Mike and Danny:
Restless Hearts
by Rock Lane Cooper
This is
a work of homoerotic fiction. If you are offended by such material or if you
are not allowed access to it under the laws where you live, please exit now.
This work is copyrighted by the author and may not be copied or distributed in
any form without the written permission of the author, who may be contacted at:
rocklanecooper@yahoo.com
Note that these stories, including this
one, are not an endorsement of unsafe sex. They take place many years before
the appearance of AIDS and before it was standard practice to use condoms to
reduce the risk of infection from sexually transmitted diseases. Remember
always: that was then, this is now. Sex is precious, and so are life and
health.
Chapter 16
Tully makes a difference; Mike gets a phonecall; Rich has a request.
“You should go to Mike’s tonight,”
Tully’s wife told him. “You’re needed over there.”
He knew
She handed Tully an apple pie she’d taken
from the freezer in the basement and baked as soon as she got back home that
afternoon.
“You got some pie, you’re half way
there,” she’d always said when it came to dealing with sorting out people’s
problems. This seemed to be one of those times.
“What’s this all about?” he wanted to
know, ready instead for an evening of TV and some popcorn after milking his
cows.
“You’ll figure it out when you get
there,” she said, like it was not for her to go into.
So he changed into a clean pair of jeans,
put his boots and his hat back on, and went out to his pickup for the drive
down the road to Mike’s.
The day done, the frosty night air made
him think of football and Friday nights playing for his high school team. It
hadn’t been much of an athletic career, as a so-so defensive lineman, with just
a moment or two he still savored after all these years—a recovered fumble that
got them goal-to-go once in a close game. The fans had gone wild, and his
overjoyed teammates had pounded him on his helmet and his butt when he’d come
off the field.
He’d been a junior that year, his first
season as a starter, and one of the cheerleaders, who was in his social studies
class, had smiled and spoken to him. The fact that she went
steady with the quarterback meant as much to him as the attention she suddenly
began to pay Tully. He was a little in awe of the guy.
Maybe he’d said something to her about
Tully after the game—parked along the river in his Chevy with the windows
fogging over—and to come up as a subject of conversation between the two of
them made him flush with a warm feeling of pride.
Old feelings like that came back to him
all these years later when he happened to be out on an autumn evening, and he
felt the distance of time, of youthful innocence, of being little more than a
boy with half-formed notions of what it was to be a full-grown man.
As he drove now to Mike’s, the truck cab
filled with the rich, cinnamon smell of warm apple pie, which sat on the seat
beside him. He smiled as he saw the beginnings of condensation on the cold
glass of the windshield. As a senior, he’d finally had his own few
opportunities to fog up the windows on football nights.
But young and horny, he’d made little
progress with the one girl he’d picked to pursue—Alice, whose Catholic upbringing
and determined resistance to every form of persuasion he brought to his
backseat romancing had kept the two of them still virgins until they got
married after graduation.
And that had given him less than a month
of discovering what he’d been missing before shipping off to basic training at
In all his years he’d never had sex with
another woman, and once he was out of the service he’d never known anything but
being a provider, a father, and a man for others to depend on. He might wonder
sometimes how his life might have been different, if he’d waited a while to
find a wife and settle down—if he’d sampled a bit more of the opposite sex
before picking the one he’d be spending the rest of his life with.
But if wishes were horses, he liked to
say, they wouldn’t all fit in the barn—plus there’d be all that horse shit. You
played the cards you were dealt, and that was that.
He could have made a far worse pick than
Often without saying so, she let him know
that she’d never stopped enjoying his naked body, and while they could have
their spirited disputes during the day, these just seemed to keep the air clear
for what mattered just as much—this coming together under the sheets, his hard
cock not so readily hard these days but still good enough for the job of
satisfying them both.
He wondered now as he turned his truck
into Mike’s drive if she’d be up when he got home, reading one of her Reader’s
Digest Condensed Books in bed and waiting for him—maybe agreeable to some
lovemaking. It had been a while.
He parked by Mike’s pickup and noticed a
big motorcycle there beside it. A Harley, he observed, stopping to take a look
at it and imagining for a moment the feel of it between his legs and roaring
with it over hundreds of miles of open countryside—another of his dreams of a
road not taken.
Then he carried the pie to the porch door
on the side of Mike’s house, where a light burned brightly in the kitchen
window, and he went inside.
Mike was at the kitchen sink doing
something, but what Tully noticed right away was the young man sitting at the
table.
“Hello, soldier,” he said.
The words had come from him before he
could even think to say anything else. After all these years, there was that
thousand-yard stare that he’d seen sometimes in Korea, among men who’d fought
long and hard in combat—too long and too hard. He sat with a bottle of beer in
front of him, smoking a cigarette.
“Tully’s the name,”
Tully said, putting down the pie but waiting to offer his hand.
The eyes glanced up at him, and there was
a nod.
“This is my friend Rich,” Mike was
saying. He was sounding his usual cheerful self, like there was no one in the
room with what Alice and her Bible would call the shadow of death hanging over
them like a dark cloud.
“The pie’s from
Rich nodded again, stubbing out his
cigarette. “We met,” he said. “She’s OK.”
What the hell happened to you, son, Tully
wanted to say, but he turned to Mike instead, who was offering him a beer.
“Don’t mind if I do,” Tully said and
decided not to sit down. He leaned with his butt against the counter top.
Rich’s hair stuck up in tufts, and there
was a dark growth of beard on his face. He looked like he hadn’t changed his
clothes in a week. A long, hot shower would surely have done him good.
“
Rich shrugged. “A year,” he said. “More’n a year, I guess.”
“Pretty rough over
there?”
Rich shrugged again and reached for
another cigarette. The air in the room was already blue with smoke. And the
conversation went on like this in fits and starts, Tully sensing what was wrong
with the boy and not sure what to do about it.
Get him talking maybe. Otherwise, Tully
guessed, he’d stay locked in whatever hell there was inside him.
“
Rich didn’t look at him, just shook his
head no.
“Well, I was.”
And he told Rich about his tour there in
the military police. How he got shot at a few times on convoy but that, he said,
was probably no more dangerous than keeping drunken soldiers on leave out of
trouble. There was a story told sometimes about a knife fight over a
misunderstanding that involved a girl from a strip club.
Mike had heard the story before, and
Tully dressed it up with some details that may or may not have been true
anymore—it had been so many years ago, he’d begun to doubt his memory. Mostly
he was gauging Rich’s reaction, to see how much was safe for them to talk
about.
“The girl was yelling and trying to keep
them from cutting off each other’s nuts,” he said, laughing a little. “She’d
put some time in with both of them, and she wasn’t sure yet which one was going
to pan out.”
Mike smiled and said nothing, drinking
his beer.
“
Mike took the pie from the table and set
it on the counter, then opened a cupboard to take out some plates.
“I did have one close call,” Tully said,
and kept watching Rich, who continued smoking his cigarette, his concentration
fixed on working the label loose on his beer bottle with a thumbnail.
“We was
escorting prisoners from the front and took a mortar that blew out the whole
front end of our vehicle. My buddy got hit bad, and we
damn near lost him. Medevac got him out in time, but
I was watching them take him away not knowing if I’d ever see him alive again.”
Only then had he looked down at himself and seen he was covered with blood—and
checking himself, he realized it was his buddy’s and not his own.
Mike was cutting the pie into wide
pieces. Then in the silence after Tully’s story, he scooped them onto plates
and set the plates onto the table.
“You gonna need
a fork?” he said.
“Not for me,” Tully said. He was happy
picking up the pie with his fingers.
Rich put down his cigarette and took the
fork Mike was handing him.
“Did you?” he said looking at Tully. “Did
you see him again?”
“Yes. He was pretty bunged up—maybe lost
some of his good looks, but he had some to spare. He made it OK.”
Crush, they’d called the guy, because he
always had a new girlfriend writing from home he was crazy about. Now he was
good and crushed, he’d said, when Tully found him in the hospital. The doctors
had put him back together, but he’d lost most of the hearing in one ear and
some teeth. One side of his head was wrapped in bandages, and his jaw was still
wired together.
“What do you know about
“Police action,” Mike said. “38th parallel. General MacArthur.
“It was no police action,” Tully said,
wiping crumbs of pie crust from his face with the back of his hand. “It was a goddam war. You know how many troops we lost?”
Mike said he didn’t know, and Rich was
just staring at his beer bottle.
“Fifty-four thousand. I’d call that war, wouldn’t you?”
Tully never went on like this. History
was history. And what you learned if you studied it was that it was usually
about somebody getting fucked over, and nobody else ever wanted to hear about
it. Those two years of taking casualties while negotiators refused to reach an
agreement and the folks safe at home went about their business—well, that
showed what little people knew or cared.
Years of living with his cows, watching
them give their milk morning and night, and almost envying their disregard for
the human race and human folly, he had come to a kind of truce within himself.
He was not in fact angry now, just stating some facts.
Rich took a bit of the pie and nodded,
like he was having a conversation with himself. “You know how many we lost?” he
said. “Fifty-eight thousand.”
Not counting those who came back from the
dead, Tully thought, and find themselves like this
now—sitting in a farm kitchen somewhere on an autumn night, talking and eating,
and feeling all the while like a ghost.
“Average Joes like you and me, we’re the
ones had to pay,” Tully said quietly. “You don’t mind me talking like this, do
you, Mike?”
“No,” Mike said in a respectful voice.
“You two were dodging bullets, not me.”
“I lost someone,” Rich said, putting down
his fork. “A buddy in my platoon. He was just another
kid from the country like me. No real family. His grandma had raised him.” And
as he talked, the tears welled in his eyes and fell onto his face.
The two of them were like this, he said
holding up two fingers in a king’s cross, never separated longer than they had
to be. Bound together by fear, courage, and something like
love that they had finally confessed to each other after a night of drinking.
They had promised—when this fucking war was over—that they’d be friends
forever.
What that might have meant a million
miles from home on a starless tropical night wasn’t all that clear, but they
weren’t talking about the future anyway. From then on, they had looked out for
each other, every day bringing them one step closer to boarding the big plane
for home—alive.
“He was such a good-natured guy, I didn’t
see how anything could happen to him,” Rich said. “I guess it made me feel safe
just being around him.”
But one afternoon out on patrol, while
they had stopped and the two of them were sitting side by side on the trunk of
a fallen tree, talking about nothing, his buddy had
suddenly fallen backward into the brush. He’d been hit by a sniper, and they’d
all dived for cover, firing into the trees and undergrowth. But if they had
taken out the sniper, they couldn’t tell. There had just been that one shot out
of nowhere.
Crawling to his buddy, Rich had found him
already dead.
“I just hung onto him and kept prayin’ hard as I could,” he said. “Fuck, I don’t even know
how to pray—but it was just, ‘Jesus, Jesus, please, Jesus.’ All I could think of was I wanted him to go to heaven.”
Tully watched the boy, wiping the tears
from his face and picking up the fork to take another bite of pie. And he
wondered how much of this he would ever tell
“I can’t stop wonderin’,
why did it have to be him?” Rich said through his tears. “I was sitting right
there beside him. That sniper could have picked me just as easy. Draw a
bead—right between the eyes—and bam! But he picked my friend.”
Tully thought for a moment and finally
said, “Look at it this way. It saved your buddy the hell you’re going through
now. Would you trade places with him for that?”
Rich’s eyes met his, but he said nothing.
“Tell me, son, you got any family or
friends?” Tully said. “Anybody you can count on?”
Rich glanced for a moment to where Mike
stood. “Mike’s the only family I got,” he said and seemed to think over
whatever he was going to say next before looking back at Tully. “And there’s a
friend, yeah.”
“Does he know about all this?”
Rich shook his head.
“Can you tell him?”
“I don’t know where he is now.”
“What’s his name? Let’s find him.”
Rich shook his head again. “I owe him too
much.”
“For what?”
“For letting myself get so fucked up,”
Rich said, and he began talking about how he and this other guy named Ty had been on a trip to
“I must have blacked out,” he said. “When
I came to myself again I was in some motel in
“What’s the last thing you remember
before that?”
Rich looked back at his unfinished pie
and frowned. “We were going to a ranch up in the Sandhills.
I wanted to see someone there, a guy I used to know when I was a kid.”
“What did you want to see him for?”
Rich’s frown deepened. “I dunno for sure. That part’s kinda
hazy. I just have a memory of being in a fight.”
“Fist fight?”
Rich nodded. “And nothing after that.”
When he’d come around, he explained, he’d gone back to the ranch, the last
place he remembered seeing his friend—but his friend had already left, on a bus
headed east. And there was just a note that he’d been here at Mike’s, on his
way home to
“I don’t know where in
Tully glanced at Mike, who still stood
there, with his arms folded across his chest and that look of his—like his own
world had come to a stop and yours was all that mattered.
“I must have really scared him,” Rich
said. “Or I really let him down. Maybe he’s good and pissed off at me. I
wouldn’t blame him.”
“Don’t you suppose a real friend would
find a way to understand what happened that day?” Tully said.
“I know he’d understand. He was like
that. But I’m thinking it’s almost too much for me to ask.”
Tully had finished his pie a while ago
and had been holding the empty plate. He finally set it down on the counter
beside the sink. A clock chimed the half hour from another room in the house.
“I got nothing but respect for a man
who’s been through hell,” he said finally. “But I don’t have much patience for
self-pity.”
Rich gave him a sharp look.
Tully decided to risk everything. “And
the buddy you lost in
Mike nodded. “He’s right, Rich. You got
plenty of reasons to be hurtin’, but not enough to
give in to ’em—or to give up.”
“I don’t think I’m giving up, Mike.”
“What would you call it?” Mike said.
“Maybe goin’
down fightin’,” Tully said. “That
more like it? That why you picked a fight with somebody out there at
that ranch? Give them a chance to beat the shit out of you?”
Rich shook his head. “Fuck, I don’t
know.”
Tully sighed. “We’re not gonna fix this thing tonight.” He’d drunk the last of his
beer and set the bottle down now beside his empty plate. “But, by God,
something’s broke, and we’re gonna fix it. You hear
what I’m saying, son?”
Rich nodded, a
thumb and his fingers pressed into his closed eyes.
Tully went on. “I can tell you’re a good
man and, dammit, there’s enough good men gone to
waste in this sorry world.”
Rich looked at him again now, blinking.
Tully hoped he was hearing him.
“You do what you have to do, but you
gotta set your sights on being the man everybody wants you to be—and needs you
to be. You understand?”
“Yes, sir,” Rich said.
“Aw, sweet christ,
you don’t have to sir me. I’m just tellin’ you one
honest man to another.”
An uncomfortable silence filled the room,
and Rich sat there, like he was letting it all sink in.
“Another thing,” Tully said. “And no offense,
Mike, but you ain’t got near enough family. I want
you—both of you—comin’ over for Sunday dinner with
us. You can meet my girls and my grandkids. You don’t have to like ’em, but I’m sure as anything they’ll like you.”
Rich gave him a smile now and said, “I
will do that.”
“Give me your word?”
“You got my word.”
“Good, and I’m holdin’ you to it. Now, you gonna
finish that piece of pie you got there or am I gonna
have to have
Rich nodded. He’d met
Then the phone rang. Tully had to step to
one side as Mike took the receiver from the wall.
Tully didn’t listen and was thinking
instead about saying goodnight and heading back home. He’d done enough here and
could tell Alice so if she asked—and she probably would—and there was still
maybe an hour for a little TV and then seeing about some time with her in bed
before sleep. He realized he was still up for that.
“He’s right here,” he heard Mike saying,
and for a moment, Tully thought it was
But Mike turned toward Rich and held the
phone out to him. “It’s Ty,” he said. “He wants to
talk to you.”
— § —
Ty and his dad had been closing up the store, and he’d
got to thinking of the phone in the back room his dad used for an office.
“Mind if I make a call?” he said. “It’s
long distance.”
“Go ahead, son,” his dad had said,
pleased that the two of them were together again,
doing something they used to do every night when Ty
was a teenager in high school.
He wasn’t sure what he’d say when he
dialed Mike’s number. Mostly he just wanted to hear the sound of Mike’s voice
again. And after three rings, there it was—warm and reassuring—and for a moment
he felt the miles between them disappearing.
When he discovered that Rich was there at
Mike’s, his heart leaped in his chest, and after a long pause—and Mike saying,
“He’s comin’, he’s comin’”—there
was his voice, too, and everything inside Ty seemed
to go into a spin.
Rich sounded tired, but glad to be
talking to him. “When Mike told me you went back home, I wanted to follow you,”
he was saying, “but I don’t know where you live.”
“Oskaloosa,” Ty
said, laughing. “I told you once. You said it sounded like the name of a swamp.”
“Did I say that?”
“Yeah, I guess you forgot.”
“There’s a lot I wish I could forget,”
Rich said, after a pause, his voice growing darker. “I want to come to
Oskaloosa. I want to see you.”
Ty thought of Rich there among his family and how
they’d react to him, a biker with his unpredictable moods.
“I don’t think Oskaloosa is ready for
you,” he said.
“Yeah, I suppose not,” Rich said, like Ty had told him it was all over between them.
“But I want to see you again, too. You still goin’ to
“Naw, I’m
probably gonna hang out here at Mike’s for a while.”
“Good, I can come over some weekend.”
“Don’t wait too long.”
The fear came over him that Rich was
slipping away, and Ty felt something he hadn’t let
himself feel for days—the desire to be curled up in bed, his arms around Rich
and holding on. But he knew that he wasn’t strong enough to save his friend
from the phantoms that haunted him.
“I’m gonna be
there, don’t worry,” he said. “Don’t go jumpin’ on
your bike and headin’ off again god knows where.”
“That ain’t gonna happen. Long as Mike’ll
have me. And long as I know you’re comin’ to see me.”
Ty tried to take heart in the determination he could
hear in Rich’s voice. And he ached to be able to lift his friend’s troubles
from him, and to give him back his life.
As the words struggled up from the
confusion that filled him now, he knew that they were utterly true. “I love
you,” he said.
There was a long pause at the other end
of the line, and then finally he heard Rich’s voice, like someone clinging to
the ragged edge of hope. “I love you, too, buddy.”
And then, after it seemed there was
nothing else to say, they hung up, and Ty stood for a
long time in the dim light from his father’s desk lamp, letting the tears fall.
— § —
Rich had finally got out of his clothes
and took a hot shower, letting Ty’s words fill the
emptiness in him as the steamy water washed the tiredness from his body. The
mirror had fogged over, and he was glad not to have to see himself. That would
happen soon enough when he decided to shave the thick bristle of beard on his
face—maybe tomorrow morning, and maybe the next day.
Mike gave him a clean change of
underwear, and when he came out of the bathroom, he’d pulled on the tee shirt
and boxers.
“Your jeans, and the rest of what you had
on, they’re in the wash,” Mike said. “A dirty job, but somebody had to do it.”
Rich gave him a smile. “You’re the mom I
never had.”
Mike laughed. “If it’s a mother you’re lookin’ for, I’m sure
“
“Salt of the earth.”
“I want to be like that.”
Mike was getting ready for bed. He was
unbuttoning his shirt and pulling down his jeans.
“I think you always have been. The old
Rich is just hidin’ there somewhere, waitin’ for the right time to come out and say, here I am.”
“I dunno, Mike.
It ain’t that simple.”
“Maybe not. Time will tell. But my money says he shows up again better’n ever.”
He’d pulled off his shirt now and walked
through the house in his stocking feet, turning off lights until all that was
left was the lamp over the bed.
“I want to sleep with you tonight,” Rich
said.
“You gonna need
your boots again?”
“No,” Rich laughed. “I just want you to
hold me. Like you did when I was a kid and I used to come here.”
Mike smiled. “I remember that.”
“I never forgot. I didn’t know what it
was like to really feel safe until then.”
Mike sat on the edge of the bed, pulling
off his socks.
“Well, it was the easiest thing in the
world to do,” he said. “It still is.”
He got into bed and Rich got in with him,
turning so his back was against Mike’s chest. Mike switched off the lamp and
then put one arm over him, snuggling up closer, and patting him on the belly a
few times.
“Tully’s right. You’re a good man,” Mike said. “And you’re gonna be just fine.”
“I think I know that now,” Rich said,
letting the warmth of Mike’s affection steal through his body. And in a moment
he felt himself drifting off to sleep.
End of “Restless Hearts,” but the story
continues . . .
More stories. There are
links to all the Mike and Danny stories, plus a
conversation with the author, pictures of the characters, and some cowboy
poetry at the Rock Lane Cooper home page. Click here.
© 2008 Rock Lane Cooper
rocklanecooper@yahoo.com