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 8
Mike takes the day off; Ed has an
encounter on the road; Ty looks after Owen; Marty
gets a phone call; and Kirk reflects on his life.
There were at least a hundred perfect
ways to have sex with Danny. This time, like all those others, had been just
fine and made Mike feel all over again that he was one helluva
lucky man.
He had lain there on top of Danny, whose
legs were hooked around his shoulders, while he pushed in as deep as he could
go, bending down, his mouth open and tongue pressed into Danny’s mouth and
moaning as he came, hips thrusting with each burst of cum.
When he was done and awareness of the
present moment slowly returned to him, he heard the sound of the rain slap
against the bedroom window—and this was almost better yet—he knew that with the
weather too wet for fieldwork, he had no reason to get out of bed. There was
time and world enough to go on lying naked here with Danny for as long as he
wanted, letting the good feelings linger. And now that the aching desire for
sex was released, they ran like a pulse through his arms and his chest, warming
his heart and soul.
When the words “I love you, Danny” came to
him in the heat of passion, they meant something else—a hunger that yearned for
the feel and taste of skin and muscle and the blinding urgency of his hard-on
wanting to be enveloped tight inside Danny’s body. Now they came from a gentle
wash of tenderness he could feel all the way from his fingertips down to his
toes.
“I love you, Danny,” he said softly,
still lying on top of him and looking down into his smiling eyes.
If anyone had asked him, he would say of
each part of having sex that it was the best—from the first touch to this sweet
afterglow—each while it happened filling him with a pleasure he could hardly
put into words. In fact, he’d have said there weren’t words to say just what he
was feeling.
Danny, the writer, might be able to, but
for Mike most words were intruders. They took up room in his brain when what
his whole body craved was not thought at all but holding to him with all his
strength the one person who made him feel so alive and happy that nothing else
mattered.
He might during other times of the day,
working alone in the field—like these days in autumn, riding the big harvester
and making endless rounds as it cut down the stalks of corn, separated the ears
from the dry leaves and stalks, and then shelled the kernels from the cobs—he might
give thought to the many concerns that were part of running a farm.
There was the bank loan that helped pay
for that harvester, the unpredictable weather, wondering how many bushels he
would get to the acre and the rising and falling price of corn, and what the
balance sheet would look like at the end of the year. Money
ahead or deeper in debt.
All these concerns could make a man feel
unsure about almost everything—including himself.
While he didn’t wear a white shirt and tie or work at a desk, he had to be a
hard-nosed businessman if he was going to make a go of it. It wasn’t the reason
he’d wanted to be a farmer—the love of the seasons, the earth, the outdoors,
watching things grow—but it was 1972, and like it or not there were risks he
had to take and decisions he had to make if he was going to hang onto this
thing he loved—this 400 acres of land.
But Danny—ah, Danny—there were these
moments with him that made all these concerns simply melt away. To be with
Danny like this was to be overtaken by something so much more powerful than all
that, and to find himself wrapped instead in a kind of bliss that needed
nothing more than itself.
“I just love the heck out of you,” he
said again, gently pulling back his cock until he felt it fall free, then
rolled to his side in the bedsheets, Danny stirring
now, stretching his legs out, and pulling up the blanket to cover Mike and
himself.
“Me, too,” Danny said,
his voice husky with sex and emotion. “I love you like crazy.” And they lay
pressed together, listening to the rain and saying nothing for a while.
— § —
Ed had a thing for Merle Haggard. He
loved the guy for being an ex-con and singing tough songs about hard knocks and
busted love. There was honesty and a lot of heart in his voice. He was Ed’s
kind of man, and most of the eight-tracks in his car were recordings of his
albums.
Ed wasn’t much of a singer, but he sang
along as he barreled down the highway in the rain, the windshield wipers
keeping time.
I keep on workin’, long as my
two hands are fit to use,
I drink my beer in a tavern, singing a little bit of these workin’ man blues.
As the miles passed, he let his thoughts
drift, enjoying the feeling of being on the road again, with some place to go
and something to get done.
He’d had plans to get as far as
He was practically busting out of his
wranglers from being well fed and doing nothing but hang out at Ted’s for the
last two months, but it was his favorite meal to order up when he was out on
the road. Like they say, as he often told himself, breakfast is the most important
meal of the day, and anyway who knew when he’d eat again. Which
was a joke, of course. He never had much reason to miss a meal.
It was a slow Sunday morning and he
flirted a bit with the waitress, who looked tired like she needed some cheering
up. She wore a wedding ring, but here she was waiting tables all by herself on
a Sunday morning in a little town without even a by-pass. Maybe the guy she was
married to wasn’t the breadwinner she’d hoped for—it showed in her face, that
half-concealed look of disappointment.
He’d met plenty of women like that. And
there were still times when he let himself get into bed with one of them, just
for the sake of something he couldn’t quite account for—maybe the satisfaction
of being for once all the man a woman secretly desired.
It didn’t bother him that he wasn’t
actually what he seemed to be. After all, with women he was only good for a
one-night stand. What mattered was that look of disappointment disappearing for
a while and the welling up of passion that took its place—sometimes an
explosion of it.
So here was another one of them, topping
up his coffee mug, noticing his outfit and calling him “cowboy,” like by any
stretch of the imagination he was one. Then a carload of other customers had
come in, a man and his family dressed for church, plus two old guys who must
have been regulars and, tired of each other’s company, kept her at their table
between trips to the kitchen, talking to her and making lame jokes as she stood
there with a coffee pot in her hand.
When he was done eating, he covered the
check with something extra for a tip and tried to catch her eye from across the
room as he left, touching the brim of his hat when she glanced over at him.
Yeah, he thought to himself, she’d probably like to get in that Caddie with him
and take off for parts unknown. The world was full of people—men and
women—ready to make an escape just like that. Restless
hearts.
Soon he was crossing the state
line—“Welcome to
A man came from the john as Ed got there,
and he took a step to one side to let him pass. When he came back out, the guy
was still there, standing at the big plate glass window and looking out at the
rain, which was now falling harder.
He wore a dark blue jacket with a company
logo on the front and a dark blue cap with the same logo. He was, Ed figured,
the driver of a big rig that was parked out by the diesel pumps.
“Ain’t this
something,” the guy said, shaking his head.
Ed agreed, thinking he’d wait for the
rain to let up before going back to his car, and the two of them stood there
together.
The trucker had his hands in the front
pockets of his pants, and he rocked a little on his feet as he continued making
comments about the road and the weather. He was older than Ed, hair cut short
around the ears and beginning to gray. Under his jacket he wore a sweatshirt,
and over that, holding up his pants, was a pair of wide suspenders.
“How far you goin’?”
the man wanted to know.
“
“Been on the road long?”
“Couple hours.”
The kid in the windbreaker had come
jogging back from Ed’s car, and Ed paid him, after working the wallet free from
where it was wedged tight into his back pocket.
“Got a regular run from
“Long haul.”
The trucker reached down with one hand
and scratched his balls, holding his cock for a moment and giving it a tug
before he slid his hand back in his pocket.
Then he said, “There’s a
rest stop a ways down the road. You know it? I like to stop there for a
little shut eye.”
“Is that right?” Ed said.
Here it was happening again, he thought.
He looked at the guy, who was still gazing out at the rain. There was a firm
set to his jaw and a little smile on his face. He was a handsome man, and as he
stroked his chin now with one hand, Ed saw a wedding ring on his finger.
He thought of the waitress again and
laughed to himself that the two of them could be a couple, each less than happy
with the other. Each making the other’s life feel a little empty. Each noticing something in Ed and wanting it.
Flirting with the waitress was one
thing—it would never have come to anything. But this was different. He could
easily have sex with this guy. Just stop with him at that rest stop, climb into
his cab and do what comes naturally. He’d be on the road again in thirty
minutes and not lose any time.
But it wasn’t going to happen. And for
maybe the hundredth time since he left that morning, he thought of Ted, who
didn’t believe Ed could stay true to him. If Ted was ever going to believe
him—that he’d become someone to count on, someone to love, just one man for one
man—all this was something he was giving up. For good.
“See you later,” the trucker said and was
walking out the door and hurrying through the rain to his truck, without
glancing back. Ted watched him go, climbing up into the high cab, his pants
pulling tight over his butt. No doubt about it, he was a good looking man, and maybe
a barrel of fun in the rack.
If he followed the guy to the rest stop,
Ed caught himself thinking, Ted would never know. But—and this was his next
thought—that’s exactly why he wasn’t going to do it. More than Ted, it was
himself he needed to prove something to.
Later, back on the road, he drove for a
few miles before he caught up with the big rig. Following it now down a
two-lane stretch of highway, he’d already decided to pass and be on his way.
But the truck was throwing up a thick spray of whiplashed
rain from the pavement, and Ed couldn’t see around it. Two cars came out of
nowhere from the other way, one after the other, just to show that only a fool
would take a chance pulling into the oncoming lane.
So he slowed and dropped back a ways,
hoping the rain would let up. He popped another cassette into the tape
player—Kris Kristofferson’s worn-down voice singing “Me and Bobby McGee.” Damn
perfect song for driving down the highway on a rainy day.
Freedom’s just another word for nothing left to lose
Nothin’ ain’t worth nothin’,
but it’s free . . .
After a while, the right turn signal
began to blink on the back of the truck, and it slowed, drifting a little to
the right and then pulling off the road. They’d got to the rest stop. A cluster
of trees grew there in the misty rain, and there was a stretch of grass that
had been kept mowed during the summer by some state highway crew.
Ed slowed as the truck moved to the side,
and then, when the way ahead was clear, he put his foot down on the accelerator
and drove on.
— § —
Owen was still flat on his back in bed
and feeling like he’d been knocked down and dragged half a mile by some old
wild steer. His body ached, and he kept feeling hot and sweaty and then too
cold.
Ty, who’d been in and out of the bedroom all morning,
had kept him company, bringing him more hot drinks—“Fluids, rest, fluids,
rest,” he kept saying, like he was in charge—and searching the medicine cabinet
for painkillers and cough syrup.
“Robitussin?” Ty had called out from the
bathroom.
It was what they gave Owen’s
kids when they had colds and runny noses.
“That’s the stuff,” he said.
“I’ll go get a spoon.”
“No, shit. I’ll drink it straight from
the bottle.”
And he’d finished it off.
“We’re gonna
need more of that,” Ty said, with a look of concern.
“How long’s it
good for?”
“Says four hours,” Ty
said, reading the label.
“Don’t matter. I’ll probably be dead by
then.”
He popped several Excedrin and swallowed
them down from a glass of water Ty had brought for
him.
“I found a thermometer in the medicine
cabinet,” Ty said. “Let’s see if you’ve got a
temperature.” He shook the thermometer down and then held it out waiting for
Owen to open his mouth.
“If I knew I was gonna
have a good-lookin’ nurse to take care of me, I’d
stay in bed sick more often.”
“Just open like this. Ahhhh,” Ty said, ignoring the remark and dropping his jaw. His
tongue lay there soft and pink behind his teeth.
“I could give you a big ole kiss right
now,” Owen said.
Ty shook his head. “Ahhhhhhhhh,”
he said again.
“Yeah, you probably don’t want any of my
germs.”
“That’s one reason.”
“What’s another one?”
Ty slipped the thermometer into his mouth. “Wouldn’t
Kirk care?”
“You don’t have to worry about me and
Kirk,” Owen said around the thermometer. “We’re OK.”
Ty took Owen’s wrist now and
felt with two fingers for his pulse.
Owen studied Ty’s
face as he sat there on the edge of the bed, eyes fixed on his watch as he
counted. The guy was such an innocent. How could someone his age know so little
about this world? When Ty let go of his wrist, he put
his hand down on Ty’s leg and gently squeezed the
muscle above his knee.
“A little fever. Not much,” Ty said when he
took back the thermometer, turning it in his fingers to peer at it.
“What did Kirk mean when he called you a
lost sheep?” Owen said.
Ty didn’t move from the bed. Just slipped the
thermometer into his shirt pocket and then put his hand down on top of Owen’s, holding it there. “Suppose I am a little,” he said
and shrugged.
“Where was the rest of the flock the last
time you saw them?”
Ty laughed now. “You’re saying that because you know or
you don’t?”
“How would I know?”
“I thought maybe Kirk told you. I was
working at a church, studying for the ministry.”
Now Owen felt a little different about
having his hand inside the young man’s thigh, and gave up his plan to see how
far he could reach between his legs. There was innocence, and then there was
innocence.
He lay back, listening as Ty told a story of losing his job because he’d got himself
into some trouble that—if you looked at it from any reasonable point of
view—wasn’t much trouble at all.
“So you got screwed,” he said at the end
of it.
Ty gave him a sad look. “I guess so.”
“No guessin’
about it. Them fuckers are all alike. When I think of
the holier-than-thou folks going to heaven, it gives a man all the more reason
to head for the other place.”
Ty said nothing, like he’d never thought of this
before. “They’re good people, most of them,” he said.
“Not good enough, if you ask me.”
“Still, we’re supposed to forgive.”
“Who says?”
“Do unto others. You heard of that?”
“I’m not a heathen, but a little of that
goes a long ways.” He felt Ty’s hand, still there
unmoving on top of his. “What’s still got me puzzled is what you’re doin’ way out here.”
Ty sighed. “Oh that. I was with another guy. We were on
our way to
— § —
It was
Wet leaves scuttled in the window wells
when the wind gusted around the house, and looking out he could see rain
clouds. It was a good day to spend at home, and he was glad he didn’t have to
go to work. He got dressed in the clothes he’d tossed onto the floor the night
before, his jeans, a wrinkled work shirt, and—when he couldn’t find his own in
the closet—a pair of Virgil’s sneakers.
He was in the bathroom splashing water on
his face and rinsing the taste of Virgil’s cum from his mouth, when he heard
the phone ringing. He wondered who could be calling, and thought of his mother
or his boss at the lumber yard, but more likely it was someone for Virgil.
The phone was in the living room, on a
footlocker pushed against the wall. It was next to a bench where Virgil pressed
his weights, and he’d sit there talking on the phone, with the receiver in one
hand and doing curls with a dumbbell in the other. It went along with being a
jock. Marty, a kid who grew up on a farm, got strong lifting
hay bales, feed sacks, and fence posts and never saw the need for all this.
“Hello?” he said when he picked up the
phone.
“Marty?” came a voice
from the other end.
“Yeah, who’s this?”
“Mike.”
He sat down on Virgil’s bench now, trying
to think of the Mikes he knew, and he couldn’t think of any who’d know where he
was living now.
“You know, Mike up the road from your
dad’s place.”
Then he realized who it was, and his
first thought was that something had happened at the farm—there was some
trouble. “Is anything wrong?” he said.
“No, no. I was just wonderin’
if you’re busy today. I’d come over.”
“I’m not busy,” he said and tried to
imagine why Mike would want to see him.
“Will you be at home?” Mike said.
“Yeah, do you know where it is?”
“Danny knows.” They were driving to
“Sure.”
“OK, see you in a while.” And Mike hung
up.
He looked up and Virgil was standing
there in the doorway from the bedroom. He was stark naked, except for a camou cap on his head. He looked almost skinny without his
clothes.
“Who was that?” he said.
“Mike.”
“Danny’s Mike?”
“Yup. He’s comin’ over to see
me.”
“What’s up?”
“I dunno.”
Virgil crossed the room to where he sat
and put his arms around his neck, hugging him to his belly, his cock against
Marty’s chest. He was still warm from bed and smelled of sleep and sex and
something pungent and sweet like day-old Right Guard.
“I gotta tell you something,” Virgil
said. “I was ass over heels in love with that guy for about a week when I first
met him.”
“Really?” Marty’s voice was muffled, his cheek pressed to
Virgil’s belly. “He was always one of my dad’s friends. I never thought much
about him.”
“He ever give
you a haircut?”
“A haircut? No.”
“He did me once, and I coulda creamed my jeans.”
Marty stood now, looking at Virgil. He
took Virgil’s cap and put it on his head backward.
“You’re kinda
easy that way,” he said and put his arms around him.
“Oh, I am, am I?”
“I’m not complaining.”
— § —
The other cowhands were on horseback in
the rain, driving the herd of bawling cows and calves along the road toward the
ranch. Kirk had taken up the drag, following them in his pickup.
He towed the long horse trailer behind
him, which they’d used to take the horses over to bring back the herd. On the
way there, two of the cowboys, with their long legs, had squeezed into the cab
with him, and the third one had ridden in the back, out in the rain.
Inside, there’d been no hesitation about
which of the two would get the window and which one would have to sit in the
middle. Kirk didn’t know how all this was decided because not a word had been
spoken. It was just clear which of them had the most privileges.
When they’d got there, the four of them
had ridden the horses out into the pasture to round up the cattle, which were
mostly bunched together in the wet, windy weather and not interested in going
anywhere. It had taken them a while to get them moving and out the gate onto
the road. By the time Kirk had got back into the truck, he could feel the cold
rain soaking through his clothes.
He had his window rolled down now and
beat on the side of the truck with one hand, yelling at the stragglers to move
them along, “Hey, boss, hey, boss!”
One of the men, riding behind the herd
along with him, gave chase to any of them that tried to turn back—and there was
always at least one cow, determined to make a run for it, taking her calf along
with her. The cowboy’s yellow slicker was glistening wet, the saddle creaking
between his legs, and the rain spilled from his hat brim. He grinned at Kirk
from under a droopy mustache like they couldn’t have picked a better day to be
doing this.
The rule of the ranch, Kirk had learned,
was that the weather never stopped you from doing anything. If
it rained, dammit, then let it rain.
He would see to it they all got into town
for some free rounds of whiskey afterward, and they were probably counting on
that or they’d all have been in a different mood. They were good men, after
all, and there was no need to give them reason to start looking for work
somewhere else.
As he drove along, he thought of Owen, who
was tough as his old man and would have come out in this weather if Kirk hadn’t
stopped him. He was glad Ty was there to look after
him.
It was still new for Kirk to think this
way about anyone else, and he wasn’t used to it. It was so much easier not to
give a fuck.
Years ago, when he was still a kid, he’d
walked away from his buddy Rich like that and never thought of him again. Not
once. And if Rich hadn’t showed up yesterday and punched him in the nose, he
wouldn’t be thinking of him now. It had been the same way with every other guy.
Always moving on.
But he’d let Virgil get to him—the little
bastard—and he hadn’t been the same since. He still didn’t know how it had
happened, but somehow he’d let his guard down. He’d let Virgil weasel his way
under his skin and then the boy had taken off, just like that. It had knocked
Kirk on his ass—him of all people.
And for a while, he’d gone back to being
his old self. He wasn’t going to let something like that happen to him again. Then damned if it didn’t anyway. Owen had gone and found
him. Only this time, even after he’d agreed to be Owen’s
business partner and move in with him, Kirk had promised himself
that whenever he felt like it, he could pack up and leave again.
And maybe it still was that way between
them. But even if he tried to let go, he’d begun to realize that something
about Owen wouldn’t let go of him. It wasn’t love—he didn’t know what that was
anyway, even if it came up one day and bit him in the backside—but whatever it
was, it wasn’t bad.
And that—like breaking in a new pair of
boots—was beginning to feel OK with him.
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.
© 2008 Rock Lane Cooper
rocklanecooper@yahoo.com