Authors: Amy Lane
Tags: #Paperback, #Novel, #GLBT, #Contemporary, #Romance, #Contemporarygay, #M/M Romance, #dreamspinner press, #amy lane
It wasn"t until they"d moved into the big monstrosity overlooking
Folsom Lake that Chris had realized that the dreams were a heart-
pounding, body-shaking, head-exploding reality for Xander every single
day of his life.
One morning, about three months into their first season with the
Kings, after Chris had crooned over Xander"s sweating shoulders, and
Xander had finally calmed down, he"d finally asked the hard question.
“What do you dream about, Xan?”
“Being alone in a box.”
And Chris had breathed in and out deeply, and kissed his temple. “I
forget,” he murmured. “I forget that your life didn"t just start when you
moved in with us. I forget that you had a long time to be afraid.”
“I should be past this,” Xander had confessed, still struggling to
breathe, and Chris had soothed him until the shakes had faded.
“You"ll never be past it,” he said, when Xander had finally groaned
and turned into his warmth. Chris skated his hands over the breadth of
Xander"s shoulders, and because Chris was so broad himself, Xander felt
protected, and almost delicate. “I mean, they may fade, Xander, but…
you….” He exhaled softly. “You went through a lot of pain, baby.
You… you were starving that first night, you know? I didn"t realize it
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then, you were just the best new friend I"d ever had. But I think about it
now, and….” Chris"s voice grew fragile. “Your hands were shaking. You
were trying not to just wolf chicken at our dinner table, and your hands
were shaking as you fed yourself.”
Xander had struggled to sit up, because it sounded as though Chris
were the one who needed comfort now, but Chris was firm, and kept
Xander"s face pressed into his middle, and kept up that sweet, steady
stroking of Xander"s strong back.
“I wondered sometimes, where your drive comes, why you press
yourself down the court like you were running from something that was
going to gobble you up, and then—” Something had plopped, hot and
wet, onto Xander"s sweat-cooling shoulders. “Then,” Chris continued,
trying to firm his voice up, “you kept having these dreams, and I realized
you"d always had them. You must have woken up in the dorms with
them and calmed yourself down because I was on the other side of the
room, or next door, or not there.” Another hot, wet plop, and Xander sat
up then and faced Chris, his short, curly blond hair awry and sleep still in
his eyes. Chris shook his head and framed Xander"s face with his hands.
“I will always be here, okay? If I have any choice in the matter at
all, I will always be here.”
And this morning, nearly five years later, he still was.
Xander turned into that strong, sturdy body, bulkier now that he"d
passed twenty-five, but also more finely honed, and started touching the
sleek muscles, the smooth, golden skin.
Well, not golden
everywhere.
They"d both gotten tattoos, heavy
ones, spanning from their necks and over their shoulders and to their
upper biceps. The tats were matching, a series of interconnecting rings,
all done in black, which looked dramatic against Xander"s Slavic-white
skin, and worked into the rings, they"d had the other"s name written in
Cyrillic. Xander didn"t have any particular attachment to the language,
but it blended in so seamlessly with the rest of the tat that not even the
news cameras had picked up on the fact that the two of them had
practically carved marriage vows into their skin and worn them for the
world to see, if only it cared to look.
Chris arched, sleek and powerful as a racehorse under Xander"s
firm and gentle touch, and burrowed deeper into the blankets.
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“Better?” he asked sleepily.
“Uh-hm.” Chris always made him better.
“Then leave me alone, you sadist. We"re in the middle of
conditioning; do you think I want to go running around the lake with you
today?”
“You"re gonna get faa-aaat,” Xander taunted, the singsong of his
voice masking the fact that he was still not quite recovered from his
morning terror. Chris wasn"t fooled. He snagged Xander"s hand and
kissed the back of it.
“You"ll love me anyway,” he said softly.
Xander bumped temples with him and said, “Damned straight,”
before rolling out of bed and into his morning routine. In less than five
minutes, he"d brushed his teeth, thrown on his old, holey college sweats,
washed down 800 milligrams of ibuprofen with a Pepto-Bismol chaser,
put on his god-bless-me special-made, fully endorsed arch-supporting
running shoes, and gotten his tall bag of bones on the road.
They hadn"t really looked when they"d moved in, but Leo really
had chosen well for them. The entrance to the house was nearly a mile of
thinly paved private road, which bled into a trail that lined one of the
high hills that overlooked Folsom Lake in the foothills. Xander (and very
often Chris, in spite of his grumbling) would go running in the morning.
In the summer it was excruciating. Much of the time, the temperatures
reached the high eighties before eight in the morning, and the underbrush
was dry and brittle. Burrs and stickers would worm their way into the
boys" sweat socks and scratch their legs as they ran, and tan-colored dust
would puff up at every footfall.
In the winter it was chilly, sometimes cold enough for gloves and a
hat, and the grasses grew long enough to be slick if they lay across the
trail. They would also wrap around unwary ankles if Xander or Chris
strayed off of the path too far, and since there was poison oak (which
Chris had discovered in their first year, much to his intense discomfort
and loud complaint) they tried to stay on the trail.
But winter or summer, it was worth it. In spite of the fact that the
hillside was becoming increasingly populated with large, multimillion-
dollar houses (apparently zoning laws stopped at ten, which relieved the
both of them) there was the illusion on their little trail that they were
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completely alone. More than once, they had stopped and kissed, softly,
passionately, in the same way they had kissed as virginal teenagers when
they"d worked their afterschool McJob. Sometimes they skipped the run
and simply walked, holding hands and talking of anything at all.
The press had been inside their house, had silently pitied the “stoic,
severe” Xander, had laughed indulgently at the “cheerful, sociable”
Chris, and had left, never seeing the lie right in front of their faces. That
didn"t mean that their home didn"t feel invaded, labeled, imprisoned
under the weight of the expectations of thousands of people who loved
their team as much as they did. But the two of them couldn"t even hate
the fans who placed the burden on their shoulders. They were, after all,
only using the game in the same way Xander had, to escape a life that
was sometimes too difficult to bear.
But the press had never followed them on their run. There were no
pictures of the two of them on their unpaved path, giving each other shit,
racing each other for fun, or stopping and kissing passionately behind the
thick stand of oak trees toward the center of the path. There were no
pictures of the golden Labrador retrievers, Max and Mercury, chasing
balls and sticks and pheasants through the underbrush and trying to trip
them and kill them as they roared back. These things were theirs. This
place was real. It was the unspoken reason between the two of them that
although they had more money than they knew what to do with, they
never stopped and landscaped the path, or tried to civilize it (with the
exception of hiring someone to burn out the poison oak, that is. Chris
had been applying calamine lotion too damned high up on his thighs for
anybody"s comfort.) It was something in their lives pure and untainted
by the rest of the world, and they clung to it.
It was a short run, even with the dogs crashing in front of him, one
hundred and fifty pounds of clumsy canine good will. It was the second
week of January, and the sky was the color of snow on the road, and the
wind off the dirty silver lake cut to the bone. Xander never had gotten
the hang of running in anything but old T-shirts and sweats, and he
shivered his way through half his run before he decided he was getting
old and spoiled and that he"d rather spend the rest of the morning in bed
with Christian.
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He threw the ball for the dogs a couple of times in their modeled
front yard, and then left them their food in big bowls on the porch before
coming inside, hot, breathless, and sweaty. There was fruit and pastries
on the table, and his stomach felt like it might behave, so he grabbed a
banana and a croissant on his way up the stairs, thanking Lucia, their
middle-aged housekeeper as he went. Lucia, fully intent on her morning
break, waved to him with her nose buried in the middle of her
People
magazine, and Xander gave her shit like he always did.
“Lucia, why you reading that crap, sweetheart? Seriously, you
know they always get it wrong!”
Lucia turned around and looked at him, halfway up the stairs, her
mouth twisted wryly. “Old habits are hard to break, Mr. Karcek. I
understand you"re dating one of those dancers from that show now;
how"s that going?” She held up the picture for proof, and Xander rolled
his eyes. The girl—sweet enough, but completely devoted to her
female
choreographer—had asked him to accompany her to a charity dinner,
and he"d agreed. It had gotten him out of an unpleasant duty that month,
and the picture was worth its weight in gold.
“It"s going great, darlin"!” Xander said now, jovially. “I"ll let you
know when Chris is done hiding the body!”
Lucia snorted. “Like you wouldn"t be the first one to kill to keep
that one to yourself.” She shook her head. “You ask me why I read it?
It"s because this shit is even more fun now I know it"s fiction. Now go
shower. You smell like dirt and dog.”
Xander laughed his way into the bedroom, and then stopped
because Chris was sleeping with his head under the pillow, usually a
surefire clue that the poor boy was either sleeping in or hungover.
Xander wrinkled his nose at that last thought. It wasn"t like Chris partied
a lot—twice a month wasn"t too much to be hungover, was it? Or was it
three times? Or five or six? And it was never on game days or training
days. Since it was a game day, odds were he was just tired from
practicing the day after an away game. Airplane travel was getting
rougher on the old system every year, and Christian grew visibly paler
when he spent long trips away from home.
Xander tried not to think about it as he undressed, but he wasn"t as
good at that as he used to be. It used to be he could focus on Christian,
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focus on basketball, and say to himself,
I have them both. That"s all I
need.
But the toll… the toll this life took on the both of them.
Xander shuddered. It was the third home game of the month.
Christian
would
be hungover tomorrow, and Xander would likely
be hurting right along with him. The next couple of days would be
strained and painful, and they would barely stand to touch each other,
and he"d been a fool to leave Chris in bed, alone, the morning before the
third home game of the month.
He was squeezing his eyes shut tight and pounding his fist against
the shower walls with rhythmic thuds, when there was a burst of cool air
and a chilly hand caressing his backside through the spray.
Xan tried to clear the water out of his eyes and was in the middle of
saying, “Chris?” when another hand joined the first, this one parting
Xander"s ass cheeks, and a smooth, cool, metallic object, heavily coated
with what Xan assumed was the waterproof lube, teased his opening.
Xander spread his legs a little, and bent his knees, making it easier for
Chris to push the heavy, stainless steel plug against his tight ring of
muscle. Xander gasped, and relaxed, and let Chris push Xander"s
favorite toy slowly and relentlessly inside his asshole as his body
clenched and recoiled from the cold metal.
With a little pop, the wide part was in, and Xander gasped hungrily,
still leaning against the wall, his hair dripping into his eyes.