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Authors: Ryan Field

Tags: #Erotica, #Romance, #Fiction

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BOOK: Valley of the Dudes
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from years of holding barbells. The car warmed up fast and the tinted windows glazed

 

over with fog. Their clothes fell in a rumpled pile.

 

When they were both naked, Rush reached between Harold’s strapping thighs and

 

grabbed his erection. He wrapped his warm hand around the shaft and jerked it up and

 

down a few times.

 

Harold took a deep breath and pressed his palm on the top of Rush’s head and

 

forced him down to the floor. Rush went down to his knees without resistance, then

 

opened his mouth, yanked Harold’s erection to his face, and wrapped his lips around the head. Harold’s body jerked backwards and his hips bucked forward. He rested his head

 

on the back of the black leather seat and spread his legs. While Rush’s lips went all the

 

way down to Harold’s pubic hair, Harold placed his other palm on Rush’s head and

 

guided his face between his legs.

 

Rush’s cheekbones indented and he took a deep breath through his nose to inhale

 

the sweet masculine aroma between Harold’s athletic legs. His lips puffed out and rubbed

 

against Harold’s wiry pubic hairs. He remained this way for a few minutes, with Harold’s

 

erection filling his mouth, pressing his tongue to the bottom of Harold’s shaft and

 

sucking as hard as he could.

 

When he finally lifted his chin, slowly, Harold’s shaft slid out of his mouth until

 

just his lips were wrapped around the head. He held this position for a moment without

 

moving, then started moving his head up and down. Harold placed his palms over Rush’s

 

ears and guided his head with care. “We’re so good together,” Harold whispered. “I
love

 

the way you do this. And I really
love
when you suck on the tip.”

 

While Rush was sucking, it occurred to him that they’d never actually said the

 

words, “I love you,” to each other. Harold often told Rush that he loved the way Rush

 

gave head, or that he loved the way Rush knew how to tighten and clamp down during

 

anal sex. Harold usually paid him compliments and told him he loved the way he looked.

 

In return, Rush did the same. But they’d never actually looked into each other’s eyes and

 

said the words, “I love you.”

 

Fifteen minutes later, Rush was leaning over the back seat and his legs were

 

spread wide. Harold was still inside Rush’s body and they’d both just had outrageous

 

climaxes. While Harold was pulling his erection out of Rush, he tapped Rush’s ass and said, “I
love
the way you tightened up this time right before I came. It felt like a clamp

 

around my dick.” Then he pulled his penis out of Rush’s body and smacked it against

 

Rush’s smooth bottom.

 

Rush lifted his head and he turned back to face Harold. “But are you
in
love with

 

me?”

 

“Huh?” Harold said. He was already reaching down to the floor for a box of

 

tissues so he could wipe his shrinking penis. They always used a generous amount of

 

lubricant and Harold hated how the greasy, messy lube felt on his penis when the sex was

 

over.

 

“I’m curious, is all,” Rush said. “You said you love the way I tightened up this

 

time and clamped down on your dick. You said you love the way I give head. But are you

 

in
love with me?”

 

Harold wiped his penis dry and said, “I love everything you do.” Then he handed

 

a few clean tissues to Rush.

 

Rush reached for the tissues and shook his head. Harold hadn’t answered his

 

question. The sex they’d just shared had been good and he didn’t want to ruin it, but he

 

had to know the answer. “I love everything you do, too, Harold. But I’m not sure I’m
in

 

love with you, Harold. Are you
in
love with me?”

 

Harold smiled and reached down for his pants. Without looking Rush in the eye,

 

he shoved his right leg into his pants and said, “I already told you. I love everything

 

about you.”

 

Rush lowered his head and frowned. He didn’t ask Harold again, because he knew

 

Harold wasn’t going to give him the answer he desperately needed to hear.

 

Chapter Two

 

On Monday morning, Rush gave two weeks’ written notice that he was leaving

 

his position at the law firm in Connecticut and moving to New York. On Tuesday, he

 

signed a lease to sublet an apartment in Chelsea and faxed it to the landlord. And two

 

weeks after that, on a cold Sunday morning in Connecticut, Harold, his mother, and his

 

aunt drove him to the train station to see him off. He’d asked his mother to sell his car. In

 

New York, a car would only be a problem.

 

His mother and aunt packed some homemade food and a family photo that had

 

been framed in pewter, so he wouldn’t go hungry and he wouldn’t forget where he came

 

from. This was the first time he’d ever been away from New England for more than a

 

week. Before he boarded the train, they hugged him as hard as they could and wiped tears

 

from their eyes, smiling and wishing him well the entire time.

 

Harold just stood there watching, a few feet behind Rush’s mother and aunt. His

 

hands were in his pockets, his legs were spread apart, and he was smiling with his lips

 

pressed together. After Rush hugged his mother and aunt, Harold extended his right arm

 

and shook Rush’s hand. “Have a good trip,” he said, in a low, solemn voice. He didn’t

 

throw his arms around Rush and he didn’t shed a single tear.

 

Rush smiled; it was so businesslike and formal. “Thank you, Harold.” He knew

 

Harold was not happy with his decision. Harold hated disruption and he hated it when his

 

normal routine was altered. They had argued for two weeks about Rush moving to New

 

York and there wasn’t much left to say. Harold did not hide the fact that he thought Rush

 

was making a huge mistake. When Rush had told him he needed time to figure out who he was, Harold had just frowned and shook his head instead of grabbing Rush and

 

begging him to stay.

 

“I wish you luck,” Harold said, putting his hands back into his pockets. His voice

 

went even lower and there was a sharpness to it that Rush hadn’t heard since the time

 

Harold’s car had been stolen.

 

“I know you do,” Rush said. He also knew something else. Though they hadn’t

 

officially broken up, and Harold thought he’d come running back to Connecticut within a

 

month, Rush knew this was the end of their relationship.

 

Then Rush picked up his luggage, boarded the train, and sat down in a window

 

seat. As the train pulled out of the station, Rush took a deep breath and sighed. He waved

 

to his family and Harold until he couldn’t see them anymore, then stared out the window

 

until the quiet, snow-covered New England countryside faded and skyscrapers started to

 

appear.

 

When Rush reached Manhattan, he took a taxi to his new apartment in Chelsea.

 

He had never actually seen the apartment, but it wasn’t much different from what he’d

 

expected. It was a typical New York studio, on the fourth floor of a newly renovated

 

building that had a doorman. The walls were white and the floors were parquet. Basically,

 

it was one square room with a small bathroom, a wall of closet space, and a kitchenette

 

concealed behind louvered folding doors. The only window in the apartment was up front.

 

It faced busy Tenth Avenue and he could hear the honking traffic swish by. In one corner,

 

there was a full-size bed and a small glass nightstand. In the opposite corner to the right

 

of the window was a small flat-screen TV fastened to the wall. Altogether the entire apartment couldn’t have been more than five hundred square feet, about half the size of

 

his old bedroom back in New England.

 

Rush placed his suitcases on the floor next to the bed and scanned the room with

 

his hands on his hips. When he looked at the kitchenette, he smiled at the small two

 

burner built-in cook top. There wasn’t even an oven—just the cook top and the tiniest

 

refrigerator he’d ever seen. But he wasn’t worried about whether or not he’d get used to

 

living in such a small, meager place. He hadn’t moved to New York to set up his dream

 

home and he wasn’t much of a cook. He’d moved to New York so he could meet new

 

people and have new, exciting experiences. The only time he planned to spend in this

 

apartment was when he was sleeping.

 

On Monday morning, Rush went for a long run before work. Then he showered,

 

trimmed his thin beard, and put on a brand-new light gray business suit. He wanted to be

 

extra early his first day, to give a good impression.

 

When he crossed into the reception area of his new law firm, there was a full

 

figured middle-aged woman sitting behind the desk. It was the same woman he’d seen

 

during his interviews, but he wasn’t sure if she’d remember him. She’d been busy with

 

phone calls each time he’d been there. This morning, she seemed just as busy. She’d just

 

hung up the telephone and was writing something on a notepad When Rush looked down,

 

smiled, and said, “Good morning. I’m Rush Goodwin and this is my first day.”

 

The woman looked up at him and raised her eyebrows. Her puffy hair was deep

 

red, she was wearing a bright green dress, and she had reading glasses on the end of her

 

nose. She put down the pen and stood up from the desk. She extended her hand and said, “I’m Esther. It’s nice to meet you, Mr. Goodwin. Mr. Hasslet is on a conference call right

 

now with an important client. I’ll let him know you’re here as soon as he’s finished.”

 

Rush smiled and thanked her. Mr. Hasslet was the senior partner and the man in

 

charge. Hasslet, Hasslet & Sharp wasn’t the largest law firm in New York, but it had an

 

excellent international reputation as a boutique firm. It specialized in the field of

 

entertainment law, and the clients it represented were some of the most famous celebrities

 

in the world. The senior Mr. Hasslet had started the firm with his brother, and together

 

they had built it into a thriving business. Mr. Hasslet’s brother had passed away five

 

years earlier and Mr. Hasslet, who had to be in his late seventies, refused to retire. When

 

he’d interviewed Rush and asked about Rush’s prior experience, Rush told him the truth.

 

Rush’s limited experience as a lawyer in New England had been in criminal defense, but

 

he’d always been interested in entertainment law. When Rush told Mr. Hasslet he was

 

willing and eager to start at the bottom and learn everything he could about entertainment

 

law, Mr. Hasslet seemed to like the fact that he could mold Rush into the lawyer he

 

wanted him to be. If Rush had already had experience in entertainment law, Mr. Hasslet

 

probably wouldn’t have hired him.

 

Esther crossed from behind the desk and said, “I’ll take you around and show you

 

the office while we’re waiting. It’s still early, though, and no one’s here yet.” She had a

 

deep, no-nonsense, husky voice. If she wasn’t a smoker, she probably had been at one

 

time.

 

Rush smiled. “I’d like that,” he said.

 

While Mr. Hasslet was on his conference call, Esther gave Rush the grand tour of

 

the entire office. She walked with heavy steps and greeted people as if she were the senior partner instead of Mr. Hasslet. She made a point of making Rush understand that

 

she knew everything going on at all times. Rush met a few of the office workers, one

 

intern, and a computer tech guy. When Esther approached these people, they stopped

 

whatever they were doing to concentrate only on what she wanted. Evidently, Esther was

 

both respected and feared by everyone.

 

Esther showed him the office doors of the other junior lawyers, but she didn’t go

 

inside. When they reached the smallest office at the end of a long narrow hallway, she

 

stood in the doorway and extended her arm. “This is where you’ll be working, for now.”

 

She lifted an eyebrow, as if goading him toward a negative response.

 

Rush stepped into a small windowless room. The walls were beige, the miniature

 

metal desk was shoved up against a wall, and there was a metal bookcase to the right of

 

the desk. It looked like a sample—a scaled-down version of an office instead of a real

 

office. But he smiled and said, “This is very nice. I’m looking forward to working here.”

 

Esther gave him a look and lowered her eyebrows. “Let’s go back and see if Mr.

 

Hasslet is ready to see you.”

 

On the way back to the reception area, Esther stopped in front of an office and

 

pointed. The name on the door read, “Lance Sharp.” She smiled and said, “This is Mr.

 

Sharp’s office. I know he’s not in yet because there isn’t a line outside his door waiting to

 

get him coffee.” Then she pressed her fingertips to her lips and snickered.

 

Rush tilted his head to the side. “Why would there be a line outside his door?”
BOOK: Valley of the Dudes
11.77Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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