Date: Sun, 12 Feb 2017 15:48:21 -0500 From: Bear Pup Subject: Beaux Thibodaux 4 Please see original story (www.nifty.org/nifty/gay/adult-youth/beaux-thibodaux/) for warnings and copyright. Highlights: All fiction. All rights reserved. Includes sex between adult and young-adult men, some of them related to one another. Go away if any of that is against your local rules. Practice safer sex than my characters. Write if you like, but flamers end up in the nasty bits of future stories. Donate to Nifty **TODAY** at donate.nifty.org/donate.html to keep the cum coming. ***** "For only having three letters, I know it's a big word, Beaux, and important. A lot of people, me included, use it to mean 'young man' or 'buddy' or 'guy' or 'boy'. Some young guys find it insulting. I want you to know two things: First, I'll be using it that way cuz it's a hard habit to break. Second, though: One day I hope to use it to mean that you're really my son, that we see each other as pure family. That's going to be a lot of work for both of us, Beaux." He looked back down. "Yes, sir, it surely will," he said softly. ***** Beaux Thibodaux 4: Homeward Bound By Bear Pup M/T; bonding (NOT bondage); no sex yet (just plot) We finished up the morning with shopping some more, but targeted and specific. First was a piece of luggage for the clothes and such we'd bought. Virtually every shop offered something, but at the time it was rare to find a shop devoted to luggage outside the insanely-priced custom leather-good shops. I have money, more than I'll need, but I'll never waste a penny. I found what I actually wanted as a fairly upscale clothing boutique. A nice, soft-sided piece large enough for whatever we'd buy but not heavy or bulky. It was, as was virtually all soft-side luggage in those days, black. In a shop I'd frequented in the past, I bought Beaux a watch as well, which he protested. I don't waste money on needlessly-expensive things, but I also refuse to buy things cheap either. For the time the watch was surely expensive; not Rolex but up there from a leading Swiss brand. It was expensive, though, because of the impeccable workmanship and durability inherent in the near-ancient brand. I could tell, though, that Beaux adored the timepiece. I stood slimly staring at his reflection in the shop's mirror as he stood, looking at the watch against his wrist. I picked the watch's style because the silver-steel drew out his pale if tanned complexion. And his eyes were startling. With the dark hair with sun-gilded glints of auburn, you expected dark eyes. Beaux's were a strange hazel; they'd glow intensely blue when he was excited or pleased, like now, but a dark green when worried or upset. This was one of the few times I had seen that flash of blue other than the dinner the previous night; it warmed me. The drudgery of shopping soon palled for Beaux. We lunched at Napoleon House. Everyone (including me) raves about the muffulettas at Central Grocery down by the Market, and they are certainly superb. I'd always loved the ones they served at Napoleon House, though, and the setting has literally been unchanged since the structure was original built to house Napoleon in exile, something that never came to pass. We sat in a whitewash plaster-over-brick nook off the bar. I ordered us one sandwich to split which made my perpetually-hungry teen charge narrow his eyes, but those same eyes popped huge when the waiter delivered the enormous, warm and scrumptious pile of cured meats, luscious cheeses and olive "salad" (tapenade). I think I was lucky to get a third of it, but the lust with which the man-child attacked that sandwich made a less-than-full tummy utterly irrelevant. We were both beaming, for quite different reasons, when we finished and walked back toward the hotel. We passed between the Cathedral and Jackson Square again, not the quiet and restful place of early morning but the bustling and informal market of artists, palmists and buskers it became in the sultry afternoons. I realised suddenly that Beaux was no longer at my side and turned to find him transfixed by some art hung on the wrought-iron fence of the square-proper. A man sat selling custom portraits in a quirky, bright, vibrant style. The paintings hung behind him, though, included a number of impressionist, perhaps almost abstract works showing the iconic buildings of the French Quarter in a riot of deep and penetrating shades, each angle distorted as the structures bent and moved as if living things. I'd later come to own a number of works from Michalopoulos, some before but most after he came to fame, and have never tired of them. That first one, though, discovered on a French Quarter fence by my new ward, remains unquestionably my favourite. A night scene with a blue-black Van Gogh sky wrapped around a balconied dark-red corner home, streetlight nearly blinding in contrast. I bought it instantly, over Beaux's protests. I forget the price, some amount that even then barely exceeded daily pocket-money. I simply said it was more for me than him, but he could use it in his room when we got home. Beaux went silent and thoughtful then, 'his room' and 'home' clearly echoing through his thoughts. Since we were nearly there anyway, I dropped the painting at the hotel asking Henri, again on duty, to get it wrapped for shipment. He had my address and was happy to do so. We then strolled the gardens as Beaux gradually relaxed and again began to smile at some of the beauty of this historic city. We ended up the late afternoon as I'd planned, covered head to toe in a cloud of powdered sugar that made the beignets of Cafe du Monde the incomparable and uncopiable New Orleans snack. We returned to the hotel to rest, both of us ending up dozing a bit. I watched as he dropped into the light-switch-fast sleep of youth. His featured softened and flowed. He was truly a beautiful young man, strong but fragile; elegant and rough; inescapably innocent. As a surrogate father, I knew I was going to have my hands full keeping him safe from the predatory schoolgirls (and boys and not a few men!) his looks would surely attract in droves. We woke and refreshed ourselves. I had sweated profusely in the southern humid heat, but Beaux decided that he was still quite fresh and kept his outfit unchanged. It turned out I had a deep green dress shirt with me that complemented the one Beaux wore, and we looked like a father-son pair as we walked up the street. I'd originally thought to visit The Clover across from the storied and ancient gay bar, Cafe Lafitte in Exile. I had spent many evenings on that bar's balcony overlooking the seedy part of Bourbon Street, ending the night across at The Clover with one of the brilliantly-greasy burgers that made them famous. After last night, though, I decided to rein it in a bit. Instead, I took Beaux to a chophouse (now long-defunct) called Claude's after the chef-owner. It was a half-block off the noise and bustle of Bourbon Street (something that even in the tame of midsummer made Beaux's eyes pop). Inside the cool and dark interior, oak and burgundy reigned supreme. I ordered something that Claude had brought with him from San Francisco, that city's version of the Delmonico. Unlike the "real" one from New York, this was a thick, bone-in rib steak seared hard and finished in a very slow oven. It was the best union of a ribeye and prime rib. He always paired it with fluffy mashed potatoes and bacon-wilted spinach, both of which were huge hits with my ward. Again, though, in the midst of gastronomic splendour, the steaming-hot, fresh-baked loaves and golden-yellow butter were what lit Beaux's eyes with blue fire. We both agreed that dessert would be 'gilding the lily', a phrase I expected to need to explain. Beaux again shocked me with the depth of specific areas of knowledge, knowing both the original phrase (and the play, Shakespeare's 'King John': To *gild* refined gold, to *paint* the lily / To throw a perfume on the violet...) but also the modern corruption that, honestly, sounds better: 'One may gild the lily and paint the rose...' "You did it again, Beaux." That brought him up short and he grew serious. "No, you ninny! You just plucked Shakespeare from thin air and even knew how the modern phrase came to be. It's amazing and incredibly impressive. Be proud. You know things that I doubt any kid does! Yeah, you've got a lot to learn, but perhaps even more to teach them, and me!" Beaux blushed adorably but smiled shyly. Maybe I was finally breaking down that reserve. We slowly walked the darkening streets to the hotel, again detouring so we could see the third of the four incarnations of the Cathedral's plaza (the last, the depths of the southern night, were for older and more-seasoned senses). Early evening saw the night-blooming jasmine perfuming the air as sultry breezes moved the leaves of the now-locked square. St Louis Cathedral glowed above us, reminding any and all that the real power in New Orleans had been and to some extent remained the Roman Catholic Church. To this day, Louisiana has no counties; they have parishes. The night passed uneventfully. Beaux started to watch TV with me but grew bored in minutes (smart kid) then drowsy. I suggested bed and he was relived to be 'released' from what must have seemed the chore of watching mindless drivel. The light stayed on a while and I noticed him reading. Since I knew I'd brought and bought no books, I inquired. "I'm reading the Bible someone left here, Oncle. It always did relax me so." I smiled, charmed and bemused in equal parts and closed the door. I called the airline to arrange my return flight and one added passenger one way, explaining the situation to the initially-snippy and suddenly charmed-to-help lady. I booked us on a mid-morning flight that stopped but did not change in St Louis. We'd be home in time for a late lunch. I made a few more calls. Barry, the guy who cleans for me, might be an issue so I called him next. He habitually the same outfit round the house when cleaning than I did when lounging -- the suit delivered by God at birth. I figured that would complete unhinge poor Beaux, and he agreed to stay clothed as he did "for a few of my most-prudish clients." The sniff in his voice was hysterical. He did, however, agree to make a 'teen boy food raid' at the grocery store and drop the results off the next morning so we'd have Beaux-compatible foodstuffs when we arrived. He also promised to freshen and prep the guest room that would now be Beaux's home. His voice softened at that and I smiled. Next was Louise. I knew I'd be interrupting dinner and apologised profusely, but wanted to update her on my schedule. Nothing important there. I also called my lawyer's office; a late-working intern took my particulars and promised to pass them to Mr Walsh the following morning. As late as it was, I was surprised when Eloise, Dr Martin's lovely wife-nurse-secretary answered instead of the machine. I told her about Beaux. She was delighted, having just lost her last son to the horrors of adult life -- he'd married and moved to Denver the previous spring. A new teen to dote on what just the 'prescription' she needed. She found time for us the next afternoon, in fact, and promised to ask 'Bobby' (her husband, Robert) to find a really-talented Psychiatrist for Beaux as well. Done with those, I found myself suddenly agreeing with Beaux's tacit disregard of the TV shows. It was useless drivel as his face had so-plainly shown. I shut the box off and stepped out into the courtyard. The fountain for this rear-most courtyard was near the other end, but there was a charming wrought-iron table and chairs nestled against the fern-encrusted brick of the enclosing wall. The sky was ink-black, no stars penetrating the city's perpetual light, but I could still get a whiff of jasmine and magnolia, with the intensely-relaxing melody of the burbling fountain singing from twenty yards away. I was supremely contented as I made my way into suite and back to the bedroom and hour or so later. Beaux snored softly, erratically, almost-musically. Between the serenity from the courtyard, the wondrous meal and the simple abandon of the boy at rest, I was asleep before I realised it. I was again up first in the morning and finished my ablutions without waking the boy. I set about quietly packing all but one outfit. Since he slept, I picked the jeans and soft-blue chamois shirt. Subconsciously, I think I was hoping some sympathetic magic would draw the blue of delight to Beaux's eyes and banish the green flashes that came with distress. I knew we had only moderate walking (and the sneakers are easier to pack), so I left out the boots. I also left him a pair of the new-style low-rise briefs, wondering what he'd make of them. He worn the y-front that I had handed him the first day as we left the store, and he wore (and slept in) a pair of the boxers the day before. Undershirt, socks, wallet and wristwatch completed the outfit. All were laid out in the bathroom for him and I had nearly finished packing the rest when Beaux woke. He went to get up and froze. I choked back a laugh, knowing his predicament. A teen, after a full night's sleep of hormone-laced dreams and with a full bladder? He had to be hard as a rock. I got up and left the room, chattering about getting ready and the flight, leaving my back conspicuously turned. Perv that I was, though, I wasn't about to miss a show. I made sure that I had a clear view in the mirror as he scurried to the bath and closed the door. Holy fuck and Saints preserve us! Either my new ward was smuggling a large-calibre handgun in his boxers or I really needed to up my planned protection quotient again the men and women who might get a glimpse of that package! Just... wow. I physically shook myself out of pervert mode, smiling to myself. 'Thank God and the Virgin Mary that I'm not attracted to slim young things', I thought. One of the many oddities of the Crescent City is getting to and from the airport which is way out in Kenner, the other side of Metairie. A cab there costs just fractionally-less than a stretch limo. Don't ask me why; I'll never understand it. I'd dropped my rental when we first got back to the city (there is neither use nor room for a car in the Vieux Carre), and a long, black car with a tall, black driver in a long, black suit awaited us. He grabbed the bags as Beaux gawked at him, the car and everything else. The ride was, as always, a nightmare of starts, stops and honking horns. Lanes were things that happened to other people in the New Orleans of those days, especially around the inevitable wrecks on the Interstate. Neither of us made use of the completely stock bar, however, but I could see a very calculating look in the teen's eye. As per usual, I'd planned for delays and we got to the counter in plenty of time. I paid for the tickets and dropped both bags (why bother with a carry-on?) and we headed out to the concourse. Still called Moisant Field at the time (ironically after the first air-crash casualty, daredevil John Moisant who'd crashed there), the airport was then rather grubby, much like the City itself. Unlike Mid-Continent that served Kansas City, the older style worked well in this age of heightened security. Whilst long before the TSA and such, hijacking in the 70s meant being metal-detected. It was more of formality then, but still a nuisance. I could tell Beaux was getting really nervous and was about to suggest he sit down when he tugged my arm. "Kevin, can I go into that there bookseller?" "Of course! I'll come with you and pick up something to read myself." "Um, sir, do you think I got enough to actually *buy* a book? I don't know what such things cost only having read from the lending library." I laughed and smiled. "Sure you do, Beaux. You have plenty. And I told you to worry less about the costs and let me do that, okay?" We entered the bookshop and Beaux's head near exploded. The riot of colour of the bindings blew him away. Library books at the time were universally-dark, boring and rough. We had lots and lots of time to kill, so I just let him roam. I had to remind him several times that he could touch and read anything he wanted, even if he didn't buy it. I think that shocked him as much as the colours! He calmed like a lamb around the books. The written word was, obviously, a long and treasured friend. I found a relatively-new work by a science fiction author I liked named Samuel R Delaney called 'Stars in My Pocket like Grains of Sand'. I finally wandered over to where Beaux sat on a bench, looking troubled. "What's up, son?" "I don't know which one to get." "How many are you interested in?" He looked at me blankly, confused, "All of them, Oncle, all of them." I smiled and perhaps chuckled. "Let's pick three." He was astounded at such largesse, but I was fascinated by his choices. This was an airport bookstore, so heavy works were thin on the ground. "There's so much I never saw, Oncle. I'm real drawn to histories of real people, though. I never seen those." He reached out and picked up 'The Kennedys'. I hadn't read it; I rarely even ventured into the non-fiction shelves I realised with a guilty flush. He also pulled out a book I'd actually heard of, 'Modern Times', largely about the transformation of society by the science of the 20th century. I considered both to be superb choices for my own reasons: They introduced an America that Beaux would have to come to terms with. I insisted on something fiction to round it out, but here Beaus was at a complete loss. Other than the classics, I don't think he'd ever read fiction at all. I decided to choose for him. 'Watership Down' was one of my perennial favourites and I knew my own copy was haggard. Yes, it was a bit stark, but it was also a masterwork of the times. I grabbed all three and my own purchase and checked out. We walked down to the gate and lounged. I just watched. Beaux opened and read some of each book in turn, leaving the highly-suspicious fiction item for last. I smiled as it was also the one he kept reading, curling his legs beneath him in a pose unknown over the age of 30. I could see his frowns and smiles, vaguely following the narrative in his expressive face. They finally called our flight and Beaux near jumped out of his skin when the speaker above us crackled to life. Beaux had been lost in the world of rabbits for a while, but every uncertainty came flooding back. His eyes now shone with green and he whispered to me, "I don't know what to do, Oncle." I smiled and said, "That's why they have all these people," pointing to the stewardesses that were helping people down the ramp. I got him seated at the window, me next to him (this was before airline seats became slightly smaller than your average paperback). He paid rapt attention to the Safety Briefing, blanching at the whole 'masks will fall from the ceiling' and 'seat cushion as a floatation device' concepts. He turned to me in terror. "Settle down, Beaux. Millions of people fly every day and accidents are really, really rare. It'll be fine, son, just fine. Settle back and get to reading some more. I find that helps." I took my own advice and opened my book. The was a sharp squeak from Beaux when we finally pulled away and what I recognised as a fervent prayer in French as we were pushed back in our seats at take-off, but his breathing returned to normal and his eyes grew large and bright as he watched the City dwindle and Lake Pontchartrain spread below us. I worried that I would have to use some kind of solvent to unstick him from the window, but just smiled. I'd done the same when I first flew, not that much younger than Beaux! The landing at St Louis was rough and Beaux startled like a rabbit, but calmed again and was less shocked at the next take-off. Sadly, Midwest summers mean frequent storms, and the pilot couldn't get us around the one that towered between St Louis and Kansas City. To say that it was turbulent was a tragic understatement. I will say this, though, Beaux may have been even more green than the storm-light coming through the windows, but he toughed it out. Eyes wide, dark green and fixed, frequently staring up at where the oxygen masks would come when the plane inevitably disintegrated, he nonetheless made it to solid ground without resorting to the bag from the seat pocket that he clutched to his lap for that interminable hour of misery. When we got to the terminal, Beaux practically sprinted off the plane and sat breathing deep in a chair in the waiting area. It was a good five minutes before he turned to me and said, "Oh Lord, please tell me we ain't got to that again soon, do we, Oncle?" I smiled and agreed. Kansas City was NOT particularly security-friendly, but it was a marvel when you got off the plane. The luggage carousel was right next to the gate itself, and our bags appeared just moments after Beaux regained his composure. We collected the bags and in minutes was encased in my Toyota Celica Supra, my "non-working" car, plush with every extra the model had to offer. My "normal" mode of transport was, of course, my giant Ford pickup truck, still upgraded but definitely a workhorse. Both were manual transmissions and I realised I'd have to teach beaux to drive a stick... oops; I'd have to teach him to drive *at all*. Whew. I shook my head. I pulled out and Beaux was openly shocked. I guess he thought that all cities would be like the Big Easy. The barren-looking fields of browning grain without open water in sight at all obviously threw him. I'd built my home on some extraordinarily cheap land with a nice lake just south of the airport, which was also the reason it was cheap. No one wanted to build right in the flight path. But one of my residential specialities is absolute noise control. Jets could do everything but crash into my house and we'd never hear a whisper. Regardless, it was still a 15-minute drive as I live southwest and the airport entrances are north or northeast. I made a quick detour onto Barry and raided a Wendy's (I wasn't sure Beaux, of I for that matter, was up to Taco Hell). Six minutes later, Beaux's stomach growling and eye fixed like a hound on the bag emitting the wondrous smells, we wove our way to the house. I had a gate that recognised my car, but normally stood open anyway; it was more for show. The garage door also opened when the car got within range. Beaux just goggled trying and failing to drag his attention away from the food. The house is not huge, but it is both my home and my workaday office, thus requiring it to be my showplace to tempt and impress my clients. The drive circles under a portico at the front before dipping and curving into the lower-level garage. The hills of KC-MO give a lot of advantages for the creative builder. The entire house is faced with fieldstone matching the muted browns and reds of the surrounding countryside. The roof is a complex shape that draws the eyes to features like the chimneys, huge windows and spacious porch of laid stone and a raised wooden platform. We pulled into the garage, my huge grey truck parked there already, and climbed out. In an act of simple self-preservation, I made sure to keep a tight grip on the food sack. I grabbed my bag and made Beaux trail behind me carrying the one containing his new wardrobe. His eyes rarely left the food, though, and we reach the place I called The Bar and I dropped my case and told Beaux to do the same. I spread the food out on the bar and watched in amazement as Beaux began a full-frontal assault on the various greasy delights. I saved a bacon-double and some o-rings from the carnage along with a bucket-sized root beer and sat back to enjoy the show. For a kid who'd never seen fast food before, he really made me believe in the genetic inevitability of a teen's love for deep-fried salt. Halfway through a moan of appreciation, Beaux pulled up and gulped his mouthful of burger, eyes wide and breathless. It was perhaps five minutes from our entry and, for the first time, Beaux got a look at the view. The back of The Bar is nearly wall-to-wall glass, broken by thick supports required from the noise-proofing. The house stood on a moderate hill above a pool that I called a lake but the pre-airport owners likely called a horse-pond. Kidney-shaped and perhaps 100 feet by 300, I'd cleared the trees between the house and the lake but left the thick woods intact (even adding new trees and shrub) around the remaining 3/4. This was before the modern strictures on land use, so I'd drastically deepened the lake and used the fill to build up and level the site of the home. A tiny rocky "island" was off-centre to the left which I'd left in place, and I'd built a dock as the last stage of a series of decks that descended to the water. It was just past 2:00, so the summer sun made the wind-whipped ripples glint and glow as the trees shone in greens and tans. Beaux sat, transfixed. I watched him watching an enormous jet taking off just to the right of the home itself. I frowned. Even with the rebuild and new materials for the underpinning that acted as both foundation and shock absorbers, I could still detect a slight tremor. I'd have to work on some other materials and made a mental note to call my partners over in the KU Materials Engineering team an hour to our west. Beaux just sat gulping over and over, Adam's apple bouncing like a toy ball. He turned to me, the food (for at least those few millisecond) forgotten. "You own all this?" "No, Beaux." I blushed hard as my voice choked a bit. "No, *we* own all of this. This is *our* home, not mine now. You understand that, right?" He went still and silent and I saw a tear work its way down his pale cheek just before he nodded brusquely as the ravenous stomach monster reasserted it dominance over the boy. I reached over and laid my hand on his shoulder. Beaux stiffened, then sighed and relaxed. It was a start at least. A lot of folks like this story and worry over where it's going. I don't want to give too much away, but I also want to make sure you know: Kevin is not a predator. If you are hoping for or expecting that outcome (something I've done in other stories), that won't be happening here. There will be sex (lots) and Kevin will gently mentor Beaux on certain aspect of sexuality, but if you're waiting hungrily for the "rape of innocence" scene, you'll be disappointed. Please keep the comments coming. I've only been writing for a couple months and commentary from readers has made a huge difference in the quality of both the stories and the writing. ***** Active storelines, all at www.nifty.org/nifty/gay... Canvas Hell: 12 chapters, more coming, .../camping/canvas-hell/ Karl & Greg: 14 chapters, more coming, .../incest/karl-and-greg/ The Heathens: 3 chapters, more coming, .../historical/the-heathens/ Beaux Thibodaux: 4 chapters, LOTS more coming, .../adult-youth/beaux-thibodaux/ Mud Lark Holler: 3 chapters, more coming, .../rural/mud-lark-holler/ Turntable Rehab: 4 chapter, more coming, .../authoritarian/turntable-rehabilitation-services/