Date: Mon, 6 Sep 2010 15:02:32 -0700 From: Zack McNaught Subject: Matt and Jake Part 2 DISCLAIMER: the following story is about a pair of young teenaged boys falling in love. 'Matt and Jake' contains very few explicit sexual references, but all the same if this kind of material offends you, or is likely to get you into trouble, now's the time to leave... Still here? Good, then settle back and enjoy the ride. Luvz, Zack Mack (zackmcnaught@hotmail.com, www.asstr.org/~zack/, twitter.com/zackmcnaught) Matt and Jake, part 2 15. Jake closed the gap between us in one stride. In the same movement his hands went to the sides of my head, and a heartbeat later his lips touched mine. I was still too flabbergasted to understand what was happening. Jake tried again, and thankfully this time I got it. This time I realised what was happening, and that quite frankly I loved it, and I wanted to do more of it. It's funny to think how quickly you learn to kiss, especially with passion involved. A minute later my lips and chin were covered in slobber from our rather wet coupling, and a surge of adrenaline close to lightning bolt strength was racing through me as a hot, soft hand reached inside my shorts and took possession of all of me. 16. I doubled over with the shock of feeling him touch me, ripping my mouth away from his, gasping for breath. The sensation had been too much and Jake stood staring at the single wet streak which ran up his arm, seemingly in disbelief. I leaned back against the only solid wall of the den, breathing hard, shaking like a leaf and feeling weak at the knees. He came over to me and pulled me upright, grabbing me in a fierce hug which had a lot more to do with companionship than lust. For the first time since I was a small boy, I let a tear fall from the corner of my eye. 17. We went and talked, but properly this time. I know it seems strange that two thirteen year old boys would go and talk about it, but we did. In excited whispers, of course, because his parents were still asleep upstairs. His little brother came in at one point and demanded to watch TV, so our conversation was curtailed somewhat until we struck on the ingenious notion of going to his room and talking there. Of course, we had to be even more quiet there. My presence wouldn't really be questioned, but his parents hated to be woken up early at the weekends, when during the week they both got up early for work. So we whispered, and then kissed again, and by the time we were done whispering, and kissing, and well... you know... anyway, by the time we were done it was very much time for me to get home before I was missed. With one last kiss I left him standing there with a rather obvious problem to either hide, or solve... by himself this time. 18. To suggest that I saw the world through rose-tinted spectacles that day really didn't do justice to the way I felt. Suddenly all those unpleasant emotions which had been ruining my relationship with my mum were gone. I was her happy little boy again, her best friend. She even joked that I must have found a girlfriend, and I smiled inwardly as I was able to say that in all honestly there was no chance. The possibility of telling her about Jake and I didn't even enter my head. It just didn't occur to me that my mum's reaction could be in any way positive. I just imagined her freaking out and kicking me out of the house or something. I didn't think for a second she would see it for what it was, see that I loved Jake and that was that. Of course, I asked if Jake could come over and stay the night, something he'd done fairly regularly in the preceding few weeks. Normally my mum would have agreed straight away, and I'd almost thanked her before my brain registered that she'd said no. That rather knocked the wind out of my sails, but to be fair she was right, she had told me several days before that she was going out for the evening, and that she was going to get one of the neighbours to look in on me from time to time. She didn't feel it was fair on them to have the extra responsibility of having Jake around. The fact that her reasons were good did nothing to blunt my anger. I'd just got Jake and now I wanted him all the time. With homework and chores to do during the day the only chance I was going to have to see him was the evening, and now my mum's personal life was getting in the way of mine. I was the one meant to be having fun, not her! There was only one thing for it – I had to persuade my mum that I was old enough to look after myself, and that I wouldn't burn the house down if I was left to my own devices. I started almost straight away, trying my most persuasive tactics as we went round the supermarket getting the week's food in. I carried on as we went to the DIY shop to get a replacement power socket for the living room (you pick up all sorts of things when there's no dad on the scene and your mum was never that good with the practical things), and by the time we reached the pet shop (dog food, in prodigious quantities) I could sense that she had reached the point where she was either going to agree or lose it with me altogether. Being the annoying little kid that I was I pushed it. 19. For the first time ever I was going to be left home alone. Of course she agreed, I always knew she would! And the best part was that in fact I wouldn't be alone. My `best friend' was coming over, and the knowledge of what might happen set my heart hammering in my ribcage, and all of the blood it pumped heading in the wrong direction... I was a giddy little kid all afternoon, definitely not acting my age. My mum noticed how excited I was, and commented on it with a weird smile on her face. Suddenly I was paranoid, wondering if perhaps she knew something. I just made up something about there being some film on TV that we really wanted to watch. Thank God when I looked in the Radio Times it turned out that Die Hard was on that evening, and that was just the kind of movie I liked watching. 20. Jake turned up at six o'clock, the appointed hour. He came in with a shy smile, and because I knew my mum was in the shower upstairs I closed the door and stopped him with a hand on his arm, moving in to kiss him. Oh, major butterflies time! It was practically chaste in comparison to the last time we had kissed, but instantly I went light in the head at the feeling of his soft, hot lips. His hand went briefly to the back of my head, then my shoulder, and then my lower back, pulling our hips together. When finally we parted I was blushing strongly and had a serious problem to conceal before my mum came downstairs. "Hey," he said as he smiled at me. His eyes betrayed a fierce battle between the pure emotion of live and the corrupting forces of unstoppable lust. "Hi," I replied. "My mum should be going out in about twenty minutes. She actually has a date! Can you believe that?" Jake giggled and shook his head – after all, how was it possible that an old person would go on a date. To put into context how ridiculous our train of thought was my mum was only 34 at the time, but of course that was ancient to our eyes. We went and sat down, making sure to be careful to sit on different sofas so my mum didn't suspect anything when she came downstairs. When she did in due course she was very much dressed to impress, and smelled rather strongly of perfume. "Oh, hi, Jake," she said when she came into the living room. "Glad you could come over, Matthew's been excited about it all afternoon." I cringed. I mean of course Jake knew I would be excited, but it was just the sort of thing mums said to embarrass their teenage sons. My mum gave me a triumphant smile which said `that's payback for this afternoon', and then walked out with all sorts of warnings and instructions shouted over her shoulder, none of which I listened to. Almost as soon as she was gone, Jake gave me a wicked little smile and jumped forward off his sofa onto mine. He straddled my waist and planted his hands either side of my shoulders on the back of the sofa, and then leaned forward, his hot breath on my neck. Immediately my hands were beneath his t-shirt, tugging at the buckle of his belt. 21. As the hot water ran down my body dragging soap suds with it, I reflected on what had just happened. My mind still spun with the reality of the situation. Jake and I were past friends now. We'd not used the word `boyfriend', because for us that meant something else, something between a girl and a boy. But though we didn't have the words to describe it, we both knew what was going on. As I washed my most sensitive part, a blot shot through me, a reminder of sensations only newly experienced, of a peak of euphoria so great that its impact lingered on in my body, and would do for days to come. No solitary exploration would ever again be sufficient to sate my lust, not now. I didn't think about it at the time, but I've done so any number of times since: we were really lucky in that very specific sense. The reality was that most of our classmates had never experienced love, or the opportunity to express that love physically with another. Girls were always a bit less keen to get involved with the physical side of love. Before Jake there were girls, though none of them anywhere near this serious. All were very well brought up, lovely girls, and therefore completely useless for a young boy racked with surging hormones. I don't mean to paint a picture of gay life being one long promiscuous orgy, but Jake and I had no compunctions about experiencing what we so desperately wanted to experience – sex, and a lot of it, as often as possible. We were in love, yes, but also in searing, overwhelming lust. 22. The first morning waking up next to another person, next to the person with whom you are in love, is something sensational. Jake was still asleep, which was unusual for him – all the times we'd spent sleeping over at each other's houses, before we had admitted our feelings, he had always awoken first, then made sure I was not far behind so we could begin the day. I must have worn him out, I suppose. He lay there on his back, one arm above his head, snoring very gently. He was covered up to his chest, but beneath I was fairly sure that, like me, he was unclothed. I couldn't resist very gently lifting the covers and glancing downwards. Whilst I was experiencing the usual morning issues that every boy of a certain age does, Jake was clearly still very asleep, because his lay inert across the top of one thigh. I couldn't resist. It felt naughty, but at the same time suddenly permissible. I reached down and held him, rolled him around, tweaked the tip of his foreskin. I was just so fascinated by it, almost as if I didn't own one myself. In fact I was fascinated by the whole of his body, from his delightful face, to the beautiful soft skin of his neck, his slightly brown nipples (a contrast to my own pink ones), his delightful tummy, slightly rounded still with youth, to his scraggly, almost non-existent patch of hair and finally the thing which marked him out more than anything else as pure boy, standing tall now beneath my ministrations. I still get a thrill to this day from waking him by dropping my head down beneath the covers, working on him in that hot, stuffy air, darkness enveloping me, heightening my sense of smell and of touch. What I did that first morning lay the foundations for a memory which has lasted a lifetime. 23. We were invincible, suddenly. All the taunts and jeers of our classmates faded into the background. No, of course we didn't flaunt it, that would have maybe tipped the balance toward violence, but nor did we hide the fact that, as we had always done, we preferred our own company to that iof a bunch of ill-informed idiots. Of course it wasn't all plain sailing, but by God there were compensations. As long as you were discreet, no-one saw two lads disappearing into the toilets at lunchtime. Suddenly I understood what my mum was always trying to tell me – school days really are the best days of your life, if you were lucky like we were. The daily grind was suddenly not so painful. As soon as I saw Jake, everything was OK. Everything else faded into the background. I started to almost enjoy myself. We left the library, too, found a corner of the playground which was ours alone. Even befriended some other kids who had no other friends, though the real truth of our relationship was kept to ourselves. My mum noticed the change, though she mistakenly took it for me settling down a bit better than I had in other places. I imagine she thought I was going through all sorts of changes, so the more relaxed Matt was simply another stage. Of course, nothing that perfect ever lasts. Not in the real world. 24. I stomped my foot. I actually, in the heat of anger, pounded the floor with my foot. "You can't do this! Not now!" My mum was calm. She'd seen this before, though perhaps not with such passion on my part. "Matt," she said, her tone half conciliatory, half commanding, "we have to go. The job's massive, and there's a chance I might get taken on permanently at the end of it. It's not like you've made a lot of friends this time round!" Oh God that hurt. It hurt so badly that I doubled over with pain and just sobbed into my hands. "Look, Matt," she said, perhaps realising that she had gone too far, "perhaps the next school will be nicer. I mean, the one you're at now can be a bit rough, can't it?" She referred to the state of my school bag two weeks prior to our conversation, muddied and torn after things turned a bit ugly on the way home. "But I like it!" I protested. "Why?" she asked, clearly confused. "Because!" What was I meant to tell her? That I had found love, that it wasn't a girl but rather it was my best friend? That couldn't happen. "Come on, Matt, tell me. Please?" "No!" I shouted. "You wouldn't understand!" "You don't know that, Matthew. I thought we were really close. I thought I knew everything about you, but now you won't tell me anything." "You wouldn't get it, mum, OK? You just wouldn't get it." I stalked out of the room, stamped my way up the stairs and slammed the door shut behind me. 25. She came up and knocked softly on the door half an hour later. I had cried myself out, and was sitting on my bed looking around the room, trying to memorise it all before it was taken from me. She came and sat next to me, putting an arm around my shoulders. "Matt, I need you to tell me why you're so upset this time. I know it's not easy, but we've always been alright, haven't we? We've always coped before..." "It's different this time, mum. It's just really different." "What is it? Is it a girl?" Oh God. There was the opening. There was my chance to just come clean. All I had to do with step through the door. How many times had I come to this point, nearly telling her and then chickening out? How often had I come within a hair's breadth of saying everything I so desperately wanted to say? What tipped me over the edge this time I don't know. Perhaps it was the spectre of losing Jake when we meant so much to each other. "No, mum, it's not a girl. Actually, it's a boy." I just left it hanging there. 26. My mother's face didn't display a mixture of emotions. Actually, that doesn't happen very often. Usually it's one emotion or other, but not a mixture. The one emotion which reigned over all was not anger, or disgust, thankfully, but confusion. She sat there looking as if I'd spoken to her in Cantonese and expected her to understand. The dawning of understanding was like the rain that falls at the end of a long, hot summer's day. It comes in little dots at first, but then suddenly the heavens open and it pours down. The penny dropped for my mum, and suddenly everything fell into place. "Oh." I don't know why, but I was angry that was all she managed to come up with. I wanted more. I didn't care what it was, good or bad, but I needed her to say something, not just look at me with that strange look on her face. It was as though I had given her the key to a puzzle she had been working on for a long time, and now the answer was plain to see. "So, Jake then. Right?" I nodded at her, and then decided she needed more than that. "Yes, Jake. And you can't stop me seeing him mum. You can't!" I'd interpreted her lack of words as a sign of discontent, though looking back it was clear she was simply trying to digest the news. She held up her hands in a conciliatory gesture. "I'm not going to stop you, Matt. It's just a bit of a shock." "What, that I'm gay?" "Well, yes. I mean, you're not exactly effeminate, are you? You're just not how I expected a gay person to be. I thought I knew everything about you." I had no answer to that. Honestly, I had been a bit selfish – my mother and I usually shared everything, and yet I'd hidden something massive like this from her. My mum was looking down at the floor now, troubled. "Do Jake's parents know?" she asked. "No, unless he's told them this morning. We haven't planned it, you know." "Right. Well, perhaps you ought to go over there for a while. Maybe he needs to know you let the secret out." I'd already planned to head over to Jake's as soon as my chores were done for the day, and I took my mum's suggestion as permission to skip those, so I just grabbed a jumper and went and found my bike. 27. When I was done telling Jake everything he looked down at the floor, and when he raised his head again there were tears in the corners of his eyes. "We're fucked, aren't we?" he said. Jake never used the f-word, so I knew he was pretty upset, though whether it was about our impending separation or the realisation we were out (at least to my mum) I couldn't be sure. There was simply too much to take into account. He was right, we were fucked. We sat there lost in our own thoughts for ages, until his mum came up and checked on us, wanting to ask Jake whether he wanted to go shopping with her and his brother. I knew he could do with something to take his mind off things, so I suggested he go, and I would go home and talk to my mum. When we were alone he bear-hugged me, and gave me one little kiss goodbye on the cheek. 28. There was an open bottle of wine on the kitchen table. Half gone. And two glasses. This was odd for an early Saturday evening. I knew my mum drank occasionally, but she was never really a heavy drinker, and usually it was confined to nights out. Who was the other drinker, too? I wandered through to the living room, from which a pair of lowered voices emanated. When I walked in, there was mum, with her boyfriend, Dave. He looked up at me and gave me his usual warm smile of greeting, though my mum refused to raise her head, and when I looked closely she had clearly been crying. Dave motioned for me to sit down on the other sofa, and then spoke to my mum. "Linda, do you want to talk to Matt about it, or should I?" Now I was thoroughly confused. Dave had been mum's boyfriend for a while now, since before Jake and I had been together. The date she had gone on the night Jake and I had first spent alone together in my house was with Dave, and little did I know that my mum had actually been seeing him for a while before that, through work. The way he was talking to mum had overtones, though, and I wasn't sure I liked the sound of it. Eventually, mum nodded her head. "I'll do it, Dave," she said, then turned to me, wiping away a tear from the corner of her eye. "Matt, what you said earlier, it was a shock, OK? I didn't deal with it properly. I didn't realise how much Jake meant to you until I sat down and had a think about it. You spend all of your time together. His your only friend. Obviously a bit more than that, too. "It made me think about all the moving around we do. I didn't realise how bad it messed things up for you. Or me. I called Dave and got him to come over. We were talking, and it just seemed like a good idea." Mum stopped. Obviously she hadn't realised that she hadn't told me what was a good idea. I just looked at her. "Well, what do you think?" "About what?" I asked. Fortunately, Dave was following the conversation. "Linda, you didn't really tell him what we were thinking." "Oh, didn't I? Oh. Well, Matt, Dave and I were thinking that we really like each other. Not enough to get married just yet, but maybe enough to live together." "Do you mean we could stay here?" I asked. "Well, sort of. In the area. Dave has a house over in Stokebridge. It's no further from school than here, but it's a nice place. What do you think?" I didn't know what to say. I was drained. After resigning myself to losing Jake, then coming out to my mum, then breaking the news to Jake that we would be split up, and now this, I just couldn't cope emotionally. I put my arm on the arm of the sofa, buried my face in the crook of my arm, and cried. 29. Ok, that's gone by in a flash. Seems to be all so neat and tidy, and quick when I write it down like that. But it wasn't that way, really. Looking back at my diary shows so much confusion. I can't write it all down, because the words are garbled. There's just feelings in a random order on a page. Several pages. My mind was a mess, that much is pretty obvious. I didn't want us to move in with Dave. Oh, we got on OK, but moving in with him was something else. I didn't want things to change, didn't want it to stop being me and my mum. Looking at it with an adult head on, I can understand how unfair that is. Why shouldn't my mum have happiness? I did, after all. At the time, though, there was a lot of resentment. 30. There's another aspect to this we've rather skimmed over up to now. The narrative has turned rather Matt-centric, but Jake was suffering, too. The fact was that now my mum knew he was gay, and my boyfriend. That put him in a terrible position – my mum had promised that nothing would be said until he was ready, but what had been something exciting, fun, secretive now became a millstone around his neck. He didn't want me to come over the next day, a Sunday. He said he needed time alone. I left him to it, not wanting to argue. I waited in my room all day, my homework done, my mother out with Dave somewhere, probably looking at wallpaper or some such thing. I just sat there looking out of the window. Until something familiar moved out there. I jumped up and looked out of the window, down into the front garden. It was Jake, and he was heading at speed for the front door. I ran down the stairs and flew to the front door. Jake almost fell through the door, and into my arms. He was crying, and it looked like he had been from some time. He sobbed into my shoulder while I held him. These weren't tears of joy. 31. Jake's father was at the door. I opened the door and there he was, being big and scary. Well, normally he was big and scary. Now he just looked defeated, and worried half to death. "Jacob's here?" It was phrased as a question, but spoken as a statement of truth. I nodded anyway. "I'm not going to barge into your house, Matt, but if you don't let me speak to him I won't be happy." Let's get this clear – I was scared absolutely shitless of Jake's dad. He didn't interact all that much with me, though he had never been unfriendly as such. Now he seemed to be asking me for permission to see his own son. This was really messed up. But he didn't seem angry. I showed him into the living room and then went to ask Jake if he wanted to see his dad. 32. I sat awkwardly on the sofa next to Jake. He didn't want me to leave. Told me so in very firm tones in front of his father. So I sat there feeling very much the third wheel, while Jake and his dad had the conversation they needed to have. "Jacob, your mother was wrong. Very wrong. You know she didn't mean what she said, right?" "Dad, she shouted all kinds of things at me. She told me I'm sick in the head!" Oh God, that must have hurt. Suddenly my experience with my mum looked like the perfect coming out. What on earth had happened? "Jakey, she's just in shock, OK? Let her calm down." "What if she doesn't, dad? What if she just keeps shouting at me and saying all that stuff?" "She won't, mate. She won't. Just give her a chance to get over it. Give her time. It's a bit of a shock, that's all." "You don't seem shocked, Dad. You seem OK with it." Jake's dad's shoulders slumped. He ran a hand through his hair. "I'm not shocked, Jakey. Or surprised. I've known for a while. Knew about you both." 33. Jake and his father left together half an hour later, just as my mum and Dave returned. They met briefly in the driveway, the conversation an awkward one, where nothing is said but plenty is communicated. I was grilled as soon as I was through the door. What were they doing here? Was I OK? Was Jake OK? I tried to reassure them, but I was drained. The weekend had been too much for me. I just slumped on the sofa and within minutes was asleep. I didn't go to school the next day, or the day after that. I slept, and slept some more. My mum went to work, but each day came home early to make sure I was OK. I think she understood that I couldn't cope with everything going on at once. Jake stayed home, too, but we didn't see each other, at his dad's suggestion. He was right, too. The space gave us time to wind down, to reset I suppose. When I finally came out of the far side I was refreshed and ready to face the world. 34. Jake's dad was wrong. His mum really didn't grow to cope with it, not for a long time. She refused to talk to him, and nothing his dad could say would bring her round. It was only years later, when Jake nearly died in a car crash, that she finally came around. But all that was ahead of us. For the moment, and most importantly, Jake and I were back on track. I had my mother's blessing, and Dave's too. In fact, he was the most chilled and supportive of any of the adults I knew at the time. Because of Jake's mother, we couldn't spend nights at his anymore, so when we did have a chance to we had nights at mine. Well, actually, at Dave's, because that's where we ended up only a matter of weeks later. It was strange, being in someone else's house, no matter what effort he went to, to make us feel at home. He even bought me a double bed and redecorated my room, but still it felt weird. 35. Of course, at our age, and with the feelings we had for each other, the weirdness could only hold us back for a while. I revelled in the intimacy Jake and I shared. Each time was special, each peak greeted with a satisfied smile and a warm embrace. I learned everything that made him tick, all the little things I could do to drive him mad before I took him over the edge. He, too, could push my buttons, touching me in places I never knew would bring such pleasure. To have someone who knew so intimately what excited me took passion to a new level. I would literally double up in pain at the intensity of the pleasure he could make me feel. We would spend hours together, playing, exploring, working out what felt good and what felt weird. We had no guidance, so had few preconceived ideas about what we were and weren't meant to do. The first time I felt his mouth on me was at his instigation, and I can only assume he'd heard about the idea from before, when he'd messed around with the other boy. Instantly it became the heart and soul of our games, though, the most important thing to do, the sharing of a bond of which no-one else was a part. So strong were the sensations that the very memory of the first time I tried it on him will even now bring me virtually unparalleled pleasure. We became so close that I realised I would never again love so completely, so wholeheartedly. Jake was, and is, the perfect, only love of my life. 36. So, how to end our tale? Well, there is plenty more to tell, I suppose, but not plenty worth telling, not compared to all that came before. Jake and I, well, we're still together. We've been apart, but we're together again. Those few months were only the beginning of the story, but it's a story to be told another time, in another way. Thanks for reading, I hope it means something to someone. If you enjoyed `Matt and Jake', please let me know: zackmcnaught@hotmail.com For more stories, visit the Zack Mack archive at www.asstr.org/~zack/