Jake’s Side
Part 5
To Seattle
I stepped off that flight from
Boston shaking like a soldier ordered to go into battle for the first
time. I wanted Robbie to be as he was
the day I stepped back on the bus to Boston, as if time could be frozen and
then started up again. I knew that
wasn’t possible: everybody
changes. If he was anything like he was
in Mississippi, I’d convinced myself that I could make him my lover, and
eventually my life partner. I had
nearly completely accepted that I was gay.
I certainly had feelings for him—or maybe the idea of him—on both the
physical and the emotional level. I
knew he had feelings for me, but I didn’t know how much of his feelings were
fantasy, as he said his story was, and how much came from deeper within him. And I didn’t know if he still had those
feelings, or if his story was just a momentary expression of frustration during
some horny nights. I was bound and
determined to find out, though, and if there was a glimmer of feeling for me, I
intended to use it to seduce him.
The strange thing was that I wanted
him despite the fact that I hadn’t seen or communicated with him in over a
decade. But I had thought about him
often—as he had been, of course. I didn’t
seriously consider that I may not even really know him anymore. There was always the possibility that he had
changed so much that I no longer would recognize him as the lover of my
ideal. There was always the possibility
that too many years had passed, that too much water had gone under the
bridge. Maybe he was born again. Maybe he was bald. Maybe he weighed 250 pounds.
Maybe I wouldn’t even like him anymore.
I knew that some of those things could have happened. All these things I thought as I walked up
the ramp toward the waiting area.
And there he was at the end of the
ramp. I almost swooned I was so
happy. He hadn’t changed that
much. His hair was still near black,
curving up at the ends. His dark, thin
eyebrows accentuated his ever-shiny eyes.
And his face still held the angular lines of youth. He had an afternoon beard shadow—a little
heavier than in Mississippi—and his body was a little more mature, with a
thicker chest and hips. But I really thought that time had frozen. At that moment, it could have been fourteen
years earlier, as if my private hell in between had never existed.
I wanted to kiss him, lay him on the
floor right there and ravish him, virgin to virgin (assuming he still was in
the way I wanted), but I hugged him instead.
I wanted to shout to him that I was gay and tell him I knew he probably
was also because of his story and that we were made for each other, but I just
kept on with my hug instead and beat my fist lightly on his back in a manner I
knew was sexually neutral.
At that instant I knew something
else. When I saw him I knew my
seduction plan was on. And I knew I
didn’t want to seduce him for a one-night or one-week fling. I wanted to seduce him for life. I knew.
My recent realizations about my sexuality were prodding me to push
forward in what I wanted in life. My
thoughts of me with Kingman and Dave seemed to be some sort of warmup for what
I hoped was about to happen. And I knew
that what I wanted was not too farfetched, after what I had read and reread in Robbie’s
story.
Of course, I had no idea how to
proceed, or, in my perhaps more realistic moments, even whether I should
proceed. How do you seduce a man that
you haven’t seen in 14 years? How do
you seduce a man at all? Do you bring
him flowers? Cologne? Do you take him to dinner and dancing, if
you can figure out where to take him dancing except to a place that isn’t
flashing a neon rainbow signal of sexuality?
Some Lavender Lounge, or whatever. What would Robbie do if I did make
some sort of advance? I didn’t think he
would strike me physically, but if he were to turn his back on me, the pain
would be so much greater than any physical blow.
While I was thinking through all
this on our way to baggage claim, Robbie was chatting away amiably. I don’t remember much of what he was saying,
except the dig about not being in touch with him for 14 years and his demand
for a point. The demand for a point
warmed me and pushed me emotionally higher than I already was. I licked my finger and put his point on his
side of the air ledger and asked him if he remembered the score. He did, and that pleased me as well.
“Well, you even remembered the score
right. So maybe 14 years wasn’t such a
long time.”
“Yes,
it was,” he said.
Those words had slipped out rapidly
and I think unconsciously, subliminally, I thought. But those three words were the kind of sentiment I wanted to hear
until I could hear the other three little words I really wanted to hear—that
is, if things went that far. I now had
confirmed to myself that I was going to seduce Robbie, though the how of his
seduction was still a mystery. I
thought about just taking him in my arms and kissing him fiercely, as I did
with Kingman, but that method seemed to lack a certain subtlety.
Instead, I bopped him on the arm and
said, “Thanks.”
We picked up my bags at baggage claim
and climbed into his pale-blue Dodge Caravan.
The trip into downtown Seattle was memorable, because the scenery both
beside me and outside the window was beautiful—white ferries skidding across blue
water with snow-tipped mountains in the background. I checked into my hotel, a brick-fronted place with a tiny
elevator and small, but serviceable, rooms.
We were planning to go out to dinner.
I unpacked my bags into the chest of drawers that was there. I asked Robbie if he could wait while I took a shower, and he agreed and sat down
on the bed and began to grumble at the sports pages. I took a quick shower, dried off, wrapped the towel around my
waist and opened the bathroom door. I
walked over to the dresser and dropped the towel--deliberately. This was the subtle first step in my
seduction quest.
I could see Robbie’s eyes in the
mirror over the dresser, and they were staring at my butt. Give my quest its first point. I didn’t know how many points I needed for it
to succeed, but I had a start. I felt
like wiggling my butt seductively if I knew how or do it in a way that wasn’t
too corny, but it didn’t seem to be the time to be too blatant. However, I did leave myself exposed a little
longer than needed as I made a show of deciding which boxers to wear. Normally, I’d just grab the nearest pair.
Dinner was strange. We talked, we chatted, we gossiped, but
there was always an undertone of why-didn’t-you-write-or-keep-in-contact. I avoided talking about much of the last 14
years; I tried to keep the conversation to the distant past and to the near future,
jumping over the in-between. Robbie was
persistent about the last 14 years, though.
The
renewal of our relationship was not exactly going according to plan. At one point I couldn’t take it and even walked
out the door—to a dumbfounded Robbie, I’m sure. I walked and walked, got partly lost, found the restaurant again,
and returned to Robbie. He looked at me
somewhat curiously as I sat down again, seemingly expecting an
explanation—which he didn’t get. Walking
out had been my way of dealing with some things the past decade. Robbie must have felt that there was
something really weird about my disappearance, but he never asked about it.
* * * * *
Our reminiscences of the distant
past weren’t going to be enough to sustain us forever. Robbie was going to be curious about my dark
years. If we sat across from each other
every night, there was no way to develop a relationship without having a
meaningful conversation—about me. I had
to think of something more to keep us together—a diversion. If we could do things together, side by side
again, maybe we could renew a relationship that way and keep my personal stuff
personal. I think it’s a male trait: to
become close to someone by doing something side by side, whether it be playing
pool at a bar or shooting hoops in the driveway. The activity itself becomes the communication between two
males—probably crowding out real emotional and verbal contact between
them.
We needed to do something, so that I
could avoid the interrogation of my time in Vietnam and the Far East. What could we do? I thought of something physical.
I liked cycling. If I’d known I
was going to stay long in Seattle and how much time I would have, I would have
had my bike shipped out. I’d decided to
wait until Molini made the move.
Robbie looked like he kept in shape,
so I assumed he might be willing to ride with me—or he might have something
different for us to do. He said he did like
cycling, and he even had a spare bicycle.
We made a date. He agreed to
pick me up the next afternoon, a Saturday, and took me to a large parking lot at
the University Village near the University of Washington. We unloaded the bikes from his van.
I didn’t tell him at the time, but I
was appalled at the state of their maintenance, and I nearly couldn’t hold my
tongue. I’m easygoing about most
things, but with maintenance of bicycles, I became anal. I told him we had to
do some minor maintenance before we went on a long trip, so I sent Robbie off
to get some WD40 while I worked on the bikes.
I used the lubricant liberally after his return.
A few squirts of oil later, I felt
confident that the bikes would get us pretty much anywhere we wanted to go, so we
got our helmets out of his van, locked it, took off and cycled along a broad
trail that I learned was an old railroad right of way. We went west along the water—the lakes and
the canals and inlets—until we got to a part of town that Robbie told me was
Ballard. There, the boat-repair yards
reminded me of parts of New England cities, with the sea-salt smell, the cries
of the gulls, the rainbow sheen of oil on the water and rumble of diesel motors
echoing from the hills across. It
wasn’t the prettiest district to cycle through, but there was little traffic on
a weekend and we could ride side by side.
I couldn’t stop glancing over at Robbie, and I noticed he was taking
glances at me as well. We smiled at
each other. Add another point to my quest,
I thought. Doing something side by side
again reminded me so much of the way we lived in our summer in
Mississippi. It felt comfortable, and I
felt it was the key to renewing and building upon our relationship.
We kept going toward Puget Sound and
eventually rounded a turn at the end of the Ship Canal to go north to a nice
park that abutted the sound. The sun
was starting to get low, outlining the mountains in the distance and the blue
of the water that broke onto the shore in small waves. The sun and the northern latitude made for a beautiful
quality of light, bringing out the red tones in everything. We drank some sodas while straddling our
bikes and just looking at the scenery—and at each other.
The trip home started at a leisurely
side-by-side bicycle equivalent of a stroll, but quickly became a race. I had memorized the route, so I knew the way
back. I really wanted to stretch my
legs, but most of all I wanted to beat Robbie to the van. Naturally, I won the race I had declared, and
I claimed the appropriate point from Robbie, who feigned being miffed that I
had taken off before he realized we were in a race. Tough shit, Robbie. Live
with it. On that afternoon, I was enjoying
being the self of an earlier time. I
was happier than I had been since, well, Mississippi.
We loaded the bikes in the van,
drove back the way we had ridden and ended up at a really good pizza place
somewhere under a high freeway bridge:
lots of meat and lots of fat, washed down with lots of beer, but we deserved
it—at least, we told ourselves so. We
weren’t like we were in Mississippi, but the ember of comfort was starting to
grow brighter.
The bike-ride pattern continued for
the next few days—fast food after a good stiff ride and more talk—the non-personal
talk getting easier for me by the day.
But I knew the talk was going to range closer to places I didn’t want it
to go. When Robbie started to talk
about our purpose in going to Mississippi and our summer there, I knew he was
going to lead into territory that was going to be uncomfortable for me.
I resisted telling him that I had
given up on “do-gooder” work. I told
myself that it was because I had grown up and seen more of the harsh
world. After 14 years of wandering in
the wilderness of the Far East, I had decided that our summer was good, but I
had been too idealistic to have the summer be anything that could ever really
change the world. Cold realism took
over. I wasn’t so sure we weren’t just
two naïve college boys thinking we were doing something good for the
world. I had seen so much violence and,
yes, evil since then that my view of our time in Mississippi was colored.
From what I could judge from
Robbie’s manner he didn’t think the same way, and I didn’t know how I would
respond when we came to the issue. Should
I lie and keep up the “do- gooder” charade?
Or, should I give my cynicism free rein?
Robbie talked about some warm times
we had together, including the day we went skinny dipping in the river. He laughed about our hightailing it to
shore, but he didn’t mention what he had written about in his story—about how
close he came to discovering that I had fallen in lust and love with him, and
he with me. I didn’t think it was
really the time for me to open up the subject, since he didn’t know I had read
his story, so I gave myself a rain check.
What would I have said, though?
‘Remember when we started to drift together and almost kissed and almost
locked our erections together.’ I
didn’t think it was quite time to be that brazen. But thinking of that scene got me a bit warmer in the mid
regions, which must have stanched the flow of blood to my brain, because the
next thing I knew I had said: “God, we
were naïve then. We thought we could
change the world.”
Robbie’s face and demeanor went dark
with disappointment. “I think we did
change the world,” he said somewhat forcefully.
“You’re serious?” I asked, before I
thought, and I knew from his face that he was serious. Well, I hadn’t lied about my feelings, but the
conversation deteriorated from then on.
I felt that Robbie had maintained this innocence of youth, and I had
become more realistic about the world—jaded or cynical, some would say. That particular evening couldn’t end soon
enough if we were going to keep anything with our relationship intact, and soon
I decided to find my way back to the hotel.
I had found what was going to be a
tender point in our revived relationship, and I knew not only that I needed to
avoid the subject but probably had to make some amends. I knew I had to respect his view of the
world if I really wanted to go any farther than a fading friendship with
him. So, I decided to make a down
payment by doing something neutral: by
offering to work on his bicycles come the weekend.
We kept up our rides and our dinners
out for the next couple of days, and I was able to describe to Robbie what I
did at work, and I think he could see in my eyes how much I enjoyed what I was
doing. What he didn’t know was how much
I needed to be doing something I enjoyed and something that would take my mind
off the past 14 years, and my job did just that. And Robbie did just that, but I wasn’t ready yet to tell him so.
Alec and Tran
I had to work really long hours
Friday in order to take off as many hours as I planned for Saturday, so I’d not
taken the usual evening rides with Robbie on Thursday or Friday. Also, I really needed to work on the bikes. After getting them into shape, I thought we would
be able to go out and stretch our legs again with a long ride and make up for
the missing evenings.
I hiked the couple of miles from my
hotel to his ex-wife’s place. Standing
alongside Robbie was a young boy that looked just like him—and particularly
like him 14 years earlier. He had the
same dark hair and the same straight eyebrows that accented the same dark
bright eyes. He must have gotten the abundant
curls and slighter frame from his mother.
Robbie introduced us, and he came over and shook my hand—a bit
vigorously, to prove he was a man, I suppose.
Not yet, I thought, but I could see he was going to be quite a man in a
few years.
We went down to the garage. There was space for two cars, but only one
side was being used. The bikes were
hung on the rack alongside the empty side.
I sized up the bikes that I needed to work on, grimaced and cleared off
a spot on the workbench and started in.
When I’m working on bicycles my mind
enters another world, and I lose track of space and time. I could have been in Seattle now or in
another place at another time; all my concentration went to the work I was
doing. I could completely lose track of
time and space.
My discomfort started when Alec
began to ask me all kinds of questions. With him being as bright as I quickly
learned he was, each question was better than the previous, building on each
other brick by brick. He was probing
the edge of knowledge, trying to extend his understanding of the mechanics of
bicycles. And he started to get near to
the bicycle, putting his face close to where I was working. I looked at him, but I didn’t see him. I saw Alec’s face transformed into Tran’s of
more than a decade earlier and this garage transformed into that small shop in a
hot and humid Vietnam. I trembled as I
returned to the Seattle reality. But
the memories I had been trying to suppress came flooding back.
These two boys couldn’t have been
more different. They also couldn’t have
been more alike. A boy from Vietnam and
a boy halfway around the world from the United States. One raised in poverty in a small village in
the middle of a violent war; the other raised in one of the richest, most
gentle cities in the world. Yet when
they spoke, when their eyes met mine, when they grinned, when their faces
expressed emotion and contemplation and anticipation of an answer to a question,
there was a sameness about them that frightened me to the core.
I knew there was something seriously
wrong with me when their faces morphed together in my mind, fading in and out
from one to another. My mind kept
flashing back and forth between a village in Vietnam and a garage in Seattle, like
some strobe light flashing across the decades, dominating my perceptions,
illuminating one world and then another.
I looked at Alec through the bicycle spokes that day, and his face became
Tran’s, and I cowered.
My problem, which had been to
maintain some bikes, suddenly turned into a problem of maintaining my sanity. I knew I wasn’t going to be able to look at
Alec again without Tran’s face appearing in front of me. The experience of these last few minutes became
lodged in my mind, forever changing the way I looked at Alec. I couldn’t look at Robbie’s son again
without my past rising up to haunt me once more. I became short with answers to Alec’s questions. I couldn’t bear having him close to me any
longer. At the same time, for Robbie’s
sake, I didn’t want to be too offensive about it.
At that moment I needed a break from
Alec before I broke down. I stood back
from Alec and the bicycles, and I blinked back tears. I didn’t know how to face up to the problem I was having. Except to walk. So, I turned on my heels and walked out the door, saying
nothing. I walked to the corner and
then I started to run—up the hills, down the hills—working the memory bile out
of my system. After probably a half
hour I came back around to corner of Anne’s house and slowed to a walk.
As I walked through Anne’s garage
door, I didn’t know what to say, so I just started to work again on the bikes,
trying to stay to myself and resisting being social. In a couple of hours the repairs were done, and we went on a
ride—all three of us. I tried to act as
if nothing had happened earlier, trying to make everyone comfortable with one
another again.
For Robbie and Alec the afternoon
ended, I thought, on a neutral note: no
animosity, but no love.
For me, looking back from today, I
realize the tension between the present and my past in Vietnam, the Far East
and Mississippi was too much, and it was the reason that I had to create a distance
between Alec and me. I began to
rationalize that if I could live with this distance for a few years, Robbie would be mine, because Alec would
have graduated from high school. If I
could manage to just get through those years, everything would be all
right. That’s what I decided for
myself. After all, I’d spent 14 years
in Asia waiting for something to happen, hiding from my past. What were a few more years till the time I
could have Robbie to myself?
The wall I drew that day between
Alec and me was going to have some unintended effects. I couldn’t help but observe
a wonderful affection between Alec and his father. In the current circumstances, though, the affection had a darker
side: I felt a tinge of jealousy and,
maybe, an unjustified resentment toward Alec that compounded the uncertain
relationship I was developing with him and therefore with his father.
* * * * *
With the bicycles maintained to my
satisfaction, Robbie and I began regular evening rides, joined from time to
time by Alec. I didn’t realize till
later that the main reason that he joined us was that his father had asked him,
not because he wanted to. At the time,
I thought his increasing absences were due to the fact that Alec had gotten
bored with nightly riding. Truthfully, I wasn’t disappointed about the gradual
disappearance of Alec from our time together.
I wanted to know every detail of
Robbie’s life since Mississippi. I
wanted to know him as if I had lived with him for those years, as if there had
been no break in our relationship. So,
in our rides and the meals afterwards, I pumped him for every detail—his
marriage, the children, his divorce. Even
Alec helped me out with an observation of his post-divorce years one evening,
making fun of the women that Robbie had entertained. That interchange between his father and Alec and me was one of
the few times I felt close to Alec, when I recognized his wit and intelligence. The incident saddened me as well, because I
envied the easy camaraderie between Robbie and Alec, but I wasn’t able to
provide the same thing among the three of us.
Of course, during these evenings, the
questions turned, as they did from time to time, from Robbie’s life to mine. I tried to parry them, answering them
shortly or with a diversionary joke. I had
had no real life for the past 14 years—at least nothing I was proud of. And the two years before that in the Army
were best left in the back reaches of my brain.
* * * * *
I realized that my plan to seduce
Robbie—my quest—was stalling. We had arrived
at an easy existence. Most of the gap in
Robbie’s history had been closed—I felt as if he had written me weekly about
his life and what he was doing and thinking. I liked what I had learned of him—how he’d grown and matured. He was conscientious; he was gentle; he was
kind to his kids, and he was respectful of his ex-wife. But
I had no sense for what he was feeling about me—and I hadn’t really revealed
much about myself. Were we to be just
friends in his mind, or was it going to be something more? I couldn’t tell.
Then, I suppose, fate intervened
once again. Alec was going to go on
vacation with his mother, so Robbie asked me if I wanted to stay at his
condominium for a few weeks. I, of
course, was overjoyed, and, frankly, I was tired of The Emery and its
amenities, such as they were.
So I moved into his condominium. Unfortunately, a few days later it seemed
that Robbie virtually moved out. A
major rush project at his company suddenly took control of his time. He was not able to be at his condominium,
except from late at night to early in the morning. He asked frequently if I was doing okay and urged me to be sure
to make myself at home. I answered that
I was doing fine, and I enjoyed making myself at home. I was supremely disappointed, however, that
my seduction luck was not holding. At
least I wasn’t in a hotel, but I felt a distinct lack of good fortune in the
development of my love life. I thought
once again that maybe I should just up and tell Robbie that I was gay and that
I loved him and that I wanted to bed him and marry him. Well, I couldn’t marry him, but I wanted
to.
Then again, the thought of marriage
was frightening; I had been running from marriage for 14 years in the Far East—every time one of my
girlfriends got too close I pulled away, like some magnet turned in the wrong
direction. But this was different,
because, it was Robbie, and if anything was going to drive Robbie away, a
too-early mention of marriage was it. I
knew he liked me. I knew he had had
deep feelings for me years ago when we were in Mississippi and probably a few
years ago when he wrote his story. At
least, I hoped so. And now I could only
wait for him to come home from work dog-tired late at night. How romantic! But I waited—with a patience that I didn’t enjoy.
The Seduction
The note on the microwave said: “Project done, thank God. Gone on a (long) bike ride so I can work off
the frustrations. In the off chance
that you are home before 7—a really off chance, I know—that’s where I am.
See ya later, Robbie.” I checked
my watch. It was just after 2. I knew he was scheduled to finish his
project today, but I didn’t know it
would be so early.
‘My luck had finally changed,’ I
thought to myself. ‘And there’s even an
extra hour or two to get ready.’ I’d
decided earlier that morning that it was time to change tactics. Robbie either was dense (which I knew he
wasn’t at all), unobservant or rejecting my overtures—for whatever
reasons. I knew he’d been sneaking
looks at me. I knew he’d written the
story about his sexuality. But he
hadn’t responded to any of my subtle moves.
Seeing his note, I’d decided that
tonight was the night to end subtlety once and for all. It was the night of overt seduction. Me against him—with me winning, of course, I
said to myself with a smile. Not to the
extent of a crotch grab, but maybe a kiss—a passionate kiss. And now I had an extra hour or so to
prepare, if I could keep my libido in check.
I adjusted my pants and thought of neutral things, like when to start
the potstickers for dinner.
I’d bought most of the dinner
ingredients in the International District on my way home from the office, in
anticipation of having something ready for when Robbie got home after 5. I knew what I wanted for a menu, because I
knew the cliché worked: The way to
Robbie’s heart is through his stomach—at least, tactically. I needed to do a final few errands: to run down to the Pike Place Market to get
some champagne at a fine wine shop there, to get some coffee at a store next
door called Starbuck’s, to get some flowers from one of the stalls and to buy the
last of the ingredients. I needed to do
all the preparations for the meal, to put on the sexy clothes I’d also bought
on my way home and to wait—anxiously—till Robbie got home. I determined that tonight was the
night. I could see multiple points to
be recorded—at least in my private ledger.
Of course, I didn’t expect him to
come home exhausted, but I should have realized that he might after more than a
week of late nights at work and a long bike ride.
When Robbie came through the door at
6, I was ready, though. I popped the
cork on the champagne, his (no, our) favorite, and poured two glasses. Robbie was sweaty and probably thirsty from
his bike ride, so he accepted the Champagne glass with a look of relief, not
quite like a man crawling out of the desert to an oasis, but downing half a
glass in a few moments just the same. I
stepped into the kitchen and got him a large glass of ice water as well, which
he downed in one tilt of the glass before he went back to his champagne. I told him dinner would be ready shortly, so
he said he needed to take a quick shower.
I topped off his Champagne glass and sent him on his way upstairs. I wanted to pat him on the butt on his way
upstairs, but I resisted.
I was in the kitchen finishing up
the potstickers when he reappeared, his dark hair still wet and slicked back as
if he were an Italian don—or model—wearing a clean but offensive Mariners shirt
and navy-blue shorts. If it hadn’t been
for the Mariners shirt, I probably would have kneeled and declared my love for
him right there. Instead, I sent him
packing to the dining room, where I had laid out the table with the fine dishes
that seemed to have been in permanent storage in the dust in the chest next to
the table. Two candles provided the
light for the romantic atmosphere I wanted to create. God, I was being manipulative.
God, I loved being manipulative.
The dinner was wonderful, if I say so myself. We talked about food and life and drank a lot of champagne and some
beer with the really spicy dishes.
After finishing the last dish, I told Robbie to sit awhile while I
cleaned the table and kitchen. I told
him this was to be his night, so I was insisting on doing all the preparation
and cleanup. I told him that was the
way it was going to be, no backtalk tolerated.
I picked up the dishes off the table
and took them into the kitchen, rinsing them and putting them in the
dishwasher, then started on the kitchen.
It must have been fifteen minutes before I got everything
shipshape. As I reemerged out of the
kitchen, I saw Robbie lying stretched out—conked out—on the couch, snoring
softly. Shit! This seduction was really going well. Ha! Maybe my luck hadn’t
turned as much as I’d thought. But I
wasn’t ready to quit yet. Eventually,
he would get either cold or uncomfortable and wake up to trundle off to
bed. I could wait until he woke.
I brought the candles from the
dining room, set them on the living room tables and turned down the electric
lights. I picked up a book of Emily
Dickinson poems and sat on the chair across from where Robbie lay, his face lit
softly by the candles and the light over my shoulder. I tried to read, but all I could do was stare at him and wonder
how this damned seduction was ever going to be completed if the seductee kept
conking out on me. I loved Robbie, and
I think he loved me; I keened to have our relationship move to a new level, but
that meant him staying awake at a minimum.
After a while, Robbie’s eyes
fluttered open.
“Hi,” I said softly.
“I’m
sorry. How long was I asleep?”
I
looked at my watch. “About a half
hour,” I said. “Can I get you a cup of coffee?”
“I’d
love one.”
I went off to the kitchen and poured
the simmering hot water through the fresh grounds already in the filter and set
above the coffee pot, the mixture producing a dark-roasted aroma that warmed my
brain before I even tasted the coffee.
It was done by the time I hunted up a tray and some cups. When I returned to the living room, Robbie
was sitting up, still rubbing sleep from his eyes. At least, he hadn’t gone back to sleep. I poured him some coffee and handed the cup to him.
He
smelled the fresh coffee and raised his cup and offered a toast.
“Thanks.”
Well, this was it: the time for the
seduction. But I couldn’t for the life
of me figure out where to begin—me with the nickname Sawyer was at a complete
loss of speech and wiles. I was flunking
Seduction 101. As I sat gazing at
Robbie, I would almost get the courage to say something, and then I figured it
was not the perfect thing to say, so I would pull back. I was ready to say, ‘I love you, and I’m gay
and coming out to you. Please take me
into your heart. Please take me into
your bedroom.’ But I couldn’t.
Finally, I decided on another
tack. I would give him a massage to get
everything started, so I told him to lie down—and, I told him to get rid of the
Mariners shirt, which he did, carefully folding it so that the Mariners emblem
stared at me from the top of the couch where he had set it. He folded it that way on purpose, I’m sure, but
I vowed to get rid of his taunt, however, a little later.
I rested my eyes on his naked upper
torso then brought myself back to the task at hand. In my plan, I had only
gotten as far as telling him that this would be a night for him, which left him
with a puzzled look on his face. The
best laid plans…
My hands kneaded his neck and
shoulder muscles, then rubbed his back as I gathered my courage. The soft brown of his back glowed in the
candlelight. I felt the warmth of his
skin under my fingers. As my hands
worked across his body, I told him how much I appreciated his hospitality in
Seattle. That part was easy but not
particularly seductive.
Then, I took a very deep breath and
told him that I loved him and that I had loved him since Mississippi.
“Well, I love you, too,” he said,
but clearly he did not mean it in the sense that I did. I thought I was telling him that I loved
him—and wanted him—in a romantic way. I
think he thought I loved him as a brother or a best friend. This seduction was not going according to
script.
“When you wrote that you had gotten
married, it really hit me hard. I figured you were no longer
available. You were off limits. I couldn’t handle it. So I
did what I do too often: I stopped communicating and decided to stay
away.”
After I said that Robbie’s muscles
tensed as he digested what I had said.
He turned his head and looked at me in a different, softer way. Okay, here I go.
“And that leads to the most difficult thing to say: It’s the reason I’m
beside you right now and ready to ask you to do something for me.” The crucial moments were approaching. I
felt my confidence rising and I thought I might finally be nearing a roll. I grinned my whitewash grin as I looked him
in the eyes.
“Okay, Sawyer, tell my what fence of yours am I going to paint tonight,” Robbie
said after a pause. He raised his head,
and I saw the soft reflection of the candles in his dark hair. I almost kissed him right there and then.
“Later. There is no fence, and I already did the dishes.” I didn’t
kiss him, but it didn’t mean I couldn’t feel mischievous. I slapped Robbie on
the bottom again. “Turn over.” I don’t
remember what we talked about for the next few moments as I massaged Robbie’s
arms and shoulders, then his legs, from bottom to top—or bottom to bottom, with
careful attention to the insides of his thighs. Robbie was getting an erection, which he seemed to adjust from
time to time and try to hide, like a teenager in health class when sexual
reproduction was the topic of the day.
That spurred me even further.
The seduction was now going well, so I employed my first serious
salvo: “I read the story you wrote for
the bulletin board.”
Delicious. That was the only word I could use to describe his response. He denied.
I laughed. He stuttered, he
stammered, he “explained,” he babbled.
I laughed some more. I had
caught him, I think, with his real feelings exposed and, I hoped, with his
pants down, figuratively. I don’t know
what he really said, but I paused when I
heard, “I am not homosexual.” We
looked deeply into each other’s eyes, and methinks he wasn’t really sure. But his statement gave me pause. Was I pushing too fast?
Time to slow down. Seduction has to be a subtle process, if
done well. I wasn’t interested in the
30-somethings’ equivalent of date rape.
I was interested in love. I
continued my massage, backing off from the erogenous zones and told Robbie
about finding the story, about finding out that he and his wife had divorced
and that I really did have ‘feelings’ for him that summer and that I felt happy
that I was able to come to Seattle. I
did manage in all this to knock the Mariners shirt off the top of the
couch. A small victory, anyway. I had gotten to first base, I guess.
But wasn’t I being too tentative? Why couldn’t I say what I really felt? Why didn’t I say I loved him and wanted
him? Did I feel that he was resisting
too much, and maybe I was going a step too far? Maybe I needed to be a little less forceful, but more
truthful.
I guess he must have sensed my
thoughts. “Jake, I want to sleep on
this. It’s just too much coming at once,” Robbie said, nervously, rolling
to a sitting position on the couch. I’m sure he knew for sure where I was
going with that evening. I glanced down
at his shorts again and grinned and thought that maybe I wasn’t that far ahead
of him after all.
“G’night.
Thanks again for dinner—and the massage,” Robbie said.
“Good
night.”
He leaned toward me, and I thought he
was going to kiss me, but he turned and disappeared up the stairs, leaving me
to myself, wondering what my next step could be. I had resolved at the outset of the evening to seduce Robbie, and
I had almost done it, but Robbie, exasperatingly, refused to respond as he was
supposed to—except where he couldn’t control his body.
What next? I turned out the lights and lay down on the couch, staring at the
ceiling, wondering what to do, wondering what to do about the tightness in my
pants. Should I try again later? Should I relieve myself? Did I have time to seduce Robbie before I
went back to Boston if I didn’t do it this night? No, I told myself, there was time left in this evening, Robbie
had been tempted, I knew from his physical reaction, and maybe I should take
advantage of the dinner, the soft lights and all my preparations.
I remembered what I had done in
Mississippi, what he had described in his story: placing my hand on his thigh.
A light went off in my head. If
at first you don’t succeed, try, try again—even if it’s 14 years later.
I knocked really softly on his
bedroom door and didn’t hear a response.
I opened it quietly and in the light from the hall, I could see Robbie
asleep, showing his torso, naked from the waist up, with his boxers on the
floor and the sheet covering his lower body.
I brought a candle from the living room and set it on Robbie’s
dresser. I took the chair across from
his bed and sat there, watching this man I loved in the soft light of the
candle, wondering when to go farther.
Robbie was not sleeping well. He was twisting and turning. He tossed the blankets off and pulled the
sheets over him, but not before I caught sight of his half-hard penis. I sat and kept looking. I must have dozed off, because when I awoke,
Robbie was sleeping more soundly, and he had this wonderful erection tenting
the sheets.
It was time.
I got up and sat down on the edge of
the bed and placed my hand on the top of his thigh, just as I had done so many
years earlier. In a while Robbie’s eyes
popped open.
“It’s one o’clock. I couldn’t sleep,” I said. I wanted also to say that this was the
time—the time for us to come together, but I thought that might sound like an
ultimatum. But I left my hand where it
was, and we gazed into each other’s eyes.
“Would it help you to know that my hand wasn’t where it was 14 years ago by
accident?” There was silence.
“Sawyer, were you trying to… ?”
“I suppose so,” I said, smiling. “Yes. Maybe. Maybe I was
just horny. Maybe it was more.” I
went on to describe my ambivalent feelings that night and how I didn’t want to
press things too much, lest I risk our friendship. Funny, my feelings were no longer ambivalent, but I just knew now
our friendship at least would be there, no matter what.
“The
friendship that didn’t even merit a postcard for 14 years, Sawyer?”
A dose of reality? Or a diversion. In either case, my ears burned. “Yes, that very
friendship.” And then I had to tell
Robbie what he meant to me then—as a colleague and, most of all, as a
person. “I was afraid, though, that if
I pressed things that night, I would lose you--forever. But on that hot,
hot last night I realized I was in love with that young man who had shared a
bed with me all summer.” And then I confessed that I contrived to let my
hand rest on him that night. And I told
him that I knew he was awake and that he was deciding something. But his decision was to turn away, and then
the summer was over. I told Robbie all
this, knowing that there was no question he knew I was gay now—as I probably
was even then. I wasn’t going to move
my hand until he made a decision again, because I knew what he had been
thinking 14 years earlier.
I changed the pressure on his
thigh. “My god. Oh, my god,” he said.
“You’re repeating yourself. You said that 14 years ago.”
“No, I didn’t! I thought
that.” Then Robbie giggled, sounding guilty that he had revealed too
much. “I thought you had read my
story.”
We looked at each other for several
minutes. Then Robbie told me all the
reasons he couldn’t do anything with me.
“Rob, you think too much,” I said to him.
It was time to move forward. I
leaned over and put my lips lightly on his, then pulled back again. “And
don’t think I haven’t had thoughts about this, too. It’s new to me.
But I need you, Robbie, particularly right now—at this time in my life. I
need you like I’ve needed no other person in my life. I need you as a
friend, as someone to confess to and as someone to love and someone to make
love to—and, most importantly, someone to wake up next to in the morning.”
Then I told him about my careful
seduction plan for the evening. I had
now spent all my ammunition. My guns
were empty. There was nothing more that
I could say to further my seduction.
“Leave!” he said in what sounded like a harsh tone. I felt devastated. Tears nearly sprang to my eyes.
I was truly frightened that now that I had decided I was gay I would end
up all alone—without the person I wanted in my future. I felt I was about to lose my grasp on the
lifeline that I had rebuilt to Robbie.
“Out! Out!” he said more softly. “I just need some time to think, Sawyer, without
your goddamned hand sidetracking my brain. Come back in 15
minutes.”
Yes! And I felt relief and joy surge through me
like surf across a flat beach. “No,
come back in ten minutes, and I’ll make my decision.”
I was ecstatic. The decision, I knew, had been made, and now
it was protocol. Ten minutes, he
said. The clock said 1:37, and I would
be back exactly at 1:47. I went down to
the kitchen and poured a glass of orange juice from the carton in the
refrigerator. 1:39. I went to the bathroom. 1:41.
I went to Alec’s bedroom and changed clothes—into my best Red Sox
t-shirt. 1:45.
“Sawyer,” I heard the shout, “come
back!” I would have run across a
tightrope stretched across a chasm at that point. I felt like a 15-year-old with an opportunity to get laid for the
first time. I didn’t know what to do or
how to proceed. I laughed to
myself. What kind of a seducer was
that?
I sat down on Robbie’s bed, totally
unsure of what to do just at the time I needed to act. I sat there for a couple of minutes,
fidgeting. Robbie broke the ice. He took my hand and placed it back on the
top of his thigh—where it had been 10 minutes and 14 years before. Then he turned toward me and I felt the warm
and soft and hard of his penis on the back of my hand. And it was Robbie. And he moved his lips toward me, and I bent and kissed him. It was truly unbelievable. If I had any doubts about being gay—and I
still had faint ones despite my decision on my sexuality—they dissipated in the
softness of his lips and the sweet sighs that passed between us.
I slid my hand further between his
thighs, then brought my fingers up to caress the base of his testicles and rub
the shaft of his penis. It was another
first—the feel of a cock, with its special textures and shape. I couldn’t get enough. I let my fingers move along his shaft and
through his pubes. I felt nothing but
warmth and new senses under my fingers.
All these months since the talk with my father seemed to be leading to
this place, to the physical expression of the deep love I had for Robbie.
“Off with the boxers. Off with
that goddam shirt, particularly” Robbie said. “I want to see the rest of
you. I want to see all of you.”
And so I did a striptease—to the
music that was playing in my heart, a slow sweet tune, a love song. When I finished, I was standing next to the
bed, my groin at Robbie’s eye level, and he pulled me to him and let my penis
rub against his cheek and let my pubic musk fill his senses. He wet his thumb and I could feel the soft
caress over the head of my cock. I was
getting unbelievably turned on—to the depth of my senses and the foundations of
my soul.
He looked up and pulled my face to
him. Our kisses started slowly—brief
touches of the lips—and then turned fiercer with our passion, as our bodies
moved and clenched against one another.
It was the simplest of sex acts that
first time: our cocks held together by
our hands, warmth against warmth, hard and soft against hard and soft. And then it was as if electricity had flowed
from my body into Robbie’s and his into mine weaving us together in surges of
common ecstasy. I don’t know how to
explain it, but, somehow at that moment, this most simple of sex acts was like
the most intimate sex we could ever imagine.
We lay there afterwards in a
stupor. Then, we talked. We joked.
We gave points to each other and stole them back. When I finally came down from the long
afterglow, Robbie had fallen asleep. I,
on the other hand, couldn’t fall asleep.
I was enthralled in the wonder of it all—at the end of a journey. I had what I wanted. I had who I wanted. I had confirmed my sexuality. I had confirmed that the person that I
wanted for the rest of my life, lying right next to me, wanted me, too.
I went to the bathroom and wetted a
washcloth with warm soapy water, took it to the bed and dabbed the remains of
our passion from Robbie’s stomach and chest—and then from mine. When I finished, I tossed the washrag
towards the bathroom—a good shot, I might add—and repeated my cleansing
motions, but this time with caresses.
Warm sounds came from his sleep as I moved my fingers and hands across
him.
I lay there for about an hour, wide
awake and alert, happy, just watching the rise and fall of Robbie’s chest,
letting my fingers stroke his body, hearing the warm sounds coming from
him. Then, I got up, snuffed out the
candles and climbed in bed with him, linking his body to mine and putting my
arm across his torso, and quickly fell asleep.
* * * * *
I woke before Robbie did, with my
body still spooned against his. I
rolled over and lay on my back, arms behind my head, alternating stares at the
ceiling and at Robbie’s naked torso. I
could see a tuft of black hair under his armpits. I could see a band of hair on his lower back above where the
sheet covered his butt. I felt a wondrous
stirring in my groin. I know it had
taken a god-awfully long time, but my seduction plan had worked. I smiled to myself. I realized I was being a bit too
self-congratulatory, but what the hell:
I was more content than I’d been in a long time.
I could see Robbie stirring, as his
breath changed from deep-sleep long breaths to shorter ones, and then his arms
and legs started to move. I rolled over
to look at the expanse of his back, and I took my finger and wrote “I love you”
maybe a hundred times on the soft skin between and under his shoulder blades.
Finally, he turned over and faced
me, his eyes glistening. “I love you,
too,” he said. I let my finger drift
through the hair on his chest, moving it back and forth in a slow rhythm. We gazed at each other and looked down each
other’s bodies to where they disappeared in the promise of the sheets. The longer we gazed, the more nervous Robbie
seemed to become.
“What are we doing, Sawyer? What the hell are we doing?” His voice
rose from quiet to what felt like a loud cry of anguish, though I’m sure it
wasn’t loud at all.
That was not what I’d expected, and
his question took me aback, pulling me from my reverie. “We’re completing what we almost started
years ago, Robbie?” But his rising
sense of uncertainty seemed to be contagious.
Maybe the spurt of joy I had felt last night was too optimistic. His hesitancy made me likewise hesitant
about what was passion, fear, love, and lust.
I told him as much. I told him
that I, too, was just testing the physical waters of my homosexuality, though I
was probably up to my testicles and he was still at his ankles.
Robbie’s face softened, and it
seemed as if he had made a decision of some kind. He leaned forward to kiss me.
I was okay—no, I was overjoyed—with what I interpreted as acceptance.
The kiss was the start. We spent the day in sexual bliss, exploring
each other’s bodies, expanding our sexual knowledge of each other—tasting,
sucking, fondling, grasping, learning, finding the erogenous places. And we fell asleep in each other’s arms at
the end of the day.
* * * * *
The next morning I couldn’t wait to
tell Robbie the other good news—that my company was going to move to Seattle
permanently. And I didn’t need even to
tell Robbie what my plans were, because Robbie raised the issue on his own. But the result was not what I expected.
We had wakened the next morning with
our world in a different state—a state of love and bliss and ‘I love
yous.’
Robbie joked about my return to
Boston, asking if I would send him postcards and mementoes from Boston when I
went back. Of course, I would send him
mementoes. Of course, I would send him
erotic postcards. Of course, I would call him and send him mash notes. But I told him I didn’t need to—at least for
long—because, as I and Drew only knew, our company was relocating to Seattle,
stressing that the information was to be held in confidence.
I thought Robbie would be overjoyed
when I told him what our company was going to do. I certainly was overjoyed by developments. I wasn’t prepared for Robbie’s
reaction.
I think his reaction stemmed from
the fact that Robbie had always seen things differently from me. He had his unique way at looking at the
world, and that was usually one reason I loved him. But sometimes his perspective surprised me. This was one of those times.
In his mind what we were having was
a fling—a temporary affair. And I had thought,
after the last day and the last few months, that it had already turned into something
nearly permanent. I had misjudged our
relationship—badly. He saw what we were
doing as a fantasy. I thought it the
greatest reality that I had ever experienced.
Besides openly expressing my love for the love of my life, it was the
final step in the acknowledgement that I was gay, that what I wanted in my life
was a permanent relationship—with a man, and one man in particular.
This whole thing, this past day of
joy and love, to him, was not permanent, judging at least from his reaction, or
so it seemed to me. I was crushed. No, I was bitter. I was so disappointed that I became pissed. I had worked so hard to get to this point,
and Robbie thought it was a cruise-ship romance, “a reality for a week or
so.” He actually used those words.
I burst out with words I didn’t
really want to say: “A reality for a
week or so?” I mimicked Robbie’s voice. “Christ, I’m sorry I
mentioned anything about coming back from Boston.”
He was taken aback by my
vehemence. “I’m really
conflicted. I told you that. On the one hand, I guess I’m really
happy you will be here in Seattle—in fact, I’m overjoyed. On the other
hand, I’m terrified of the change.”
“Terrified
of the change? All you wanted was a one-night stand or a one-week stand?
That’s not what I want. I want more. I want you. If you don’t
want more, it would be better for me to leave now.”
“No, please don’t.” His voice was full
of anguish.
“I do have to go back to Boston in two weeks—for a couple of months. If, when I
come back, you don’t want to have anything to do with me—”
“That’s not what I mean, Sawyer.”
“…then we can start over—or not. It’ll be up to you.” I said the last
sentence with steel rising with each word Then I left. I went across the hall to Alec’s room,
closing the door firmly behind me. And
I collapsed onto Alec’s bed and burst into tears. Were they tears because I was so fucked up? Were they tears of frustration because the
world I was beginning to construct in the past few weeks had just fallen
apart? Were they tears of anger at
Robbie? Or, were they tears because of
what I might have lost?
I sat on the top of Alec’s bed, my
arms wrapped around my knees, rocking back and forth as these thoughts piled
through me, my voice near keening with a low cry of anguish.
There was a knock on the door.
“Fuck off,” I yelled.
“Did you say, ‘Come in’?”
I melted when I saw Robbie’s face
and his offering of coffee and pastries.
I melted more when he came over to me and rubbed my back. My resolve to leave him was utterly undercut
by this gesture, this show of affection.
I turned to him in complete forgiveness, and I pulled him to me for a
kiss. We talked and we came to an
understanding: Robbie needed more time
to accept our change in circumstance.
In the meantime—till I went back to Boston—we would live in his world—in
the world of fantasy. And after I
returned to Boston we would reassess where we were. It wasn’t what I wanted, but I could accept his proposal.
As if I had a choice.
Our kisses turned to lovemaking, to
taking each other deeper and deeper into each other’s mouths, to learning
better those special places that brought pleasure, to listening to the
responses to caresses, grasps, pressure, lips, chin bristle, tongue, mouth and
time.
We came down from the violent burst
of pleasure to the afterglow, to feelings that spread both out from and toward
the pubic regions—feelings not intense, but soft and warm, like the caress of
warm tropical evening air; feelings of the slow retreat from orgasm and the
soft echo of our triumphant senses.
Robbie eventually got up and poured us cups of coffee and brought us the
pastries he had come in with earlier.
We lay there rubbing our feet against each other’s, sipping coffee and
feeding each other pastry as if the past hour had not taken place. Then we made love again—and again. It was a protein day. It was to be a big protein two weeks, until
I could no longer put off my return to Boston.
* * * * *
“The jig is up,” Robbie said as I
came in the door shortly after six one evening the next week. “Alec knows. He observed that his bed hadn’t been slept in.” Robbie raised his eyebrows, though, in a seductive manner, so I didn’t think his
statements were going to affect our ‘fling.’
“We weren’t careful enough.”
I’d wondered how long it would take
for a curious 13 year old to realize that something was going on between his
father and this man that came from Boston and the past.
“Is he okay with…us?” I asked.
“Yes.” Robbie hesitated. “I had
to tell him I was probably…gay. Really,
I had to tell myself that I was probably gay, which was probably more difficult
than telling him.” Robbie paused. “I think I’m gay, Jake, at least with
you.”
I started laughing. “I know
I’m gay, Robbie, and I know I love you, and it’s probably not just because of you. If you were to disappear from my life, I
think I’d still be gay.” I leaned over
and kissed him lightly on the lips. He
leaned back and kissed me—not lightly.
About an hour later, we climbed out of his bed and went to the kitchen
so I could finally get something solid to eat.
* * * * *
The next two weeks were a blur of
work and Robbie and sex. I wanted to
make the most of Robbie’s ‘fling,’ to reel him in as much as I could before I
had to go back to Boston. My return there was going to be the
test: whether our affair was this
cruise-ship fling or something more. As
I got on the plane I wondered if the absence would make the heart grow fonder,
or if the romance would fade again,
leaving me in a void--into another dozen years of self-imposed wandering.
To be continued…
Copyright 2005,
2007. Comments will be welcome at
vwl1999 at lycos.com
Thanks to Sharon for editing!
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