Read Vintage Toys For Lucky Boys Online
Authors: G.R. Richards
mentioned what they were supposed to be.”
Max sighed, shaking his head. He wasn’t going to give up until
Randy figured it out. “Just one figure,” he went on like a grade-school
teacher. “A female figure. Seven little men and….”
“Snow White!” Of course! He felt like a total moron not guessing it
right off the bat. “Snow White and the seven dwarves.”
“Am I right in thinking you don’t have Snow White anywhere?”
Thinking back through the years, Randy tried to visualize the
shelf in Brent’s bedroom where he’d put them after his grandfather
died. “No, I don’t remember ever seeing a Snow White. What about all
those other little ones in there?” he asked, pulling a fuzzy rabbit from
the shoebox.
“Oh, those are nothing,” Max replied, waving the rabbit away.
Randy put it back in the box. “The animals are a hundred. They all run
okay, right?”
“Yeah,” Randy said, though he’d never actually played with them.
When Max bent forward to turn the keys on each of the seven
dwarves, his intense man-scent smacked Randy in the face. It was a
physical aroma, raw but clean, like a hot, soapy shower at the gym.
Once that scent invaded his lungs, he didn’t want to breathe out. He
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wanted to keep it inside him forever.
A slight wave of guilt passed through him when he realized he
was selling off Brent’s inheritance. Was it really awful of him to get rid
of the lot for… wait, how much? A hundred bucks just for the animals?
He didn’t think he’d get that for the whole shoebox.
“If you had the Snow White, I could hook you up with a buyer
who’d give you ten for them all. It’s too bad. He won’t purchase an
incomplete set.”
Randy mulled the words over, but couldn’t make sense of them.
“Give me ten… ten what?”
“Ten thousand,” Max replied without looking up from the last of
the gnomes.
Was this place in the twilight zone or something? It was a box of
toys, for Christ’s sake! With a pronounced gulp, Randy squeaked a
syllable and then stopped to push his voice back down. For someone
who didn’t want to seem like a total moron, he was doing a mighty
fine job of it. “Ten thousand dollars?”
Max looked him up and down with a forgiving smirk.
“Remember, that would be if you had the full set, which you don’t.” He
must have been thinking, Not another one of these schmucks! What
does he think this is, Antiques Roadshow? “That missing Snow White’s
going to cost you. I can offer five thousand.”
If he’d been sitting, Randy would have fallen off his chair. As it
was, he grasped the counter to stay upright. This had to be a joke.
Someone was setting him up. There was no other explanation. A
bunch of stupid toys couldn’t possibly be worth so much.
Randy was utterly at a loss for words, which seemed to make
Max think he’d caused offense. “Oh, I’m sorry. I always assume
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Vintage Toys for Lucky Boys * G.R. Richards
everybody wants to sell. Were you just looking for an evaluation?”
“No!” Randy cried. He clutched at his chest, but of course he
couldn’t feel his heartbeat under so many bulky layers of clothing.
“No, I definitely want to sell. Jeez, I was just hoping for enough to get
my mom a cordless drill for Christmas. With fifty-one hundred, I could
fill a workshop.”
Winding his way through the animals, Max asked, “Fifty-one?
Your math’s off, little dude.” Counting up the “cheap” toys, he said, “At
one hundred a piece over here, you’ve got a good sixty-five coming to
you, if you’re sure you want to sell.”
“Oh, I do, I do,” Randy said, suppressing the urge to do his happy
dance all around the shop. This must be what brides felt like on their
wedding days—like they were set for life.
“Good,” Max replied, so calmly Randy wanted to shake him. Kiss
him? Maybe. “Honestly, there’s not much to these little guys, but with
the holidays coming people will snap them up like nobody’s business.”
Kiss him? Definitely.
Reaching across the counter, Randy grabbed Max by the scruff of
his thick neck. Everything went slow-mo as he leaned in for the kill.
When his eager lips came within two centimetres of Max’s, the
muscle-god turned his head downwards while Randy was still moving
forward. He smacked Randy’s chin with his nose, causing him to look
down just as his chest met the lineup of toys. In one swift motion, Max
put his hands out to guard the wind-up windfall, but in the process his
built forearm met Randy’s chest.
He’d never moved so fast in his life. In fact, Randy could hardly
fathom how he’d managed to get from one end of the shop to the
other—without breaking anything—in about three seconds. All he
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Vintage Toys for Lucky Boys * G.R. Richards
knew was that he couldn’t catch his breath. His whole body seemed to
be shaking as he shielded his chest with his arms, staring with alarm
at a very still antiques dealer.
When Max spoke up, Randy was sure he knew everything. “I’m
really sorry, man. I didn’t mean to…” he chuckled nervously. Was that
a nervous chuckle? Or was Randy reading too much into it, as usual?
“Just protecting your treasures.”
It seemed like ages before he could breathe again. How could
Max possibly have felt anything? He couldn’t have. Randy was bound
tight as the foot of a Chinese empress. God, what a terrible comparison.
Why would he think a thing like that? He must have picked it up online
somewhere, from one of those forum-lurking degenerates. Why was
everybody an ass-face except him? He shook his head. “Sorry. I’m just
a little jumpy. I don’t get as much sleep as I should these days.”
Max placed each toy gently back inside the shoebox before
grabbing a photocopied form and his checkbook from the back
counter. A checkbook? Damn it. He figured it would be two hundred
bucks tops for the shoebox. He’d get a couple fifties and be on his way.
He’d have to think on his feet now. “So, if we’ve got a deal, I’ll just get
your personal information, and we can finish up our transaction.”
Transaction. Trans-action. God, he knew. He knew everything.
Randy could feel the sweat trickling down his pits and wetting his
binder. But how could he take off with sixty five hundred hanging in
the balance? He was overreacting, as usual. How could Max possibly
know?
“Name?”
“Randy,” he replied softly.
Max chuckled as he leaned over the form. “I know your first
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Vintage Toys for Lucky Boys * G.R. Richards
name. What’s your last name?”
“Oh,” he hesitated. He cleared his throat and tried to hit a deeper
pitch, but his alarm raised it up and up. “It’s Venner. V-e-n-n-e-r.”
“Address?”
Randy sounded like a girl when he replied, and that made him
hate the process. It almost made him hate Max for asking the
questions, but not quite. There was something about Max that seemed
really accepting. He walked a little closer to the back of the shop, so
that he reached the counter just as Max announced, “All right, now all I
need to see is a piece of photo ID, and I can write you a check.”
The sweat that had all but evaporated came back like a tidal
wave. Randy went corpse-cold. How could he get around showing ID?
He didn’t want to leave without a check in hand. The price seemed too
good to be true. He pushed his voice down. “Actually, funny story. I
don’t actually have any photo ID. I don’t drive, so no license, and I
don’t travel, so no passport.” He tried to sound smooth as he chuckled,
but he knew he was coming across as criminally nervous.
“Okay,” Max said with an understanding nod. “Well, legally, I do
need to collect personal information and see ID in order to make the
purchase. Do you have, like a student card and a credit card, or a… I
don’t know. What’s in your wallet? ”
A sense of desperation overcame Randy as he realized he’d
never get his hands on the money for his mom’s Christmas gift. The
last thing he wanted to seem was argumentative, but a sense of
irritation built like a volcano in him until he burst with, “Why do you
need to see my ID? I don’t get that. What, you don’t believe Brent gave
that stuff to me? You think I stole it or something? Is that what this is
all about? Because I am not a crook.”
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Dammit! He didn’t mean to throw a Nixon quote in there, but it
certainly colored Max’s reaction. Instead of getting all self-righteous,
he just laughed. “Yeah, man, I know, but that’s the law and I have to
follow it. For all I know, you could be an undercover cop looking to
bust me.”
His kind gaze softened Randy to the point where he couldn’t bear
to argue. But what could he say? If he claimed he’d left his wallet at
home, Max would just tell him to go and get it. Anywhere else, he’d
have been long gone, but there was something encouraging in Max’s
demeanor. The more he looked him in the eye, the more Randy
thought this might be a safe place. His friendly gaze sparked the image
of the hippie woman leaving the shop as he’d arrived. She was very
tall, with broad shoulders. Max had called her a draft-dodger, hadn’t
he? Vietnam was way before his time, of course, but even Randy knew
only men were drafted to war. Only men would have come up to
Canada to dodge the draft.
In an ultra-casual motion, Max picked up his toothpick-pointer-
thing. He tapped at the plastic sign indicating which credit cards his
shop accepted. Behind the sign, on the old-school cash register was a
sticker that made Randy’s heart jump. At the top of the decal was a
rainbow flag, and on the bottom there was a familiar pink triangle
containing the transgender symbol of a Mars arrow, a Venus cross,
and a combination of the two all joined by a central ring. In the middle
were the words “Friendly Space.” Randy stared at the sticker. On the
one hand, it was a clear indication Max had read him. Why else would
he have uncovered the sticker? If boys could cry, he would have cried.
Instead, he bit his lip and suppressed the hurt. And, God, did it ever
hurt when someone could tell he was FTM.
On the other hand, he had to feel indebted to Max for his class.
Instead of just calling him out, he’d displayed some subtlety. He’d
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Vintage Toys for Lucky Boys * G.R. Richards
given Randy the opportunity to disclose or not to disclose. He had a
choice, and the gentle and encouraging look in Max’s eye made the
whole situation a little easier to handle. Not that it was easy easy; he
wondered if he was being set up, but couldn’t bring himself to believe
any trans-basher would have that friendly space sticker up in his shop.
His mind showed him a slide show of every negative situation that
could arise out of disclosing, but in his heart he knew Max was a good
person. He knew Max wouldn’t hurt him.
Wiping his sweating hands on his cargo pants, he grabbed for his
wallet and slid out his folded-up passport.
Surname/Nom: VENNER
Given Names/Prénoms: JENNIFER ANN
Nationality/Nationalité: CANADIAN/CANADIENNE
Date of Birth/Date de naissance: 24 APR / AVR 1977
Sex/Sexe: F
He held his breath as he handed it over to Max. Somewhat
ashamed and somewhat bashful, he said, “I haven’t changed it yet.”
Max took a look to confirm and then passed the ID back to
Randy. His voice was smooth and receptive when he asked, “Why
not?”
As quick as he could, Randy folded it up and shoved it back in his
wallet. “I don’t know,” he said with a shrug. “Just… everything costs
money, you know?”
Nodding, Max said, “One hundred and thirty seven dollars, last
time I checked.”
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Randy looked straight up at him, trying not to seem too shocked.
It was just a really random figure to know with such precision. “Yeah.”
“I have an ex who’s trans,” he said. Randy felt a smile growing
across his cheeks as Max walked toward the back room. He offered an
inviting nod and went on, “I still have strong ties to the community.
Want to sit down for a coffee? I know how hard it is to find allies in the
big bad world.”
“Sure!” Randy cried before thoughts of rat poison and Arsenic
and Old Lace clouded his vision. Why did he have to be so suspicious of