Date: Sat, 18 Feb 2006 21:40:41 -0600 From: Timothy Stillman Subject: AUTUMN IS FOR SAYING GOOD BYE AUTUMN IS FOR SAYING GOODBYE by Tim Stillman They say it's choices now. It used to be decisions. It used to be up to you. Now there are responsibilities that you must take for your actions. I pretend I believe these things.. I don't. It's my job though. Until Alton. Whom I loved with a passion I have never loved anyone with before. The first time he came into my office, I looked up from my chair, my eyes grown hard, my face harder still. I see them as weapons, or I did. Save for Alton. He ran into my arms and I held him and felt him and stroked him and believed in him. It is an unique thing to believe in someone. To really know they are there and you suddenly as well. It happened. I don't care to fill in the blanks. Whether it happened two weeks after his first visit or two months, I don't care. Time meant nothing. It did happen. I don't know, maybe some high school students were like me after all. Different. Sad. Shy. Always knowing that solitary masturbation at the end of day, so looked forward to, so missed, so lonely. And it was autumn Alton came into my life. He had been having problems in class. Picked on. Too pretty. Too kind. Too forgiving. When he came to my office that first time, he had a bandage on his face next to his nose, and a black eye. And I held him and life is not for trees and summer and ponds and woods by themselves. An odd thing, to remember your own pulse, and that it can so strangely give life to another human being. Or a chance of hope. School in session two months now. I am the guidance counselor/psychologist. It's a small school in a small New England town. Autumn had that spurned gold red beauty in full bloom, the season I lived for, the season now of Alton. I believe in magic now. Alton was small for his age and his hair was black as midnight and his eyes were searching as well as frightened, a combination that when noticed by the wrong person can get one into a great deal of trouble. And Alton was in a great deal of trouble. There was a city nearby, well, for us, it was considered a city, and it had some gay bars and Alton had been to one two weeks before he saw me, and it had been found out recently, therefore Alton the punching bag. How found out, words, rumors, and Alton of the gray eyes and the smile that could not help itself, as he told me he was in love and he and the man he met at the bar were to be together for the rest of their lives. He was to run away from home, was Alton, soon, to be with him. The man was to visit him some weekend at a hotel in our town. Alton and I didn't talk much. We thought a great deal and we kissed and I loved him and I didn't want him to go away, but there was always go away on the ghosts of friends in the past and the ghosts of friends in the future, I seem to see no difference in what and who has been and what and who would be to come. Alton and I lay on the couch in my office. The shades of green down blocking out the always brown glowy cloud days with the trees sighing wind high and comforting. I held him because he had not been held a lot in his life. I touched him because the man at the bar had touched him and Alton said then it would be okay for me to also, but remember he was spoken for. For a man of 27, it seems I always come third or fourth or lower, it seems I am used to mark time, not in a cruel unkind way, just that is how it has always been with me. Alton touched me too and he felt my firmness and he felt my fear. He stroked my forehead and kissed it with his full lips, and brushed my hair back, told me not to worry, I would be safe, I was of worth and value. All those years my junior and he comforted me and it seemed right that he do so. I had asked him about school and he said he would go there and it was okay with his old man because the old man had other things to do and was happy to be getting "the kid" out of his hair. Alton lay on me. I remember that first time. The sounds of school all round, the bells ringing, the kids thundering in the halls, and Alton in here for counseling, for hiding out, and I was afraid the door was not locked or someone would look through the window shade and see our shadows. But he shhed me and he held me and he lay his cheek against my chest and he felt me up and down and I felt his penis grow as we lay on each other. And he kissed me. What a thing. 27 and not kissed till now. And feeling his febrile body on me, a body that would trace away in the wind, that was already a torn shadow. I put my hand delicately and with fear and not a bit of shame down the back of his jeans, just a little bit, and he wriggled his butt gladly and said, "more, please" and smiled and said the first name of the man he was going away with, sweetly said, I think he meant to say my name, however, I would like to believe so, and I put my hand down on his butt and it was firm and muscled and creamy feeling at the same time, and he sighed and arched his body like a bow in an arrow, and he sighed again and looked down at me and for a time, a very little, very unforgettable time, he was a pretend lover of mine. I saw his pain, but he saw mine more. I was like a young teacher, come back to school, not to teach, but to be a student again, for even if school had been awful for them, it was better than the outside world. But teachers and guidance counselors are on the other side of the desk, and there is a whole different world in that and in being a student on the other side of that desk. And he put his vanilla tasting (he loved vanilla gum, and so thus did I) in my mouth and it made me so hard and he squirmed his crotch on mine and though neither of us ever took a chance of being without our clothing and I was too antsy to have him come to my apartment, we saw each other piece meal, he would unzip and I would touch and tingle and stroke and play with his little almost hairless balls and marvel at his perfectly pink leaning tower of Penis, as we called it, and he would do the same to me. He was to be the one to suck me off before I did him, apologizing all the way. "Please quit apologizing," he would say, somewhat irritated at times, but I always felt the need for it. I pretended the man he saw on the weekends he no longer saw on the weekends. I preferred to think I was "saving" Alton from him instead of just savoring whatever little time Alton had to take with me. We did not talk of the man. Alton learned early on to keep that quiet. I would say nothing when he did. It was easy to figure out. Alton was no longer a sad boy. He no longer got pushed around. He pushed back every now and then And sometimes when a fight could not be avoided, he did not avoid it and at least gave as good as he got. He told me "thanks" one time for helping. I hope he meant it. But it was love on my part and selfishness and the art of Alton's going away. I've never liked trains. That is why I chose an apartment in a building two blocks from a train yard. Some times at night I would lie in my bed and listen the engines and the whistles and the sheer massive bulk that somehow moved so fast and so far away at such a quick clip. I've always wanted things, me, people, seasons, to stay. Alton talked about that once. I had sucked him off and had swallowed his sweet cum and was lying with my face still on his still hard penis. We had been talking desultorily about leaving. "I don't mind traveling, Mr. Burke. I think new places are all in my future. I want to be a travel writer. I want to go back to Chicago and I want to see the old places and my old school, and I want to see plays in New York and be there for the new book season in Autumn and live in the Strand book store and smell the covers and paper and ink and paste of all the new books. I'm not scared, Mr. Burke." And he put his hands with the artistic fingers to my face and made me look up at him, his sweater and shirt pulled upward and my fingers now touching his still hard boy tits of brown, "you've both helped me. Both of you. I will never travel alone." And like the experienced lover he always seemed to be to me, he wrapped his arms round me and his legs and he tipped his tongue out of his mouth to his upper lip and he closed his eyes and I loved him more than anyone could love anyone and I thought please don't go; say you don't go to the bar anymore, say you have forgotten about him and anyone but me, and you did not say "both," you only said me. And Alton said whispered sighed advanced promised smiled looked worried looked pale looked excited looked scared look like he was even younger, look like a man in his prime controlling the boy him of now/then/past and said brook silent rush free, "I've never been--fucked--you know--fucked---and ah I would like--you know--we'd have to be quiet and we couldn't be naked totally, and--ah--I don't want it to hurt--and if it--you promise to---stop...." And it was awkward and clumsy and difficult still with jeans round out ankles, and me stopping immediately he said to, and Alton and I fucked and then we wept some and then he said tomorrow, Saturday, he was going away with his friend from the city. And the life I had extended into him had been taken from me in all the dreams and pretend and refusal to think about reality, me, psychologist, Mr. Reality Sucker, and I didn't say anything. Just got up and dressed. As did Alton. He held me around the neck and he put his face into my chest, and he said, "You fucked me first, Mr. Burke. And you saved my soul. You were here for a reason. I will always carry you with me. Believe that, please." And he looked up at me and he smiled and for the first time these entire two months, I did not return that smile. I was stern. I went to my desk. I could turn the man in he was seeing if I felt like it. I don't think Alton would do the same to me. But it would be forever over between us. But it was anyway. I could shame him at least. Take the confidence away. He would be beaten up again. He would need more therapy from me. I sat heavily in my chair behind the desk. "Please wish me happiness, " the boy named Alton, already gone, said, his hand on the door knob, his head turned to me, his eyes beseeching. I looked at him. I remembered. Him. And friends who had left me over the years who pretty much said the same thing when it was over. Only I hadn't had sex with them and had not just fucked them, still feeling the memory of his ass muscles clinching my dick and milking me of the last of my love. How does a person do that and then walk away for good with someone else? How? Did none of this count for nothing? I was again a stand in. I looked at him and told him he used me to fill time, for practice with his lover until they could be together full time. I told him he did not love me and that he had better get used to being used. As far as using, I said, and he was crying now, he knew how to do that well enough already and would get better at it. He opened the door quickly and was out of it slamming it closed quickly. I sat back in my chair. I called his home that night. He answered the phone. I told him good luck and I was sorry and I wished him well and if he ever needed someone to talk to, there was always me. He told me with much difficulty I had been right. He had felt sorry for me and he had used me but it was meant as love too--it was garbled but that was the best I could make out of it. And we said good bye. Not wanting to. Saying oh wait a minute or oh just a sec I forgot and then we were finished and hung up. I walked down to the train yards and listened to and watched the trains carrying night with them speed by in their bright sparks and the sound of their rattling cars and their heavy wheels on the endless rails up ahead and never to return to back there. I pretended Alton was on the train gusting past me. I pretended I was saying good bye. I pretended he would remember me. I knew he would not. But when it comes to pretending, with time, I can pretend it so. And even pretend I believe it. I'm a psychologist after all. I've got the knack.