Authors: Amy Lane
Tags: #Paperback, #Novel, #GLBT, #Contemporary, #Romance, #Contemporarygay, #M/M Romance, #dreamspinner press, #amy lane
his shoulder. “You did it to teach them a lesson?” he asked, his voice
tinged with a sort of happy awe.
Xander shrugged, suddenly uncomfortable with how Machiavellian
that sounded. “I just got tired of it, you know? He keeps yelling at me
like I don"t matter, but I"m sort of important to the damned team. We"re
still in first place in the west coast conference, Chicago"s still in last in
the east. I just thought I"d maybe show that fucker what this team could
be like if I didn"t pitch in.”
Chris"s sleepy grin was all of the affirmation he needed. “That"s
good, Xan. It"s about time you stood up for yourself.”
Xander sighed, the ache of missing him—even for just these last
two weeks—suddenly assaulting his chest all over again, except this time
in one big wave, instead of in little tiny pieces.
“Maybe I should have stood up for us sooner,” he whispered,
thinking of all of those horrible third home game of the months.
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“Maybe I should have too,” Chris confessed into his chest, and
Xander sighed.
“I think we"re both… you know. Learning how to grow up. It"s
weird when we only have ourselves to look at, you know?”
Chris laughed and yawned and said, “I"ll tell you what I know. I
know my ass is
still
being kicked by San Antonio, and it"s time for me to
sleep before I fuel up for more sex.
That"s
what I know.”
Xander laughed quietly too. God, he missed the way Chris could do
that to him—make him laugh, even when shit really sucked. “I love you,
Christian.”
“I love you too, Xander. Go to sleep, baby. We"ve got four days
together. It"ll be good.”
And it was.
Xander had to drag him down to breakfast the next morning, where
the two of them were met with assorted hoots and hollers from the
assembled women. (Lucia too. She"d started taking her coffee with their
roommates instead of
People
magazine, and Xander told her that he was
glad her taste had improved.)
She got up to make a place for Chris, though, and dished him up
some scrambled eggs and sausage, which he dug into with a satisfied
groan.
“Lucia, darling, you are an angel of light,” he murmured, giving
her a buss on the cheek and a little squeeze around the waist.
Lucia blushed and waved him off, and Chris continued to eat, but
Xander could tell he was getting a little glassy-eyed from the
conversation around them.
“So how long you here for?” Mandy was asking, picking her way
through grapefruit and coffee, like she always did.
“Four days,” Chris mumbled, and he was met with that adorable,
full-lipped moue of disappointment.
“That"s too bad,” she mumbled, slurping her grapefruit. “Xander
misses the shit out of you.”
Xander watched Chris blush. “Um….”
182 Amy Lane
“Nice,” said Penny caustically. “By all means bring up „shit" at the
breakfast table.”
“Hey, she"s not the one who just chewed out the gardener for not
cleaning up the dog shit,” Audrey defended, and Xander choked on his
juice.
“You chewed out the gardener? He"s a nice guy!”
“He"s a leech, Xander. I could do a better job on the rose bushes
with nail scissors and a steak knife. You just go and let people take
advantage of you—”
“I don"t even know if dog shit is in his contract!” Xander
complained again, and Chris interrupted him.
“It is,” Chris told him, through a full mouth. “I wrote it in. Dammit,
Xan, Penny"s right. I could see it in the dark, the grounds look like shit.”
“Well, his wife just had a baby, and he"s not getting a lot of sleep.
He wants to bring in his nephew to help, but I don"t know. I don"t know
if he knows… or you know. I didn"t want to have him sign the contract
without Chris or Leo to look it over, and I"ve sort of been out on the
road, right?”
Xander paused, in the middle of bringing a bite of scrambled eggs
up to his mouth. “What?”
“Xander,” Audrey said quietly into the silence, “you don"t talk that
much to
us.”
Xander flushed. “Well, he did all the talking. It… you know. It"s
nice to hear about someone else. Except, we can"t fire him, right?”
He turned to Chris in supplication, and Chris was blinking at him,
hard.
“Yeah, Xan. Right. No firing the gardener. I"ll draw up papers for
his nephew this afternoon, "kay?”
Xander brightened, unsure of why the world had stopped because
he knew the gardener"s backstory, but willing to take Chris on faith.
Then Chris wiped his mouth carefully, grabbed Xander"s face in both
hands, and kissed him soundly, scrambled eggs and all. There was a
collective “Awwwww…” from around the table, but Xander didn"t really
hear that. All he knew was that Chris was there, and something about
him had pleased his lover, and all of that desire, as hot and bright as it
The Locker Room 183
had been in high school was there, exposed on his skin, for the world to
see.
As he fell into the kiss, became stupid and hazy with it, tasted,
smelled, touched, heard
only
Chris, saw
only
Chris behind his closed
eyes, he had the dim thought that it was wonderful that a small part of
the world seemed to approve.
The kiss ended, and Xander carefully didn"t look around the table.
Conversation resumed again around him, but this time with Chris as an
integral part of it. Xander liked hearing him fitting in with the little table
of women. As foolish as it sounded, he was hoping that however this was
settled, whatever they decided to do at the end of the season, they could
keep the girls around until the girls themselves needed to go. He was
charmed by them—Mandy"s vivacity, Audrey"s quiet humor, even
Penny"s biting sarcasm—they made him remember the first wonder he"d
felt when he woke up at the Edwards"s home, and heard Andi up and
making breakfast.
Leo came by the next day, just to hang out and watch the college
games and bitch about the new roster. (He was mostly bitching to hear
his own voice. Chris and Xander were watching a promising bunch of
rookies-to-be, and enjoying their grace and their power, and, according
to Chris, “their goddamned indestructible youth!”)
They went running with the dogs every morning, although
“stumbling” might have been a more accurate term. Neither of the dogs
were particularly willing to let Chris out of their sight, and Chris had to
fight falling over for most of the run. Xander literally had a stomach
cramp from laughing while listening to him whine at them.
“C"mon, Max… man, just… just move! Dammit, just fucking…
get out of the way. Merc… Merc…
aw, fuck it all, Mercury, would you
get down?”
“Well!” Xander giggled as they were coming inside the third
morning. “They miss you! You"ve babied them their whole life! Do you
think you just disappear and they"re not going to be all over you?”
Xander punctuated that with hands on Chris"s hips and a pull back
into what felt like his perma-hard-on, since Chris had come back into
their bed.
184 Amy Lane
Chris groaned, leaning into Xander"s bigger body, into his
encompassing shoulders and his long, long arms. “I like it that you"re all
over me,” he moaned softly, and he and Xander went up into the
bedroom and didn"t come down until their run early the next morning.
Chris had a ten o"clock flight out.
He had his first shot of vodka in his orange juice with breakfast. He
had his second (when Xander wasn"t looking) after the girls had all gone
about their day and they lingered over their croissants. Xander got up to
go let the dogs in, and he came back to see Chris"s glass taller, and the
orange juice thinner, and the tell-tale smell stronger than ever.
Suddenly, everything that had been warm under his skin ran cold.
“Chris…,” he said, softly, and Chris turned to him, his goofy smile
askew, his pale face flushed with the second drink, and his eyes
unfocused and wandering.
“I… I hadn"t had any. I promised you I wouldn"t, right?” he said
back. “But… but last time, I got on the plane, and it hurt so bad… it hurt
so bad… and I asked for some Scotch, and it didn"t hurt quite so bad
anymore.” That skewed smile twisted, grew bitter. “So I kept drinking.
Cliff had to peel me off the floor when the car got me home. I
figured….” He looked away, and Xander saw two boozy tears trickling
down the side of his nose, and his entire stomach cramped, but not with
laughter.
“I figured I"d start early this time. Maybe… maybe I"d be walk-
able by the time the plane got there, you know?”
Xander held out his arms, and Chris burrowed into them, weeping
softly. Xander clutched him to his chest and wept, too, without even the
alcohol as an excuse.
Chris was a little better in the car, but he reached automatically for
his hip flask as they pulled off of Highway 5 onto the airport loop.
Xander snatched it from his hand, rolled the window down and threw it
out of the car onto the farmland that flanked the road. He grabbed
Chris"s hand then, and didn"t yell, and didn"t nag, but he held that hand
while it trembled in his, then sweated, then clutched.
They pulled up to the curb, and Tim got out to get the bags, and
Xander finally had words.
The Locker Room 185
“I forget,” he said softly. “You"re so… you put on such a good
face. I"m the weak one; you"re the one who holds me together. You can"t
let me forget again, Chris. You"ve got to let me hold you together.
Please?”
Chris nodded, turning his face away, and Xander seized his chin
and pulled him back, kissing him soundly, and without reservations,
tasting salt and a little bit of vodka.
“Anything. Do you hear me? We can survive anything.”
Chris passed his hand over his face and Xander pulled it away.
“I can"t believe you thought I was the strong one,” Chris said
quietly, his voice broken. “I can"t believe you didn"t know it was you. I
always had someone, Xan. You? You picked someone to be with when
you were fourteen, and you made us family. You"ve got the strongest
heart I"ve ever known. I"m just—” A small sob, and Xander knew it was
shame and didn"t know how to make his forgiveness, his complete
acceptance any clearer. “I"m just so proud you picked me to be in it.”
Xander nodded, and kissed him again, and said, “Just… drink soda
on the plane, okay? They don"t carry anything decent in first class
anyway.”
Chris choked on a laugh and nodded his head. One more kiss, and
he was out of the car, and gone.
XANDER understood the drinking. He did. Chris went back to Denver,
and Xander"s heart became a well-oiled machine with one function. The
only function.
Get the fucking ball down the fucking court and into the fucking
net.
It became his watchword, his mantra. The team would scream it as
he minded a series of ball-picks that would do a chess grandmaster proud
in terms of strategy. Every now and then he would get the ball and just
run
with it, and the chant would follow him as he charged for the basket,
and, yes, usually made the goal.
He had a shooting percentage of fifty-nine percent. And even
Coach had to bow before that, and even Coach joined in the mantra.
186 Amy Lane
Karcek had the ball? There was a play in motion? Then the
cameras would be whirring and the newscasters would smirk and all of
Sacramento was alight with glee as Karcek was told to:
Get the fucking ball down the fucking court!!!
(Xander usually
added the “and into the fucking net” part himself.)
The audience didn"t get sound, but there wasn"t a sports fan out
there who couldn"t read lips, who hadn"t been looking for that particular
power word since sports had first made it to television.
It made the emotion human, and real, and Xander made it his own.
Get the fucking ball down the fucking court and into the fucking
net!
Xander stopped giving away all of his shots; he started taking a few
for himself. He never played selfishly—not once was he accused of
that—but… but… Chris wasn"t there. Chris wasn"t there to take the ball
from him. Chris wasn"t there to follow him through. He trusted the team,
because they"d been doing what he told them to, but with Chris not
there….
It just wasn"t any fun to share the shot, if Chris couldn"t take it