From: nobody@replay.com (Name withheld by request) Newsgroups: alt.sex.stories Subject: Look for me by moonlite (m/b, cons) Date: 26 May 1995 06:02:26 +0200 Organization: Replay and Company UnLimited. Lines: 432 Message-ID: <3q3jsi$i1p@utopia.hacktic.nl> NNTP-Posting-Host: utopia.hacktic.nl Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII X-Warning: This message was forwarded by an Anonymous Remailer. X-Comment: Replay does not necessarily approve of the contents of this posting. X-Comment: Please report inappropriate use to Look For Me By Moonlight by Russell T. Kinkade THE GREYHOUND BUS slowed, then pulled to a stop, right wheels on gravel. Headlights seeped into darkness. "You sure you want out here?" the driver asked. The door wheezed open. Todd Burrows stood on the bottom step. Sweet air ran its fingers through his cropped hair. He looked over the cornfield stretching out before him in the moonlight. The moon was a bone oval protruding from a cloud-fractured sky. "Yeah," he said without turning around, "this is good." "Town's a few miles down the road." Todd stepped off the bus. The driver shrugged. He closed the door. As red tail lights sped away, Todd walked into the moonlit cornfield. Corn was waist high, extending before him to the extent of his vision. It crackled as Todd brushed against the stalks. Dust covered Todd's boots, rising up and clinging to his creased and baggy pants. Sweat stained his khaki shirt. In one hand Todd carried a Hughes grocery bag holding toiletries and food. From his other hand dangled a folded jacket. He walked tall. Leaving the field, Todd entered a lane leading to the back of a sleepy town. An alley led him to a quiet tree-lined street, deserted in the predawn hours. Todd paused to look over each end of the street, baptized with the moon's ethereal light. Silent houses lined the street. Behind doors, some left unlocked, families slept peacefully. "I'm ba-ack," Todd sang softly. He chuckled. As he walked up the sidewalk, a tricycle blocked his way. He bent to touch it. A light came on in an upstairs window, and Todd stepped into the shadow of a tree. On the next corner stood a house forlorn. A weather stripped fence surrounded the house, its gate hanging limply on one hinge. Lawn grass grew like wisps of hair on a bald man's head. Windows on the house's first floor were boarded; those on the second floor showed shards like broken teeth. The only window intact was the diamond shaped one looking into the attic. As Todd looked at the attic window he saw a boy's face. "Brandon!" he whispered. He blinked and the face was gone. It was a trick of moonlight. A tear nevertheless slid down Todd's face, over the stubble on his cheek. Todd wiped the tear away and walked up the porch steps. He knelt. His fingers fumbled over floorboards until he found a notch. He pulled up a board, then set it aside. Readhing into the singularity, a web clung to his fingers. He felt a flicker of legs over the back of his hand. Touching metal, Todd extracted a key. Inside the house it was dark and sepulcher silent. Todd had sent checks from prison to the water and power companies, so he tried a switch. No light. No bulbs, he thought. He walked toward the stairway. Something bounced between the toe of his shoe and the first step. Todd bent over and picked up a baseball, its cover soiled. He fondled the ball, recalling Brandon's leaving it their last day together. His fingers tightened, then he sighed and relaxed his grip. Todd carried the ball upstairs. In the upstairs hallway, Todd paused a moment under the ceiling ladder which led to a trapdoor for the attic. A knock like a small fist striking a floorboard sounded over his head. He shivered. When the sound was not repeated, he walked to the bedroom. Two broken windows allowed enough moonlight so that Todd found his old Sealy mattress against the wall near the door. A wooden chair was the only other piece of furniture. Todd set his jacket and bag on the chair. He kicked off his shoes. Then he lay on the mattress, wrinkling his nose at the stale, musty odor of the thing. With the baseball still cradled in one hand, he fell asleep. Morning light woke him. He stretched. The ball rolled away from him. He looked at it oddly. His eyes searched the room. Awareness came. He was home. A knock sounded above his head, and he jerked his eves toward the ceiling. "A bat, or a bird," he said aloud. "I have a lot of work to do." The sound of his voice was eerie in the empty house. He heard a car start outside. A boy's voice, caught between childhood and adolescence, called, "Bye, Dad." Todd got up and walked to a window. Looking out he saw a boy of about 12 standing across the street and waving. A startled look took Todd's face. The boy had gold curls, like Brandon's. As the boy lowered his arm, he raised his eyes. The boy's lips curled in a smile before he turned and walked back to his house. "Now they'll know," Todd said. He often talked to himself. It was a habit he used both as a writer and as a prisoner long used to solitary. Todd grabbed the grocery bag and walked out to the hallway. Another knock disturbed him. "Nuts," he said. He set the bag down and reached for the attic ladder. He hesitated, fingers inches away from the ladder's cord. "I'm not ready for this." His hands trembled. "I've got to." He pulled the cord and lowered the ladder. He climbed slowly. Pushing aside the ceiling board covering the attic entrance, he ducked and blinked to avoid falling dust. As he looked back up, a warm breeze kissed his cheek. He tingled. The attic was long and wide. The furniture he placed there when he bought the place his first year teaching was still there. It was a secret hideaway for him and his lovers. He and Brandon were the last to share it. A strong center beam ran the length of the lean-to roof. A rope noose hung from the beam's center, no doubt left there as a gruesome reminder. A chill ran up Todd's back. "I'm sorry, Brandon," he whispered. To the side of the rope, a hole in the roof let sunshine spray onto a broken branch and other debris on the floor. Whatever had made the knocking noises was not in sight, probably flown out the roofs opening. He'd have to patch the hole. The knocking had to go. In the bathroom the water had been turned on, so Todd took a hot shower. He shaved using a plastic razor. Then he dressed in the clothes he'd slept in, the only clothes he had, and returned to the bedroom. He counted his money. After bus fare, supper the night before, and shopping, he had $107.84 left of his gate money. Not a lot, but he'd banked several thousand from sales of short stories and one fairly successful novel. The house was his. He'd be OK. In the kitchen he found and washed a pot and cup. He heated water and made coffee from a jar of Folgers instant. He made it hot and black and it made him feel good. The sun was climbing to its zenith when he left the house. Three women, standing at a Cyclone fence up the street, stopped talking and looked his way. One woman called a little girl riding the tricycle Todd had touched just hours before. The girl yelled "No," causing Todd to grin and the woman to run after her. She was pulled back to the others, screaming. The woman spanked the girl, who clung to the fence and cried. Todd took a deep breath. The kind of violence he'd wit- nessed was acceptable; his kind of love was not. He let the breath out slowly. Then he walked up the street, his head held high. As he passed the girl and women, two of whom he recognized, he said, "Good morning." He gave the girl a smile. One woman stared at him. Another, the one who had hit the girl, looked away. The third simply said, "Burrows." He hated that. His last name was all he was called behind bars. He was out now. The boy Todd had seen from his bedroom window earlier rode a skateboard in the street. He wore tennis shoes and cutoff jeans. Drops of sweat trickled over his bare chest. He stopped and waved. Todd returned the gesture, nervously. "Robert," one of the women called, "you come here." The boy looked at the woman. "Now, young man." He threw a crooked grin at Todd and skateboarded away. Todd walked to the center of town, to the lone bank, a red brick edifice with a large window. In gold letters was written Flat Plains City Bank/Serving Our Customers Since 1898. Todd knew that many in the town still held Victorian attitudes. Inside he found a face he knew and walked over to the man's desk. "Hi, Ralph. I see you've moved up in the world. Assistant Manager." Ralph's frog eyes rolled over Todd. His tongue darted be- tween his thin lips, then pulled back. "Todd Burrows," he said with a croak. He cleared his throat. "I never thought you'd come back. Not after. . . " "Yeah. Well, I'm back. And you-or your bank-have my money. I need a withdrawal. Two thousand ought to do it for now. And I'll be looking to finance a car soon." Todd sat in the floral-patterned cushioned chair in front of the desk. "Is Skip still selling Chevys?" The banker's tongue repeated its darting motion. "Yes. Yes, Willard Hodgkins is still at the Chevrolet dealership. Where else would he be?" he asked pointedly. "He's a respectable citizen." He looked away from Todd's stare. Pulling a handker- chief from his pants' back pocket, he wiped his brow and said, "Hot, isn't it?" After leaving the bank Todd ate lunch at the Alley Cat, a popular grill. Heads turned, and whispers were matched to furtive glances. Then he shopped, clothes and household things. He took his time, wanting to see the town and let its people see him. He was back. He wasn't going to hide. As he left Johnson's Hardware, he was stopped. "Hi, Todd." Todd gaped. "Clay? Clay Gooderson?" He looked over the uniform. "My God, you're a cop?" "Yeah. Though there's just me and Chief Emery as regulars, with a couple part-time officers." "You were a hell-raiser." "That was a long time ago. I was a kid." "Yeah. Right. You were also once. . . " "Forget that. Mention that and I'll...." Clay let the threat go. "You're not wanted here, you know." He looked over Todd's packages. "I've gathered that." "People haven't forgotten Brandon." Todd looked steadily into Clay's eyes. "I am not responsible for Brandon's. . . death. This damned town with all its good moral people killed him just like they put me through hell. You of all people should know I loved that boy. I loved all my. . . " "Yeah. Well, just be careful. And don't cause any trouble. If I have to, I'll arrest you. Todd shook his head. "You'd do that? After all we've. . . " "I said don't mention that. That was years ago. I was a kid." "Yeah. Do you know how many other good men in this town shared my attic with me?" Clay glared at Todd. "You just keep pushing don't you? Your book scared the hell out of more than a few people around here. And now you're back." "I'm sure the book raised sweat on a lot of balls. I changed the names to protect the guilty. You all couldn't wait to drop your pants as kids in my attic bed. Now you are all grown up, respectable, all hypocrites and bigots." Todd felt his heart beating against his chest. His jaw tightened, but he forced the words out, carefully. "How the hell. . . how the hell is the world to learn that our love is good, that... oh, hell...." Todd walked away. Before heading home Todd called his parole officer in Bridgemont. He was told to report in person the next day. Then he went to visit memories. For eight years Todd taught ninth grade history and coached junior varsity baseball for Bridger Junior High. Clay had been in his class, as had a host of other boys he loved deeply. Brandon would have been too if the damned moralists had left him alone. He watched a group of boys playing a pickup basketball game in the summer heat. They were all strangers to him, having been in elementary school when he was sent to prison. They would stay strangers. Todd wanted no more of prison. He was about to leave when Robert rode up to him again. "Hi," the boy said. His hair was sun gold, like Brandon's, but his eyes were hazel. Brandon's had been seaweed green. "Uh, hi," Todd returned. He took a quick look around. "My name's Robby. Are you Todd Burrows?" The question took Todd by surprise. "You've heard of me?" "Sure. I'm supposed to stay away from you." "Your mom tell you that today?" "No. I've known about you since I was a kid." That brought a smile to Todd's lips. The boy flipped his board up and tucked it beneath an arm. "I like your attic," he said. For the second time Todd was taken by surprise. "My attic?" "Yeah. I use it as a hideout. You know, to get away." "How do you..?" "I climb up the oak in your back yard, shinny over a branch, then let myself onto the roof. I go through the hole and use the rope to climb down and up." "The rope? You know..?" "Yeah." "Morbid boy, aren't you?" "Morbid?" "You like Stephen King?" "Sure." "Me too. Nothing wrong with a little morbidity. But I shouldn't be talking to you." "Why?" "Why ask why?" Todd said inanely, repeating the catch phrase of a once popular beer commercial. "Cute," Robby said. "You want to play?" "Excuse me?" Todd's heart beat a bit faster. "Basketball." Robby nodded toward the boys on the court. "Uh, no." Todd raised the packages he carried. "I have to get these home." "Well, nice meeting you," Robby said. He dropped his skate- board and with a kick was off. Todd watched. He sighed. That night as Todd slept, a movement woke him. Brandon sat on the edge of the bed. "But. . . " Todd started. The boy held a finger to his lips. He lay next to Todd. Resurrected memories brought tears to Todd's eyes. "Sleep," the boy said. "I'll be here with you." Todd drifted peacefully back to sleep. He awoke alone. The sky outside was creeping toward blue. "Just a dream," Todd told himself. He started to get up when he noticed a single gold curl on his pillow. "What?" he asked. Later that afternoon, coming home from Bridgemont, Todd was met by Clay. "Mr. Burrows," the officer said. Todd grinned, but it slid from his face when met by hard lines on the young officer's face. "You been home today?" "No. I hitched over to Bridgemont to see my PO. His name's Parker. You can check." "I will." "Then I checked out some cars at the Chevy dealership." "I'll check that too." "So what's the problem?" "I got a tip from an anonymous. . . " "Of course." ". . . caller that a boy's been seen at your window. There's been laughter." "God forbid." Clay cleared his throat. "I'd like to look around inside," he said. Todd shook his head. "Sure." He led the way. Satisfied, after a walk through the house, that no boys were hiding anywhere, Clay left. Standing on the porch Todd watched the officer drive away. "Oh, Clay," he said, "you used to be such a good boy." Across the street a curtain fell back in place over a window. Todd looked into the darkening sky, then went back inside. A boy's laugh echoed in the upstairs hallway. "Who's there?" Todd called. "Robby, if that's you, you'd better go home. He walked slowly upstairs. Todd climbed the attic ladder. In the attic, moonlight fell softly through the diamond win- dow. A boy sat on the bed. "Brandon?" Todd asked. The boy beckoned. Robby smiled as Todd sat next to him. "This is dangerous," Todd said. He reached out his hand and stroked away a drop of sweat from the boy's cheek. Robby leaned close and Todd smelled the sweet scent arising from his nape. How do they know? he thought. As if reading Todd's thoughts, Robby sat back and said, "Like I've said before, I've known since I was a kid. You were always the bogeyman my parents tried to scare me with, but I always drea-ned of being with you. You weren't scary to me. I beat off thinking about you." Todd grinned. "Then that was you in my bed this morning. I didn't dream of Brandon. You know about Brandon?" "Yes. I know. But it wasn't me in your bed. It was Brandon." "And I suppose it wasn't you at the attic window the night I first came back home." "It was Brandon. He told me he wanted to be with you again. He's cool." "But he's. . . dead." "Yeah, I know." Distantly, Robby heard his name called. "I gotta go. "But. . . " "I gotta go. My mom will kill me if she catches me here. And my dad will kill you." Todd watched Robby climb the rope and scoot onto the roof. He was shivering, bewildered, and anxious. They met nights in the cornfield, the house being too danger- ous. They talked, sometimes made love. Robby was a novice, but ready and willing to learn. Teaching was Todd's pleasure. But Todd let Robby's comments about Brandon slip by. Robby was the boy in his bed that morning; Todd knew that. If the boy wanted to entertain a fantasy about Brandon, all right, but rmemories of Brandon and their love were too much for Todd to deal with. As the corn grew so did the relationship between Robby and Todd, each committed to the other. But the end of summer brought change: school. And with school a curtailing of Rob- by's nighttime freedom. Their trysts became weekend tumbles between the stalks, with Robby's youthful exuberance for or- gasm nearly wearing Todd down. One Friday night, a quarter moon and only a sprinkling of stars showing between cirrus clouds, Robby lay on his back with his legs raised, knees over Todd's shoulders, thighs wrapped firmly around Todd's head. He squirmed under the teasing of Todd's lips and tongue until he grabbed Todd's head and raised his hips, saying, "Yeah. Suck it. Suck it." Todd, exhilarated by the boy's enthusiasm, applied the pressure of quick strokes until Robby's cum splashed his throat. The boy grunted. Todd sucked and licked the last drops. "Oh, yeah," Robby said. They were buckling belts when a crushing of corn startled them. They lay still. There was laughter. Only two rows away three small dark figures raced past them. One, the last, turned his head, stopped, stared directly at them. Then he ran after his playmates. Todd and Robby hurried away. In the attic, cleaned and the hole in the roof repaired with a hinged cover so that Robby had access when he wanted, Todd sat alone, with only a candle to cast off the gloom. He was trembling. The night's close call was frightening. He looked at the rope still dangling from the beam. Prison was not an option, but perhaps death was. He got up and tested the rope's strength; still strong. Pulling a chair below the rope, he stood on it and took hold of the noose. "No." The boy's voice was faint. "Robby?" Todd asked. "How'd you get back in here? Where are you?" A movement in a darkened corner attracted Todd's gaze. It was as if ehe darkness were splitting, with first a sliver of light, then a long narrow vertical shaft between two walls of anthra- cite. The walls slid apart and brilliant light blinded Todd momentarily. When he opened his eyes again, little red dots flashed before him. Gradually his eyes adjusted. "What the hell was that?" he asked. "Not hell, Todd." A boy sat on the bed. The hair was spun gold with curls like Robby's but.... Todd stepped off the chair, walked to the bed. He stood over a grinning boy with seaweed green eyes, Brandon's eyes. "How's Robby?" Brandon asked. "Uh. He's fine." Todd's legs felt weak. He wobbled. "Sit down," Brandon said, "or you'll fall on me." Todd sat. He hesitantly reached out a hand. "You can try to touch me," Brandon said, "but you won't be able to. You can see me and hear me, but you can't feel me." There was a touch of sadness in the boy's voice. "I can't stay long," Brandon said. "And you can't join me. . . not yet." Todd's hand fell. "How. . . " he asked, taking a deep breath, looking into Brandon's eyes, "how is it possible?" "Death doesn't exist. At least not as I always thought of it before.... I am sorry. I should have waited, huh?" "I miss you." "Yes, I know. I miss you too, but now you've got Robby." "You know?" "I fixed you up. I didn't want you to be lonely. I know the feeling of loneliness. He loves you, I can tell, just like I do." "Tonight was. . . " "Don't worry. Those boys in the cornfield did not see you. I was there." "You were? You watched Robby and me. . . " "Yes." Brandon grinned mischievously. "You little dev. . . angel." "Close enough." "You've changed. You still look 13, but you're more... mature.' "I've grown, in ways I never could have in this sphere." "What's it like?" "Another time." Brandon looked toward the ceiling. "We've got company. The trapdoor in the roof opened and Robby lowered himself onto the rope. He slid easily to the floor, his feet touching the floorboards before he noticed the two on the bed. "Didn't believe me," he said to Todd, "did you?" He smirked. "No." Todd confessed. Brandon stood, motioned for Robby to join them. When the boy came over, Brandon moved back toward the corner he had come from. "Wait," Todd said. "Wait. There are so many questions." Brandon waved. "You already know the answers. Learn to trust yourself again," he said, then stepped further back into the darkness. He was gone. Robby sat next to Todd. "Neat, huh?" Todd grinned. "Yeah, neat. He shook his head, then gave full attention to the boy with him. "What are you doing here, and so late? If your parents find out. . . " "They're asleep. I heard them humping an hour ago. After that they both sleep like logs." Robby laughed along with Todd. "I had to see you. I had a feeling. . . from Brandon I bet." "Guess we got us a guardian angel." Robby looked toward where Brandon had disappeared. "Yeah. I like that." "Me too." Todd gently turned Robby's face back to his, lifted the boy's chin, and stroked his lips across the boy's like an artist's brush over a canvas. "I love you," Robby whispered, "you love me. Our love is the answer to all my questions." -The End