Date: Fri, 08 Sep 2006 11:43:56 +0200 From: A.K. Subject: "The Choice" 14/15 (Adult Youth) ---------------------------- THE CHOICE by Andrej Koymasky (C) 2006 written on November 12th 1996 translated by the author English text kindly revised by Khasidi ----------------------------- USUAL DISCLAIMER "THE CHOICE" is a gay story, with some parts containing graphic scenes of sex between males. So, if in your land, religion, family, opinion and so on this is not good for you, it will be better not to read this story. But if you really want, or because YOU don't care, or because you think you really want to read it, please be my welcomed guest. ----------------------------- CHAPTER 14 - THE MOTHER Adriano wasn't too careful about how he was dressed as he went to the entrance door. He presumed that the light drumming on the door indicated that Gustavo was returning from the market. During the week they had lived together, the two beautiful young men hadn't felt the need to wear much, they were so happy to look, admire, touch each other, that they usually felt it was enough to wear just their skin to better savor the splendid intimacy that was born between them. And, while they waited for Adriano's wounds to heal, and since Gustavo was "unemployed" they basked in their intimacy, parting only when Gustavo absolutely had to do some shopping. Moreover, the only clothes he had were those with which the boy left his family's house and they were now in the washing machine. They really needed a good washing. A clean undershirt a couple sizes too big and boxers somewhat too abundant that he had taken from Gustavo's drawer were all the clothes the boy was wearing. The drumming at the door became impatient and was followed by a long loud ringing. The long legged boy smiled thinking that his man forgot to take the apartment keys. He stood up from his place on the studio's carpet, in front at the TV, to go to open the door and to see if Gustavo needed some help. Until that moment, he had not been aware how hungry he was and saw it was already late afternoon. With one only thought in his head the beautiful boy ran to the entrance, longing to see his man again and to see what he had bought for their supper this evening. Adriano opened the door wide. "Oh!" he gasped. Clara, his mother, confronted him on the threshold. The normal warmth of Clara Crespi's face and dark eyes gradually changed as the woman's eyes closed in two tight slits and her expression to a frozen glare. The tall woman's icy glance quickly flickered in a circle from the dumbfounded face of her son to his bare feet, then back again. She bit her lower lip, then bent her head slightly to the side and said, dry and direct, "Your father told me that it had suddenly become a problem for you to keep your clothes on. I see that Ubaldo was not exaggerating." "I... Mum... come in." Adriano answered moving aside embarrassed and stepping a little back from the door to let the woman in. As she entered, Clara threw him the same penetrating glance she used to give him when the moment of judgment had come, "Don't worry about it, darling. I had intended come anyway," she said dryly. Adriano sensed that there was really very little affection in that "darling." She came through the doorway dragging a big leather suitcase at her side and stopped in the middle of the small entrance hall. Once inside, she looked back at Adriano and said, "Well, don't stand there staring at me like a dried cod. Close the door before all the heat escapes from the apartment." She stalked resolutely towards the kitchen. The proud, slender, dark-skinned woman made no effort to talk again with her son. Instead, in a very feminine way, she ran her eye over the spotless kitchen, from the appliances to the floor, the table, the cupboard, the window curtains. It was as if she were seeing each item for the first time. Adriano watched her warily from the kitchen door. Expressing no opinion, good or bad, about the kitchen, which was poor but very clean, Clara again directed her eyes at her son. Her voice was controlled and quiet, but her tone aroused a sense of foreboding in him as if he had seen a storm cloud in the distance. "Adriano, I don't have the faintest idea how this man's apartment is organized, but I imagine your clothes must be here somewhere... and if there is one thing I'm sure about, it is that it will be better if you go put something on. Now. Instantly! Did you hear me?" "Mum, all my clothes are in the bathroom, in the washing machine," Adriano informed her quietly. "I have nothing else to wear." He was trying not to betray all the sadness that awoke in him at this admission. Suddenly the fire in the mother's eyes died. The rage in her face melted in dismay. She let out a weary sigh, almost nodding, "Yes, I know. That's why... I brought you your things from home." She nodded towards the suitcase near her. "Go, cover yourself up. Put something decent on." Adriano complied without comment, immediately turning around and heading for the bedroom. He had just moved away when Clara, more than baffled by her son's absent-mindedness, asked him, "But where is your head, Adriano! Come back here to get your things, no?" Frowning and annoyed again, she lifted the heavy leather suitcase and brought it with heavy steps to her son at the door of the kitchen, where she met him coming back. Adriano blushed. "Oh, right," was all he could say in justification of his heedlessness. Glancing down in embarrassment from his mother's sardonic expression, the boy bent nervously to pick up the suitcase. "Oh, for heaven's sake!" she said dryly, while her son went back fast towards the bedroom, "Just get going. Try to find something in there to cover yourself up with, beanpole!" She watched him disappear into the study and beat an impatient tattoo on the doorframe. She turned back and went over to the table where she put down her black leather bag. She slipped her gloves off and laid them next to the bag. Then she unbuttoned her woolen coat, but she didn't take it off. While she waited for her son to dress, Clara Crespi pulled a chair out from the table and sat down. She examined the wedding ring on her finger. She had worn it for twenty-one years. As she stared at it absently, she thought about what it represented - sadly, it seemed like a pretty poor value, all things considered. An instant later the noise of a key slipping into the lock of the door interrupted her meditations. She lowered her eyebrows and rapidly swiveled on the chair so that she was looking towards the kitchen door just as Gustavo entered with two big white plastic shopping bags, filled to the brim, in his hands. As soon as he saw her, Gustavo stopped in the doorway and, searching for appropriate words, murmured into the uncomfortable and tense silence, "Good evening, Mrs. Crespi." Even though he didn't say anything else, his expression was apologetic. Clara's gaze examined each individual detail of the tall, handsome man with attention. "Well, mister Cirasa, you seem rather surprised. Didn't you expect to see me again?" she asked, emphasizing the "mister" with a low voice, her sharp sarcasm as unnerving as was the bewilderment that her half smile provoked in the man. He understood that the storm rising in the woman's angry eyes would soon engulf them both. To stem the flood of immediate conjectures about what might unexpectedly come from this unexpected visit, the young man prudently decided to remain silent. There was not much to do, nothing to say, he had simply to wait for the confrontation to begin. Notwithstanding the growing discomfort that was twisting his middle, the athletic man went over to put down the two heavy shopping bags and turned around, leaning lightly against the cupboard. "So, that's that. May I offer you something, Mrs. Crespi?" he asked in a hesitant voice, "A cup of coffee, or perhaps some..." "No, thank you, nothing for me," she interrupted him sharply, "I don't need anything, thank you." But, as she spoke, she lost some of her hardness and, when she spoke again, seemed almost melancholy. "All I really want, more than anything, is something that you and I both know I can't have any more... never again." As she offered this opening, the slender woman straightened her shoulders, but remained seated. She guessed that the ex-priest might take advantage of the opening offered to him, to give her his view of the problem in which, in some ways, they were each the protagonist. She hoped that he would, because she intended to use his defense as a point of leverage to start to list, in detail, all of her sentiments. But she was not given this satisfaction. Gustavo understood at once where she was trying to lead him and of course he preferred not to go that way. He remained silent in spite of the opportunity to defend himself. He was not yet ready to help her, nor had he the stomach to run through all that had happened over the past several days again. Instead he went to light the gas burner for the moka-machine which had already been prepared. The only sound was the faint hissing of the gas and then the jingling of the cups and the sugar pot as he placed them on the tray on the cupboard. Other than that, nothing disturbed the tense silence of the room. Suddenly the old refrigerator started up. It's monotonous buzz rent the cloak of silence in which the kitchen had been smothered. The cheerful domesticity of the sound was joined in a moment by the gurgle of coffee squirting into the upper part of the moka. The pleasant aroma spread in vague spirals from the spout. Just at that moment Adriano returned, this time completely dressed. His mother watched the way her son slowly entered the kitchen with evident curiosity. Seeing Gustavo standing near the cooker, Adriano, until then completely enervated, suddenly felt strong inside. Raising his chin, the graceful, enamored young man greeted the one who was, in his eyes, the most beautiful person in the world, with a smile, "Ciao!" Even though his expression was rigidly controlled, his voice was sweet and tranquil and his eyes shone. "Ciao!" Gustavo had, until then, been nervous, but he answered with exactly the same proud, warm look. Glancing from one side of the kitchen to the other, Clara carefully observed both her beautiful son and the man to whom he was giving himself in a way that she suddenly didn't want to examine too deeply. Anyway, the evidence of the feeling they shared, a kind of feeling that she hadn't experienced in a long time, was so obvious that she couldn't pretend not to be aware. The woman saw clearly, and without the faintest doubt, that theirs was a relationship involving much more than simple infatuation, much more than the rapport of physical desire. The strength of the feelings that she saw in her son's eyes when he gazed enraptured at the man across the room seemed to tear something inside of her. She looked at her wedding ring and thought again that it had been more than twenty years since she had shared such feelings with her husband. Adriano, even though he still felt unable to bear the scrutiny of his mother's gaze for long, sat down quietly on the other side of the table in the chair directly opposite her. "How about some coffee, Adriano?" Gustavo almost whispered across the room. "What? Oh... yes, thank you." Clara picked up her bag from the table and put it on her lap, as Gustavo slowly approached with a tray holding three cups, the sugar bowl and the steaming moka, in his big hands. "Please... have some coffee," the big man offered kindly, almost begging. "And," he added, hesitantly, "If you like, there is also some fresh cake I just bought." Clara let a sigh escape, "All right," she consented shortly; and, almost to let them understand that she intended to stay for a while, she pulled her arms from her coat sleeves and, without standing, let go of her coat to so that it hung inside-out over the back of the chair. Gustavo filled the cups and served them along with three paper napkins. He pushed the sugar bowl towards Adriano's mother and sat down at the short side of the table, between the two of them. He felt extremely self-conscious and ill at ease. As he leaned back in his chair, he contemplated his clasped hands which rested on the table in front of his coffee cup. The three members of the trio, strangely connected by different relations, sat around the table silently until Gustavo, releasing a deep sigh as he faced his duty, began, "Mrs. Crespi, I don't exactly know where to start. I..." All the apparently simple words that the young ex-priest had quietly chosen from the clean ensemble of thoughts and sentiments he had in his heart, and that he wanted fervently to make known to Adriano's mother, became entangled like a heap of brush-wood inside his throat. Pursing her lips, Clara sat up even straighter in her chair. The corrugation of wrinkles that rose on her forehead seemed like waves pushed by an angry wind, a wind that still she held back. "Well, then. Why not to let me try to lead you in the right direction," she said. "I have a precise idea where to start from." Clara leaned menacingly toward the man. "Why don't you start by simply telling me how long this mess... whatever you two have gotten up to... this mess between you and my son has been going on?" Adriano intercepted Gustavo's answer protectively. He wanted to honestly assume his share of responsibility so he spoke at once, saying to his mother, "It's not like we were meeting in secret or anything like that. It happened, just... a couple of days before Dad came here and..." "Adriano! Did you hear me ask you a question? Shut up!" his mother interrupted him in irritation, treating him like an annoying child. "He is telling you the truth." Gustavo quickly affirmed. "Oh good God! Oh my God!" Clara exclaimed, crossing her arms and pretending to be scandalized, "I swear, I would have liked it if you had had so a glib tongue when Monsignor Bishop chose you to become the parson of our parish, young man! I would have liked it if you had been clear then! Above all, I would have liked it if you had been clear about this vice of taking boys into your bed!" she said, shaking her head in a severe censure. Then she added, "If the bishop's See had known at that time of your... tendencies, it would surely have saved us a lot of problems!" Then, looking straight into her son's eyes she added, "And possibly it would have saved me a lot of pain, as well." Keeping her gaze, sharp as a steel blade, on Adriano, Clara threw an incredibly cynical question at him across the table, "And you want me to believe that this business between you and this man just started?" "I swear, Mum!" Adriano answered solemnly nodding. The woman suddenly turned again towards Gustavo, "Well, let's say I believe it; even though I know how men get around when they rut! How many boys did you get your hands on over all these years? And which ones?" she asked harshly, "And then, why did you have to chose my son?" "Mum! He is not like that at all! And anyway, I'm not a kid any more. We both..." Gustavo raised his hand quickly in a plea for Adriano to keep silent. "All right, Adriano. Thank you, but I can talk for myself," he said in a clear voice, as he looked straight into Clara's eyes, "There is no way to prove this to you, Mrs. Crespi. I know because, while it is possible to prove the existence of something, one can't prove its non-existence... it isn't possible. But, as God is my witness, in my whole life, I have never, ever done such a thing." "All right, let's suppose that is true. So then explain this to me - if it is something you never did before... why the hell did you decide you wanted him now?" Clara asked, unconvinced of the truth of the man's words. "There are a thousand reasons. All special and most of them come from the better part of my heart; but I have no way to offer you an understandable explanation of these things. I..." "Mum..." Adriano's voice valiantly interfered, unwisely presuming he could settle things once for all, "It is something that I wanted to happen... always... since the first day I met him, when he was still an assistant-parson, six years ago. Even though I only understood it clearly just a couple of days ago." The tall, slender youth cast an adoring glance at the beautiful man, a glance that revealed all his enchantment to the other two people. Then, turning again to his mother, he reaffirmed this point, "I want to stay with him. I... I want to belong to him. This is what I want, Mum! It's the absolute truth." Horrible words and sentences, similar and recurring, passed through Clara's mind. In every hour of every day for the last three days she had been hounded by her imagination. Ever since Ubaldo had forced her to listen to the venomously honest story of his accidental discovery of their son in this man's house. In spite the sincere good intentions in her son's exposition of the facts, coming to realize that her son had willingly assented to this relationship came like the fulfillment of a horrible prophecy, feared and at the same time denied. It came down upon her, drenching her like a rain of acid, burning her ears and shriveling her soul. She was visibly shaken by the impact of her son's confession; but, in spite of her dismay and the tears she tried to hold back, the slender woman continued to sit straight, her chin stubbornly high and her lower lip bent in a sharp fold that expressed all her indignation. She supported herself against the straight back of the chair trying to maintain her calm. In spite of her bewilderment, her face went blank. A moment later, seeming to recover her composure, but obviously refusing to easily believe him, she questioned her son, "Are you telling me that... that you were chasing men, Adriano?" "No, Mum... no. It's not like that, either ... I..." the boy answered with a quivering voice. "Damn it, boy, then how is it!?" The woman asked with a venomous roar, letting him understand that she wanted hear no embroidered tales, "Tell me how it is, then!" she again shouted. Remembering how Gustavo told him that only truth could make what they were feeling for each other right and keep them united, Adriano took a deep breath, "There has been nobody else but him, Mum. There has never been... there will never be... not for me." He answered in a respectful but completely honest and sincere tone. For a boy who was just testing his wings, the bottomless pit of judgment Adriano saw in his mother's eyes was a terrifying sight. Nonetheless, the youth in love gathered his strength so as to be able to hold his mother's look without flinching and tell her, "Mum... I love him." Notwithstanding all its luminous beauty and honesty, this declaration failed in its implicit plea to elicit understanding from the woman. Adriano could read this at once in his mother's eyes. When the boy saw that his mother maintained a mocking silence as if in rejection of an idiotic remark, he became instantly as furious as he was wounded. "It is real love!" Adriano shouted, "Why can't that be true?" The fury she had borne since she had entered in Gustavo's home had been neutralized during the last moments, as if it had been obliterated by a miraculous stroke of lightning. It was as if the main point of what was happening between her son and the man sitting near him at that table had suddenly vanished between her hands, volatilizing in the thin air like a puff of smoke. Clara bent back her head and looked at the ceiling. Then her hand struck the table with force and her body started to shake and jerk on the chair as if it were made of a steel spring as she burst out in loud, hoarse laughter. "Love? You are in love? Boy, for God's sake, do you know what are you talking about?" She asked, this time with the most sincere astonishment. She continued to laugh. Eventually, her laughter died out and her face became serious again, "But what do you know about love, other than what you see on those silly soap operas that you and Diego and Loredana watch on TV?" she asked. "Sweet words, tight embraces, and long kisses don't make love, boy! They never did. And not even being in bed together to do... those things," she went on, shooting a disgusted glance at Adriano and Gustavo. "Love... is having the common sense to go looking for somebody with whom you know you have a good chance of building a life with, here, in this world... no matter how hard it may be. Love is going forward and living together anyway, even when it starts to seem that the love you had isn't there anymore. It is discovering that the garbage of life doesn't go away, it is true, but is just replaced by days of rubbish... and yet you are able to maintain your peace, in spite of what you feel inside. Day after day, months and years of nights spent watching over your children. It is paying bills and suffering and holding out any way you can... for the good reason that you have a door behind which to take shelter. This is love, boy! But, in any case, all this has nothing to do with... with a man loving another man. No! "And now I want you to answer me, and I want you to answer frankly and bluntly," She ordered, pointing her finger at Adriano, "Who did you talk to get an idea like this? What kind of books did you read that I didn't see?" Even though she was no longer controlled by anger, Clara felt all that anger rise up in herself again. She leaned forward toward Gustavo, ready to accuse, "Was it you who put this nonsense in his head?" she asked, brusquely. "Mrs. Crespi, this is not something one can instill in someone else's head. It is a natural sentiment. One discovers that he is wearing it like his skin, or his eye color. It is part of a person. It is how he feels... his nature. I have felt this way all my life, and all my life long I told myself, no... But this time, this time, I couldn't say no anymore to myself... and I couldn't say it to him, either. We are just following our nature. This is the main point to understand." "I don't give a damn if it has been just once or a thousand times! Why do I have to understand?" Clara asked, getting heated. But she didn't wait for an answer. Watching the young ex-priest stand up and leave the table, as if he wanted to keep a distance from her and her wrath, she said, "Do I really have to understand something that is making me suffer so much?" She was shouting now "So much that I am not even able to explain even half of why I feel as if I had been cut into pieces?" Clara smashed her bag down on the table. "In pieces, I say! Today, this story is giving me so much pain that it seems ten times worse than the pain I had twenty years ago, when I would have sworn that my body would tear itself apart, the day I gave birth to this boy!" "Mum!" "You shut up!" Clara roared. ----------------------------- CONTINUES IN CHAPTER 15 ----------------------------- In my home page I've put some more of my stories. If someone wants to read them, the URL is http://andrejkoymasky.com If you want to send me feed-back, or desire to help revising my English translations, so that I can put on-line more of my stories in English please e-mail at andrej@andrejkoymasky.com ---------------------------