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Andy's Mom sends him to his childhood home to check on the house for Christmas -- and he can't avoid memories of the past, especially when Jake shows up on his doorstep to spark a fire in the unheated house. A story from the Dreamspinner Press 2008 Advent Calendar package "Christmas Dreams."
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Seitenzahl: 62
Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2008
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The Long Way Home
SOME Christmas. Guess it was going to be a white one after all, even though I hadn’t been dreaming of it.
The snow had been too light and dry to stick yet, swirling over the tarmac ever since I left the city. I rolled down the window and caught the unmistakable hint in the air that told me more snow was on the way. It didn’t matter much; the state was good about keeping the thruway cleared. I’d make it home all right.
It would be the first time since I’d graduated college that I was going home and my parents wouldn’t even be there. I always found some excuse to avoid going, and surprisingly, my mother accepted them no matter how lame.
But this year, they’d gone to Florida for the winter and my mother hadn’t bought my line when she called. She had a “feeling” that something was wrong at the house and ordered me to go check on it. She always claimed that she was psychic, and she was right just often enough to hang onto her reputation for womanly intuition.
When I told her I didn’t want to go, she asked what I was doing that was more important than doing a favor for my mother.
“Well, when you put it like that,” I’d said.
“I do. Andy, get your butt up there and call me to let me know you made it all right. Be careful driving.”
“I will, Mom.”
Which is why I found myself counting exits instead of sitting alone in my apartment in the city. The snow was coming down harder now and starting to stick. By the time I made it home, it was four inches deep.
Pulling into the driveway, it was hard knowing that they wouldn’t be there, my mother coming out to urge me to eat a snack to hold me until dinner, my father gruffly slapping me on the back and shaking my hand….
The house looked like it always did and it hit me how much I’d missed coming home. Not just to see my parents, but the feeling of being in a place I was completely familiar with. It was strange, as if I’d lived there in a previous life long ago, which in a way I guess was true.
I should have taken my bag inside and gotten settled right away, but just being home made me want to see the old fishing hole again. Instead of coming straight down, the snow was dancing sideways, as if promising that it would hold off long enough for me to walk there and back before dark if I started out now. I pulled my cap down to cover my ears and turned up the collar of my coat. With my hands dug into my pockets, I set out cross-country through our apple orchard, taking the shortcut from when we were kids.
The bare trees cast pale blue shadows across the new snow and the pond was frozen over, a flat disc of silvery grey surrounded by the wizened sumac at the edge. Where the creek flowed in the ice was thin and black, showing the sluggish current beneath.
The big flat rock still jutted out over the water like it always did. We used to sit there in the sun to dry off after swimming. I brushed off a spot and sat down cross-legged like I used to, squinting into the misty glare, wishing I could see Jake jump from the rope just one more time. It still hung there, rigid and glittering with ice, or maybe it was a new one, replaced by the boys who swam there now, whoever they were.
Maybe it was nostalgia, but I could swear the air felt balmy on my cheek and the sky was blue again as I watched Jake swing on the rope and launch himself into the water. For just one moment, it was as if time froze and I could see his naked body stretched out, achingly beautiful, muscles taut and firm, the round lushness of his ass as he soared through the air before cutting into the water sleekly.
How often had I wished that I’d owned a camera back then and could have captured that shot to keep it forever.
He’d always be laughing when he broke the surface and gave that little shake to get his hair out of his eyes.
From the time I first started to feel the unmistakable tug of attraction to other boys, rather than girls, the fishing hole became both heaven and hell for me. I would sneak glances at the other boys, getting a thrill from looking at their undeveloped torsos. It was the contours, hard instead of soft, angular instead of curvy, except for the sudden swell of their buttocks, the hint of something between their legs that kept me submerged most of the time.
Once I moved to the city, my fishing hole became the gay bars where you could find action every night of the week even if you were a quiet, nerdy guy like me.
But back then this was my personal fishing hole and Jake had played a starring role in all my fantasies. He developed faster than most of us, his lean body hardened with muscle. He had big biceps, and his forearms were defined under his tanned skin. Farm work developed his trapezius muscles, sloping along the top of his broad shoulders. Where other boys’ chests were flat, his pecs were filled out, with pink nipples that pebbled in the cold water so they cast tiny shadows on his chest in the sunlight.
He was adventurous. He was the one who’d tied the rope in the sycamore and swung into the water the first time, shouting with glee. And where he led, we all followed. He invented a complicated game of tag that had us all jumping off rocks and clambering up the tree in an attempt to escape from whoever was “it”.
He was loud, funny, and a star, even back then. And yet I was the one he chose to pal around with - quiet, introverted, and shy.
Jake was the flint that struck sparks from my steel.
The fishing hole lay between our farms on state land, part of a right-of-way for the power company. The other boys had to come further to join us but Jake was so much fun to hang out with that they did.
Some days, though, it was just us. Those days were magical for me. As if there was something unspoken that was understood just between the two of us.
Watching Jake was my greatest pleasure. I always wore my jockeys when I went in, but he swam in the buff. I used to love floating in the water and watching him climb the tree to get to the rope. The memory was so vivid to me, as if I was reliving a hot summer day and we were together again.
A snowflake hit me in the eye and shook me out of my reminiscences. The sky was still grey and the water was frozen hard. Like my heart. I laughed at the triteness of my passing sentiment and stood. Gazing over the fields in the direction of his family’s farm, I saw no lights in the dusk. Just grey fields blending into grey sky as if the grey went on forever.
It was pretty dark when I got back to the house. I unlocked the door and dropped my bag inside.
“Holy fuck.”
