Authors: Amy Lane
Tags: #Paperback, #Novel, #GLBT, #Contemporary, #Romance, #Contemporarygay, #M/M Romance, #dreamspinner press, #amy lane
this alone. But you can"t. Penny"s moving in here, whether you like it or
not. You"ve got what? Six guest rooms in this place, not including the
room that"s
supposed
to be yours? Good. She"ll be all moved in two days
time.”
“Grown men don"t need a babysitter,” he said with dignity,
although a private corner of his mind was jumping around singing,
“
Hallelujah, I don"t have to live alone!
”
The Locker Room 121
“Xander….” Andi trailed off and looked at her husband. “Help me
out here, Jed. You"re a man, you get that whole pride thing. Talk to
him!”
“Xander,” Jed said mildly, “do you love us?”
Xander blinked. He"d never said it, but of course he did. They"d
taken him in, given him luggage, and become a part of his heart like
nobody else in his life. “Of course,” he said, worried for a moment that
this had been in doubt.
“Do you remember how upset Andi was when she saw your first
apartment when you were just a kid?”
Xander flushed. He hadn"t been able to make that work. Some
grown-up he"d been! “Yeah,” he said, embarrassed.
“Don"t put her through that again, okay? Penny can save for a
house while she"s living rent-free, and she works in Folsom anyway.
You"d be doing us a favor.”
Xander smiled a little. It was transparent, and silly, and, well, yeah.
It worked. “Okay,” he said, flushing. “Can I go for that run now?”
Andi gaped at him and shook her head, then looked at her husband,
who was smirking at her. As Xander ran up the stairs for his running
shoes and some dog toys and his ticket out of the emotional void that
was threatening to consume him, Andi was smacking her husband on the
arm, completely at a loss for words.
122 Amy Lane
Jack-in-the-Box
XANDER took his cell phone and called Chris as he started his run.
Chris answered, groggy, but happy to hear his voice, and said he had to
sign papers in an hour and a half, and then asked about his folks, and his
family and….
The conversation was just so normal. Xander could almost believe
that they could make it work. It would suck, but it was only six months,
right? He"d endured worse. How long had he lived with his mother
before he"d broken away? He"d been scrounging for his own clothes at
thrift stores when he was nine. He"d been getting himself off to school at
the age of seven. He had a vivid memory of trying to forge his mother"s
signature on a field-trip form at the age of six. (He had no idea how he
ended up on the field trip, but he knew his teacher hadn"t been fooled for
one damned minute). He had memories of an Operation Santa van
pulling up to his house when he was eight years old, because he"d asked
for pants that came down past his calves. They"d been appalled at the
drug mess, and had even called Social Services, but his mother had
managed to clean up her act for a visit, and they were never heard from
again.
Xander had toughed it out as a kid, right? He could endure
phenomenal amounts of pain and punishment, rattling his outsized body
down the floor as a giant-sized adult. He could do this. He could live
apart from his lover for six goddamned months, right?
Then Christian said, “Xan, mom called me about the nightmares.
She wants to take you to someone so they"ll stop.”
Xander tripped on a rock and went sprawling, sending the phone
out into the stratosphere and giving what felt like a nasty sprain to his
wrist. He finally found the phone (thank God, not in the poison oak) and
redialed Christian, feeling scratched and sweaty and irritated.
“Fuck no,” he said when Chris picked it up on the first ring. To
prove his point, he took a picture of himself with bramble scratches
down his face and a big old rip in his favorite running shirt and a scrape
down his gingerly held left arm.
The Locker Room 123
Chris choked into the phone and said, “Damn, Xander—I"m not
sure if that proves that you like being crazy or if crazy makes you
clumsy!”
“I have nothing to say to anyone but you,” Xander growled, and
Chris gave a weary laugh.
“Okay. I hear you. I"m surprised half the lakefront houses can"t
hear you, you"re damned near shouting.”
“You had to move out last night and your mother tried to shrink my
head this morning, Chris. It"s going to make me grumpy!” Under-
fucking-statement of the goddamned century!
Chris"s sigh practically gusted his hair back from the phone alone.
“I love you, goddammit. I will love you forever. I just don"t—” Chris
made that grunting noise he always made when he didn"t want to finish
the sentence.
“Don"t what?” Xander demanded, irritated.
“Don"t want to see you in pain.”
“Then make sure you see me in six months, when you come back
to me!” Xander snapped, completely out of patience, and Chris snapped
back.
“I didn"t leave
you,
you know! I just left….” And then Chris
completely deflated like a blue sound balloon over the telephone.
“You"re on a business trip,” Xander said now, just like he"d said to
Andi and Jed.
“A business trip,” Chris repeated firmly.
“And we"ll see each other between times,” Xander said, more to
make himself feel better. They both knew—he"d taken a look at
Denver"s schedule, and Sacramento"s schedule, and the practice
schedules, and it was a real possibility that the man he"d seen every day
since he was fourteen might not be able to touch his hand or quiet his
fears or touch his body until the NCAA break in March. At least they
were both playing the All-Star Game.
“All-Stars,” Chris murmured glumly, and Xander was so pissed off
to hear Chris say it, he kicked a rock lying in the road.
It was attached to a basketball-sized boulder, lying under the
decomposed granite of the pathway, and Xander"s follow-through and
124 Amy Lane
connect broke his toe—truly, broke it. He"d done it the year before when
he ran into the bleachers during the game, and had played on it for the
entire season, and he remembered the pain, and he remembered the
feeling and oh, fuck fuck fuck fuck fuck fuck fuck
fuck
it fucking hurt,
and now he"d have to play on it all-fucking-over. His swearing could be
heard out over the lake, and the dogs came back to whine at him
worriedly, and Chris, not sure what to do about the situation from a
thousand miles away laughed bitterly over the phone until Xander
hobbled through his front door, desperate for some ibuprofen, some
Pepto-Bismol, and some motherfucking ice.
HE PLAYED on it. Of
course
he played on it. And when he was running
during practice, no one even noticed he was in pain. It wasn"t until the
coach blew a whistle for a halt that he started to limp, and as the court
doc came running up to check him out, the coach snapped, “It"s just
because his little boyfriend isn"t there to carry him! Leave him the hell
alone!”
Xander wasn"t really sure what happened to the ball in his hand.
One minute he was dribbling it slowly, and the next minute it was
rebounding off the wall by Wallick"s head. Wallick was fit, though—
he"d ducked, and now he glared at Xander through narrowed eyes.
“
Karcek!”
“I"m "bout done with practice, Coach,” Xander said numbly. “I"ll
get my foot wrapped and finish up at home.”
With that he walked past the guy, and wondered if anyone else
could guess that he had just barely missed committing assault.
The court doc wrapped his bruised, tender toe, and then secured it
to the rest of Xander"s long toes, and pressed some pain relievers in his
hand.
“You drive today, Xander?”
He barely remembered to nod. Chris usually drove, but yeah,
Xander had dusted off the big black SUV (Chris had gotten it as a
birthday present and had it “pimped out” with gold rims and flashy
The Locker Room 125
fixtures, just because he knew it screamed the things that Xander was
uncomfortable with) and driven himself.
“Yeah,” he whispered, tucking the painkillers into his gym bag.
They were more powerful than the ibuprofen, but a lot harder on the
stomach, and Xander"s stomach was already starting to churn this
morning. Pancakes and strawberries were not sitting well, and Xander
wondered sourly if it wasn"t time to eat oatmeal or granola or something,
since he was being so damned grown-up about all this bullshit.
“Don"t take those when you"re driving, okay?”
Xander shrugged. “Don"t like taking them in general,” he said. He
never had. Ibuprofen was about as hard as he got.
Doc Malloy grunted. “That"s going to hurt a lot, Xan—and you"ve
got a game tomorrow. I"d go home and put that up if I were you.”
Xander grunted. “Sure, right.”
“Yeah, well, before you go out and party all night, at least let me
wrap that scratch on your arm. What in the hell did you do to yourself
this morning?”
“Tripped on a rut in the road and kicked a rock.”
Malloy was an older black man, with buzz-cut graying hair and
small, laser-point black eyes. The gaze he leveled at Xander was
disconcerting, to say the least. “How"s Chris doing?” he asked quietly,
and Xander looked away.
“He"s settling in. Staying with Cliff in Denver.”
“With that harpy of a wife Cliff"s got? God, we"re going to miss
him here.”
Xander must have made a sound, because Malloy patted his
shoulder.
“Well, you don"t have to be married to a guy to miss him.
Roommates, brothers, whatever. You spend some time with someone;
they leave a hole when they"re gone. You take care of yourself, Xander.
You"ve got to get your head in the game. Chris could read your mind out
there, and Pollack out there—he can barely read a newspaper! You"re
going to have to bust your ass to keep this team in the playoffs, right?”
126 Amy Lane
“Playoffs?” Xander had been wandering.
He"s not my roommate.
He"s not my brother. He"s my lover, my husband, my reason to live.
What would Malloy say to that?
“Well, yeah!” And now Malloy"s laser-point look had changed,
become fathomless, and he was looking at Xander in mute supplication.
“Xander… man, I"ve been working for this team for fifteen years, and
I"ve seen us in two places. I"ve seen us in “almost enough” and “two
floors down from the basement.” God… you and Edwards? That"s as
close as this team"s been to winning, you know?”
It"s only a goddamned game!
He thought it, but he couldn"t say it.
The guy had just wrapped his toes and listened to the shit he didn"t say.
Xander might be pretty good at self-pity, but he was usually
awesome
at
keeping it to himself. He wasn"t going to smack poor Malloy down for
loving the same thing that had given him Chris in the first place.
“You really want to see the win, don"t you?” he asked quietly—but
he felt the question, deep down in his heart.
“Boy….” Malloy straightened up and looked away. “See, I was in
my thirties when this team came to town. I was trying to finish nursing
school, because they didn"t have a sports medicine degree or a
physician"s assistant degree then. There was just two-year nurse and
four-year nurse, and I was going for four years because, dammit, I
wanted to be on the
floor.
I"d blown off my college education for this
game, and I"d do it again, and now I just wanted a chance for it again.
But this town? This is a weird sort of place, man. About twenty miles up
the road you"ve got rich white people living on converted farmland.
Down here, you"ve got a mix of people, and out here, with the Arena?
Twenty years ago, this was a coyote"s toilet. So you"ve got all these
people, all these different people, and it"s like they"ve got the worst of
being poor—they"ve got the ghetto poor and the redneck poor, and a
town full of dirty politicians. About the one thing they"ve got that holds
them all together is this goddamned basketball team.”
“I remember,” Xander said, swallowing hard. He remembered
being a kid, living in that shitty apartment, and living and dying with the
Sacramento Kings. He remembered the night they"d lost the playoffs to
the Lakers—not in truth, but in spirit—the whole night had been cursed