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 1, Part 2
Interlude
Marty and Virgil had an apartment across
town from campus. It was in the basement of a house with an entrance from the
driveway. The landlords were an old couple, both deaf, and besides playing the
TV really loud some nights, they were easy to get along with. Both of them, in
fact, were sweet as grandparents to the boys.
A coffee cake might show up on their
kitchen table—the door to the apartment was never locked, and there were no
keys anyway. Or there would be leftovers from a church supper in the
refrigerator. They were growing young men and not supposed to go hungry.
Marty had moved in the weekend before
school started. He’d decided not to enroll at the college, but took a job at a
lumber yard, where they put him on a forklift and kept him busy all day.
“I’ll be the working man,” he told
Virgil. “You go get your education.”
This had disappointed Virgil, who
pictured them together each day, taking the same classes, having lunch together
in the cafeteria. Going back home together at the end of the
day.
“I’m not ready for that yet,” Marty had
said. “I got too much other stuff going on.” By that he meant, Virgil guessed,
the fact that he’d left home again—and again under a cloud of disagreement with
his father—and was living on his own, in a new job, in a new town.
“And there’s you to get used to,” he
said. They were sitting together at the A&W eating burgers and fries in
Virgil’s car, which was on permanent loan now from his aunt Doris. Her
boyfriend Duane, she explained, was more than willing to take her anywhere she
wanted in his pickup.
“Me to get used to?” Virgil said, slurping down a root beer float.
“Yeah, like who drinks those things
anymore?” Marty said pointing with a french fry to
the mug Virgil was holding. “They’re for kids.”
“Hey, so I’m still a kid,” Virgil
laughed. “I’m gettin’ used to you, too.”
“Meaning what?”
“I dunno,”
Virgil shrugged. “Nothin’, I guess. I just wanna be between your legs right now.”
And their conversations always seemed to
revolve around to this. There was not enough naked time together as they called
it. And about this they were in agreement.
Virgil had helped Marty move in, filling
the backseat and the trunk with boxes of his belongings, a stereo, fishing
gear, a couple 4-H trophies and some clothes. Marty’s mom had given him a
sweater she had knitted.
“It was supposed to be for Christmas, but
you’ll need it before then,” she said, putting a smile on her face for them,
but not happy at all. You could tell.
She seemed to like Virgil. At least she
acted that way. But Marty’s dad was nowhere around that day, and no one spoke
of him. Because of that, maybe, Marty had been quiet all the way to
He had not come out of himself until they
had carried everything into their apartment, stacking the boxes against a bare
wall in the unfurnished living room, where someday they promised themselves,
there’d be a couch with a TV and they could sit together with their feet up,
drink beer and stay up late watching the late movie.
For sure, Virgil said, they had to have
one by the World Series. It looked like it was going to be the Reds and the A's.
Virgil didn't want to miss that.
Marty had stood there looking at the
boxes, in a kind of daze, and Virgil had finally stepped up behind him to put
his arms around him, pressing against his back and stroking his chest and his
belly.
“You’re here now,” he said, sliding his
fingers under his tee shirt.
“Yup,” Marty said and then laughed. He
reached with one hand behind him and felt for Virgil’s balls.
“Is it naked time?” Virgil said.
“Damn right.”
And they had taken each other right there
on the bare floor.
Three weeks later, they were already into
the routine—Virgil every day to classes, Marty to his job at the lumber yard.
Evenings they had supper together, Saturday nights were beer and pizza, and
Sundays were a day of rest, which meant hanging around the apartment in their
underwear or, if it wasn’t raining, sunbathing in the backyard.
This Friday night, Virgil waited as usual
in his car for Marty to get off work. After he punched a clock somewhere
inside, he came ambling through the gate along with the other employees,
carrying a hard hat and a lunch box.
As always he looked so handsome walking
there in his work clothes, a denim jacket pulled over a plaid flannel shirt,
wearing his jeans, and his heavy-soled boots. He looked tired, but glad to be
going home, and he smiled as he waved goodbye to the other men and headed for
the car, spying Virgil there behind the wheel.
“Hey pardner,”
he said, getting in.
“Hey.” Virgil started up the car and they
drove off, the car filling with the smell of wood shavings, fuel exhaust, and
sweat from Marty’s clothes.
They small talked as they drove across
town, the late afternoon sun turning the trees golden in the slanting autumn
light, and with Marty there beside him, Virgil felt his cock already stirring
in his jeans.
“Got something to show you when we get
home,” he said.
“Whatcha got I
haven’t seen already?”
“TV. Guy I know sold me his old portable for twenty
bucks.”
“Hot tamales,” Marty said.
“Thing is, the only place it gets a
signal is in the bedroom.”
“That’s a problem?”
“No we can have naked time while we’re
watching TV.”
“That’s what I’m
thinking.”
Virgil’s cock took another lurch against
his thigh and started feeling awkward. He had to reach into his pants to work
it free again.
“You already gettin’ a hard-on?” Marty said and laughed. “Me, too. We’re just a couple of horn dogs.”
When they got home, they went straight to
the TV, which Virgil had put on a chair he’d brought in from the kitchen. And
they sat together on the end of the bed, watching the
During the commercials, Virgil slid his
hand between Marty’s legs and stroked along the inseam of his jeans, and by the
time the news was over, they were stretched out together on the bed.
“You still got that hard-on?” Virgil said
between kisses.
“Never went away.”
“I can take care of it for you.”
Marty opened his jeans and pulled down
his underwear, his long erection swinging out in front of him. Then he reached
for Virgil’s belt buckle.
Virgil was already sucking him by the
time he got Virgil’s cock into his own mouth, and while the TV droned on, they
lay together making muffled noises, their faces buried in each other’s warm
crotch.
— § —
George had to do some talking, but he got
Don finally to agree to a weekend off for him and Slim. And not just off work,
the two of them sleeping late and loafing all day in the bunkhouse, but leaving
the ranch and driving all the way to Scottsbluff.
It was Slim’s
birthday, George explained. He was getting up there in years, and was overdue
for a little celebration.
“How old is he?” Don wanted to know. He
was standing in the open door of his truck, where he’d squeezed himself under
the dashboard to replace a blown fuse that was keeping the turn signal from
working.
“Old as the hills, don’t you think?”
George had said. Being Indian, he could talk like this to Don who wouldn’t
expect him to be more than vague and roundabout about such things.
“Fifty? Sixty?” Don said, peeling back the plastic on a packet of little fuses he
was holding between his fingers.
George had shrugged. He knew for a fact
that Slim was going on fifty-three, but if Don was willing to believe Slim was
older, it could do no harm.
“Hell, how many days were you thinkin’?” Don asked.
“Leave Friday
“What do I do if I need you while you’re
gone?” Don had bent down to squeeze his big frame under the steering wheel
again to peer under the dashboard.
“
“
“I already asked him.”
Don pulled himself upright again, the job
done. He took his hat from where he’d put it on the seat and set it back on his
head.
“A real boss would be a hard-ass and just
say flat-out no,” he said. “You understand that, don’t you?”
“You’d be in your rights.”
“Why am I saying yes then?”
George just gave him a little smile and
said, “Thanks, boss.”
And so it was decided. He and Slim had
left the ranch that Friday
George had pulled a little candle from
his vest pocket and lighted it from a pack of matches he’d picked up in the
bar. He’d popped the candle into the frosting on Slim’s
cake before he could reach for his fork, and then he’d grinned and said, “Happy
birthday, pardner.”
“Gosh,” was all Slim could say, marveling
at the sight of the burning candle, as if nothing like this had ever happened
to him before. And—who knows—maybe it hadn’t.
“You gotta blow out the goddam thing,” George said.
Slim nodded and grinned a while longer,
his fork still in his hand, and finally he sucked in a lung full of air and
blew.
“I got something for ya,” George said as
the candle smoldered, and he put a leather string tie down on the table beside Slim’s plate. It had a silver medallion the size of a
fifty-cent piece, with bits of turquoise.
“This is yours,” Slim said, recognizing
it.
“Yeah, I want you to have it.”
“You can’t give me this,” Slim said,
objecting.
“There something wrong with it?”
“It belongs to you.”
“Not any more. It’s yours now.”
Slim put down his fork and carefully
picked up the medallion, studying it.
“Put it on. Let’s see how you look,”
George said.
Slim slipped the narrow leather cord over
his head and patted the medallion into place on his chest. Then he looked into
George’s eyes, speechless, an expression on his face of disbelief and
gratitude.
“Now eat your cake,” George said, more
than a little embarrassed by it all. And they ate without speaking until they
had cleaned their plates, pressing their forks into the last crumbs and then
into their mouths.
They were in good spirits as they stepped
outside into the cool autumn night and took a walk along the deserted streets
ambling slowly until they came to a lighted marquee glowing above the entrance
to the town’s movie theater, the
They hadn’t planned on seeing a movie,
but it turned out to be a western with John Wayne—not George’s favorite cowboy
actor, who’d killed more than any man’s share of white Hollywood actors dressed
as redskins—but then they were not real Indians anyway, and John Wayne wasn’t a
real cowboy either. And more than anything, Slim seemed more than willing to
pay a buck at the box office to see it.
It was called “The Cowboys,” and they’d
missed only the first ten minutes of the second show, sitting there in the dark
with a handful of other people scattered around the theater.
“There’s the Duke,” Slim said as they sat
down, and George could tell from the sound of his voice that this was a
birthday treat almost as good as a string tie with a silver medallion.
It turned out to be not a bad movie, with
a fair body count after a big shoot out, but none of them were Indians—just
white guys trying to kill each other.
Long before John Wayne got out the guns,
though, Slim had reached over to George in the darkness and taken his hand,
holding it warmly there between George’s legs, squeezing it now and then at the
good parts.
The tenderness of that rough hand in his
took George more than a little by surprise. But somehow it seemed all right.
And he knew there was a good chance before the night was done that when the two
of them got back to the hotel room and crawled into the big bed,
they’d probably do more than hold hands. And that was OK, too.
— § —
Ellis watched the sun sinking behind the
His mother had wailed as he held her at
the graveside, the minister having said his last words, trying to console her.
“What am I going to do without him?” she had sobbed to Ellis as he held her frail
body to his chest.
His sister Kathy’s feelings had been more
mixed—relief on the one hand that the old man had finally given up the ghost
after years of being a constant burden with his failing health. And on the other hand? Her usual resentment that Ellis had
abandoned them all—though it had happened years ago now—divorcing his young
wife and making a new life for himself far away in Montana.
She also knew the reason he’d done it.
Never marrying again and showing up like he did the last time, with a friend
little more than half his age—Deacon—he’d made pretty clear that he’d never
developed the interest in women he’d surely been born with.
Which was a shame, so
she said. He was a handsome man,
and with his calm, patient manner he would have made such a good father. And so
on.
They’d had one last go-round, sitting at
the table in her kitchen, the morning after the funeral. She was angry again as
she reminded him how unfair it all was, his leaving
her to look after her ageing parents all by herself.
“Look at it this way,” he’d told her.
“You don’t have a queer brother in town embarrassing you in front of everybody
who knows you.”
“Don’t talk about yourself that way,” she
said, never more than half able to accept the truth about him.
He’d shrugged, poured himself another cup
of coffee, and looked out the kitchen window at the maple tree in his sister’s
back yard, its leaves turning autumn gold. The two of them would never get
beyond this, and he yearned to be gone again, away from his family’s
expectations and this endless flat land, which now held the remains of his
father.
With the long lay-over in
Tomorrow he would be himself again, slipping into the life he’d left behind, as easy as
pulling on his old Luchese boots, working as a
veterinarian and driving his truck out to ranches to look after people’s sick
cattle and horses.
He’d even forget the one clear
realization that struck him as he watched the coffin being closed for the last
time—with his father now gone, he was next in line to deal with the Grim Reaper.
Watching the ebb and flow of other people—all strangers—as he waited at the
gate for his plane, he’d felt the chill of that thought again.
He was alone in the world in a way he
hadn’t been before. The thought of his father didn’t trigger inside him the old
feeling of something—someone—pushing back at him. Instead, there was a vacancy
there, like a cold draft in an empty room.
Still, a solitary life was better than no
life at all. And he vowed to live the rest of his years to the fullest,
whatever they might bring. What that meant for him right now was the warm,
rough touch of another man—and the yearning for it swept over him as he sat
looking out the porthole beside him at the setting sun.
He’d called his home phone from
Which could have meant
days, or weeks, or months. Ellis
had learned not to count on him. About the time he’d decide Deacon was gone for
good, he’d show up again and move in like he was there to stay.
The nights would then be full of
lovemaking. And it was love. There was no other man Ellis felt so much
tenderness for—and missing him with such fierceness when he was gone surely
meant something. It wasn’t just because Ellis spent nearly every night alone.
When was the last time he’d had sex anyway? The Fourth of
July, at the rodeo in
He’d met a stock dealer from
He’d wanted to be fucked, and Ellis had
obliged him, but his heart had not been in it. To keep hard, he’d done what he
did on the nights when masturbation was the only thing that would help him get
to sleep—he closed his eyes and imagined himself with Deacon.
A surge of warm affection then rose in
him, and he felt his naked skin flush with aching desire. The man from
But there was nothing to seal the
illusion. With Deacon, his legs wrapped around Ellis, the two of them would
have embraced and rolled up tightly together, wet with spent cum, and the
kissing once it started would not stop.
Looking down now at the man under him,
still lost in an ecstasy and reaching to pull on his full cock, Ellis simply
froze where he was, braced upright on his knees and his fists, which were
buried in the bed sheets. The man’s face and chest were damp with sweat, his
hand in a kind of death grip as he jerked off, bobbing faster and faster.
Eyes tight shut, he moaned, his head
lifting from the pillow, finally crying out as he came in sudden spurts that
shot onto his hairy belly. Then he fell back, his legs dropping to the bed,
like he had passed out cold.
Ellis had pulled out of him after a
moment, and he’d gone to the bathroom to take a shower. When he came out later
and reached for his clothes to get dressed, the guy was still lying there,
asleep. He would wake up tomorrow, naked, hung over, and butt sore. He might
remember Ellis; he might not.
This was not living life to the fullest,
he knew, but damned if he knew what the hell to do about it. Just keep putting
one foot in front of the other and do the job he’d been given to do. It was
something he did well, and he could take pride in that.
He had phoned his answering service in
the morning to say he’d be back for work the next day and to pass the word on
to anyone who called. He’d phone again tomorrow morning before dawn and pick up
any messages. By sunrise, he’d be on his way to some rancher who needed him,
and life would be back to normal.
It was dark in
Slipping through a glass door into the
building, he saw people waiting at the gate for passengers, some calling out
when they saw someone they knew, others already hugging or laughing and
slapping each other on the back.
Pushing through the crowd with his
carry-bag in one hand, he felt in his pocket for his truck keys and started
trying to remember where he had parked in the long-term lot.
“Hey!” a voice came from beside him and
he glanced over for a moment without stopping. He saw only a young man standing
there, hands in his pockets, watching Ellis walk by.
Then he stopped and looked again. The guy
was smiling at him now and coming toward him. “You gonna
say hello or not?” he was saying.
It was Deacon.
“What are you doing here?” Ellis said,
setting down his bag.
“What’s it look
like?” Deacon said, glancing around at the other people and then back at Ellis.
“I’m here to welcome you back.” He just stood there when he got to Ellis, his
hands still in his pockets.
“How’d you know I was here?”
“You weren’t home when I got there, so I
called your answering service. They said you were flying in tonight.”
“How’d you get here?”
He stuck out his thumb. “Hitched.”
Ellis shook his head and couldn’t help
grinning back at Deacon’s smiling face. “Well, you’re a sight for sore eyes,
that’s for damn sure,” he said. He wanted to put his arms around Deacon and hug
him hard, but he thought better of it. Hugs could wait.
They walked together out the entrance and
headed for the parking lots, where they found Ellis’ truck under a lamp post
glowing in the night. He tossed his bag into the back and they got into the
cab.
The doors slammed shut,
Ellis just sat for a moment, letting his feelings well up in him as he looked
over at Deacon.
“We’re gonna
fuck each other silly tonight, you know that, don’t
you?” Deacon said and laughed.
“You bet your life.” Ellis thought of his
dead father in the cold prairie ground.
“I can’t wait,” Deacon said. “Let’s go.”
— § —
“Can’t you sleep?” Rich said in the
darkness, turning to Ty who’d been lying there restless
beside him ever since they’d switched off the light more than an hour ago.
Ty sighed. “No.”
“You thinking
about tomorrow?”
“A little.”
Everything was packed and ready to go.
They’d be climbing on the Harley when the sun came up and heading west. How far
west was hard to say. Rich knew a guy in
It was not a long distance for someone
like Rich, who’d been all the way around the world, humping the back country of
He knew Ty
would be OK riding behind him on the bike. They’d gone on several day-long
rides together and Ty had taken to it easy as
anything. He’d even bought himself a helmet with stars and stripes on it like
the guy in Easy Rider.
He had a trust in Rich that made him seem
fearless, and though Rich had never really liked taking on another rider, Ty’s presence behind him was a kind of comfort.
“You havin’ second thoughts?” Rich asked him and reached under the sheet to put
his hand on Ty’s shoulder.
“No.”
But Rich wasn’t convinced. “Sounds like
you might be.”
“I was thinking about my family.”
Rich slipped his hand now to the back of Ty’s neck and stroked his hair with his fingers. Ty had let it grow in the five or six weeks since they’d
known each other.
“Your folks are still home to you,” Rich
said.
Ty stirred, his head turning under Rich’s hand, and he
reached over to touch Rich on the chest.
“I dunno. Home
is here with you in Mike’s house. And now Danny, too.”
Rich thought about this. “It’s been home
to me, too, but I can’t stay here. I need to have a place of my own somewhere.”
“Why?”
“I never thought about it. It’s just what
a man does.” He pulled the two of them closer together under the sheet. “And I
want you to do it with me.”
Ty was quiet for a while.
“But if that’s not what you want,” Rich
said and didn’t say the rest. He had already decided to go without Ty if he wanted to stay behind.
And he didn’t like to think what that would
be like. There would be a lonesome emptiness for a while, and there was no
predicting how heavy that would weigh on him or how long it would last, but he
knew he was strong enough now to go on. In the time he’d been here, he’d
recovered some of the faith he once had in himself.
“When I said I was thinking about my
family,” Ty said, “I meant I was wondering whether
they’d take me back if you went without me.”
“I don’t want to go without you.”
“But you do want to leave.”
“If I don’t leave now, it’ll mean staying
here all winter. I can’t ask Mike to let me do that.”
“Couldn’t we find our own place around
here?”
Rich hugged Ty
now, holding him close. “It’s Mike you can’t do without, isn’t it?” he said.
It came to Rich now that this might be
their last night together. And he knew that he couldn’t leave Ty without making love to him one more time.
There might be sex enough on the road and
in the nights to come, but when would it ever be like this again? This warm tenderness that he felt. This
deep desire to hold on and not let go.
“If I have to choose between you and
Mike, I choose you,” Ty said.
“But you’d rather not have to choose at
all. I know.” He took Ty’s face in his hands and
kissed him. “Ah, my Tyrone,” he sighed and kissed him again.
Continued . . .
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.
© 2007 Rock Lane Cooper
rocklanecooper@yahoo.com