Date: Tue, 14 Jan 2003 10:23:10 -0500 From: Taylor Siluwe Subject: "Grandma's Hands" Part 6 Grandma's Hands Copyright 2002 by Taylor Siluwe Part 6 Sonny's head was spinning. Too much had happened much too fast . . . too much to comprehend. As he walked out of the subway station into the glare and bustle of downtown, he felt as if he was in a dream that he couldn't wake up from. People moved in their usual harried way. Yellow cab drivers careened through the impossible traffic, honking horns, flipping the finger and cutting each other off at the slightest whisper of a fare. A simple scratch of the head would make one of the bright sedans cut across four lanes of traffic and screech to a halt. A bike messenger barreled down the sidewalk as if he owned it, his muscles standing out like cables. Sonny paused and watched him slice his way through the crowd, jump the curb, and maneuver against traffic as if in finals of the X games. It was just a normal day in the city with everyone doing their own damn thing. None of them, apparently, had a best friend happily stuck in fag mode . . . or a senile grandfather who was suddenly a teenager again. As the messenger disappeared, Sonny pushed his sunglasses back up and continued on his way. Since he was a child, covering his eyes always made him feel anonymous . . . almost invisible. He wanted to invisible today, alone in a crowd. And Manhattan was the best place to be if you didn't want to be noticed. He turned down a side street and headed for the west side. A bum accosted him demanding a dollar. Sonny ignored him, lost in his own head, engulfed by the impossibility of the situation. He needed to get away from home, from his recycled grandfather. It's just too crazy, he thought, too fuckin' crazy. He thought of his mother, locked away in that . . . in that nasty place. He was just a kid when they hauled her away after his father died. He'd never been allowed to visit her because, as he was told, it was no place for little boys. Maybe it was hereditary. His grandmother once said that she, his mother, was always a couple of peaches short of a cobbler. He didn't understand at the time, but now that he was older and wiser, he suddenly began to worry about his own mental stability. He thought it had all been a dream. However, in the light of morning, his grandfather . . . Zeke, was still young . . . looking just like Sonny. It couldn't be true, but at the same time it had to be. The old picture in the photo album under the sofa, the memories of his grandmother standing in the window and the fact that Zeke knew things that only his grandfather would know meant only one or two things. Either it was true and the whole world had gone crazy, or it wasn't true . . . and just he had. Then again, maybe he was just having a really bad trip, like the time he and Little Man had taken acid and Ecstasy in the park. Instead of trickin' the homo's like they'd planned, they'd hid in the old gazebo, because as Little Man put it . . . . "We never done this shit before. Let's see how it affects us before we get started." Sonny agreed. He was offered the drugs as payment from a guy who wanted to film him jerking off. Sonny wouldn't go that far, but by promising to come back and try some other day, he got the drugs anyway. "I don't feel nothin'. You?" Little Man said, glancing over his shoulder as he plowed his way down the familiar path. He paused as the thick brush clawed at his bare legs, covered only by baggy white Nike shorts. He stomped at the weeds with his Timberlands and proceeded. "Nah, we only took the shit like fifteen minutes ago," Sonny replied, already feeling a rush, but was pretty sure it wasn't from the drugs, ". . . don't sweat it." He followed the glow of Little Man's white shorts in the gloom. They stood out like a ghost against the smaller boy's ebony skin. A rat, or some tiny creature, crunched lightly through the leaves nearby. It was so hot that night. The air was thick and heavy; it was like walking through a steam room . . . with weeds. Sonny was not in the mood to be felt-up by a bunch of old perverts but he'd grown accustomed to the feel of crisp new Benjamins in his pocket. His grandfather's pension barely covered expenses like rent and shit. He needed much more. He needed things that gramps wouldn't, or couldn't pay for . . . like designer clothes, top-of-the-line sneakers and a never-ending supply of weed. Gramps never understood why he needed $120 dollars to buy the new Jordans or the latest Sean John gear. Forget about the necessary extras, like heavy diamond-cut silver chains which added the final bling-bling to his `young upwardly-mobile thug' persona. He never understood that in order to survive in this urban jungle you had to have a certain look. It didn't matter whether you could afford it or how you got it . . . as long as you had it. If you had to suck a little dick to get what you wanted, then so be it. He knew that women used sex to get what they wanted out of life since like, forever. Why couldn't he? Gramps really wouldn't understand that. Sometimes, old people didn't know much of anything. Sonny wondered how they managed to live so long knowing so very little. As soon as they emerged from the brush into their cozy spot, Little Man removed his `wife-beater' tank top and tossed it on the table. He stared at Sonny for a moment, his eyes sparkling in the moonlight that seeped through the trees and the holes in the gazebo's roof, and said, "I feel somethin'." "Yeah," Sonny said, ". . . what's it feel like?" He'd never done acid or X before so he was eager to feel it too. There was a strange sensation in the pit of his stomach, almost as if he'd swallowed a large goldfish and it was still squirming around inside him. "I don't know. I just feel . . . ," his hands spread across his chest and slid slowly down his torso to just beneath the waistband of his shorts, "I don't know . . . I feel different." He glanced around. "And everything looks brighter." He stepped closer to Sonny, smiling. "You look different too, bro." "Really? How?" Sonny smiled too, but he didn't know why. "I don't . . . you just . . . ." His words trailed away. Standing so close, Sonny could see Little Man's body tremble a little, as if he had a sudden chill or, as his grandmother would've said, someone just walked over his grave. "My heart is beatin', like, really fast and shit. Am I shakin'?" He asked Sonny, holding out a hand which was trembling visibly. "Yeah, kid, you are." Sonny grabbed his hand to steady it. The goldfish did a back-flip. Things did look brighter, sharper. Little Man's eyes seemed unnaturally lit, like there were tiny amber fires smoldering inside his head. Little Man placed his other hand over Sonny's heart. "Yours is racin' too, bro." Little Man announced. Then he looked up at Sonny and kissed him without warning, his pink tongue squirming into Sonny's mouth with the speed of a side-winder across hot desert sand. The goldfish was now doing the `running man', like a tiny MC Hammer with fins. Sonny put his hands on Little Man's shoulders and tried to push him away, but found that he couldn't. Little Man's thin arms had weaved themselves around Sonny's neck with such intensity, which combined with Sonny's effort to escape the sudden embrace, threw them both off-balance. They crashed back into the table. Sonny tried to speak but his dueling tongue was being subdued. He wanted to make him stop, but a tingly sensation, which must be the drugs, had taken over his nervous system . . . and also his hands, which gripped Malcolm all over at once. He felt so . . . weird . . . so out of control. He didn't know if it was the X or the acid or whatever the fuck. It didn't really matter which as they staggered about, tongues locked in mortal combat. Finally he managed to come up for air. "Malcolm," he gasped, as forcefully as his breathless lungs could manage. Little Man pulled him closer again with one hand while the other went straight to Sonny's crotch. Up until that moment, Sonny didn't realize that he had a raging hard-on. But now, with Little Man's hand gripping it painfully and his mouth almost gnawing on his neck, Sonny began overwhelmed by sensations and pushed him away forcefully. Little Man crashed to the grimy floor. They just stared at each other, panting like puppies, eyes wild and excited as if they'd just discovered King Solomon's mine. Neither spoke for a moment. Making no effort to get up, Little Man was the first to break the silence. "What's wrong, bro?" he asked. "Nothin'," Sonny replied, his voice an airy whisper. And it was true. There wasn't anything wrong, except for the fact that he'd just pushed his best friend in the entire world to the ground like trash. He'd known Little Man as long as he could remember, but he never realized how much he needed him until now. Standing there in that dilapidated gazeboolittered with condom wrappers, vines and all sorts of whatnot, surrounded by trees older than them and nasty men who only cared about getting their wrinkled rocks offohe realized that he was staring into the face of the only person on the planet who truly understood him. He felt like he was seeing him for the very first time. "Then why you lookin' at me like that? And suddenly I'm Malcolm now? You ain't called me that since, since . . . shit, I can't even remember." He lowered his voice. "So, what's up, boy?" Little Man persisted from his position on the ground. Propped on his elbows, oblivious to the trash and twigs around him, he smiled as if he knew the answer. A beam of bluish moonlight illuminated his face as if sent down specifically for that purpose. That smile. It was a magnetic smile . . . very real, not like the one that charmed horn-dogs out of their money and their hearts. This smile was as natural as the trees that shrouded them and also, Sonny believed, reserved just for him. Sonny stepped closer without meaning to. Malcolm's two front teeth were a bit longer than the rest and overlapped ever so slightly (Sonny had never noticed this before) . . . his lips curled up at the corners causing long dimples to slash his cheeks and his eyes turned up at the corners also like they were laughing (Sonny had seen these before, but never like this). He'd stepped even closer at some point and now was standing between Malcolm's legs. He extended a hand. It too was trembling. "Nothin' . . . c'mon, that floor's nasty, get ya skinny ass up . . . Malcolm." He took his hand and Sonny tugged. Malcolm didn't budge, however his dimples deepened. Sonny felt himself being pulled downward and he laughed, "I ain't gettin' down there with you, kid. I love you . . . but fuck that." Malcolm's dimples, laugh lines and smile melted away but his grip tightened and he said, "I love you too, Sonny . . . for real." Sonny wasn't sure if he was pulled down or if he went down on his own. He wasn't even sure if it happened before, after, or during Malcolm's statement. But down he went. He watched himself doing it, as if having an out-of-body experience. First to one knee, then both . . . and finally, he was pinning Malcolm against the littered floor. They'd been in this position before, but never like this . . . it had always been a hushed and frenzied moment in the dark. Now he was suddenly oblivious to all the trash as his vision tunneled into that beam of moonlight and onto Malcolm's face. He looked like an angel. He felt like an angel. This time . . . he felt right. "Yeah . . . I know, kid," Sonny whispered as if one of the empty bottles might overhear, "I uh, I meant it too." Then they kissed again, slowly this time, never closing their eyes. The beam of moonlight moved away and still they kissed. At various points they heard voices and noises and sometimes even music but they never stopped doing what they were doing. Maybe someone was watching and maybe not. Maybe it was just the drugs kicking in. It didn't really matter. They never looked around. They never lost eye contact. Nothing else existed until the sun tinged the horizon sending carroty light through the trees and holes in the gazebo. ---------------------------------------------------------- Sonny woke up suddenly, feeling disoriented and wondering why he was naked on the picnic table. A sweaty little arm was draped across his chest. A condom wrapper was plastered to his thigh. His head hurt and his mouth was dry and tasted like something died in it. "Uhhmmrrggll," the arm muttered. Sonny looked to his left and saw a shiny-faced Malcolm drooling on his shoulder. He pushed his arm away. "Yo, Little Man," he said, then lowering his voice and looking around he continued, ". . . wake up." He wondered where their clothes went. Then he noticed various items scattered about the gazebo: his sneaker . . . his jeans . . . Malcolm's shorts . . . his other sneaker . . . his boxers, looking strangely shredded. A memory flashed through his mind . . . a ripping sound following by hysterical laughter. "Oh shit." His head throbbed. "Umnnffolitty," the sweaty arm returned. "Dammit Malcolm! Wake the fuck up!" Sonny shoved him harder this time. Malcolm teetered on the end of the table, nude and still asleep, with one arm and one booted foot dangling over the edge. He mumbled, "No Fiona, I don't wanna touch your titty!" then he crashed to the dirty floor. When he popped up, hair wild and looking confused, Sonny was slipping into his jeans and frowning. Under other circumstances, the half-eaten Now and Later stuck to Malcolm's forehead would have been funny as fuck. But Sonny didn't want to laugh. Now he just wanted to escape. "What happened?" Malcolm said, swiping at the strange sticky growth on his forehead. "Nothin', nothin' at all." Sonny kicked at his tattered underwear, an ugly reminder that it definitely had been something. "Where you goin'?" "Where you think? It's fuckin' morning almost. Grandpa must be trippin'." Sonny said as he slipped into his shirt. Malcolm yawned, "Ol' dude prob'ly ain't even notice." He stretched, came over and leaned against Sonny, snuggling into his chest. "Last night was cool, right?" "Not right. We shouldn't a . . . I don't remember." Sonny pushed him away, angry at Malcolm for being naked, angry at the rush of memories that suddenly swamped his mind. "Will you get dressed?! I'm out." Malcolm stood there in silence looking hurt and strangely erotic, naked down to his Timberlands. "Are you comin'?" Sonny asked, growing more annoyed by the view, and angry with himself because he kept looking. Malcolm did not move for a moment, and then he grabbed Sonny in a tight embrace but still said nothing. "C'mon Little, stop fuckin' around." "Okay," Malcolm mumbled into his chest, ". . . gimme a minute." He looked up at Sonny. "You really don't remember?" A bus groaned somewhere in the distance. The trees rustled. Sonny's eyes darted about. It was fully light now. The gazebo, which only last night had seemed like a magical oasis, now could be seen for what it was . . . a heavily littered scene of numerous sexual crimes. He needed to get away. "No, I don't. We were high, Little Man, just forget about it." He tried to untangle Malcolm's arms, but his hands were locked in place. "I said I love you." "Let me go." Sonny tensed. "You said it too." "Get the fuck off me." Every cell in Sonny's body just wanted to leave . . . to run away as fast as he could. "You know you remember, just admit it." Sonny exploded. Malcolm went flying to his ass. Sonny bent over him pointing a trembling finger into his shocked face. "Look, you little bitch! I'm not a fag like you. I do it for the money, that's all." "Since when?" Malcolm responded. Sonny slapped him as if that were the only answer he needed to give. The sound seemed to echo through the trees. "I do it for the money! Remember that!" As Malcolm sat there still in shock, holding a hand to his face, Sonny went over to Malcolm's white shorts, rummaging frantically. "What are you . . . ?" Malcolm began. Then Sonny retrieved what was in the pocket: a crumpled twenty dollar bill. He held it up. "You still owe me thirty. Nobody rides for free." Sonny dashed down the path, leaving Malcolm Jacobs . . . a.k.a. Little Man . . . a.k.a. his best friend on the planet . . . stunned, hurt and naked to his boots on the gazebo floor next to Sonny's torn Joe Boxers. That night had been like a dream too, because in the sobering light of morning, he felt dirty about the things they'd done and confused about what was said. It wasn't just a bad trip. And although he finally convinced Malcolm never to mention it again, he still remembered every single detail about that night. It had been real, and as incredible as this situation is now, it too had to be real. Zeke was either his grandfather, or Sonny's evil twin. Sonny walked faster as if to get away from it all with his brow in a knot, dodging strange faces oblivious to his pain and the insanity of his world. He needed to get somewhere . . . someplace where he could forget all this shit . . . someplace where he could just fade away. When he got there, maybe he wouldn't come back. He arrived at the nondescript building and rang the buzzer. When he got no answer, a sick feeling gripped his gut and he pressed the buzzer a few more times. Maybe he wasn't there. He would have called but he threw the number away after the first time. But now he needed to be here. He had no other place to go. He sat down in the doorway and decided to wait. Just then the speaker crackled and a metallic voice asked, "Who is it?" To be continued ... * * * Stay tuned for more. Coming soon. Email me your thoughts so far. taylorsiluwe@earthlink.net CraZySeXyCool Writers Group http://groups.yahoo.com/group/crazysexycoolwriters CraZySeXyCool / TAYLORism's http://taylorsiluwe.tripod.com House of Blah http://www.geocities.com/taylorsiluwe