Date: Tue, 29 Jul 2003 18:05:35 -0700 (PDT) From: Jon Loewe Subject: Oliver Chapter 9 Disclaimer: You know the stuff! Chapter NINE -- Day 8 I awoke to something touching my cheeks, my forhead, my lips. I opened my eyes and Ollie was tickling my face with his dick. It was hard and I opened my mouth and he placed his dick on my tongue. I licked and sucked. I pulled is bod closer to me by cupping his ass cheeks in my hands and sitting him on my chest. I took all seven inches in right down to his hairless pubes. He moaned and thrust lightly. I started to slurp on and off his pole. He started to move. I don;t know how he did it but he turned around, keeping his dick in my mouth, and sucked on to my boner. Our most favorite thing -- 69. We sucked. I spewed -- he spewed. We laid there tickling pubes and dicks and balls. A knock on the door. "We're off to work. It's 8:30" "Bye!" We got up and got dressed. Breakfast was waiting on the table when we got down there. We ate and went out the door and Shane hollered at us and ran to catch up. We got up to Ollie's attic and Travis was already there and covered in paint clothes. We got ours on and started the base coat. By noon we had 2 coats on and were given the rest of the day off to let it try completely. We went outside and started throwing the baseball around. Ollie was getting pretty good. "Let's go to the park!" We grabbed bats and balls and baseball caps and headed out to the park to hit a few. Now, as I am writing this story, I am struck by a thought -- stereotypes. We learned about them in Mrs. Wilson's 9th grade English class. Travis, Ollie, Shane and I did not fit the stereotype of the teenage gay male. In fact I knew of a couple of other guys that I thought might be gay and they didn't fit the type either. I knew of one guy who was quiet and withdrawn, a little feminine, Oliver says `swishy'. But he was a nice guy. I was friendly to him but not really friends with him. I guess what I'm trying to say is that this group of gay boys was not doing outwardly gay things. Why does the world try to paint people with only one color. There are gays who have nothing to do with sports. There are gays who have nothing to do with the arts. There are gays who have a lot to do with everything and nothing to do with anything. So my point is -- why the stereotype? Well we had fun batting the ball around. We started something though. A lot of other teens gathered and played with us. I knew most of them from high school and Shane knew the rest from middle school. We had a blast. We went over to the sugar shack at the center of the ball fields and got a coke and some sour gummies and stuff. We spent all afternoon playing ball and got home just intime for dinner. There was a call waiting at our house and yes, it was Shane's mom. But she left a peculiar message. She asked us all over for dinner. We asked our parents and then trooped over to Shane's. He was beaming. I never saw him so happy. He was actually bringing friends home. Something he told me he hadn't been able to do since he was about 8. We would find out why that night. Michael Jon Loewe