Authors: Amy Lane
Tags: #Paperback, #Novel, #GLBT, #Contemporary, #Romance, #Contemporarygay, #M/M Romance, #dreamspinner press, #amy lane
phones and television and bad movies and anything, anything at all that
made the waiting less than excruciating.
Leo apparently raided the Big & Tall section when he went to
Walmart as well, because he came back with a couple of pairs of sweats,
some generic sweatshirts and T-shirts, some socks, underwear, and some
really
cheap tennis shoes from a Famous Footwear nearby—as well as
an attitude that fooled no one.
“And wasn"t
that
fun for me. Uncle Leo, my ass… you"d better
win the fuckin" playoffs, Xander, that"s all I"m saying. Fuck the thank-
yous; just make me look good, okay?”
The Locker Room 199
“Thank you,” Xander muttered, before being sent off to a shower
cubicle by the now-sympathetic nurse.
“Yeah, thank yourself. It was your goddamned piece of plastic, you
big dumbass.”
But Xander didn"t remember giving Leo his credit card. Months
later, he figured out that he hadn"t, and that it really
had
been all bluster
on Leo"s part. Uncle Leo, indeed.
All that, and it was still three days before they even knew for sure
if Chris would live.
During the eight-hour break between surgeries, Xander spent part
of the time at the foot of Chris"s bed and simply looked at him. They"d
had to shave his head again—or part of it—in order to stitch the head
wound, and he"d broken his nose and bruised the shit out of his face
against the airbag.
But Xander, tired, hungry (no one could get him to eat—Leo had to
threaten him with a sedative and an IV to get him to even pretend to eat),
and practically delusional, could see it.
“Do you see it, Leo? That gold shimmer? It"s still there. I can see
it. It"s still in him.”
Xander had been seated, leaning precariously over his knees in an
effort to get closer to Chris, in spite of the breathing tube and the
machines that made it difficult. Leo gave his head a little shove—just a
little one, sideways—and Xander had rested his head on his outstretched
arm and slept, really slept, for the first time in two days.
He woke up when they came to take Chris away for the next
surgery, and the whole thing started again.
After four days, Xander was so exhausted, he was practically
fugueing from one reality to another. He would blink and see Penny,
from when she was a girl, shaking him awake on the Edwards"s couch,
telling him it was time for breakfast. He would pretend to eat and then
want to sleep again, on the musty couch from that tiny, dark, freezing
apartment, and he would be all alone. He would sit and watch a movie,
and try to listen while Mandy mindlessly chatted over the dialogue (she
was good at that) and he would be in college, when he was dreaming
about him and Chris being knights in shining armor, or condottieri
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captains, fighting for a just cause, and he would wake up and they"d be
watching an Austin Powers movie, and he"d wonder why Chris wasn"t
there to laugh with him.
On the third day, Chris came out of surgery again, and they made
Xander shower again and totter around the building while they prepped
Chris for his room. He was on his second loop when Leo kicked off his
dress shoes and forced Xander to keep up with him, running around the
hospital campus like kids running a race through someone"s back yard.
When they pulled up after a couple of laps, Leo found his five-hundred-
dollar loafers and looked them over glumly.
“Jesus, I think I"ll have to go to the mall and get me some of those
spiff-tacular pieces of shit on
your
feet. I"m not putting those shredded
socks into these shoes—disgusting!”
Xander, feeling a little bit clearer than he had been, offered to go to
the store for him, but Leo had shaken his head. His ruddy, animated face,
still blotchy from the exertion, became as serious as Xander had ever
seen it.
“I really do love you kids, you know it? I"ve seen my share of
athletes fuck themselves up, just like Chris, but I don"t know if I"ve ever
seen anyone as fucked up as you are, standing by his side.”
Xander looked away, feeling helpless. “Without Chris, I"m not
anything,” he said, meaning it.
Leo breathed out, hard, the kind of breath that meant he was closer
to something more painful. “You just keep telling yourself that, Xander.
None of us here are buying. I mean, we"re all here for Chris, right? But
being here for Chris is also being here for you. And like it or not,
Cochise, you"re going to have to make a serious decision in four days,
you hear me? Because however he"s doing by then, you will either have
to leave his side or give some plausible explanation as to why you won"t,
and that"s going to be all you.”
Xander tripped over the bench on the front lawn and literally went
down hard on his knees and face-planted onto the lawn.
Leo, bless his black little heart, laughed so hard that he sat down,
even as Xander picked himself up, not even hoping for dignity.
“Surprised you there, didn"t I, chief?”
The Locker Room 201
Xander nodded, rolling his eyes as he brushed himself off. “I"ll
play,” he said, not even sure he said it. “I"ll come out this season—don"t
doubt it. But Chris… he can"t play. He"ll never play again. He"s going to
live… I"m going to trust that he"ll live because I can"t think beyond it,
right? But I can play. How
dare
I not do it, when Chris loves to watch
me play?”
Leo"s smirk went slack and open, and his eyes went wide, and he
shook his head. “Xander, it"s a good thing you weren"t some sort of
Cossack general, back in the day. You get that tone of voice, that look on
your face, and I"m not kidding… even
I
would follow you into hell.”
Xander blinked at him, and then a real, full-fledged grin
blossomed, even though it felt like seven shades of crazy. “What in the
fuck have you been smoking? Jesus, Leo, the shit you say!”
He went back inside, and Leo followed him, finally deigning to put
his loafers on without socks, and they went for the latest update.
When Chris woke up on the fourth day, Xander was asleep in his
room. The nurses had brought him a little cot, with an extension, and
Penny was asleep next to him, with her hand on his shoulder so he
wouldn"t start twitching in his sleep.
Xander woke up to Penny"s rather hysterical giggle, and he bolted
upright, terrified that he"d missed something.
“Chris, you fucking dork,” Penny was saying, somewhat brokenly.
“Fucking Jesus—”
“Wha?”
Chris blinked, his face swollen and the bandages on his head
moving when he did. “Penny, ge" your han" off my man….”
Xander fell to his knees in front of the hospital bed and wept clean
tears, while Chris fumbled numb fingers through his hair.
An hour later, Chris had fallen back to sleep, and then and only
then did Xander go to Cliff and Alicia"s house. The first thing he did was
take a real shower in one of Cliff"s big, full-sized shower-baths instead
of a half-one in a cubicle. Then he fell asleep on their guest bed—Chris"s
old room, he learned the next morning—and slept for nine hours straight,
and for once, no scary monsters intervened.
202 Amy Lane
When he woke up, he dressed in sweats and begged Penny to take
him back to the hospital, because Chris was awake now, pretty please,
little sister, cantcha please go faster?
She made him eat breakfast first, and had Alicia"s housekeeper
pack him extra food for the way there.
“You"ve got a game in two days,” she said adamantly, and Xander
frowned at her.
“How did you know that?”
“Because I heard Leo talking to Chris, and I think it"s the best idea
I"ve heard in a long time!”
Xander frowned. “Leo shouldn"t be talking to Chris about it. It"s
my job.”
Penny turned to him, her movements sharp, and Xander glared at
her and swallowed. For a moment, she was so completely her mother"s
child that he felt fourteen again, and he"d been asked nicely to take his
elbows off the table.
But he didn"t back down.
“You"ve done a real good job of being grown up,” Penny said
softly, although her lips were tilted up in a sardonic smile. “I think Leo
just wanted to make sure you followed through. He knew Chris would
get you down the court, even if you didn"t think you could make it.”
Aw… basketball analogies? Who"d told her they were his secret
weakness.
“I would have made it,” Xander said, slightly mollified. “I just
wanted to talk to Chris myself. Now come
on,
I"ve been ready for
forever!”
Penny looked him up and down and said, “Yeah, that"s only
because you don"t care that you look like shit. My brother looks forward
to seeing you, even if you look like the walking dead crapped you out
and put you on a reality show. C"mon, Xander,” she added sweetly,
when she saw his eyes widen and he automatically started checking his
hair, “you"re the one who said we were running late!”
“I hate you,” he muttered, as he sat in the rented Acura, his knees
up to his chin. He was trying to check his hair and his face in the mirror,
and he realized that he probably could have shaved closer, his hair had
The Locker Room 203
grown out into his eyes, and he needed a good pore minimizer or
something, because exhaustion and worry had left his face looking saggy
and old. “I really, really hate you.”
Penny grabbed his hand as she negotiated the Denver traffic. She
was so confident driving, he thought miserably. Chris was too. He was
going to be in charge of the driving now, when they didn"t have Tim do
it. He sucked. He went too slow, went too fast, got confused at
intersections. Oh my God. He was going to have to adopt Tim so they
could go anywhere outside of Folsom.
“Stop it,” Penny said softly. “I was teasing. I can see your head
gears getting all stuck. You"re thinking you don"t look good enough,
you"re not good enough to take care of him, to do what you need to do.
You"re thinking like that kid who couldn"t be a grown-up when he was
fifteen. You"re going to do fine, and I think he pulled through all that
surgery just for you, so just… just calm down. You"ve got a playoff in
two days; now stop living up in your head like that. Tell me to piss off or
something, but don"t do that to yourself.”
“You"ve got all this confidence,” Xander grumbled, almost to
himself. “Where do the two of you get all this confidence? The only
place I know what I"m doing is when I"m on the court.”
“I can"t answer that,” Penny told him, turning into the hospital
parking lot. “Or I can, but I think that"s something you need to hear from
my brother. I know you held us all together in the last four days—and I
don"t know why you can"t see it. Now, here. Get out and tell Mandy and
my folks to come down. I"m going to take them home for a while, and
you get him all to yourself.”
“Mandy and your folks? Which one of them are you putting on the
roof?” he asked, unfolding himself from the front seat.
Penny grimaced at him. “Mandy—but we"re putting her stick-
skinny ass in the trunk. Now move!”
Xander did, laughing a little, and he was bright and cheery as he
kissed Chris and Penny"s folks and gave Mandy a one-armed hug before
sending them on their way.
“How"s he been?” he asked Mandy quietly. Chris would hide stuff
from his folks that he might let slip to Mandy.
204 Amy Lane
“Depressed as hell,” Mandy muttered. “I took him internet
shopping for fancy wheelchairs—the doctors say he"ll be in one for
almost a year, you know? We went for aluminum and Kings" purple, and
a little power pack and shit… and then the doc came and said that was all
well and good, but we needed to be able to put his feet up in the first
one—he gots to ride around like that for, like, months. That made him
sad again.”
She sighed, and leaned her head on Xander"s arm as Xander
watched him kiss his mom a quick goodbye.
“You know, the only thing that makes him happy is knowing you
get to play next week. He"s got, like, little parties planned and shit. I
never seen anything like it, you know?”
Xander smiled at her, shoving all of his butterflies down into his
feet, so maybe they could give him wings. “Well, sweetheart, I"d better
be ready to give our boy a show, right?”
“You do that,
papi—
I"ll be on the sidelines dancing for you, right?”