Contemporary, #Romance, #Contemporarygay, #M/M Romance, #dreamspinner press, #amy lane
on the court, no one saw it for what it was.
The press, in its relentless quest to make men"s basketball the game
for warriors, had dubbed them “the happiness twins,” and speculation
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69
abounded on whether the two of them would manage the impossible,
odds-shattering feat of being recruited by the same team. Xander had
been courted by an agent already, and he and Chris had agreed on it.
They would play nowhere if it wasn"t together.
So Xander knew exactly what Penny was talking about, in spite of
four years of denial as he and Chris had tried hard not to think about it.
“No,” he said softly. “We don"t watch the sports shows.”
Penny took a deep, shuddering breath. “You guys, me, Mom,
Dad—we may be the only people on earth who know who you are. Who
you
really
are, and what you mean to each other. Maybe you should man
up, tomorrow, and just be who you really are. Because the whole world"s
going to be watching you, and seeing what they want to see. Wouldn"t it
be nice to have people who love you for yourselves?”
Xander had needed to close his eyes then, blocking out the pleasant
late twilight, magnified off the gray hush of the sea. The terrifying
blackness of the world beyond the microscope lens was before his eyes,
and he shivered, just shivered, trying hard not to cry like Penny was,
until Christian grabbed his hand and said, “Don"t worry, Xander. I"ll tell
them.”
“We don"t have to tell them, Chris. All you have to do is give me a
good-morning kiss at the breakfast table, and they"ll know.”
Chris sucked in his breath, and then, thank the gods, took Xander"s
hand to his lips, and said, “Okay. So that"s what we"ll do.”
And that"s how they did it. Andi and Jed had looked at them,
smiled a little sadly, and said, “Good morning, boys. What do you want
to do today?”
And that had been it. They"d spent the vacation with Chris"s
parents holding hands on the beach and playing Scrabble and video
games and touring North Carolina in a rented minivan. They"d managed
one of the happiest memories of Xander"s entire life.
And now, as Christian dragged him tippsily into the misty dawn of
the quiet of the arboreatum, Xander remembered that moment so clearly,
he could almost feel the clench of Chris"s hand in his as Penny had
finished speaking.
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Amy Lane
“Of course,” he said more loudly now. “How could I forget last
summer?”
Chris hauled him to a big tree, and Xander found himself pressed
up against the side of it, and Chris"s mouth, tasting pleasantly of beer
and barbecue sandwich, invaded his.
He opened for Chris, regardless of the risk or the chill in the air,
regardless of the potential for everything they"d worked for to implode.
He opened his mouth for Chris because he had to, because Chris was
bigger than basketball, more important than the court, more important
than their careers, just more important than anything, and even though
he"d started to be their voice in the interviews, the public face of the
team, he just didn"t know how to say that anyway at all to the person
who needed to hear it.
So he opened his mouth and let his lover in. He let Christian
Edwards, the most beautiful man he"d ever known, go down on his knees
and pull Xander"s hardened cock into his mouth, and worship him in the
misty North Carolina dawn, because who they were to the world had
become so much bigger than they felt, and who they were to each other
was so much more than words.
THE NBA draft was a blur, a terrible, frightening blur of flashbulbs and
sound bites and uncomfortable suits and people talking to him like he
and Chris would understand all that shit anyway.
If it hadn"t been for Leo Schindler, they wouldn"t have made it.
Leo had been the most persistent agent to track them down, and
what had made up Xander"s mind about him had been an unexpected
thing. He"d been sitting in Xander"s dorm, on the bed because Chris had
the chair, and Xander had been saying for the umpteenth thousand time
that he didn"t go anywhere without Chris.
Leo had been shining them on.
“Now c"mon, boys—no one does that. The odds of getting you
drafted onto the same team? Astro-fucking-nomical. I mean, I can
represent Chris, but other than that, I don"t see what else we can do.”
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71
Leo was one of the shortest men Xander had ever met. He stood
about five foot three and looked like a leprechaun, with bright red hair
and a ruddy complexion and some of the most flamboyantly gay gestures
either of the boys had ever seen in someone related to sports. Even now,
in their room, he was wearing a natty pinstripe suit with a bright pink
necktie and matching kerchief in his pocket. He sat with his legs crossed,
and his fingers locked around his knee, as though he were presiding over
one of those women"s shows like
The View
. Every now and then he"d let
limpid green eyes linger over Christian, and it was starting to piss
Xander off. He was pretty sure he could handle it if they were straight, or
if Leo was a girl, but dammit, Christian was
his.
“Now, Oregon wants you really bad, Xander—the signing bonus
that"s on the table, I mean, that alone should give you a hard-on, and
Chris? The Kings are pretty high up in the draft this year, but I think we
can do better than that—”
“The Kings?” Chris and Xander both said in unison, and Leo rolled
his eyes and patted Chris"s cheek.
“Look, sweetcakes, I get it. I do. You guys want to go home.
Totally understandable. But that just doesn"t happen, okay? I mean,
guys… they"re not the worst team in the league… by about two games,
they"re not the worst team in the league.”
Of course Xander and Chris knew about Sacramento"s stats. It
didn"t matter. That was
their
team, the team they"d grown up loving.
There was no way on the planet they"d give up a chance to play for their
team. They met excited eyes, and Chris grinned playfully, and Leo, who
had just patted his cheek as he sat there, pinched it now.
“Ohmigod, aren"t
you
adorable! Oh, honey, it is a real shame I
wasn"t that kind of agent, because you and me, we could do some
business on the modeling front, oh yes we could.”
Chris jerked back, startled, and Xander felt a surge of real jealousy
for the first time in his life. “Get your hands
off
him and get out of my
room!” he roared, vision red, and then Leo, who hadn"t seemed to stop
talking since the coach had introduced him to Xander, grew very, very
still.
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Amy Lane
Xander flushed uncomfortably, and Chris cocked his head and
shook it, grimacing with good nature, and Leo looked from one of them
to the other and then let out a low whistle.
“Who knows?” he asked, all of his flamboyance gone.
“I don"t know what you"re talking about,” Xander said, keeping his
face blank.
“Don"t bullshit me, kid. One of you gets busted with a
chickenhawk in the middle of the night, who do you think is going to be
the one to bail you out and cover to the press about drinking too much on
painkillers? Who knows about you two? I need to know names, and I
need to know now, or you"re going to have to get yourself an agent who
will
not
get your particular needs, do you hear me?”
It was like a furnace opened up from Leo"s mouth and sucked all
the air out of the room. Chris was the one who managed to answer, and
Xander could only listen to him, half crazy with the mixture of hope and
despair.
How many people really play ball after college, after all? Chris
is for the rest of your life.
“My parents and my little sister,” Chris said quietly. “But they
didn"t know for sure until last year.”
Leo"s mouth pinched in at the sides. “So what was your plan, guys?
See each other on the weekends for the occasional bang? Pretend to be
roommates on multimillion-dollar salaries? What in the hell did you have
in mind?”
“Giving up basketball so we could be together?” Xander asked
rhetorically, and Chris said, “Don"t even fucking mention it!” his voice
as angry as Xander had ever heard it.
“Chris!” Dammit, Xander was pretty sure it was a romantic
gesture, but Chris wasn"t looking flattered.
“Basketball makes you get up in the morning. When you"re on the
court, your face is as open as day, Xander. It"s the only time ever that the
whole world can see in you what you let me see all the time. I"m not
going to let you give that up. Not now. Not when there"s a whole lot of
time you still have.”
“And what about you?” Didn"t Chris want a home? Because
Xander wanted a home, dammit, and you couldn"t have one when you
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73
were playing in one state and your lover was playing on the other, and
you could only pretend to see each other personally once in a while!
“I love the game too,” Chris conceded—but he wasn"t passionate
about it, not by a long shot, and Xander"s heart grew tight and painful in
his chest. He wanted a home too. Xander had grown up knowing what
Chris wanted from life, and it didn"t have anything to do with living on
different sides of the country.
“Well, I"ll give it up before—”
“No no no no no no!!!” Leo snapped, standing up and pacing. “My
God. You two boys have the NBA panting after you like Comic-Con
fans after Joss Whedon. Do you think that just comes along for nothing?
I mean….”
Leo turned and looked at them, and for the first time there was
more than flirtatiousness or venality on his ruddy, blunt features. “Guys,
I"ve seen you move on the court. It"s the whole reason I got into this
business. Because when human beings can do what you do… God. It"s
fucking inspirational. You don"t just take that talent and flush it away
because you think you"re in love!”
“We"ve been in love since high school,” Xander said with dignity,
and Leo nodded his head and pinched the bridge of his nose.
“Well, that"s nice. I hope it"s all sparkly and peachy and
everything, because I think we can do this. I think we can pull this off.
It"ll mean I sign a first-round draft pick with the world"s crappiest team,
and that"ll make
me
look like shit, but I think we can do it. Because,
guys… I"d give a whole lot of commission to be able to see you two play
on the pro floor, and say that yeah, you"re my guys.”
“We just want to play together,” Xander said roughly, leaning
forward on his knees. It seemed to be the only way his body would fold.
“I"m not any good on the court without him.”
“Oh, honey, I"ve seen the tape, and that"s a lie you"re gonna have
to live with, okay?”
Xander glared at him, and Leo held up his hands in surrender.
“Okay, okay, okay, down, Cave Man—”
And now Chris was the one standing up and growling, his chair
tipped over in front of him. “Call him that again and I"ll fucking end
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Amy Lane
you!” he rasped, and Leo nodded, the last vestige of atti-dude seeping
out the guy"s spine and into the mattress underneath his thousand-dollar
suit.
“I get it,” he said, sounding sad and a little bit older, like an uncle.
“I get it. The two of you cock-docked for life, I got it. You sign with me,
and I swear I"ll do everything I can to make sure that stays true, okay?”
He started to perk up then, recouped from the fury on Chris"s face, and
the understanding of just what he was up against.
“It"ll be a challenge. Biggest one of my career. At the end, you
guys come out, write the multimillion-copy bestseller, and I"ll be your
agent for that too. It"ll be fucking awesome. I"ll branch out, schedule
press tours, you can talk to every schmuck from Bryant Gumble to
Barbawa Wawa, and I"ll start looking into getting you onto
30 for 30
or
whatever the fuck they"re doing when this blows up in our face. Just—”
And again, his entire snot-slick-Harvey-the-crooked-leprechaun shtick
melted away. “Just be careful, you two. That Amaechi guy, he got
lucky—he outed himself after retirement. Everybody could love him
then. You guys… you"ve got five, ten, hell, fifteen years of playing to
go, since Super-Xan here seems to be injury proof.” And now he turned
to Xander in supplication.