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Authors: marshall thornton

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Looking down at him in the dim light, the thought flashed across my mind that he could have been Daniel. That he should have been Daniel. That if I’d moved more quickly, recognized the danger earlier, if I’d been able to stop that bat from swinging, we’d have gone home that night.

And we would have ended up in a happy, relieved, drunken--

“Please,” Brian whispered, pulling me back to the present. “Make me come.”

I picked up my pace and started jacking him off. His body went taut, and he let out a long moan as he shot all over his stomach. My own orgasm took me by surprise, and I almost didn’t realize I was coming in him until it was nearly over.

I fell on top of him, and he slipped his arms around me. His come spread over my belly, sticky and warm, as we held each other. When he began to cry softly, I remembered that he was nearly a boy. A boy who’d just learned his mother was dying and whose stepfather had tried to kill him.

Boystown - 48

It must have all come rushing back in on him. Maybe that’s what the sex had been for, I thought, to give him a few minutes without death and betrayal. A few minutes of oblivion.

I held him until he stopped crying. “It’s been a busy night,” I said. “I suppose I should go.”

He nodded. When I got out of bed, Brian didn’t bother putting any clothes on. He just lay naked on his rumpled sheets, his dick now red and sore-looking as it lazed along his thigh.

I picked up my jeans; they were soaked and freezing cold. There was no way I could slip them back on. I turned around and looked at Brian. “It’s okay,” he said. “You can stay. There’s a dryer in the basement. I’ll put some clothes on and take your stuff down.”

He didn’t move, though. I stood awkwardly in the center of his room, feeling very naked. He seemed like he was warming up to say something. Finally, he did. “What you did for me... I don’t know how to thank you.”

“Don’t worry about it,” I told him.

“I’m going to Springfield in the morning. I want to see my mother again, before she... there’s an early train. If I give you my phone number down there, will you call me?”

“Sure,” I told him. He looked at me like I’d just told him a big lie. And maybe he was right. I had no idea if I’d call him. I sat down on the bed. I could have turned around and cuddled him again.

But the mood had shifted.

“There’s someone else you’re in love with, isn’t there?” he guessed.

“No,” I lied. “There isn’t anyone.”

Boystown - 49

LITTLE BOY BURNED

That Valentine’s Day I was sleeping alone -- by choice.

I was in the middle of a sex dream about the kid in that island movie that came out last year, the one about the boy and girl who get shipwrecked, run around mostly naked, and eventually learn about sex. In my dream, though, there wasn’t any girl on the island, and things between the kid and I had begun to get hot and heavy when the phone rang.

“Yeah,” I said, untangling my hard on from my twisted boxers. I glanced at the clock. It was 6:12 a.m. I’d slept a little more than two hours.

“Nick, it’s Ross.” His voice was electric. “Something’s happened. Paradise is on fire.”

“I’ll be there in a couple of minutes.”

I worked the door at Paradise Isle two nights a week and had for a couple of years. Ross was one of the bartenders and my occasional fuck buddy. The nightclub, which we usually called just Paradise, was part of a string of brick storefronts down on Broadway right above Diversey. Ross and I had both finished shifts just hours before.

Groggy and a little horny, I threw on some clothes and ran out to find a cab. It had been easier to find one at three a.m. In the wee hours of a Sunday, cabs cruised around ready to take late-night revelers home. But by six-thirty they’d become scarce. It took almost ten minutes, but I finally got one, and it zipped me down Clark to Diversey. We couldn’t make the V turn to get onto Broadway because fire trucks blocked the way. I paid the driver and hopped out.

I got there about six-forty. Smoke was still pouring out of the top of the building, but it looked like the fire was winding down. The sky in the east had turned pink, and I figured the sun would be up in a few minutes. The air was frigid cold, but at least it wasn’t snowing. Two big, red fire trucks sat in front of the bar. Hoses crisscrossed the street. Firemen scuttled back and forth; the sidewalk slick with icy water, washing away the dirty snow that currently graced most curbs in Chicago.

I saw our DJ, Miss Minerva Jones, standing on the east side of Broadway in a small crowd. I made my way over. I’d never seen Miss Minerva out of a dress. Usually she favored wrap-around silk disco dresses, six-inch heels, over-teased blond wigs, and a dusting of glitter. That morning, though, she wore a pair of Sergio Valente jeans with their bull’s-head logo stitched into the back pockets and a gray parka. She’d left her wig at home and made a half-hearted attempt to take off her makeup. Whiskers were starting to poke their way through the remaining streaks of foundation.

Boystown - 50

When she saw me, she growled, “Every album I own is in there.” In the DJ booth, there were about five milk crates stuffed with the best disco ever recorded. “My life is ruined,” she moaned.

“What happened?” I asked.

“No one knows. I was getting ready for bed when I heard the sirens.” Miss Minerva had a studio apartment a block away on Clark Street. “They kept getting louder and louder. When they stopped, I knew. I called Davey and then Ross.”

I looked around and saw the owner, Davey, and Ross talking with a fireman. Ross was wearing a long, gray wool coat that was actually mine. He’d borrowed it a couple weeks back and now seemed unwilling to return it. Too thin for this weather, the only way I got away with wearing it in winter was to layer up with a corduroy blazer, a flannel shirt, and a T-shirt. Ross wasn’t wearing anything underneath but a BVD T-shirt. Even from where I stood, I could see him shivering.

“Bernie was inside,” Miss Minerva said flatly. Bernie was another of the bartenders. I didn’t know him well. He’d started on the afternoon shift and had only recently begun working the peak nights, Friday and Saturday. I had noticed that, like all of Davey’s bartenders, he was a very good-looking boy.

“Is he dead?” I asked.

“No. He’s burned pretty bad. They took him to the hospital a few minutes ago.” She was sullen, seeming to grind her expensive caps.

“What time did this start?” I asked.

She shrugged. “Not long ago. Close to six?”

“What was Bernie doing here at six in the morning?

“Sleeping in the storeroom,” Miss Minerva said. Then with a roll of her eyes she added,

“Boyfriend trouble.”

I nodded, then headed over to join Davey, Ross, and the fireman. As I walked over, I noticed that an axe had been used to get through the front door where I usually stood checking IDs and keeping an eye out for trouble.

Davey and Ross greeted me, and I patted Davey on the shoulder.

The fireman wore stiff, yellow turnout gear that made him seem enormous. His face was smudged with soot, and he smelled like sweet, acrid smoke. He explained, “It appears the fire began near the bar or possibly even behind it. Accelerants were used, but it could have been bottles of liquor.”

Boystown - 51

“151 Rum would have done it,” said Ross.

“It’s arson,” the fireman said bluntly.

Davey went pale. “Someone did this on purpose?”

“We’re not finding any signs of forced entry.”

“What does that mean?” Davey asked.

“It could mean a lot of things,” I interrupted. Davey didn’t seem to understand the situation, but I did, and I didn’t think he should say anything else. The fireman gave me a look. His eyes were a sharp blue. We stared each other down for a moment. And then he said, “I’ll be back to talk to you later.” He walked away.

Davey shook his head, confused. Paradise was his world. It was the second bar he’d put together.

The first had been called The Cellar and had a five-year run in Old Town. He’d hit at just the right time. Disco was big then, and there had been long lines around the block on Fridays and Saturdays. Paradise Isle was successful, but not on the same scale.

Ross pulled out a pack of Camel Lights. He offered me one, and I took it. We lit up and smoked for a minute. “If there are no signs of forced entry, it means that whoever started the fire was let in or had a key,” I explained.

“They had a key?” Davey wondered. “How would they get a key?”

“They might have hidden somewhere,” suggested Ross. “In the bathroom maybe?”

I took a drag on my cigarette and said, “The thing is, Davey, you’re gonna be the most likely suspect.”

He blushed a little. “I have an alibi.” Davey had a much younger, Asian boyfriend who barely spoke English and called the bar if Davey was five minutes late leaving.

“Doesn’t matter,” I said. “You could have hired someone to start the fire.”

“I love this place. I would never burn it down.”

“You have insurance, right?”

He nodded.

“That’s your motive.”

“What, they think I burned the place down so I could redecorate?”

Boystown - 52

I smiled. “That’s a better reason than some I’ve heard.”

“I have to go to the hospital and see how Bernie’s doing,” Davey said, as though to himself. He walked away without saying goodbye. Then he turned and came back.

“Find out,” he said. “Find out who did this.”

* * *

I could have told Davey this wasn’t exactly the kind of case I took. As a private investigator, I handled mostly background checks, a little security, and the occasional skip trace. I’d never done an arson investigation, even when I was on patrol. Sure, in the six years I spent on the job with the Chicago PD, I’d worked some fires, but only around the edges -- crowd control and canvassing neighborhoods. I’d never been the actual investigator.

Still, Davey was in trouble, and I couldn’t turn him down.

Ross and I walked up to The Melrose and had some breakfast. The Sunday morning breakfast rush had just begun. The crowd reflected the neighborhood and was a mix of preppies, who worked downtown in the financial district, and queers, who worked wherever they could. The thing they had in common was sleeping late on Sunday mornings, picking up the
Sunday Herald,
and chowing down on eggs Benedict.

We slipped into a red vinyl booth and asked for coffee. It took a while, but when it finally came, Ross asked me, “What should we do first?”

I ignored the question -- particularly the ‘we’ part -- and instead asked, “How was your Valentine’s Day?”

“We worked, remember?”

“After that.” Ross had a boyfriend named Earl Silver who wrote a gossip column, called The Silver Spoon, for the
Daily Herald
and had a wife and kids in Naperville. He’d shown up at Paradise just after midnight and waited until Ross got off at two a.m.

“It was okay. Nice, I guess.” He studied me for a moment, “You’re not jealous, are you?”

“Of course I am,” I joked. “I’ve always had a thing for Earl.”

“Right,” Ross said, then asked his question again. “So, what are we going to do first?”

I considered for a moment. It wasn’t my style to work with a partner, but I had no intention of sending Davey a bill and a lot needed doing. Part of me didn’t want Ross around while I investigated this, but the offer was too good to pass up.

Boystown - 53

“We need to knock on doors and see if anyone saw anything. We should try to get started around eight-thirty, before people start their day.”

Ross nodded. “What should I ask?”

“Basically, if they saw anything. And if they did, find out exactly what they saw. You could also ask if they’ve seen anything suspicious in the last week or so, especially at night.”

“Got it,” said Ross. “So... who do you think did it?”

“No idea. What kind of enemies does Davey have?” Though we’d both known Davey the same amount of time, Ross worked shifts during the week when business was slower and the staff had more downtime. He was more likely to see or hear things than I was.

“Everyone loves Davey,” he said.

“Fire inspector been in recently?” I asked.

“I don’t know. Maybe.” Ross looked at me funny. “You don’t think someone in the fire department...”

“Probably not. Davey’s been in the business a long time. He knows who to pay off. Still, it was worth asking.”

“You have to bribe people?” Ross came from a town downstate aptly named Normal.

“It’s Chicago. If you don’t make the right payoffs, they write you up and fine you until you do. I suppose if you’re really stubborn they might burn you out.” I shrugged.

A waitress came by and took our order. I had a rib-eye steak with eggs, while Ross ordered a Belgian waffle with strawberries. I chuckled to myself. Waffles were a kid’s breakfast, and Ross reminds me of a big kid. He’s a boy-man. Freckles and a cowlick over his left eye, and he has arms that are so muscular, he could crack open a walnut in the crook of his elbow.

When the waitress left, I asked, “You see any Outfit types coming in?”

“Outfit?”

“Yeah, like mafia.”

“I really am a hick, aren’t I?” Ross said. He thought about it for a moment. “Every so often there’s someone who stands out. Middle-aged guys who look kind of straight. But I don’t remember anyone who looked, you know, criminal.”

Bars like Paradise had been subject to various kinds of extortion by The Outfit for decades. If Davey had objected, refused, or even attempted to negotiate, he could have made himself a target for retaliation by The Outfit. For that matter, the Chicago PD has been known to operate in
Boystown - 54

exactly the same way, though since they couldn’t raid bars anymore they’d lost a lot of their leverage. “I’ll talk to Davey about that,” I said.

When our breakfasts arrived, we split up the neighborhood between bites. I took a fifteen-story building across from Paradise called The Shore. Shaped in a wide U, the building looked to have about a hundred apartments in it. Of course, I’d focus on the west side, which faced Broadway.

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