Date: Sun, 23 Feb 2003 04:10:26 +0000 From: tommy nofeet Subject: Brothers and Lovers, part 3 DISCLAIMER: the following FICTIONAL story may contain vivid descriptions of sex between young boys. If this is offensive to you, or viewing of such material is illegal where you're at, DON'T READ IT! Otherwise, enjoy it. And e-mail me comments if you have anything nice to share. The author would like to point out that this is a story of love, and the realisation of something hidden deep within. Yes, there is sex involved in some areas, and yes, it is between boys, but I don't think it would be the same without it. In other words, boys are horny, and they get up to things... Brothers and Lovers Part 3 Chapter 7 - The Bit You'll Hate A small, shaking, sobbing bundle. Soaking my shoulder, then my chest, then my stomach. And then my other shoulder. My own tears added into the mix couldn't help, but I was only crying because he was. He had a good reason, my excuse was simply that I loved him. Of course, I didn't realise that at the time. Well, not in so many words. But then I was a few days into my eleventh year on this planet, and you don't understand these things at that age. Like I said, he had the reason to cry. The suddenness of it all was the reason the tears had not come earlier. Mike had been, still was, in shock, and there was nothing which I could do about it. Not for lack of trying, but I wasn't able to help. I cried my own tears of frustration. All I wanted to do was wrap him up and take him away from the pain, but I was unable to do so. And so, while he remained resolute, and would not (or rather could not...) cry, I bawled like a baby. He didn't know, because I never did it around him, and that meant spending less time together. I couldn't let him see me crying. I couldn't let him down like that. He needed me to be strong, and while on the surface it looked like he was coping, I knew that inside he had died with his mother. The tumour had been diagnosed the previous summer, while Mike and I were on holiday in Crete. Sarah hadn't wanted to tell Mike, but it was obvious that something was wrong with the frequent headaches and time off work. It was only two days after he had found out, when hope was still alive that it might be operable, that Mike's mum didn't wake up. It was a school morning, and he had spent the night at his house. In fact, he had not left the place since his mother had admitted she was ill, and I had been called home by my parents to leave them to be together. I'd not understood, of course, but then I was going through a very selfish, possessive phase with Mike, and almost couldn't bare to share him with his own mother. My father had sat me down and explained, and though I pretended to understand and accept the need to allow them to be together, it didn't stop the anger at our separation that I felt inside. I woke suddenly that morning, from a grim dream. Sitting bolt upright with a sharp intake of breath, I knew something was wrong. The sun didn't seem to be up, but looking at my bedside table told me that it certainly should have been. The reason was an early autumn fog, rolling heavily from between the trunks of the nearby woods and covering everything in its path with a sticky, freezing dew. As I came properly awake, I realised why I had woken - Mike needed me. Shoving a pair of tracksuit bottoms on over the shorts I wore to bed and finding a hoodie from the 'almost clean' pile on the floor, I stumbled from my room, still barefoot, and downstairs. In the kitchen, my mum was already up having an early breakfast. She never did sleep well. I passed her without a word, and she just watched me leave. I'm not sure where she thought I was going - I never asked her afterwards - but she let me go without saying a thing. Crossing the street, I tried the back door of Mike's house, and as expected found it unlocked. It was amazing that even as late as the early 90s it was possible to be that lax about security, but the nature of our insular little community allowed it. I went straight to Mike's room, but he wasn't there. The kitchen I had passed through was empty also, and the bathroom door was open with the lights off. And then I realised the only place I'd not checked was Sarah's room. My heart dropped. I don't know why, and I don't think it will ever be explained, but somehow I knew in my heart what I was going to find when I walked into the large bedroom. Mike was knelt by the bed, staring at the lifeless form of his mother. Her eyes were closed, and she would have looked almost peaceful in her sleep were it not for the fact her skin was grey and her lips blue. I'd never before seen a corpse, but instinctively knew that this was my first experience. I couldn't talk. I knelt by Mike, tried to put my arms around him, but he didn't respond. He too was cold, sat there in only a pair of shorts. Normally I would have found this attractive, but now it only bought pain. He wasn't shivering, though he certainly should have been. He was hardly breathing, in fact, and was stone cold. Quickly I went to his room and grabbed one of his own hoodies. Absently, I noticed that it was the one my parents had bought him as a present from me. It was my favourite piece of his clothing, mostly because it was so oversized that it dwarfed him, which made him look all the cuter. But I didn't stop to think how well he would be dressed. Hurrying back to his mother's room, pulled one limp arm up into the air and threaded it into its sleeve. Then the other, and finally I was dragging the neck over Mike's head. I have no idea how long it took, but by the time I was finished, my mother was standing in the doorway. As I turned to face her, I saw the retreating form of my father, clearly heading to phone for the ambulance that would come several hours too late for Mike's mum. My own mother had tears rolling down her cheeks, and just sagged against the doorframe as if she were suddenly exhausted. I suppose she must have realised where I was going, and that it was important, so she followed. Distantly, I could hear my father speaking urgently to the 999 operator. Mike was glued to the floor, unresponsive. He didn't move when the paramedics arrived, he didn't move when I tried to get him to come to the hospital, and he hung like a rag doll when my father lifted him from the floor in his strong arms. He didn't speak all the way to the hospital, he didn't even move his head. His eyes remained unfocussed, and he leant on me. By the time of the funeral a week later, Mike was close to joining his mother. He lay in a hospital bed, a drip the only thing that kept him alive. He'd not eaten a single thing since the day he'd found Sarah, and after four days had been rushed to hospital, having simply fallen off his chair sideways one morning. He didn't even put his arms out to stop himself, and I went pale at the sound of his head hitting the floor. He was unconscious for two days, of which I spent all but three hours at his bedside. My parents understood that I needed to be there as me as he needed me there, but when Mike had regained consciousness, there was still nothing there in his eyes. He remained unfocussed, uncaring of the sharp intrusion into his slender, blemish-free arm that the drip caused. I tried to speak to him, but couldn't hold a one-way conversation for long, so I stopped. I, too, took up staring for a hobby, though I had more focus in my glare. My attention was entirely devoted to my boyfriend, who I don't think even realised that I was there. But I wouldn't leave. Even when my parents dragged me, exhausted, from his room a week later, I protested. It was a weak argument, since I was weak myself, but I had to make a stand. Around the fourth time I attempted to escape my house and get the bus to Mike's hospital, my parents relented, agreeing to take me back as long as I got a good night's sleep. And so I ended up banging on their door at seven the next morning, frantically trying to get my parents to drive me to the hospital. My dad, bleary-eyed hero that he was, stumbled from the shower five minutes later and into clothes I virtually threw at him, and we were off. As soon as I reached the hospital, the matron of the night shift tried to stop me seeing Mike, but I was past her in a flash and into his room. The day matron, just coming on to her shift, restrained her colleague and explained the situation, and I was left to sit with my boyfriend until he woke. I must have failed to have the sleep I promised to take, because I had drifted off when Mike woke. The first I knew was a gentle squeeze of my hand, which I had wrapped around his as I sat in the chair that almost had an imprint of my bottom on it from the time I had spent there. I opened my eyes slowly, forgetting for a second where I was and looking instead into the eyes of my love. I'd never before, and never since, had the level of joy sweep through me as I did when I realised that the life was back in Mike's eyes. He was home. Chapter 8 - Definition of Love Of course, that could not be the end of the story. Mike was far from alright. He came to live with us, his mother having signed over his guardianship to my parents as soon as she was diagnosed as potentially terminal, a move with which his estranged father had agreed. He still would not respond to others, and I had to be there to feed him, since he refused to do it for himself. It wasn't a cry for attention, he simply could not do anything for himself. I would sit in the bathtub with him, washing him like a baby. I would dress him, and then leave for the day to attend school, on my mother's insistence. I knew she was only looking after me, ensuring that I didn't miss more than I had to, and that I didn't mope around all day with Mike, but I resented what I saw as her cold-heartedness. Mike needed me, and I could not be there for him for up to eight hours a day. It was about two months after Mike came home that the crying started. Not his crying, but mine. Mike was still immovable, his face blank every moment of the day, except for the odd occasion in his sleep when his brows would furrow, and then relax once more. But my emotions could not be held back, knowing that he felt so much pain that he simply could not express any of it. The trigger was his eleventh birthday, which fell two months to the day before my own. He sat in his bed, eyes seemingly uncaring, as my parents brought in all the presents they had got him for his birthday. It was all pretty standard stuff for an eleven year old boy - a new football, new boots and the strip of his favourite team, Spurs. All passed before his uncaring eyes. He thanked my parents, and I think they knew it was a genuine emotion, but he could feel nothing inside. The final present was what, in truth, sent me over the edge. It was a letter from Sarah to her son, to be read on his eleventh birthday. Carefully, Mike slipped open the envelope and unfolded the single sheet of paper. He read it aloud, the most words he had spoken in nearly a quarter of a year. It was not a long note, but it had my parents crying by its end. Mike still has it somewhere, ten years on, but I don't think I will find it and repeat the words here. They were for Mike. At the time, though, he was unaffected, at least on the surface. Having come to the end of the letter, he carefully folded it up once more, returning it to its envelope and announced he was tired, before rolling away from us and curling up. I couldn't stand it any longer. I burned inside with pain at seeing him like this, but refused to cry in front of him if he would not. And so I fled the room we shared, running out into the garden. I didn't stop when I reached the fence at the bottom. In one clear leap I scaled the inside before dropping down the other and into the forest beyond. I didn't stop running until I reached the hiding place that Mike and I had made our own over the last six months. It was an old place, no more than a few sheets of plywood erected into some form of shelter, and had clearly been the haunt of many boys before us. It was enough, though, to keep the cold drizzle off me, and as I sat hugging my knees, I started to cry. I don't remember much after that. When I woke, I was in the guest bed, wrapped up in my mum's clean white sheets. Moments later she came in to see how I was doing, and smiled when she saw I was awake. I'd apparently been found cured up in the foetal position by a neighbour's dog when they were out walking in the forest. He'd carried me home, semi-conscious, and explained how I'd been found. All the neighbours knew what had happened, and how badly it had affected both Mike and I, and he was concerned for my welfare. I was up and about a lot quicker than Mike had been. When I found him, he was lying on his bed, fully clothed, staring at the wall. As gently as I could manage, I slipped onto the bed behind him and shifted closer, draping an arm over him. He lifted himself slightly, so that my other arm could pass underneath. I hugged him fiercely, and his arms returned the strength, grasping mine with as strong a grip as he could muster. We fell asleep like that, me spooned into his back, and did not wake until the middle of the next day. If we knew the definition of love, we would have spoken the words. Chapter 9 - Eleven Two months passed, but things were not getting any better. Christmas had been ignored, on my request. I couldn't stand to celebrate when I knew that Mike would not respond. Silently, he thanked me with a hug when I told him we would not mark the occasion. My parents would not let it pass entirely, though, appearing on Christmas morning with a gift for each of us - one of those pendants split in half, one piece for each of us, to add to the chain with our keys. Mike's eyes briefly flashed gratitude to my parents before returning to their uncaring natural state. I think my parents knew he appreciated the gift. I had nothing for him, having thought that since we were not celebrating, gifts were unnecessary. When I tried to explain, pain flashed through Mike's eyes, and I thought I had really messed things up until he leaned forward and grabbed me into a rib-crushing bear hug, and whispered in my ear, 'You are my present.' I had to force myself not to cry. My birthday approached, and I hoped that it would pass without mention. I had already asked my parents if they could pretend that I did not have a birthday, because I would not be able to enjoy it without Mike, and they had agreed. There was a strange look in my mother's eyes as she agreed, but I couldn't read it and thus forgot it almost immediately. And then the day was upon me. I woke alone in my own bed. Mike and I had taken to sleeping in separate beds, since he would have bad dreams and throw his arms around a lot. I didn't want to be hit, and he didn't want to hit me, and so we had silently agreed to the separation. But I was not alone for long. As soon as I rolled over to look at my clock, another weight joined mine on the bed. Rolling back, thinking my mum had come in to wish me happy birthday, I instead came face to face with Mike. He leaned forward and kissed me, a strong kiss and our first in many months. I was shocked, but reciprocated when I remembered how. He broke the kiss first, and leaned back slightly. 'Didn't think I would forget your birthday, did you?' he said. And then, an even bigger shock, the corners of his mouth turned up into a tiny little smile. It didn't last for long, but it was there. I knew that simple display of emotion was a huge effort, and it struck me how much Mike was going through just to see me happy. And then all of the love I felt for him came up at once. It rose through my stomach, butterflies flapping up toward my throat, and through into my mouth. I sobbed. I couldn't stop myself. Making my excuses, I tried to leave so that Mike wouldn't have to see me crying, but I couldn't move. Mike's hands were on my shoulders, holding me down on to the bed. When I stopped struggling, he pushed me down onto my back, and lay down on the bed beside me. I stopped trying to hold it in, and heaved huge sobs into his shoulder. My crying was Mike's trigger, just as his mum's letter had been mine. I felt his body shake, and then the tears came properly. He was silent, but the tears soaked me to the skin through the t-shirt I wore to bed. When he had flooded one area, he moved on to the next, and then another, until my whole upper body was wet with his tears. Not that I cared. I was crying, too, to see his pain, and also a little out of relief. Finally he was able to let it out, and the months of saved up emotions all poured out in one go. I had no idea how long we were there, but eventually awoke to see my mother standing in the doorway. Her eyes were red, but if she had been crying she'd now stopped. She met my gaze for a moment, gave a brief smile and then turned and left. I heard her running a bath, and woke Mike to see if he wanted to bathe. Utterly exhausted as he was, he could only nod, and supporting each other more than anything else, we stumbled to the bathroom. Once there, mum left us to give us a bit of privacy, shutting the door behind her. As I'd done innumerable times in the last few months, I started to take off Mike's bedclothes. This time, however, a hand stopped me. Mike looked me right in the eyes, and said, 'Allow me.' I couldn't exactly refuse, and stood there mutely as he lifted the now dry, but crusty, t-shirt over my head, and knelt down to remove my shorts. He herded me into the bath, before quickly stripping himself and joining me. I felt like I couldn't move, now that Mike had found the ability to do so himself. He washed me slowly, lovingly. For once, I didn't become erect as he cleaned my most intimate areas. It was too important a moment to spoil with something that crude. When he was done, he allowed me to return the favour, though my hands were shaking so much that I found it hard. Mike just sat there patiently with a hint of a smile on his lips, watching everything with the same eagle eyes he used to use when he watched me build model airplanes. Then it had disturbed me, but now it was a wonderful thing to see. It meant that he had purpose once more, and that filled me with a warm feeling. Unfortunately, it also filled my eyes with tears, and I cried as I washed him. Gently, with love, Mike wiped the tears from my cheeks, before giving me a light kiss on each closed eye. That's the end of part three. I've got more on the way, just as soon as I find the time (I stayed up until four in the morning to finish this part...). Hope you enjoyed it, and remember to e-mail me if you want to say anything (tommynofeet@hotmail.com).