Authors: Amy Lane
Tags: #Paperback, #Novel, #GLBT, #Contemporary, #Romance, #Contemporarygay, #M/M Romance, #dreamspinner press, #amy lane
instead.
Sacramento was eleven games up. They were playoff-bound, and
probably had been since December. Xander"s season was officially going
into June, goddammit, but that didn"t mean he didn"t have to play the last
game of the regular season, same as Chris.
Xander played his at San Antonio, on the tail end of a three-game
road trip, and Chris played his at home. Xander got back to the hotel in
time to watch Colorado—one game out of playoff position—almost take
it in the teeth to Boston.
“Aww, fuck,” Xander muttered. “Chris, goddammit, I
know
you
could have made that last three-pointer!”
Chris"s playing had been off since March—since the NCAA break,
when Xander had caught him spiking his orange juice with vodka.
Chris hadn"t missed his morning phone calls (although he looked
crappier and crappier during them), and Xander would have
known
if
he"d been playing drunk, but that didn"t keep worry from being a
constant roil in his stomach.
The Locker Room 187
He"d taken to calling Cliff at night, before bed, just to check on
him.
“Hey, Cliff, how you doing?”
“Look, man—I think he"s fine. But you know? He"s got his own
room. As long as he doesn"t stain the comforter or mess up the curtains,
he could be doing Jack, blow, and heroin in there, right?”
(Oh Jesus. Thanks a lot, you bastard.) “Is he?”
“No, Jesus, Xander, of course not! Or at least I"m sure about
everything but the Jack. Why don"t you call him yourself?”
“Because I"m texting him while we"re talking, and his spelling"s
better than this, dammit!”
(Sigh.) “Look, Xan, I"m not… I"m not going to make any
assumptions here about you two, so just tell me if I"m stepping over the
line here. But… my wife. If I didn"t get to see her almost every night, I"d
be drinking too. If she wasn"t here when I got back from a road trip, or if
she didn"t get to come with me sometimes—man, I would fucking lose it.
You guys… you were… you know—”
“Married. Say it. Yeah. For real. We were married for almost
twelve years, and yeah. That"s exactly what this is, Cliff, and he"s not
doing well, and we"re going to figure it out at the break, but right now, I
just want to know he"s okay!”
To his credit, Cliff remained exactly the same after that
conversation—the same good friend they"d had in college, the same guy
who helped Xander keep an eye on Chris as he struggled to hold it
together. Xander was grateful for him. Xander and Chris had stood up
with Cliff for his wedding, and now it felt like Cliff was standing up with
them for their marriage, and that meant something.
Between Xander on the phone and Cliff in real life, they managed
to hide the alcohol, keep Chris out of the bars as much as possible, and
generally help him hold it together for the last hectic, visit-less, six
weeks of the season.
So Xander watched Chris play the last game of the season with a
heart twisted with different wants. He wanted to see Chris play well,
God,
did he want to see Chris play well. He remembered that first
magical game when they were kids, and the way the beautiful boy
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seemed to move with the ball, seemed to fly with it, seemed to make it
magic. Even though Chris didn"t look as golden when they weren"t on
the court together, Xander could still see the vestiges of that magic
boy—he hoped he always would.
But God, did he want Chris home. Win this game, Denver went
into the playoffs, and Chris was gone for another six weeks. (Well, there
would be some time off in between, one week, at the very least, between
the last game and playoff season, but still.) Lose this game, and Chris
was home, cheering Xander on at the sidelines.
In the end, Xander liked to think his better nature won. Chris
finally landed a three-pointer, the buzzer rang, and Denver was in the
playoffs, and Xander was waiting to get Chris"s text that said they"d
meet at home.
The text never came.
Two hours after the final press conference, after trying Chris"s
phone about six hundred times, Xander was on the phone to Cliff.
“Cliff, hey—”
“Xan, I swear, he got out of the showers, dressed, and said he was
on his way to the airport.”
Denver was playing at home—it was maybe forty-five minutes to
the airport from the arena, and Xander"s stomach went cold, and then the
entire rest of him, down to his numb fingertips and his icy lips.
“He was okay, right? I mean, you know….”
Cliff grunted. “I know he still carries a hip flask, man, but I don"t
think he"s used it.”
Xander swore. “What was he driving? I"m going to call him one
more time, and then I"m calling the cops.”
Xander was cut short as the phone in the hotel rang.
“Wait a sec, maybe this is him.” Xander balanced a phone on each
ear, and waited for Chris"s voice on the other line.
It wasn"t Chris; it was a woman from the press. She wanted a
quote.
“A quote on what?”
The Locker Room 189
“Christian Edwards—he"s just been life-flighted off the freeway to
a Denver hospital. The paramedics say he"s lucky to be breathing.”
A quote?
“Oh Jesus. Holy fucking God.
Chris.
Where"s he going?
Jesus. I"ve got to call his family… oh, Jesus, Cliff, did you hear? Lady,
where"s he going? I don"t give a shit about your quote, just tell me about
Chris! Where"s he going?
I don"t give a shit! C"mon, bitch, you"re the
one with the answers!
Where"s he fucking going!”
The hotel phone exploded against the wall, and Xander was left
with Cliff"s panicky voice on the other end of the line.
“Just get a plane out here, Xander. You get the plane out here, I"ll
be there to take you to him, got it?”
“Oh Jesus.”
“
Xander, do you got it?”
Xander fought to breathe, fought to see, fought to think. His vision
was dark, pewter gray, like that first night, when the shining magic boy
had played some ball with him, talked to him, joked with him, took him
home, took his heart—
Xander had a sudden vision of that shining boy, fourteen, slender,
flashing smile, dark eyes all mischief, and then he saw him, clavicles and
knees, bony elbows, narrow jaw, lying in a hospital bed, broken and
alone.
Cliff was yelling at him from the other end of the phone, and he
hadn"t taken a breath in too long.
He pulled in air, and again, and again and again, and then, when he
could see the room, he said faintly, “I got it, Cliff. I"ll let you know when
I get there.”
He was wearing jeans and tennis shoes and a hooded sweatshirt,
with his wallet in his pocket. He left everything else in the hotel room,
and didn"t make another phone call, just turned around with his wallet in
his pocket and walked out, looking for Wi-Fi and the airline on his phone
so he could buy his tickets before he got to the airport.
When he"d done that, he called Mandy, and told her and Audrey,
and had them go in and take care of Penny when she fell completely the
fuck apart. While Mandy comforted her, he gave Audrey instructions to
have her packed, and then the number for the town car, and instructions
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for it to go and get Andi and Jed first. Then he hung up, glad as he"d
never been for his little “harem” of women to take care of Chris"s little
sister for him when he couldn"t.
Then he called Chris"s number, the same number Chris had when
they were kids, and the same old yellow wall phone, with a cord and
everything, as well.
He told his family that Chris was in the hospital, and that they had
tickets waiting at the airport, and that he"d be there, because nothing
could keep him away from their angel, his shining magic boy, and they
put their faith in him as no one had in his life.
Xander had grown up with nothing. Food, clothes, a place to
sleep—they"d all been iffy propositions for a lot of years. His profession
had brought him wealth, and he had appreciated it—he loved his house
and his dogs. He enjoyed his television, the basketball court, the fact that
he could pay Lucia to make him food he was not good at making
himself. But never in his life had he appreciated his money as much as
when he walked up to the counter at the airline and plonked down a
useless piece of plastic, and that thing took him to see Chris, and brought
their family too.
WHEN he got to Denver, Cliff was waiting at the airport for him, with a
hospital name and an update, and a grim, pursed mouth. His wife was in
the front of the car when Xander got outside into the chill, thin Colorado
air, but she stood up without a word and moved to the back of the Lexus
when Xander got there.
“You"ve got longer legs,” she said quietly, her full mouth turned
down for probably the only time Xander had seen her. Her makeup was
done, and she was finely dressed in a black pantsuit, but she was missing
her trademark earrings, and her mouth was tight and tense. Even Alicia,
it seemed, had fallen in love with his boy. “Now put it into gear,
Clifford, they don"t know when he"s coming out of surgery.”
“Surgery?” Xander asked, waiting for the details. When Cliff was
done giving them, Xander had to make him pull over to the side so he
could throw up.
The Locker Room 191
Alicia handed him a bottle of water wordlessly from the back when
he was done, and he rinsed and spit, and then came a little box of breath
mints. Cliff pulled the Lexus into traffic, and Xander looked behind him
gratefully.
Alicia gave a thin smile. “If it was Cliff, I"d need sedation.”
“Dammit, Cliff!” Xander started, but Alicia cut him off.
“Oh, honey—I figured it out a long time before Clifford did.
Nobody pines the way Chris was pining for just his „bro", right,
Clifford?”
“Right, honey,” Cliff said, so automatically that Xander felt a
surprised, rusty chuckle rattling his throat.
Alicia had been called a ball-buster by most of the NBA. People
said she was a bitch, and Clifford was P-Whipped, and her name was
used as a cautionary tale among players and fans alike when they were
warning against the wiles of the opposite sex.
But one look behind him and the note of tenderness in her voice as
she said, “I knew you"d agree, Cliff,” made Xander think that his buddy
was a lucky man.
THE family had made it there before him—Xander figured they would.
Penny had dragged Mandy along, and the two girls were clenching white
hands, as Jed and Andi sat together on a little couch in the private
surgery waiting room.
As Xander walked in, he was suddenly assaulted by Cliff"s words
in the car, and the sweet little moment between Cliff and his wife was
forgotten.
“Is he… his spine? His head?” Oh God. Spinal injuries… brain
damage… all of it came back, and Xander grabbed the doorframe,
hard,
because if he keeled over, there wasn"t a soul in this room who could
catch him.
“They"re fine,” Andi said, coming up to him and putting her
shoulder underneath his arm. He wanted to laugh at the idea that she"d be
able to support his weight, but he couldn"t. It was too close to the truth,
because his knees almost buckled.
192 Amy Lane
“Fine?” He looked at Andi, because her face was still tight and
stoic with worry. Chris was obviously not fine.
“He"s got some internal injuries,” Andi said, blinking hard. “They
were able to stop the bleeding in his kidneys, and they had to remove his
spleen, but it"s… it"s his legs. That"s why they thought there might be
spinal damage. He whacked his head pretty hard, and while they were
testing his reflexes, there wasn"t any response, but it"s because his legs
were—” She stifled a sob, and Jed"s arm came around Xander"s body as
he took Xan"s other side. Xander shook them off gently, and took their
elbows to lead them back to the couch. He was grown. They"d taken care
of him when he"d had no one—he could be their strength now.
“Tell me,” he said gently, when Andi was weeping softly on her
husband"s ragged denim jacket.
“His legs were crushed,” Jed said brokenly. “He"d punctured his
main arteries in a couple of places, and they"re trying to get them
repaired now. When they"re done with that, they"re going to start to put