Authors: Amy Lane
Tags: #Paperback, #Novel, #GLBT, #Contemporary, #Romance, #Contemporarygay, #M/M Romance, #dreamspinner press, #amy lane
“We….” He sighed. “We stopped. You know. Third home game of
the month. I just couldn"t do it anymore. Neither could he. It was….” Oh
God. Now that he"d put his foot down, it hurt to admit that they had ever
lived like that in the first place. “It was so wrong,” he said at last, and
now Leo sighed loud enough for it to crackle over the phone.
“Yeah,” he said after a moment. He"d known. He"d heard the buzz
that the happiness twins had finally ended their public celibacy. He"d
asked them what was up, and Xander could never decide if the
expression on his face had been incredible pride or incredible
disappointment. Maybe it had been both. “Yeah. I knew it when you
started, but… God. Compared to the other shit people do in this
business? Jesus. What made up your mind, by the way?”
Xander sighed. “I don"t want to talk about it,” he said, meaning it.
“The good news is, it never happened—no matter what she puts out on
the internet.” He didn"t think she would. In fact, he was pretty sure that
she"d blow up the picture, put it on the wall, and only tell the people who
mattered what really went on that night—but he couldn"t be positive.
There was a silence on the other end of the line, and Leo asked
tentatively, “Please tell me she was eighteen?”
110 Amy Lane
“Barely, Leo—that"s why nothing happened.” Xander flopped
backward on the comforter, bouncing his hand lightly on top of it. It was
Kings" purple, with gold trim, because it had cracked Chris up to have it
made that way, and it had made Xander laugh when he"d seen it. The
sheets and the pillows were purple and gold to match. It was raucous and
gaudy and sooo not them. That had been the point, right? Two queens
playing for the Kings? Get it?
He was having a conversation right now that wouldn"t let him
laugh about that.
“God… she was a baby, and she lived in what looked like my first
apartment, and… Christ. Christ, I"m done with lying—not to her, and not
to the media. Look, whatever happens, they can draw the conclusions
they want, but I"m not getting up and giving a press conference and
answering to any of this bullshit. Not now. Not ever again.”
Leo sighed. “Yeah. Yeah, I hear you, big guy. "Kay. Look, I"ve got
your owner on call waiting, right? Whatever the fallout is? It"s about to
rain down. Go put Chris together—he"s going to need you.”
Xander stood up and went to the bathroom, wondering if he was
going to have to pull him out in the same way Chris had pulled him out
three years ago, but he needn"t have worried. Chris had shut off the
water and was drying his hair, a towel slung around his trim waist and a
little bit of life back in his eyes.
“You told Leo?”
Xander stood behind him and put his hands on his shoulders, still
soft and damp from the shower. They had some moisturizer (Chris called
it “man-sturizer”) that smelled like cedar, and Xander liked the smell. He
smoothed some on Chris"s back now, and along his neck, and over his
shoulders. Chris had never really gotten Xander"s chest-mane, so he just
sort of left his little patch of gold hair alone. Xander liked playing with
it, and teasing him about it, and he rubbed it once the bulk of the body
lotion was gone.
The tattoo, the one with Xander"s name on it, stood out in stark
relief with Chris"s silver-pale skin, and Xander"s fingers traced that
pattern, the only public proof of what had privately been a marriage
lasting nearly ten years. He was so damned proud of that. The day the
two of them had gone to get the tats had felt like their wedding day.
The Locker Room 111
They"d even gone out to dinner afterward, the bandages over their
shoulders hidden by the cut of new suits.
That day felt far away now, and Xander"s fingers tightened on
Chris"s marked shoulder.
“I told him,” he said softly into the waiting silence.
“What"d he say?”
Xander rubbed his cheek against Chris"s short hair. Maybe he
could grow it out now. He didn"t have to try to please the bastard
anymore, right?
“He said the owners were on the phone, and he"d get back to us
when they were off.”
Chris shivered, and Xander draped his bigger body completely over
his back. “So soon?” he asked, sounding as small in his voice as
Xander"s embrace made him look in the mirror.
“I don"t know how to make it slow down,” Xander said, meaning
it. “It"s like… we just kept running down the court, and now we"re in
one of those big hamster wheels and it"s going downhill without us.”
Chris smiled a little, and opened his mouth to answer, but he was
interrupted by the blare of the phone. He swallowed. “I"ll get it,” he said,
interrupting Xander as he turned around.
“I can get it.” The phone rang again.
“No, Xander, I"ll get it. Because we both know what"ll happen, and
I"m not going to make you say that to me, okay?”
Before Xander could argue, Chris had brushed past him, placing a
tentative hand on his shoulder, and picked up the phone. “Hey, Leo.
How"re they hanging?”
He was quiet after that, and too, too still. “Denver?” he said, and he
moved to the closet while he was listening. He started throwing clothes
on the bed in a random order—suits, casual, underwear, jeans, a couple
of different pairs of shoes. Xander made a strangled sound in his throat
and went to the closet to get the luggage. It was his luggage. The set that
Chris"s parents had given him and had his name and their address on it.
They both had better suitcases now, but he wasn"t sending Chris away in
anything that didn"t have his name on it.
112 Amy Lane
Tomorrow morning
, he thought painfully. Chris would be gone in
the morning.
He was wrong.
He came back with an armload of suitcases, and Chris was sitting
on the bed, looking at the handset in his hands. The conversation was
obviously over.
“Denver,” he said softly.
“I heard,” Xander said, dropping the luggage and sitting down next
to him.
Chris leaned against him, boneless, and for the moment, beaten.
“The plane leaves in three hours.”
“Fuck.”
“Leo called the town car—”
“I"ll take you!” God. Wasn"t that the least Xander could do?
Chris shook his head, still looking at his hands. “No, baby. I don"t
want you driving back alone.”
“Fuck that,” Xander whispered. Just like when he was a kid, when
he was living in that little apartment, just himself and his couch, he was
afraid of voicing anything out loud. If he shouted too loud, his mother
would hear him. If he shouted too loud, the authorities would know.
Sometimes, when he"d been in that room, by himself, huddled under his
blanket without heat and trying to sleep, he would bury his face into that
old musty couch and scream, just scream and scream and scream, until
his throat was raw and he"d exhausted any of his fear or his panic or his
hunger into the sweaty-breathed, ugly plaid-covered stuffing, and had no
choice but to sleep.
He stood up and started to pace, not bearing to look at Chris, hardly
bearing to think about him, not there in their bed that night.
“Fuck that,” he said more loudly, stronger. He wasn"t that kid
anymore. He wasn"t. He had some control here, dammit. He wasn"t cold,
or hungry, or about to disappear. Chris would miss him if he didn"t man
up. He needed to man up.
“Fuck that!” he shouted, and then something shattered across the
far wall. He looked down at his hand, and then looked at the dent that the
The Locker Room 113
lotion bottle had made when it had shattered against the gold-painted
wall.
“Xander?”
Xander took his concentration from the dent and the scattered
lotion and blindly sought Chris, who was still sitting on the bed. “Yeah?”
“You can come in the town car, right? It"ll take you home.”
Xander nodded. “But… you….”
He was standing up, across the room, and suddenly, it was like he
could see the entire span of the Sierras between them, and the Rockies as
well.
Chris started to talk rapidly, maybe to calm him down, or maybe to
get it all out, Xander wasn"t sure. “You come with me to drop me off.
Leo said he was going to call my folks, and then maybe you can all come
back here, you know? So you don"t have to be alone.”
“And you?” Xander asked, thinking about Chris alone in a hotel
room. His stomach started to knot and roil, and he rubbed it uneasily.
“You"re going to be alone… I mean, we"ve done it before, Chris, but…
this is until the end of the season. I mean… we"ll have breaks….”
Yeah. They"d have breaks.
“He can"t control what we do during the breaks, right? We"ve been
quiet, there"s no reason for the press to start hounding us now, right? I
mean….” Xander looked around frantically, at the little corner of the
house where their heart seemed to live.
“Chris, this is your
home.
How can they make you leave your
home? Why didn"t they make me leave… why does it have to be you! I
can think of you here, and it"s okay, right? It"s okay, because your family
is here, and they"ll take care of you, but who"s going to take care of you
in Denver? Christ, you remember, we drove across the Rocky Mountains
that one summer—those people don"t believe in guard rails, Chris—how
are they going to take care of you—”
“Shh… sh… sh….”
Suddenly Chris was there, in his arms, rubbing his back, and
Xander wrapped his arms around him, making him small, making him fit
into Xander"s outsized body, and Chris kept shushing him. It was absurd,
Xander thought, feeling like he was in that box and the box had been
114 Amy Lane
dropped off a cliff. They were grown men, being transferred was part of
the business. But as Chris disentangled himself and started to explain
that it would be fine, Leo would be there to help him sign papers, and
that it was only until the end of the season, and that they would
reevaluate their contracts then, Xander came to a very sudden, abrupt
realization.
They couldn"t be grown-ups if they were faking it. There was a
reason for the hoopla and the two people in the center of attention,
announcing to the world that they were going to, by golly, be grown-ups
for the whole rest of the world to see. There was a reason for the
traditions and the music and the flowers and the celebration. There was a
reason to make God a witness and to say vows and all that shit that
seemed damned silly if you were two men who stood over six feet tall
and didn"t like attention and just wanted to live your life in peace.
The world didn"t know you meant it, unless you made it official.
“I can"t do this,” he said into the blue. “I can"t just watch you get
on a plane and leave our home. I—”
“If you say you quit, I"ll knee you in the balls!” Chris growled, the
life slamming back into his eyes, his posture, his voice. “Your whole life
you worked for this season—”
“To be with you!”
“And it"s my dream too, dammit!” Chris cried, pulling on his
slacks and dashing his hand across his eyes. “You, you"re always so
generous, giving the whole rest of the world the ball, making the shot for
the rest of us, carrying the damned team on your back!
You"re a fucking
act of God, Xander!
And you
love
what you do. Just once… even if it"s
just this season, and after that we quit the game, tell them all to fuck off
and die and we"re who we want to be, but just once—you have got to be
the star. You are
not
a little boy alone in the box, and the whole world
loves
you, and you
deserve it,
dammit, because you and me, we have
sacrificed and we have worked and we have
earned
everything we have
here, and
you
have earned it too!”
“But I wanted it for you too!” And oh, how he had. He"d wanted
the two of them together on the court, like two parts of the same engine,
because that"s when he knew he"d never be alone again.
The Locker Room 115
“You want to do something for me?” Chris asked, his voice thick
and his face turned away. “You really want to do something for me?”
“Anything!” Xander begged. Anything. He would always do
anything for Chris.
“Then you kiss me goodbye at the airport, and keep our home nice
for when I can come back, and then… Xander, you go play your heart
out, you hear me? You go be a superstar, and you stop feeding your