Authors: Amy Lane
Tags: #Paperback, #Novel, #GLBT, #Contemporary, #Romance, #Contemporarygay, #M/M Romance, #dreamspinner press, #amy lane
the attention from the press, from the fans, from the dancers—hell, even
from Mandy and Audrey, who did nothing but fawn all over him all day,
anyway.
The Locker Room 217
God, he was enjoying himself. Xander watched him for a moment,
under the lights, smiling as though pain were the same old tired lapdog
that fear had become.
It wasn"t his imagination, he thought, swallowing hard past the
ache that his throat had become. Chris really was golden.
He turned around to go talk to his team.
The locker room was… joyous. Loose. Everyone was focused but
cheerful. There was no squabbling except the good-natured kind, and a
lot of checking to make sure the uniforms looked just right. Xander
called his starters around him about five minutes before the coach came
in to talk to them, and hoped that, maybe, he could put his faith in the
people he"d served.
“Um, guys? Can I talk to you here?” He looked at them—Aames,
Burkins, Pollack and the completely healed Oswald, and felt a surge of
affection for the team that he"d never really felt when Chris was at his
side. Well, good. It was nice to be part of something larger than himself.
He just had to make sure they wanted him
for
himself, and now was time
to test that.
“Guys, you all know Edwards is on the sidelines, right?”
“Yeah—man, he"s looking….” Aames trailed off, his light-
chocolate, round face grimacing. He"d been going for the classic
“looking good,” but what he looked, and they could all see it, was
“retired.” He was never going to play ball again—and there wasn"t a
person there who wouldn"t feel that loss like an amputated limb. “Man,
we"re sorry. But, you know, he"s Chris. If anyone can have fun after the
game, it"s him, right?”
Xander smiled. “I hope so.” And now for the full-body blush.
“Um… look, some of you know, and most of you have guessed, but…
um… you guys know that we"re… um—” Fuck. How did you come out
to a room full of jocks? “Married.” His voice—sort of a low-pitched one,
mostly, actually squeaked.
“I thought they just voted and said you couldn"t do that,” Pollack
said, a little numbly. (Unlike his name might imply, Pollack was, in fact,
a black man, who wore his hair in a retro seventies afro. He was seven
foot three, and Xander had always liked him, simply because he"d made
Xander feel both delicate
and
smart.)
218 Amy Lane
“He means they"re the next best thing, Pollack! Jesus—I can"t
believe they graduated you from Texas.” Burkins was a little more
tactful when he wasn"t drunk. But not a lot.
Oswald was looking at Xander as though he held a dead bug.
“Eww. Really?”
Xander wasn"t sure how to answer that. “Um, yeah. But not ewww.
Is that going to be a problem?”
Oswald shrugged, still looking a little icked out. “You gonna grab
my ass on the court?”
It was Xander"s turn to grimace. “Ewww. Really?”
Aames snickered. “I think that"s a „no", Scott.”
Oswald still looked unconvinced. “Yeah, man, whatever. You still
planning to play ball?”
Xander nodded. “Yeah—if they"ll let me after tonight.”
Aames got it first, and the others were still struggling with it when
the light dawned. “Aww… Jesus, Xan. Really? Tonight?”
A sudden lump in his throat. God, Xander hoped they would
understand. “Yeah, Justin. Tonight. I… I can"t do this for everyone else
anymore. I gotta sort of do it for me, right?”
Aames nodded, and clapped him on the shoulder. “Yeah, man. No
worries. We got your back, right, guys?”
“Yeah, whatever,” Oswald snapped. “Just throw me the ball and
don"t grab my ass, man. It"s all I ever wanted from a teammate.”
Xander felt a little bit of humor seep in—because it looked like
they were going to be able to go out and play like they had all season,
and that"s all
he"d
ever asked.
“You know what, Scott? I can guarandamntee you that I will
never
grab your ass.”
Coach came out at that moment, and called them all to attention.
The music started to shake the floorboards; the entrance to the tunnel
went dark with strobing lights to punctuate the darkness. The crowd
noise became thunderous and deafening, and the announcer began their
intro. And the players were suddenly all about the purity of the game.
The Locker Room 219
They took a deep breath, bumped fists, and started the cold-bowel
adrenaline dump that Xander always associated with the game.
“"Kay, guys,” Xander breathed, loving the way his heart thundered,
loving this moment until his atoms quivered with it. “Just remember. Get
the fucking ball—”
“Down the fucking court and into the fucking net!” the team
finished, and that was their cue to run up onstage, underneath the
strobing light and the adulation that awaited them.
THE bench team almost lost their lead, and Xander strained his voice,
screaming his mantra at them.
Get the fucking ball down the fucking
court and into the fucking net! Fuck!
(That last word came out on a fit of
desperation as the twenty-point lead that the starters had sat down with
was narrowed to two points because the bench lost the rebound for the
five
zillionth
time.) The starters were up and into position, dying for the
buzzer, pushing against the invisible barrier of time like dogs pushing
against a window to get a bone.
The buzzer rang, the coach waved them in, and—
Xander had the ball, in what was usually their classic team
position, and Xander looked up, saw Aames waiting for the bounce pass,
and said, “May I?”
“Do it!”
And Xander blew past the defense and down the court and one-
two-up for a dunk, the kind where the basket was about at his waist.
The crowd screamed, and the game was right back on.
Xander had caught glimpses of Chris as he"d played. When he"d
been on the bench during the third quarter break, the two of them had
met bugged-out eyes every time the other damned team had scored. This
time, as the other team snapped the ball back into play and their forward
rushed past Xander in an attempt to get into an unguarded position, Chris
said, “Way to go, Xa-an!” and Xander whirled, managed to wink at
Chris, and threw himself in front of the opposing forward just in time to
intercept the ball with an unbelievably long-limbed, one-armed catch.
220 Amy Lane
Before the crowd even realized what happened, Xander was down
the court for another shot—this one from the three-point line, because he
felt like it, and suddenly, what had been a two-point lead was a seven-
point lead, and the timbers of the little tiny Arco Arena rattled with the
bloodlust of the nearly eighteen thousand rabid fans who had been long
denied.
Tonight was their night. The rest of the team helped, of course, but
for that quarter, the fourth quarter, Xander played every play as though
he was the star.
Because, for once, he was.
He handed the ball off when it was needed—Aames, Oswald,
Pollack, Burkins—all of them racked up a few points. But Xander had a
twenty-five-point quarter. Twenty-five points that he took for himself,
and made them beautiful, and made them count. Twenty-five points
where “Get the fucking ball down the fucking court and into the fucking
net” was absolute fucking poetry of muscle, blood, heartsong, and bone.
Two seconds before the buzzer, Xander made his last shot,
impossibly over the heads of two of New York"s finest, dunking again
like a rookie show pony, landing like he had nothing to fear.
The buzzer went off, and he threw his hands to the sky just like
Chris would have wanted to, and screamed triumph into the stands.
If he"d wanted to, he was sure he could fly. Anyone looking at the
tape to see him cut a swath down the court would have sworn he already
had.
WHEN the press of his screaming, hugging, sweating, shouting, delirious
teammates had faded, he suddenly found himself facing his first reporter,
one of ESPN"s finest, and he wondered if the woman—a strong,
beautiful black woman in her early thirties who had won Olympic track
medals in her youth—was ready for the sports scoop of her life.
He turned around and spotted Chris on the sidelines (where his
retinue was taking care to make sure he wasn"t jostled too much by the
crowd) and waved, a little shyly.
The Locker Room 221
Chris grimaced—shy? In front of twenty-gazunga people? After a
game like that? But he winked and waved back.
And Xander turned to the reporter and made history.
“So, I"m talking to Xander Karcek, the undisputed MVP of
tonight"s game. Mr. Karcek—you"ve said before this series that you
were playing all your games for your best friend, Christian Edwards,
who was injured earlier this year in an automobile accident. Was that
true tonight?”
Xander shook his head. “Chris kept asking me to play one for
myself. Tonight I played for myself. I figured, you know, the guy was
my heart anyway. If I played to make myself happy, he"d feel it.”
The reporter looked a little disconcerted. “So, Christian Edwards,
your best friend….”
Xander looked at her, looked at the camera, and then looked past
both of them to where Mandy was pushing Chris so he could hear the
interview. He winked at Chris, saw Chris"s dawning comprehension and
surprise, and said, “He"s more than my friend, Ms. Robinson, and if the
NBA doesn"t know it, it"s because they haven"t wanted to. My whole
life, all I"ve wanted was basketball and Chris Edwards. Tonight, I had
basketball. The rest of my life, it"s going to be Chris Edwards.”
He tried a smile after that, as the reporter floundered for words.
“But… but… but the NBA playoffs… are you going to play the
playoffs…?”
And now Xander said what he"d always wanted to say, even from
the beginning, from that first kiss behind a hedge, clinging to the only
thing he knew was good.
“If basketball loves me as much as I"ve loved this sport, then it"s
not going to care who I am when I play it. If the world hates me more
than it loves basketball, then I"d say that"s the world"s loss, but I"m not
going to live like that anymore, and I"m not going to make Chris do it,
either. Now if you"ll excuse me—”
He walked steadily to Chris"s chair and grabbed the handles on the
back, taking over the steering while the reporter stammered into the
microphone.
222 Amy Lane
“Are you insane?” Chris asked weakly, and Xander had to lean
forward to hear him.
“He"s fucking nuts!” Mandy muttered. She looked up and saw that
the word of Xander"s postgame interview was making its way around the
arena floor, and suddenly hollered, “Dancers! Get your asses over here,
we need you!”
Suddenly, they had a phalanx of dancers on either side, guiding
their way down to the tunnel, just as the press really got wind of the story
and went to charge. Xander grabbed tight to the handles on the
wheelchair and sprinted, their friends and family right behind them, as
they made it through the doors to the men"s locker room.
The room was full of half-naked Sacramento Kings, who all looked
surprised as Xander and Chris (and Mandy and Audrey and Pete and a
couple of other girls) charged in, but Xander wasn"t looking at them.
He leaned back against the shut door with the battalion of press on
the other side of it, and giggled like a teenager, while Chris giggled back.
“Jesus, you fucking dorkfish! What in the fuck did you just do?”
Xander sobered abruptly. “I played this game for myself. It"s all
you"ve ever wanted me to do, and I did. And playing for me means you.
It means you, and me, and the world can take a flying fuck. It means
whatever we do for the rest of our lives, we do it forever, and we do it
openly, and—” Xander took a deep breath and wiped his mouth with a
hand that was shaking and cold.
“I mean, Jesus, Chris. It can"t possibly be any harder than hiding
was. Or being apart. Or having the world think we"re just overgrown frat
boys. Right?”
Oh please, God, let it be all right. Xander had known that it was a
possibility. He"d known this was the flipside of doing this for himself—
that maybe coming out, being together in the sunlight, wasn"t what Chris
really wanted.
Chris looked at him, a bittersweet smile on his face, and pressed