Date: Sat, 18 Dec 2004 08:09:44 -0800 From: Timothy Stillman Subject: And Then Suddenly the Sun Again And Then Suddenly the Sun Again by Timothy Stillman Ricky smiled, and it was a December morning. He still was of gold. Older now. Far more muscular. He rode a Harley and his hands were callused, but his smile was still a boy's smile and his hair was still spun sun. And he hugged me and told me how much he had liked me. He held me and I wept. And it was a most odd thing, missing someone, remembering someone who was standing, again, right in front of me. We had good times together. Exploring our sexuality. The first time we made love. The tangled sheets. The giddy laughter. The little fears we took away from each other in kind. We remembered. And in remembering, were again. How I loved to take his erection into my mouth as we lay in bed, watching, or not watching, "The PTL Club." Every time Tammy Faye cried, we had to jack off. God bless Tammy Faye, and her eternal tears. It seemed a sign from God. I loved being naked with him. He was never completely naked with me. He always wore his football jersey, but let me push it up from his chest, so I could lick his nipples and he could say, "Come on, I'm not a girl." And I always responded, after a while, by rote, "Oh yeah, Ricky, I know that for sure." How we loved to have cock fights and wrestle each other out of our clothes. And touch. We were all the time touching. One winter it snowed deeply, and we made a snowman and on the groin area, I put the biggest icicle I could find. And Ricky said, "are you crazy?" And we laughed and he held my gloved hand and helped me down the icy drive way and we walked arm in arm down the snow banks. He was my world. He was the boy I never thought I would ever know. And he thanked me this month. He thanked me and said he pretended he was my brother and that my mom was his grandmom. He told me never be guilty about the sex we had, we were exploring, and that it was just like two kids jerking off except I was in my 20's and he was 15 and how he had enjoyed that too. I had been told often and endlessly how wrong it had been. How I had destroyed his life. He told me I had saved him from himself many times over the years and our two years back then were full of fond memories and sunshine. And his saying that killed there dead, as we stood by his hawg before my house, the psychiatrists and psychologists, like offal flies kalooming to the street below us, all their cliches and their one liners and their judgmental superiority. And Ricky and I talked of the summer we flew kites, and I remembered the first time we slept together and how I woke up the next morning with him only in his briefs and stroking his cock, and how even then I didn't tumble to what he wanted from me. It took about a month. And I never really was, in the midst of it, sure it was actually happening. He gave me my memories back, you see. He gave back two of the sweetest years of my life. He took away the prison in my mind, stolen away by morons who always got everything wrong. And I remembered lying with him and holding him and stroking him and watching Saturday morning cartoons and the one time, though he didn't want to, and I only asked him once, he said he had a surprise for me, and he bent down and put my hard on in his mouth. And his peaches and cream face going down on me as I raised up and down, and my hand exploring his hips--there was magic in the world. And there was magic in the world now too in these cold winds... He loved KISS, he loved Black Sabbath, he loved being happy and bright and giggling, and told me this day that he was never popular in school, that he didn't have many friends. Which astonished me. And shocked. How could he not have? He was Ricky and anyone who did not want to be around a boy like this, these people were fools of the Nth degree. He told me I let him practice being an adult. I told him he let me for the first time experience adolescence and childhood that I had never had the chance to before, for I had always felt like an adult even as a child. We talked comic books, and his old friends, and his current life, and I looked in his eyes hidden behind blue shades, and they were Ricky eyes. And his smile was easy still and warm, and there was December snow in our hearts that wished again, that said walk a little more with me, share a little more time with me. He told me how safe he felt with me then, and how he wished he could do it over one more time. His youth. Me in it, too. How very odd to hear that. How I felt complete with him like for the first time. And he said how I was an oasis of sanity in a world pretty bad for him. And he said he never forgot: and listed a litany of things that astonished me; for I have never been one to be fond of, but somehow the days brought us to this point, and though that life is forever over, he extended his hand and put it on my shoulder and December cold smiled with an air of electricity and said journeys don't end the way you think they will. Sometimes if you hold on, and have no reason to hold on, someone you once loved deeply, will return, will write loving letters, eloquent letters, funny and sweet and full of nostalgia and wisdom, putting my own writing to deep shame. And that is how December is for me now. And it is a sweet December. And I don't feel so alone anymore. Because Ricky smiled at me, and held me once more, and said it would be OK. And today I find myself glad that I am alive. And that somehow I did good things for him when I lived with the guilt of doing such bad things for him. Fools who said. Fools who pontificated. Fools who filled me full of death drugs. But Ricky smiled at me and I smiled back and thanked him, before he got on his big Harley and rode away.. And I am glad I am alive today. the end Timothy Stillman comewinter@earthlink.net