When they arrived back near Alamo Park, Adin was left in
the backseat alone to weigh things in his mind as Edward
skipped lightly up the steps to his painted lady–style Victorian
home.
“You should go back to the hotel now, Dr. Tredeger, all
right? I’ll bring you what you like for dinner. Just…find
something on television and stay out of things for a while. Mr.
Edward is right. Things have changed.”
100 Z.A. Maxfield
“You’ve got that right,” muttered Adin resentfully. “They
sure
the fuck
have.”
Adin checked his watches again. In the darkness, the
illuminated markers on his Rolex glowed faintly, telling him it
was half past eleven. The television was still on, recapping the
news of the day. Adin had screened two pricey pay-per-view
movies and eaten the steak dinner Boaz brought him. He hadn’t
ordered it, but apparently Boaz didn’t feel compelled to listen to
him when he said he wasn’t hungry. It turned out that as soon
as he smelled the food, he was ravenous anyway.
Turning off the television, Adin opted for music on the
clock radio. It had an iPod docking station, and Adin placed his
player in it and cued up his classical playlist. He sighed as he
sank deeply into the pillows, punching them around to make
himself more comfortable. The truth was, he didn’t want to be
lying in bed. He wanted to be anywhere else, preferably
forgetting he’d ever seen that
fucking
manuscript, and that called for drunken anonymity and men. Adin rolled over onto his dick
as it came to life. Finally he threw the covers aside.
“Fuck this.” He lurched out of bed and dressed in his club
clothes, low-slung jeans that were indecently tight in all the right places, but loose in others so he could dance. He threaded a
too-long, wide leather belt through the loops, pulling the end up
through the belt itself and then down through its excess. He
slipped a lightweight olive cashmere sweater over a tight T-shirt.
In the bathroom, he messed up his hair and brushed his teeth,
then added a dab of cologne at the last minute. Adin stared at
his reflection in the mirror, liking what he saw.
When he was ready, he put condoms in his wallet and dialed
Boaz. “Yes, Dr. Tredeger?” Boaz answered. At least he didn’t
just ignore him like a jailer when a prisoner rattled the bars with his tin cup.
“I’m going out. You can drive me, or you can watch me
leave in a cab,” Adin growled.
102 Z.A. Maxfield
“That’s not strictly true, sir, as I’m not near the hotel at this
time. I’ll be there in twenty.”
“To drive me or to watch me leave?”
“Once again, so droll, Dr. Tredeger.” Boaz hung up.
What
the hell did that mean?
Adin was out in front of the hotel, chatting with the
doorman, when Boaz arrived with the limousine. Its size
required that he park it on the street, but Adin saw him pull up,
so he murmured his good-byes and went to meet it. When he
got there, Boaz was holding the door open and only looking
slightly reproachful.
“Good evening,” he said, as he took in Adin’s clothing. “I
see it’s hunting season.”
“Yes, Boaz. I’m particularly fond of the sport.” He gave
Boaz a defiant look as the man closed the door.
When Boaz entered the vehicle, he turned to Adin. “I take it
it’s futile to try to talk some sense into you?”
“It is.”
“Where to, sir?” Boaz asked, all business.
“Take me to The Bar on Castro. I’m going dancing.”
“Would it do any good to mention that Mr. Fedeltà would
prefer it if you—”
“Is there no ‘food’ to be had in Los Angeles? Did he miss a
meal?”
“Dr. Tredeger.” Boaz sounded disappointed in him.
“I’m going dancing,” Adin repeated. “I doubt there will be
many ancient-manuscript enthusiasts there. I will be perfectly
safe.”
In answer, Boaz raised the privacy partition and headed to
the Castro district. Adin looked out the window. A little
dancing was just the thing to pull him out of his mood. If he
could get his swerve on and get laid, maybe he could sleep.
The place was as packed as he remembered, an eclectic
group of men and women from the young and hung to the
straight and curious. The Friday crowd was well ahead of him,
NOTTURNO
103
the drunks loud and the bodies rocking. He got himself a beer
and waded onto the dance floor with it, not caring that he was
alone. He didn’t stay alone for even the length of the song, a
number of other bodies joining his, some guys, some girls, all
pressing and groping in the tiny space until he’d finished his
dance and his beer and was flushed and shiny with sweat.
“Hey, pretty.” A man behind him snaked a hand over his
shoulder to rest on his chest. Adin looked down and saw the
hand had neatly trimmed nails. He turned to find a reasonably
good-looking, dark-haired man with a tattoo of an eye on his
neck standing behind him. Adin smiled. He continued to dance
to the throbbing beat, not knowing and not caring whom he
danced with, content to brush and touch and work his body
hard. The other bodies, most of whom Adin never actually
looked at beyond ascertaining what space they occupied, began
to exert a soothing kind of pull on his senses, like the ebb and
flow of waves when he swam in the sea, lifting him, pulling him
down, challenging his equilibrium, and lulling him into a kind of
transcendent euphoria.
It was within this space that he first heard the hissing
sounds, like the slithering of hundreds of snakes beneath his
feet. It began as part of the music, the noise, and—much like
the sweat that dripped from his face and caused him to remove
his sweater and tuck it into the back of his jeans—it wasn’t a
distraction. The hand that now caressed his chest pulled him
closer into a solid, muscled body, its contours and valleys
brushing Adin’s like hard wind. Adin felt the man’s erection and
deliberately rocked into it, taking pleasure where it was offered,
indicating he could give pleasure if he chose. The man slid his
hand down to Adin’s waist, pulling him back flush against his
cock, grinding a little, and Adin expelled a sharp breath.
“Pretty,
pretty
.” The man spoke into his ear, causing the hair to tickle the back of Adin’s neck.
Adin sighed and leaned back against him, putting a hand up
to caress the stranger’s hair. Another man moved up beside
Adin, also touching him, running a finger down Adin’s face and
taking his hand; the new man joined the erotic dance with them,
finding new places to graze a hand or brush a body part. The
104 Z.A. Maxfield
three of them swayed there, under the hot strobe light, with the
bass thumping inside and outside their bodies. A fourth man
came to join them then, another tall man, who brushed and
touched and bumped until Adin was breathless with wanting.
He swayed and moved, rubbing up against the first, who held
him flush against his body as the others groped him.
The hissing in Adin’s head turned to whispers, then strange
words that soothed and excited him, as his arousal numbed his
brain and turned off his other senses. He heard Spanish words,
under his skin, like crawling, predatory insects that burrowed
deep within and moved about in a parody of the dance the five
men did on the dance floor.
“Who?” asked Adin, unable to move away, unable to feel
the fear he
knew
should be making his heart race and his mouth dry.
“
Querido mio,
” said one, “
que guapo.
” He lifted one of Adin’s hands and, turning it over, took a sharp, stinging bite out of his
wrist, lapping at the immediate blood there and, just as quickly,
closing the wound with a sensuous lick of his tongue.
Adin reacted to the pain, now stirring from the drugged
stupor of the dance, when the man who held him bit his neck.
Again, he delivered a bite and a lick so quickly that Adin hardly
knew what was happening until it was over. He craned his neck
to see the man behind him and was appalled to see a gleam of
amusement in his eyes. That’s when the truth clanged into place
as irrevocably as if it were the vault in a bank crashing to a
close. He was a toy. They were out there, everywhere; he was a
pretty bauble for them to play with, and it amused them.
Adin tried to shove the men surrounding him away, but they
held him, and it seemed so easy for them it made him sick
inside. He could no sooner free a limb or pull a small distance
away than one of them would catch it again and pull him closer.
He fought, but it was like a rip current: the more he struggled,
the stronger their holds on him became.
The three men continued to bite and lick, tormenting him
with pricks of their teeth so sharp they slid into his skin like hot knives through ice cream. In the shifting anonymity of the
NOTTURNO
105
crowd, it looked like they were just dancing. When they licked
his wounds closed,
dear heaven
, he couldn’t help the pleasure that gave him, the feeling that they weren’t licking the tiny punctures
they put into his exposed skin, but that they swirled those
exquisite, slick tongues right over the head of his cock, up and
down under the crown, along the vein… He thought he’d die of
ecstasy.
One second the pain would sear his skin; the next pleasure
would engulf him. He still fought to break free, fought their
holds on him, but they were much stronger, and fighting only
brought him a different kind of pain, as they weren’t above
ruthlessly jabbing him with their bony elbows, hard enough to
bruise or even crack a rib, or pulling his head down below the
sightline of the sea of bobbing people and giving it a sharp,
shocking pop with a fist that he was sure would show up as a
black eye the following day. In the end, they bit, licked, and beat him until, just as suddenly, they left, throwing him to the
ground and delivering a few vicious kicks to his hips and thighs,
making him weak and dizzy. He was crawling to the side of the
dance floor when several pairs of hands lifted him up, patting
him and pushing him away.
More than once he heard what sounded like, “Fucking
drunk, ought to know better.”
Adin made it as far as a wall against the patio, where he
leaned hard, catching his breath, and called Boaz on his cell
phone. The noise was impossible, and he didn’t know whether
Boaz even heard him before he hung up. He stumbled his way
to the exit, to Castro Street, and into even more people who
took his staggering and the torn and dirty state of his clothing as one more example of simple inebriation and shockingly bad
taste.
Eventually Boaz arrived with the car, his dark eyes
unreadable as he opened the door. Adin crawled into the
backseat. Boaz didn’t meet his eyes after that, which didn’t
surprise him. Adin’s humiliation was complete. Men like Donte
could use him. They could play with him; they could eat him or
fuck him or tear him apart like fresh bread. He
had
known it but
106 Z.A. Maxfield
hadn’t let it sink into the part of his consciousness that knew
without thinking that fire was hot and would burn you if you
touched it.
Now he knew.
They drove through the night in silence. Adin tried to read
his watch, cursing that he’d chosen to wear only the one, his
father’s. By the illumination of a reading light, he saw the crystal had been cracked during the scuffle. He turned the light off and
slumped in his seat, trying hard to comprehend what had
happened. Every part of his body hurt, and he was so exhausted
he’d begun to drift.
Only a week before, Adin considered himself a capable man,
good at his job, certain of his life. Only a week before, the
things he dreamed about were just that; he’d known his
nightmares were an illusion, and he’d always known he’d wake
up sooner or later.
Only a week before, Adin had dared to believe that
he
was
the top of the food chain.
Adin’s mind drifted lazily away from his body as Boaz
drove. It began to occur to him that the trip back to the hotel
was taking a great deal longer than the trip to the bar. He
opened his eyes to look around and realized they’d been driving
for some time, probably over the bridge into Sausalito. He knew
he’d probably slept; that soon the sun would begin to glow on
the horizon, but nothing he saw was familiar to him.
“Boaz?” he asked, suddenly startled out of his dreamlike
state. “Where are we? Where are you taking me?”
“I’m not allowed to say, sir,” Boaz replied. “I’m very sorry
for the inconvenience.”
“This is more than inconvenient, Boaz. It’s kidnapping. It’s
a criminal offense. Please take me back to the hotel. I believe
I’ve quite learned whatever lesson you wanted to teach me.”
Adin felt his throat tighten.
Boaz looked at him in the rearview mirror, and Adin caught