sitting on his sofa, waiting to share a beer with him. What the hell was going on?
Grabbing two cans of Coors from the fridge, he returned to the living room.
Reese was leafing through a magazine he"d found on the end table beside the sofa.
He looked up and smiled, patting the sofa beside him. Jeff moved toward him, as if he
were the guest in his own apartment. He sat, holding out a can of beer to Reese, who
took it, popped the top and drank nearly the whole thing in one long gulp.
Setting the can down, he turned to Jeff, his Paul-Newman-blue eyes settling on
Jeff"s face. Jeff waited, sipping at his own beer, glad to have something to hold in his
hand. Reese stared at him another few seconds and then leaned back, lacing his hands
behind his head and staring up at the ceiling.
“There"s no easy way to say this, so I"m just going to dive in,” Reese said, his eyes
still focused upward. “I invited you to lunch because you intrigue me. You"re so quiet
at the office. To be honest, I didn"t even know you were there at first. I mean, I heard
about the whiz kid, the brilliant new programmer who was taking Strata to another
level.”
Despite himself, Jeff flushed with pleasure at this comment. He knew he"d
impressed Bob Sanchez, who had doubled his salary within the first six months, but he
hadn"t realized the non-programmers knew much about it.
“I guess I"m out of the office a lot, which partially explains it. Plus, you have to
admit, you aren"t exactly Mr. Social Butterfly. I mean, I don"t know if I"ve ever seen you
at one of the impromptu happy hours.”
Jeff didn"t deny this. Getting drunk and eating crappy finger food with near-
strangers at five in the afternoon had never been his idea of fun. He didn"t respond,
however, except by a nod.
Reese sat forward, fixing his eyes on Jeff. “When I asked you to lunch, well, I guess
it was pretty obvious I was interested in more than your brilliant mind. But that"s where
I want to apologize. In my clumsy efforts at seduction, I discounted your innate
intelligence, your ability to see the player hiding behind the bid for sympathy.”
“What?” Jeff blurted, stunned the guy had admitted to what he had suspected.
Vindication warred with disappointment and confusion. What game was Reese playing
now?
Reese hung his head for a moment and Jeff felt almost sorry for him, though he said
nothing more. Reese turned finally to face him. His hand dropped to Jeff"s bare thigh
and damn it all, Jeff"s cock hardened from the touch.
He started to pull his leg away, but Reese held on. “Please. Hear me out. I"m trying
to tell you I"m sorry. I"m trying to tell you
why
I"m sorry. Let me explain and then you
can kick me out or whatever you want to do.”
Jeff stilled, Reese"s hand burning his skin, his blue eyes pleading. Something in
Reese"s face went beyond his words and Jeff found his heart melting, despite his earlier
resolve. “I"m listening,” he said softly.
“There"s no Aidan.”
“Pardon?”
“No Aidan. No love lost, no heart broken. I made it up because I was trying to reach
you. Because for the first time in my life, I think I"ve met someone who isn"t going to lie
down and spread his ass cheeks for me, just because I smile at him.
“I know I must sound like a pompous dick, but I guess it"s come so easy to me over
the years, I forget sometimes that other guys are real people. I come up with ways I can
win them over, and then go for it. I made up Aidan because I thought if you felt some
sympathy for me, you might look past the posturing and see the real man inside.
“It was a dumb ass thing to do. The irony is, I meant what I said. I really do want to
meet someone like you. Someone who isn"t just out for what they can get. I shouldn"t
have lied to you. I apologize. Truly.”
Reese bit his lip and looked away, though not before Jeff saw the shame wash over
his face. His heart thawed a little more, though a small voice in his head warned him
this could just be another in a series of ploys.
“Why me, Reese? I mean, c-c-come on.” Jeff paused, refusing to stutter, not now. He
took a long, cleansing breath and pushed on. “Why focus on me, of all people, the geek,
the loser?”
The look of genuine surprise on Reese"s face almost made Jeff laugh and yet
another layer of ice melted around his heart. Could Reese really be that good an actor,
or was he actually sincere?
“Are you fucking kidding me?” Reese emphatically asserted. “Loser! No way!
You"re a fucking MIT graduate. You"re brilliant. I"ve always been attracted to smart
men. It"s like an aphrodisiac to me. But it"s more than that, Jeff.” Gently he squeezed
Jeff"s leg, his expression so utterly sincere Jeff finally knew he must be telling the truth.
In a quiet voice that radiated with muted intensity, Reese continued. “There"s
something about you. Something I want to explore. I can see the pain in your eyes.
What happened to hurt you? How can I fix the hurt? How can I make it better?”
Jeff sat stunned. How had he known? Jeff never spoke about it, not to anyone. Tom
Shepherd had swept into Jeff"s quiet, controlled life as an academic, turning his world
upside down and completely capturing Jeff"s heart in the process.
After a whirlwind love affair that lasted only three weeks, Tom left for Africa with a
group called Volunteers for Peace, promising to return in a month. A month became
two and then three, during which Jeff learned through the grapevine that the volunteer
program had long ended. He heard rumors he tried to ignore that Tom had headed off
to Europe, seen in the company of jetsetters more interested in party life than good
works.
When Tom did finally come sweeping back into Jeff"s life, Jeff confronted his lover
with what he"d heard. But Tom had answers for everything, soothing Jeff"s hurt with an
onslaught of sexual attention and devotion. Jeff gave in to Tom"s considerable charms.
Who knows how long he would have labored under the illusion that what they had,
even if it was temporary, was real?
It was the night before Tom was to leave, this time for India, with promises he
would return soon to Jeff"s arms. “Do you have to go,” Jeff said, hating himself even
before the words were out and angry at Tom for forcing him into the role of pining
lover.
Tom had smiled gently, shaking his head. “You know me, Jeff. I"m a gypsy. But
you"ll be with me, in my heart.” After he made love to Jeff, he sent him away, claiming
he still had to pack before his early morning departure.
When Jeff returned later that night, hoping to surprise Tom with a new backpack
for his trip, the lights were out in Tom"s studio apartment. Not wanting to disturb him,
Jeff started to leave the backpack beside the front door, a note wishing Tom a good trip
tucked inside. It was then he saw the door was ajar. Surprised, he pushed it, causing it
to swing open.
Inside he could hear whispering and muted laughter. Confused, he stepped inside.
The laughter turned to groans and sighs, accompanied by the creak of bedsprings. Jeff
stood rooted to the spot, a dawning horror washing over him as he realized what he
was hearing.
The next morning when Tom appeared at Jeff"s graduate housing to say goodbye,
Jeff had meant to say nothing. He would just let Tom go and forget about him. But
when Tom reached for him, Jeff found himself blurting, “Are you sure you"re in the
right place? Shouldn"t you be with whoever you were fucking last night?”
Instead of denying it or at least having the grace to be embarrassed, Tom had
shaken his head with a small, condescending smile. “Jeff, Jeff, always the romantic to
the bitter end. I didn"t plan what happened last night. An old friend happened by. One
thing led to the next. It"s no big deal.”
“No big deal? One minute you"re in bed with me, whispering how you"ll miss me,
the next you"re fucking some guy who just
happens by
? I thought we had something
special!”
“We did. We do. But it"s not like we"re married, for god"s sake. Surely you can"t be
so naïve to think I"m seeing no one but you? You know I can"t stand someone who"s
clingy. Maybe it"s good this happened. I"m beginning to see just how needy you are. It"s
really not an attractive trait, Jeff. You might want to work on that. Good luck to you.”
And with that, he was gone.
Tom hadn"t been his first lover, but he"d been the first to capture Jeff"s heart.
Beyond the heartbreak of loss, the casual ease with which Tom had cast him aside had
made his humiliation complete.
Even when time and reflection allowed Jeff to admit maybe there had been more
lust than love at work on his side as well, the pain of his humiliation remained. It would
not, he promised himself, happen again.
When the chance to move from Boston to Colorado had fallen into his lap, he"d
accepted the move as fate—he"d make a fresh start and meet someone new. And this
time he"d think with his head instead of his heart and his cock.
But somehow, once the walls were raised, he found it hard to lower them, not yet
ready to risk the bruising of his heart. Instead he retreated into a kind of emotional
deepfreeze. No one, until now, had penetrated the walls of ice.
He realized Reese was watching him and he felt the heat rise in his cheeks. He
found himself wanting to tell Reese about Tom, but he kept silent, instead losing
himself in Reese"s gaze. Reese reached out, touching his face with one finger.
“I have to kiss you,” Reese whispered, his voice husky.
Jeff leaned forward, drawn in spite himself to the handsome man. As their lips
touched, all thought of Tom flew from his mind like a mist burning away at break of
day.
“What"s with you tonight?”
“Huh?” Reese turned distractedly toward Hank. They were lingering over dessert
and fine brandy at a very expensive restaurant Hank had chosen.
“You got a cold sore or something? You keep touching your mouth. And I don"t
think you"ve heard anything I said for the past thirty minutes.”
“What?” Reese dropped his hand from his lips and focused on Hank. “No, I don"t
have a cold sore, for god"s sake. And yeah, I heard you. You were telling me about your
latest investment in the Internet porn industry.”
“That was fifteen minutes ago. Just now I was talking about what our next bet
should be, once you deflower the innocent Mr. Hartman. The heart man. Get it? He"s
got a heart. We don"t.”
Reese startled at these words.
We don’t.
Until recently, he would have readily
agreed. Hearts were made to be broken—better to dispense with them altogether. So
why was he offended by Hank"s inclusion?
Reese slipped back into his reverie. That kiss—he could still feel it. It made no
sense, and yet there it was. He couldn"t seem to stop reliving that single, chaste kiss.
He"d planned more, of course. Lips would part, tongues would touch, hearts would
pound, hands would roam, cocks would rise. When he had Jeff panting and yearning,
he"d stop the action. He"d pulled away, saying they should wait. They were rushing.
They had to slow down.
He"d had his lines ready:
Jeff, I want you, but not this way. Let’s take our time
… That
way, when he returned to finish the job on Saturday night, Jeff would be begging for it.
But something had gone wrong. Or not wrong, exactly, but certainly not according
to plan. When their lips had touched, something deep and aching had burst open inside
Reese, leaving him nearly breathless with a confused, unfocused longing.
It was like he"d been shut off until that moment, the key to ignite him long since lost
or stolen. Jeff"s kiss—that tender press of closed lips against his own, had lit something
within Reese that both thrilled and terrified him.
Irony of ironies, Jeff had been the one to pull back. Reese could see he wanted it—
even without the blatant evidence in his shorts, a fire had kindled in Jeff"s eyes,
something deep and powerful that beckoned to something inside Reese, making him
forget for just a moment who was in control.
“You"re doing it again. Jesus. What is
with
you tonight?” Hank"s tone was
exasperated.
Reese dropped his hand from his lips and shrugged. “Sorry. Maybe I"m coming
down with something.”
“Oh, no you don"t. You"re planning a way out with the computer geek, aren"t you?
Don"t think I don"t know it.” Hank rubbed his hands together gleefully. “Well, it won"t
work. I don"t care if you have the plague. Tomorrow night you either fuck the guy and
bring me the proof, or report to my doorstep, naked and ready to serve.”
“You"ll have your proof,” Reese muttered, though he had no idea if he would be