Authors: Amy Lane
Tags: #Paperback, #Novel, #GLBT, #Contemporary, #Romance, #Contemporarygay, #M/M Romance, #dreamspinner press, #amy lane
don"t know, Xan. I just know that….” Chris ran his hands through his
short-cropped hair. Xander missed his curls—he"d kept it super short,
ever since “Bigot-man” had showed up. One less thing for that acid
tongue to drip bile on. One less thing to not try to ignore. One more thing
to hide.
“Something?” Xander asked, feeling hope. They could talk to Leo.
They could trade to another team, keep the house here, and play
somewhere else. Hell, they could come out and let the NBA make the
choice. Something. Anything. Anything but two condoms in their
pockets, every third home game of the month.
“Let"s not get traded mid-season, and then, yeah. You"re right.
Something"s got to change. We"ll change it. I swear.” His breath caught.
“God, Xan, I love you. You know that, right? You know… I mean, we
never say it, because our whole lives, it"s just been us. It"s like saying it
is sort of silly, but….” Chris shook his head again, and Xander reached
across the distance between them and pulled him against his chest.
“It"s not silly,” Xander whispered. “I love you too.”
“You need to eat more,” Chris muttered, probing at his chest.
“Ibuprofen and Tums are not a good breakfast.”
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Amy Lane
“It was Pepto and a croissant,” Xander said back with dignity.
“And it"s better than vodka.”
Chris tried a smile. “Sometimes there"s tomato juice—that"s good
for me, right?”
“No,” Xander said seriously. “No.”
Chris huddled in his arms, a child seeking protection. Xander
wondered how it was that they"d managed to be more grown-up at
fifteen than they were at twenty-eight.
XANDER KARCEK pounded down the glossy wood of the court, thigh
muscles straining, huge biceps pumping, and sweat dripping into his
eyes from his black bangs. The ball sang against the boards in front of
him and popped back into the palm of his wide-fingered hand as he
dribbled furiously, strides ahead of the enemy, in perfect position to
score....
OH,
GOD
, it was a good game! Xander and Chris—they were poetry in
sweat, an orchestra of heaving muscle, sinew, and bone. The crowd
roared like the ocean, and the hollow thunder of their feet on the boards
and their hands against each other made even the air tremble in their
ears. They were high on the game, blinded by the magic that flowed
from player to player to player.
The score was tight—the Kings had a two-point lead through most
of the game, and then, in the last minute, Xander was shoved backward
by the Blazers forward, falling on his ass and feeling something
obnoxiously painful ping in his wrist. But his blood was up, and he was
already on painkillers, so he was on his feet before Chris could even look
at him twice and hurtling down the court again, coming up underneath
and behind William Skaarsgard and stealing the ball.
The crowd erupted, the noise so overwhelming that Xander started
hearing under it, so that the blood in his ears, his harsh breathing, Chris"s
whoops of triumph, they were all louder than the cheering as he whipped
a neat one-eighty around Skaarsgard and threw a high, looping pass to
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Chris before anyone realized he"d stopped dribbling. Chris caught it,
dribbled, and then behind-the-backed to Washington, who made it down
the court and… missed the dunk.
Chris was right up there, though, and he made it, and then the ball
was in the opponent"s hands for a scant second as Oregon set up to
recoup the lost two points.
They never made it down the court. Xander told the press after the
game that it felt like reaching out to the sky and picking a bird out of
flight. The words were bandied about for weeks, because Xander was
supposed to be “stoic” and not “poet,” but he didn"t care. That"s how it
felt—charmed, magical, personal—and before the other team even
realized they"d suffered a turnover, Xander was on the outside of the
key, where he executed a running three-point shot in front of a raging
crowd.
That made it in right before the buzzer.
His team was surrounding him, thumping him on the back, rubbing
his sweaty hair, patting his ass, and he was right back with them, in their
midst, surrounded by family and light and happy, happy noise. Christian
was there, although after the initial hug with the rest of the team he did
what he did in high school—showboated, held clenched fists to the
heavens and reared back and roared, leapt impossible heights into the air
and whooped—and Xander was not alone, far away, in a box.
He was as happy here as he was in Chris"s arms, only the happiness
was louder, brighter, and sharper on the nerves. Even Xander, in the eye
of the maelstrom, knew it wasn"t the sort of happiness that was meant to
last—but that didn"t mean it wasn"t sweet.
The mood at the team watering hole was triumphant, and the
women who had managed to filter in through bouncers and propriety
seemed to double in number every time Xander looked. They celebrated
for a couple of hours, they talked with their teammates, relived their
shots, and everyone lifted their glass to Xander and the “magic-bird-ball”
even as the sound bite was replayed again and again on the monitors
above them.
Things wound down, though—they had to. Chris put a heavy hand
on his shoulder, and Xander looked up to where a group of girls milled,
looking at the unattached players in a faintly predatory way.
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“Should I guess which one you"re going to pick?” Chris asked
bleakly, and Xander narrowed his eyes.
“I don"t even know which one I"m going to pick,” he all but
snarled, and Chris"s hand tightened, and he bent down to talk privately in
Xander"s ear.
“It hurts me worse when they"re like me,” he whispered, and
Xander looked at him accusingly.
“They"re all like you,” he said, wondering if that came out right.
“Even when I try to pick the ones that aren"t.”
He sighed then and stood up, shaking off Chris"s hand and going to
the bar to get a beer and a spare. He was on his way back, keeping an eye
out for someone who didn"t look
too
predatory, someone who looked
like she could make him laugh, when he practically walked over a tiny
little woman with dark hair, who was urgently texting on her cell phone.
She looked up, an apology on her lips, but when her neck kept
falling back before she could actually see Xander"s face, her mouth
literally swung open at the jaw—but her hands
never
stopped texting.
Xander had to laugh. He looked over the front of her and down (a
long way down) to her phone and started to laugh. “OMG,” he read,
“Xander Karcek just ran me over. He"s as tall as an ogre!”
“Oh shit!” The poor girl turned pink, right to the pale end of her
nose, and Xander got a good look at her. She was, in essence, the anti-
Chris. She was tiny and feminine, wearing a frilly little black skirt and a
white blouse that looked like a pirate shirt. She had a wealth of straight,
shiny dark hair, and vaguely Asian features, and she was not laughing or
bubbling or socializing without compunction. Instead, she was clinging
to her phone, and probably to the friend on the other side of it, with a
little bit of terror in her eyes, and looking at Xander with quiet adoration.
Very rarely was Chris quiet.
And Xander liked her already.
“I"m not really an ogre,” he assured her with a smile, and she
nodded avidly. “Although,” he added, looking around as though this
hadn"t just been reported on some special about athlete grooming, “if I
miss my waxing appointment, I look like one.”
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It was socially awkward, and maybe, if his face wasn"t up on ten
television monitors around the bar, it wouldn"t have worked, but she
burst into giggles, and he knew he had her.
“I saw that,” she confessed. “It looks painful.”
Xander shrugged, and went to his fallback line on the subject—one
cooked up by Chris, of course. “Well, when your father was half-yeti….”
She giggled again, and then looked at the beer in his hand. “So, um,
does that have a home?” She was looking at him hopefully, and he
smiled, feeling resignation steep down from his spine to his balls.
“It does now.”
Audrey was funny, and a little bit shy, and she had heard his sound
bite and told him that she was majoring in English and thought that his
poetry was beautiful.
Xander had actually blushed. “I was a history major,” he said,
embarrassed, and she"d nodded, like she knew this.
“I
know!”
she told him, excited. “Everyone else majors in business
or computers or technology. Do you
know
how rare it is to have a
basketball player major in the humanities?”
“Probably not as rare as you think,” he said, thinking it was true. A
lot of the players had enjoyed their educations as much as he had. For
some of them, it had been an opportunity they"d never dreamed about.
Audrey shook her head. “I"d need to do stats,” she confessed. “I
just thought it was interesting, you know? The press calls you Cave Man,
but really, you"ve got this sort of erudite specialty. It"s like they don"t
know you at all!”
Oh God. She was actually looking at him like a
person,
and Xander
had a sudden, real conviction that he couldn"t do this. He was smiling at
her, getting up the courage to tell her that it had been nice, but he had an
early morning, when she suddenly looked him dead in the eye.
“Hey—do you want to get out of here?”
And he felt trapped, as locked into sex with her as he had been
locked into this whole encounter, and his eyes sought Chris"s across the
bar. Chris nodded and held up two fingers. Xander nodded back, and
Chris held up his index finger and his thumb, perpendicularly, like a big
L. Xander laughed like his buddy was chiding him for being a Loser, but
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he knew the code. It meant “locker room.” They both had keys, and it
was a convenient place to meet.
“Do you live nearby?” he asked smoothly, because his silent
exchange with Chris had lasted less than a second.
“Only about ten minutes,” she told him, and Xander looked up at
Chris and made a little X with his fingers. An hour and a half, max, and
so he left.
She actually lived less than five minutes away, although it seemed
longer because he went in her car. It was tiny, and he felt as though his
knees were at his ears, and Audrey laughed and chattered nervously the
entire way. He got to the apartment and was a little surprised; it was
about a block away from that first apartment he"d had, the one with the
couch and the garbage bag, and his heart started to flutter in his stomach
and his throat and behind his eyes.
It was pounding like a kettledrum when he got inside.
She had a couch in the front room, and a laptop on the coffee table
as a television. There were stacks of books and a printer and computer
paper in the corner, but no table to put them on. He looked beyond her to
the one bedroom and saw that it had clothes—not a lot, but enough to
indicate she"d moved from somewhere—and a dresser, but no bed.
She saw the direction of his gaze and looked sheepish. “I hope you
don"t mind. I just moved out of my parents" house, and I"m still earning
the money while I study, you know?”
Xander nodded stupidly. “What"s your major?” he asked, buying
time. There were a couple of standing lights in the living room, and he
could get a better look at her face than he had in the darkened bar. She
looked improbably young.
“Poetry,” she chirped, turning back to him, and he smiled, thinking
she"d be a wonderful English major—hell, probably a wonderful writer,
and then he looked around the apartment again. When he looked back at
her, she was texting again, and he had to laugh.
“Telling your friends?”
She grimaced and closed her phone, turning it off. “They keep
giving me shit, you know? Because I haven"t put out yet…. I told my
best friend that I had Xander Karcek in my living room, and she about
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shit her pants. She won"t believe it in the morning!” Suddenly, Audrey
looked abashed. “She asked for a picture, but I couldn"t send one. I
mean, you know. I know you"re just here for sex, but that"s sort of