Zero at the Bone (57 page)

Read Zero at the Bone Online

Authors: Jane Seville

BOOK: Zero at the Bone
11.59Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

So he’d spent his first night back with D just holding him until they’d both fallen asleep.

He’d woken the next morning to find D propped up on one elbow, watching him, smiling a little. “How do you feel?” Jack had asked.

“Like a new man.”

“You
are
a new man, Anson.” And they’d reached for each other and then, just bliss. A whole day and night’s worth until they’d been forced out of the bedroom in search of food.

And then, chaos.

First, the phone calls. Jack had put in his notice at Borders. “Just tell ’em ya quit and you ain’t showin’ up no more,” D had groused.

“I can’t do that. I have to give work my notice. Do you know how much of a bind it’ll put them in if I just stop showing up?”

“That ain’t your problem.”

“Hey, I like that job! I’m not going to leave them in the lurch if I don’t have to! I don’t have to,
do I?
” D had to admit that no, there was no rush, so Jack had worked his two weeks. This did allow him the pleasure of dragging D to the bar so he could introduce him to Gloria and his other co-workers, unable to keep the proud smile from his face as he took D around, saying, “This is my partner, Anson” and watching D fumble his way through handshakes and small talk and all the questions everyone had.

Then, there had been the phone call he’d been dreading, to Churchill to tell him that he didn’t require Witsec’s services anymore. Churchill hadn’t said much about it. Jack suspected that he knew at least part of the truth, and when Jack told him that he was no longer in danger from the brothers, Churchill seemed to buy it with a minimum of protestation.

After which followed the endless paperwork of reclaiming his own identity, not to mention procuring one for D. Megan knew some people and pulled a few strings and got D issued a new birth certificate and a new Social Security number. So he was Anson Dane again. “But isn’t Anson Dane supposed to be dead?” Jack asked.

“No law sayin’ there cain’t be more’n one Anson Dane,” D had said, examining his brand-new driver’s license. “So yeah, he dead, but I ain’t. I got a different SSN, different place a birth, Megan even made me a year younger. Far’s any authorities are concerned, I ain’t the same Anson Dane that was in the Army and died in that car crash.” Both of them back on the grid, Jack had called Johns Hopkins to ask if they could use a maxillofacial reconstructive surgeon. They’d invited him back at once. Then it had been about if he really
wanted
to go back to Baltimore. Long conversations ensued.

“But what about you?” Jack asked D, curled up with him in bed. “It’s not like you can get a job at Ace Hardware.”

“Why not? Sounds good ta me.”

266 | Jane Seville

“Be serious.”

“I got plans. But they ain’t dependent on me bein’ anywhere particular. I go where you go, Jack.”

Jack had sighed. “Where do I want to go?”

“I dunno. You tell me. You wanna stay here?”

“No.”

“Back ta Baltimore?”

“No,” Jack said, abruptly. He blinked, feeling D’s surprise.

“Ya don’t?”

Jack turned over in his arms and met his eyes. “No. I mean, we have to go back for a little while. I’ve got things in storage there. But….” He thought for a moment. “I think I want to go home.”

“Home? Where’s that?”

“The only time in my life I ever felt really comfortable, really at home, was when I was in med school. I think….” Jack imagined himself back there, in that city, and it felt right. “Yeah, I think I want to go back there.” D chuckled. “You wanna move to
Ohio?

“What’s wrong with Ohio?”

“Nothin’. Jus’ never heard nobody say they wanted ta move there.”

“Anyway, it isn’t Ohio, it’s Columbus. It’s just… different.”

“If you say so.”

“But we still have to go to Baltimore first.”

“Sure ’nough. Get plane tickets tomorrow.”

“No, let’s drive.”

“Aw, shit, Jack. That’ll take a week.”

“I know. That’s the idea.” He leaned in and began kissing D’s neck. “C’mon,” he purred. “Been so hectic since you came back. Be nice to have a week just to ourselves, don’t you think? Take our time… stay in swank hotels… no rush, nothing to do, nobody chasing us….”

D was growling low in his chest as Jack’s hands moved over him. “Sounds good ta me,” he said, closing the topic and Jack’s mouth with his own.

Which was how they’d ended up here, on their third day on the road, in the middle of Colorado. They were heading for the infamous Stanley Hotel. “It’s the hotel from
The
Shining
,” Jack had said, pointing out the location on the detailed trip plan he was making on the computer.

“There gonna be creepy ghost kids? I ain’t down with that shit.” He looked up at D, grinning. “Don’t tell me big, tough Anson Dane is afraid of a few ghosts.”

“I’m afraid of anythin’ that don’t go down with a bullet, doc.” Jack couldn’t let an opening like that go by. “Oh yeah?” he said, grabbing D’s hand and bringing it between his legs. “What about this?” He smiled to himself at the memory of what had followed. Not that he lacked other reasons to smile at the moment. They were driving east on Highway 34 through Rocky Mountain National Park on their way to Estes Park, their stopover location this night, and it was so beautiful that it was hard to concentrate on the road at times. He heard Anson sigh, then his hand slid from his own lap over to Jack’s knee. He reached down and laced his fingers through D’s. “Fuckin’ amazin’,” D said, the first time either of them had spoken for hours.

Zero at the Bone | 267

“I know.”

“How far to the hotel?”

“Estes Park is on the far side. Couple hours, depending on the traffic through the park.”

“Maybe we’ll see a bear.”

“I want to see a moose.”

“Do they have moose here?”

“I think so.”

The road got busier and busier the closer they got to the campgrounds and visitor’s areas of the park. D sat up straight so he could see better. They saw moose, all right. They sat in a half-hour traffic jam caused by people slowing down to look at a large moose sauntering along the side of the road. D whipped out a camera and snapped photos.

“You’re such a tourist,” Jack laughed.

“Fuckin’ moose, Jack! Look at that sucker! He’s huge!” He pointed, grinning like a child, looking back at Jack with his face full of open wonder.

Jack smiled, watching D, a lump rising in his throat.

THEY pulled up to the Stanley just before seven, the sun low amidst the peaks. D

whistled. “Nice place,” he said, looking up at the hotel’s impressive white façade.

A valet hurried up to take the car keys, and a bellhop appeared out of nowhere and took their overnight bags. Jack looked around as they entered the lobby, a cavernous wood-clad space that made Jack feel like he ought to be wearing something from the Hammacher Schlemmer catalog. They went to the reception desk. As usual, Jack smiled his way up to the clerk while D lurked behind, his sunglasses still on his face, looking generally impenetrable. “Good evening, gentlemen,” the clerk said. Jack’s gaydar went haywire.

“Hello. I have a reservation. It’s under Francisco.”

“Let’s see…. Oh yes, sir, you have reserved one of our suites for tonight only, is that right?” he said, his eyes flicking past Jack to D.

“That’s right, yes.”

“Welcome to the Stanley,” the clerk—his nametag said Charles—said, his lip curling slightly. Jack had been through this a million times with clerks, waiters, and other service employees. It was that slight loosening of the inflection that said
Clearly you two
are a gay couple; we won’t mention it but it’s obvious, so I’m just going to flirt openly
with you because that’s what’s expected.
Jack barely noticed anymore, but it made D

uncomfortable. Charles processed Jack’s credit card, then slid their room key across the desk. “Please let us know if there’s anything we can do to make your stay more pleasant,” he said.

D stepped forward and grabbed the key off the counter before Jack could even open his mouth. “Thanks,” he said, the word sounding like a death sentence. Charles’ flirty eyes went a bit cautious. Jack just shrugged, smiling ruefully, and followed D to the stairs, the bellhop trailing them.

Their suite faced the back of the hotel. Its large windows looked out onto a spectacular view of the surrounding peaks. Jack tipped the bellhop and they were alone again. “Nice view,” he said.

268 | Jane Seville

“Don’t care ’bout the view,” D said, turning from the window and pulling Jack into his arms.

Jack grinned and returned D’s urgent kisses. “Don’t you even want to shower first?

I’m all travel-grimy.”

D walked them over to the bed. “Smell mighty fine ta me,” he said, nuzzling his face into the crook of Jack’s neck.

Jack had no further objections. D grabbed the hem of Jack’s T-shirt and yanked it off over his head, then pushed him back onto the bed. Jack propped up on his elbows and just watched while D unbuckled Jack’s belt and pulled his jeans off, focusing on his task with a determined single-mindedness that Jack found utterly charming.
I am going to get
this man undressed as quickly and efficiently as possible, just watch me.

Once he had Jack naked, D clambered up on the bed and knelt over him, looking down at his body. “Mm,” he said. “Lemme lookit you,” he breathed, his hands going to Jack’s belly, petting the skin, stroking the hair that thickened south. Jack lay beneath D’s roaming hands, gazing up at his face and seeing there D’s desire for him, its brash directness still a novelty. Since his return D had become a good deal more comfortable with letting that desire show, and with expressing his appreciation for Jack’s body. The body itself had changed a little too. Jack was slimmer and more toned than he had been when they’d parted, which D had noticed the first day he’d returned.

“You been workin’ out, doc?” he’d asked, his hands stroking the firm muscles of Jack’s chest.

“Exercise is great for sexual frustration,” Jack had said.

Jack reached up and pulled D down into his arms, arching up to meet his mouth. D

stretched out and wound them together, the heady sensation of D’s clothed body up against Jack’s nude one speeding their breath. D dug a hand beneath Jack to grip his ass while Jack massaged D’s groin through his jeans. “Get these off,” he muttered in D’s ear, and within a few moments D was coming back into his arms, gloriously naked.

“God, you feel good,” Jack breathed. D was sucking on his neck and writhing against his body in a way that let Jack know he’d been thinking about doing this to him all day. “Where’s the lube?”

“Oh, you want it, huh?” D growled against Jack’s skin.

“Yeah,” Jack said, anything else he might have added lost into D’s mouth. D slid off the bed and went to his suitcase, pulling the lube from a pocket on the side. Jack sat up as D returned, reaching out to yank him close, crushing their mouths together as he pulled them both back on the bed. His blood was pounding through his body, rising to the skin, heating and flushing him all over. Too impatient to take time, he pulled D between his legs and arched his hips against him. He felt D slick himself quickly and then he was pressing deep and entering Jack’s body, his eyes closing, sucking in a hissing breath while Jack watched his face. This was his favorite part, seeing the guardedness fall away from D’s features, watching as the sensation of being inside Jack overwhelmed the face he wore around all day and shattered it, revealing the naked need and vulnerability beneath. Knowing that it was him who could make D feel like that, himself and nobody else, not for D’s whole life, was intoxicating.

D leaned close for a kiss, but Jack stopped him. He didn’t feel like kissing. He didn’t want to make love, not right now. He didn’t want to exchange deep, tender caresses during a long, slow coupling. He wanted to get fucked, by the only man he’d ever been to bed with who could do it right. Right now, Jack just wanted D to drill him through this mattress until he couldn’t walk. And he could let D see that. It was okay. D

Zero at the Bone | 269

would still respect him afterward. He’d still love him. He might not say it, but that didn’t mean he didn’t feel it.

Jack was just starting to spiral upward when D suddenly pulled out and seized Jack’s waist, flipping him over as easily as one might a pancake on a slick skillet. He didn’t pull Jack to his knees but just tilted his hips up, then entered him again, propping himself over Jack’s back, the whole bed jouncing with his thrusts, pressing Jack’s body into the mattress on each downswing. “That what you want?” he hissed, his mouth near Jack’s ear, swiveling his hips down and forward and making Jack see stars.

“Yeah,” Jack could only gasp, his hands clutching the edge of the mattress. He arched his back, laying himself bare to be flayed raw, D’s skin hot and damp against his, drops of his sweat falling onto Jack’s back.

“Goddamn,” D groaned, holding tight for a moment, buried deep and straining together, before going at him again, rearing and bucking like he was riding a bronc. Jack cried out, strangled through the filter of his arousal, everything else going away, nothing but the heat, the breath, the sweat and the sex. “Goddamn, ya kill me,” D said, nearly unintelligible. “So fuckin’ fine.”

“D,” Jack gasped. “God… yeah….” He didn’t even get to finish the sentence before he tipped over and yelled out his release, the warm wetness blooming between his stomach and the hotel’s bedspread.

D’s arm was around Jack’s neck now, holding him up and close. “Aw darlin’….” He felt D go rigid and thrust deep. a lump rising in Jack’s throat at the intimacy of this act, a sometimes terrible intimacy, frightening in its strength.

D sagged onto Jack’s back, arms wrapped around him, still inside him but softening now. They were both breathing like they’d run a mile. Jack pushed up, D’s weight heavy on him, and they turned over to their backs, D slipping out, their limbs tangled together.

“Jesus Christ,” Jack gasped. D could only grunt incoherently. They just laid there for a few minutes while their heart rates returned to normal. “I don’t get it,” Jack finally said.

Other books

Heat of the Moment by Robin Kaye
Ratchet by Owen, Chris, Payne, Jodi
Building Heat by K. Sterling
Local Custom by Sharon Lee, Steve Miller
The Bone Tiki by David Hair
The Deal by Helen Cooper
The Gallows Gang by I. J. Parnham
The Fregoli Delusion by Michael J. McCann