Read Don't Read in the Closet: Volume Four Online
Authors: Various Authors
Tags: #Don't Read in the Closet, #mm romance, #gay
sport—and he wanted to do something to get in shape. After three
years on the team, he’d become damn good at rowing. Over time, he’d
developed his upper body, and now, when he rowed, it felt like he was
dancing on the water. He liked how his body felt, and he liked how he
looked. With all that exercise, his abs were ripped and his chest and
biceps bulged.
This trip to Brazil was the first time he’d been so completely on
his own. In Brazil, he was independent. No parents. No crewmates.
There was no one on the Amazon tour, in fact, who knew anything
about him. And he liked that. In this remote spot, he could become
someone he’d never been before.
Matt had begun to change himself the moment he arrived in
Brazil. For one thing, he’d stopped shaving. In the first five days, he’d
grown enough facial hair to give his face a new shape. On the
morning of the canoe trip, he’d shaped his beard into a goatee. He’d
put on the new clothes he’d picked up in Manaus: a Brazilian tank top,
cargo shorts and sandals. The cargo shorts he bought were real bun
huggers. The tank top was camo military square cut, tight across his
chest. He liked how he looked in these clothes. They made him feel fit
and powerful.
The rhythm of “Jungle Strut” pulsed in his ears. He felt like he’d
become one with the canoe; one with the river; and one with the dense
canopy of trees along the riverbank. He saw something in the corner
of his eye. Up to his right a Marmoset monkey hung by one arm on a
vine beside the river. Matt raised his paddle to wave at the monkey.
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The monkey gazed back at him with an amused look, and wagged its
free arm.
As soon as Matt raised his paddle, he realized the canoe was
moving on its own. He rested his arms, and let the current pull him
along. The other rowers were charging ahead. But Matt preferred to
float along and soak in the scenery. Off to his left he glimpsed the
yellow wings of butterflies and macaws. He closed his eyes. He
imagined himself from up in outer space, looking back at himself on
earth. He could picture just how far he was from Michigan and from
the circumstances of his usual life.
When he opened his eyes, he saw a bend coming up in the river.
In fact, he could no longer see the woman in front of him. As the river
bent to the right, it eclipsed his sightline. He stuck his oar back in the
water and paddled. The current was moving at a good clip. Small
crests of whitewater signaled an even stronger current ahead. The
other canoers must have gotten away from him when they got onto the
rapids. He rowed faster. The river continued to bend out ahead of him
in a long gradual arc to the right. Just ahead, he saw a fork. The river
split into two channels. He had to decide what to do.
It looked to Matt like the main part of the river was on the right.
The current was pulling him that way. He figured that had to be the
main channel. But the left fork was big too, bigger than any of the
other tributaries he’d seen. If the river split into two channels that
went around an island, it wouldn’t matter which way he went. He
shrugged and let the current take him to the right.
He paddled hard. He was coursing down the river at a fast clip
now. But even after ten minutes of hard paddling, he couldn’t see the
others. That bothered him. Something was wrong. It was too late to
turn around. The current was too strong to back paddle. There was
nothing for him to do but get around the island as fast as he could, and
rejoin the group. The others must have taken the left fork.
After fifteen minutes, the river forked again. This time he took the
left channel. That was only logical. He popped the earbuds out of his
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ears. He didn’t feel like hearing more drum music. He listened for
anything that might help him figure out where he was. But all he
heard was the buzz of insects.
Then he looked ahead and his heart sank. Now the river was
curving back to the right. That didn’t make sense, not if it was going
to work its way around an island. Maybe he should go ashore. He
could portage on land to walk back to the main channel. He had to do
something. He couldn’t just keep rowing deeper into the jungle on his
own.
“The hell with it,” he said. “I’m going ashore.” He paddled to the
left bank, to a spot clear enough of trees and vines that he could climb
ashore. He got out of the canoe, tied it up, hauled his backpack out of
the boat, and sat down beside it. He saw thick jungle growth in every
direction. He only had a pocketknife. It would be useless against the
tangle of trunks and vines around him. The reality of his predicament
was sinking in.
It occurred to him that the best thing to do was to stay put. By
now, the rest of the group would have noticed he wasn’t behind them.
The tour guide knew all the ins and outs of the river. He was probably
already on his walkie-talkie calling for help. All Matt had to do was
stay and wait for them to come find him. He should tie something
bright on the canoe, so they’d see it when they came to get him. He
pulled his yellow t-shirt out of his pack and tied it on the end of the
canoe.
Then he surveyed the area around him to decide where to settle in.
The clearing went about thirty feet into the jungle. The trees and brush
beyond stood up like the walls of fortress. That was OK. He didn’t
have to go into the jungle anyway. The whole point of staying put was
to be near the river when the rescue party arrived.
He turned his attention to his backpack. He went through his gear
to see what he had to work with. He’d packed a light hammock. That
was perfect. He could string it up to sleep on if no one came before
dark. Thank God, he had a flashlight. Even better, he had mosquito
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netting and insect repellent. There was also a water bottle and some
energy bars. It wasn’t much to survive on, but it would last a little
while. At the bottom of his pack, he found his journal. He’d brought it
to write about his adventures. Now, at least, he’d have something to
write about.
He carried his gear to the back of the clearing, sat down and
leaned against a tree. He closed his eyes and listened intently. He
didn’t hear anything alarming, just birds chirping and insects buzzing.
That was good. He had no desire to encounter any Amazon wildlife.
There were all sorts of animals in the jungle: snakes, crocodiles,
monkeys. The insects were bad enough. They’d gotten louder since he
arrived, as if they sensed he was there. He took out his Deep Woods
Off and sprayed every exposed part of his skin. For good measure, he
unfurled his mosquito netting and draped it on himself like a snuggie.
Now all he could do was wait. An hour went by. He looked at the
angle of the sun. It would be dark soon. It was time to put up his
hammock. He might as well try to relax. He strung the hammock
between a pair of small trees. He picked up his journal and got in the
hammock. What he’d written so far was tame, compared to what he
was thinking about writing now.
Then he heard something stir. It was faint, barely a flutter. Maybe
it was his imagination. He’d been alone in the clearing for three hours.
The solitude was giving him the heebie-jeebies. Wait! There it was
again: a barely audible rustling sound. He looked around. There was
nothing to see. But he’d heard something move. He was sure of it.
Something was there—just beyond the wall of trees. He lay still in the
hammock—listening. Minutes ticked by. He thought he heard what
seemed like muffled breath. Maybe somebody or something was
watching him.
Matt shook his head. He decided he’d better get control of his
thoughts. He was letting himself get paranoid. If he went on like that,
nothing good would come of it. This was just the kind of place for
delusions. People in unfamiliar circumstances were always imagining
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strange noises, weren’t they? He couldn’t let his imagination get the
best of him. What he ought to do was snap out of it and take a nap. He
could sleep a bit, and by the time he woke up, maybe the rescue party
would have come along. It wasn’t yet pitch dark. He figured he’d
sleep more easily while there was still some light. That way if
something came and woke him, at least he would see what it was.
He put away his journal. He pulled the netting over his legs and
chest. He lay back on the hammock and closed his eyes. He thought
about his dorm room back in Ann Arbor. Back at the dorm, he would
often fall asleep listening to music. That gave him an idea. He reached
down and pulled his MP3 player out of his pack. He queued up a set
of Bach piano preludes. The preludes were gentle. That was the ticket.
He needed something restful, something reassuring. He lay back
again. He settled into the hammock and closed his eyes. The gentle,
profound, fugal melodies tinkled in his ear. And then, while he
imagined himself rowing down the Huron River with his crew team
back in Michigan, he fell asleep.
Something suddenly bumped the hammock. Matt opened his left
eye. A strange man stood over him, pointing a machete at his face.
The man glared at Matt with a hostile expression. Matt opened his
other eye. The man did not speak. He just stood there, brandishing the
machete, as if daring Matt to make a move. Matt was frozen.
The man’s dark eyelashes made the whites of his eyes stand out,
which intensified the effect of his stare. His skin was brown. His hair
was black, but cut short so it was like a coating of black down. The
man was naked from the waist up. His chest was smooth and hairless.
Matt didn’t dare look any lower. He didn’t know what to do. He still
had the earbuds in his ears. The Bach piano preludes were set on
repeat. Even now, one of the fugues was tinkling in his ear in jarring
contrast to the mood of the moment. Matt opened his mouth to speak.
He said, “Who are you?” He couldn’t think of what else to say.
The stranger said nothing. He held the machete perfectly still in
his right hand. With his left hand, he reached out and yanked the
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earbuds out of Matt’s ears. He looked quizzically at the MP3 player
that came up dangling at the end of the headphone wires. Without
taking his eyes off Matt, the man stuck one of the earbuds in his right
ear. His face was expressionless. Nothing broke his stare. He gaped at
Matt like he was studying a strange animal. There was a momentary
flicker in his eyes, as if his attention turned for a second to the Bach
music in his ear. But the flicker quickly vanished. He pulled the
headphone out of his ear. Then he stepped back and motioned Matt to
get out of the hammock.
When the stranger stepped back, Matt saw that he wore tailored
cotton pants. Matt wondered what kind of person he was dealing with.
The man looked Brazilian. His nose was straight, not flat. His skin
was clear and golden brown. His lips fell somewhere between
European and African bloodlines. They were full on the bottom but
not on the top. His pants were tight enough to show he had muscular
thighs and calves. The smallness of his waist emphasized the fullness
of his butt and the V-shape of his torso. His chest and arms weren’t as
bulky as Matt’s. But he looked exceptionally strong. Matt doubted he
could overpower the man, even if he weren’t wielding a machete.
Matt got out of the hammock and stood up. Now it was his turn to
be sized up. The man turned his gaze from Matt’s face to his body. He
felt the man’s eyes pass over his square cut tank top. Then he felt
them move past his waist to his legs. He felt like he was being looked