Authors: Amy Lane
Tags: #Paperback, #Novel, #GLBT, #Contemporary, #Romance, #Contemporarygay, #M/M Romance, #dreamspinner press, #amy lane
walked in, and Cliff stood there the entire time, making cracks about
how maybe they could try not to funkify their next room, because this
one smelled like sweat socks.
Chris looked at Xander wryly and mouthed, “Sex socks” as they
were bent over tying their shoes, and Xander tried not to smirk, but their
smiles were a little forced, and a little sad. Whatever had been set in
motion by their secrecy and their game, by their love of basketball and
their love for each other, it was more than clear that it had already begun.
64
Amy Lane
Glory Days
WHEN all was said and done, they enjoyed Chapel Hill and loved
college ball. Xander got a degree in history (rather apologetically,
actually: he told Chris"s parents he really didn"t know what to do with
that, and Andi told him that"s what her degree was in, so maybe he was
meant to be a lawyer), and Chris got one in business, but that"s not what
either of them remembered.
They remembered the night they beat Duke, the Tar Heels" hated
rival, and took the ACC regular season. Xander had scored thirty-six
points in that game, and Chris had scored twenty-eight. Xander told the
press later that if he had flung the ball out into the crowd of the Dean
Smith Center, it would have rebounded, found Chris"s hands and ended
up in the basket, because, dammit, there was just that magic in the air.
The party had lasted until dawn, and sometime before then, they had
managed to sneak into Xander"s room and Chris had taken Xander
against the wall—then Xander had returned the favor.
They remembered being in the Sweet Sixteen, all four times, and
winning it in their senior year. They played in nearby Charlotte, and the
players had to be escorted out by security as twenty-one thousand people
screamed their names. The party that night consumed their entire dorm,
and there would be happily buzzed coeds sleeping on their couch and in
their basement and in their rooms (Xander kept finding one girl in his
closet and respectfully returning her to the main floor) for the next two
days. Even though each of them had their own room, they had no
privacy, and as Christian drank too much beer, and Xander listened to
the thousandth recap of the game from a fellow court warrior, they
would meet eyes and yearn for a time to be alone.
Apparently, Christian couldn"t take it anymore after a while, and as
Xander walked by the back door, he was surprised when it opened, and
Chris grabbed his hand. He"d been drinking almost steadily for two days,
and Xander was a little concerned by the bobble in his walk and the lack
of awareness in his smile. But he followed him anyway, because he"d
follow Christian to hell or, well, all the way through the meandering
brick paths of Chapel Hill, right? And he was more than surprised when
they came up in the middle of Coker Arboretum… and then Chris kept
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65
going and pulled him back through the wisteria to a big tree, surrounded
by shrubs and undergrowth. This time of early early morning this was
the most deserted place on campus—a coed had been killed there in the
sixties, and in the morning, when the mist came off the ground, or in the
dark of the night, even the most stoic avoided it like the plague.
Apparently being gay and in love trumped some of that
superstition, at least now.
“Remember last summer?” Chris murmured as they walked.
Xander grunted, “Yes.”
They"d rented a tiny cottage on Bald Head Island, one with two
bedrooms and a couch. Chris"s family had come to visit for two weeks,
and Xander and Chris had spent an hour before they arrived trying to
figure out how to make it look like Xander had been using the other
bedroom, while they were moving all his shit into the front room to make
room for his parents, with Penny on a cot in Chris"s room.
The night after they arrived, after Andi and Jed had taken them to
dinner at probably the nicest restaurant Xander had ever been to outside
a booster dinner at the school, they were all getting ready to go to bed,
and Andi and Jed had looked at each other meaningfully.
Jed gave his son a one-armed hug and said, “Good night, boys.
You may want to let Penny sleep on the couch, okay?” before
disappearing into the bedroom.
Andi stayed out for another moment, and looked at them with
bright eyes. She was still a pretty woman, with curling blonde hair,
although Xander had noticed that more of the blonde had come from a
bottle than it had seven years earlier, and the fine lines around her eyes
had grown deeper and (from Xander"s point of view) kinder and wiser.
She didn"t kiss Chris right away. She stood on her tiptoes and
pulled Xander (a full six foot nine by now) down so she could kiss his
temple and whisper in his ear, “You will always be part of our family,
sweetheart.” When she was done, she gave Chris a long hug and then
disappeared into the bedroom with her husband.
Chris and Xander weren"t anywhere near tired. They asked Penny
if she wanted to stay up and play video games or Trivial Pursuit or
something, and she looked at them levelly and said, “How about I tell
you guys a story?”
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Amy Lane
Chris and Xander looked at each other, and Penny took the stuffed
chair and gestured at them grandly to ensconce themselves on the couch.
They sat, and Xander realized with a start that Penny was beginning her
first year of college. He wondered hopefully if there was anyone she"d
write to as she left, or anyone she"d miss. Maybe Penny would spend her
college days in that passion/drama/romance play that Xander had seen
most of the other guys partaking of during their time at Chapel Hill, and
in a way he wished that for her. He"d loved having Chris as his anchor,
and wouldn"t have traded that security or that kindness for a thing on the
planet, but Penny was braver than he was. Penny had tried band, and
drama, and soccer, and academic decathlon. She"d run for student body
offices, taken guitar lessons on her own, and worked at Jamba Juice, the
book store, and Starbucks. Penny, he thought, looking at Chris"s dark
eyes in a sweet, mischievous female face, was meant for great
adventures in the wide world. Xander was fully aware that his heart
would not survive his adventures unless the other half of it were beating
in time.
“See, here"s the story,” Penny said now, after an almost nervous
pause. “Once upon a time there was a little girl named Penny, who had a
horrible crush on her brother"s best friend.”
“Aww, Penny, really?” Chris groaned, trying to keep things light.
“She thought it was true love, Christian, you bastard, so shut the
hell up and listen, okay?”
Christian rolled his eyes at Xander, but Xander couldn"t laugh
back. Unlike Chris, who didn"t seem to know where this was going,
Xander had a congealed, belated fear in his stomach, a terrible adrenaline
rush, as though he"d been caught doing something bad, and the
consequences were worse than he had ever imagined.
“We"re listening,” he said quietly, and he resisted the temptation to
take Chris"s hand. There was another quiet, one they could hear the
ocean in, and Xander realized he loved that sound. God, wouldn"t it be
wonderful to live near the ocean for the rest of his life?
Penny reached out and patted his knee. Xander was leaning
forward, his outsized body trying not to spangle over the couch like a
Mylar decoration, and that hand on his knee was close enough to his face
to stop and pat his cheek.
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67
“I know you"re listening, Xander. You always listened to me. You
were the one quiet voice in our house, and I loved you for it. I really did
love you, you know. I mean, I know it was junior high, but you were
every boy I ever wanted to kiss me. I dreamed of it, right? And then,
when your life fell completely apart, and you were sent to some sort of
dorm for boys no one wanted, I was devastated. I wanted so badly for us
to want you. I heard my parents talking one night, and I thought, „Yes!
We can keep him
here
!"
and I was
so
excited, right?”
Xander looked up at her, and for the first time realized how much
time had passed since that moment. Five years, nearly six. He and
Christian had been children when he"d spent those months in a halfway
house. Penny had been even younger. He looked sideways at Christian,
who still didn"t know where this was going. In this moment, in spite of
the phenomenal bulking up the two of them had done, in spite of the
many stolen moments as lovers, and the fierce moments honing them
into competitors, Chris looked just as young this day.
“I didn"t know I was enough to get excited about,” Xander said
with a smile, and he wished for her brother"s hand like anything.
“You were,” Penny said with a faint smile of her own. “So one
morning, as I"m getting ready for school, I hear the boy of my dreams
outside, talking to my dumbass brother, and I open the door to go outside
and gossip with them, because, hey, they used to talk to me about high
school, and I figured they"d want to hear this, right?”
Xander shut his eyes. “That"s why you were crying,” he said softly,
and Chris said, “When was she crying? Penny, would you get to the
point?”
Penny patted Xander"s knee again. “The point, dumbass, is that our
parents know. They were sort of suspicious by your senior year, but they
kept thinking that you and Xander would somehow get that twin-at-the-
hip detachment in the last three years. It obviously hasn"t happened,
because you guys had to go and just… just…
explode
the odds books by
being two boys from high school who play together through college. For
all I know, you"ll end up playing the same team in the pros, because
sometimes the gods are just that kind, but it doesn"t matter. This little
charade you guys got? The reason you didn"t want to come home? The
fact that you"ve been here for a week and nobody in town knew you
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were here? I mean… you
heard
that waitress tonight. She was fawning
all over the two of you, and telling people that she"d have to pass the
word that you were here. And I watched you two, trying to crawl under
the table with your butt-muscles alone, and I realized that you"d been
hiding. Just like you thought you"d been hiding from Mom and Dad.
Well, stop it!”
Penny wiped her face with the back of a shaking hand, and Xander
reached out and took that hand and placed a little kiss on the wrist.
“Don"t cry, Penny,” he said softly. “We never meant to hurt you.”
“That"s not why I"m crying, Xan. I"m crying because… you guys.
Dad watches all the sports shows. Do you watch the sports shows?”
Xander and Chris looked at each other and shrugged. They had, at
first. They had watched for news on the pros and on their beloved (and
horrible) Sacramento Kings and they had watched the All-Stars and all
of those shows that made basketball still glorious and amazing and so,
so, so, out of their reach.
And then they"d started seeing themselves up on the screen.
The first time Chris had seen Xander on television for UNC, after
their high school recruitment frenzy had passed and they"d been playing
college ball, he"d been ecstatic. Xander had been mortified, and then the
shot had taken in Chris in one of their flawless passes, one of their
perfect moments of synchronicity, where Xander passed the ball to Cliff
(who had changed positions to keep playing with them) who passed to
Chris, who went up for the dunk which Xander made in his wake, and
then their patented high five/down-low as they crossed paths on the deck,
and they"d looked at each other in horror.
How could anyone watching that not know they were lovers?
They hadn"t watched any more tape after that, unless Coach made
them watch game tape. For some reason, watching game tape was
different—clinical—like the difference between feeling each other up in
the stolen darkness or getting their prostates examined by the doctor.
Either way it was naked, like the whole world got to see a part of them
they wanted hidden from everyone but each other, but for some reason,