Date: Fri, 27 Aug 2010 10:26:55 +0100 From: tooluser@hushmail.com Subject: Brave enough part 5 Copyright Tooluser August 2010 This story is fiction, and no similarity to persons either living or dead is intended. Any such resemblance is entirely coincidental. Apologies to everyone for the gap between updates. It was partly that I was updating another story ("Boy Batter" for those of you who may be following that one) but also that I found this episode a bit hard to write. I'm afraid that you Mickey fans out there will be disappointed, but don't worry - he'll be back! As always, comments, criticism and feedback appreciated! (I won't pout again, I promise.) Hope you enjoy this episode! Tooluser. tooluser@hushmail.com --- Brave Enough, part 5. There really was no help for it: he'd have to start back for the office right away. Ben sighed, the sound echoing off the cement walls in the basement parking lot, thinking of the lovely soft bed awaiting him upstairs, but there really was no point returning to his room. He looked thoughtfully at his phone and then after leaving a brief message on the office machine to say he was on his way, switched it off - he didn't want Georgette or her minions harassing him with calls all the way back to town. He drove his car to the lot's exit, where, half awake, the night security attendant swiped his key card and checked ID against the result before raising the security gate. He gave Ben directions to the hotel's gas pumps and all-night diner back of the hotel. "But just you make sure you go on round to reception, suh," the attendant said, shaking his bald head. "Know you're in a hurry, but you drive off 'thout checking out and you go right on our 'bad-risk' list. Ain't worth it, jus' for ten minutes delay, no sir." Ben had smiled, and thanked him. So after gassing up, Ben had driven around to the hotel's front entrance, parking next to a rather fast looking gray coupe. As he approached the desk, he saw that the reception desk was now staffed by a skinny boy with dark curly hair, sitting at a smaller side desk within the counter. Three thick textbooks and a laptop sat open before him, but he was just staring into space, one corner of his red mouth folded into an unhappy crease. *Cute*, Ben thought. He wouldn't mind seeing those dark brown, heavy-lashed eyes watching him wake up first thing in the morning. *Bet he doesn't have to shave yet,* Ben thought, admiring the boy's smooth, pearly skin. The boy startled visibly as Ben cleared his throat. "Very sorry, sir!" He jumped to his feet, seeming flustered. "Not as sorry as I am," Ben said, as he dropped his key card on the desk. "I have to check-out right now - urgent business." "Yessir." Ben smiled, but the boy didn't return it - just hurried to the front of the desk where Ben stood. "Was everything all right sir?" his glance flicked in the direction of the black "Comments and Suggestions" box next to the courtesy phone as he picked up Ben's key card. "I'll just call up your account." His long fingers tapped expertly at the keys, and Ben stole another glance at the boy's slender face, now half-lit by reflected screen light. The boy's posture stiffened, and Ben saw him glancing from the key card to the screen and back again. He wet his lips. When he looked up his dark eyes seemed enormous. "Is there a problem?" Ben asked. "Oh, no. Y-you wanted to check out, sir? I, I'll just get someone to check your room." "Don't bother," Ben said. "You've got my AmEx number - I'll just sign a waiver and you can charge for any discrepancies. I'm *really* in a hurry." He managed a tired smile. He figured he'd end up being scammed for a couple drinks from the minibar, perhaps a towel; maybe a hotel robe. He hoped the kid would get his cut. "I, I'm not sure -" the clerk was looking at the forms next the phone again, and Ben felt a wash of sympathy. He guessed the kid had just had some shit guest make his life hell and was scared of the reprimand he was going to get once his manager read whatever was in that box. "It's okay," Ben said. "A waiver is S.O.P., and I'll be sure to commend the efficiency of the night desk staff." But instead of seeming reassured the kid just gained a trapped, frightened look. "Yessir." He nodded, swallowing. Ben could see the boy's hand was visibly shaking as he hit a key, and printout curled. His upper lip glistened. *Companies shouldn't be allowed to do that to kids,* Ben thought, feeling his anger rising, remembering the shit jobs he'd had when he was younger, humiliated by egocentric bastards - and bitches - who'd seen nothing wrong with using him for cheap anger therapy for their fucked-up lives. He reached into his pocket, pulled out a pack of Kleenex and used the chained pen to scribble his name, room and cell number on it. "Here," he said. "Think of me as a friend, huh? I'll cover your back." The kid looked at the tissue, and then up at Ben. A moment later he blushed crimson, and as the nickel dropped, Ben found himself embarrassed and enchanted in equal measure. Ben hadn't felt so ridiculous in years, and had to bite his tongue, concerned the boy would read any amusement as some kind of humiliating joke on him. He signed the waiver with a shaking hand, watching the boy - whose posture now subtly advertised him as prime candidate for the million yard dash - out of the corner of his eye. As he picked up the printout of his bill, Ben did allow himself a single glance at the boy and, once safely in his car, laughed joyously at the memory of those adorable Bambi-in-the-headlights eyes, telling himself to lighten up. Doubtless the kid's distress was just some teenage trouble. The phone had been right next to the complaints box: he'd probably been thinking of using the hotel phone on work time to phone his boyfriend - or, Ben conceded, possibly girlfriend. Whatever: he hoped the post-pickup glow had blown off whatever bad stuff the kid had been dealing with. The feeder road was straight and deserted, and Ben floored the gas, feeling idiotically happy, only slowing to sane speed as the junction approached. He glanced in his rearview mirror and, seeing headlights, idly wondered who else had checked out. He noted they seemed to have succumbed to the same speedbug that had bitten himself, and grinned again as he slid out into the freeway traffic. He hummed along happily at just a whisker under max, wondering what was so all-fired important at the office that only he could attend to. He glanced at his phone, idly wondering how often it would have rung already, had it been switched on. No matter: he looked at his watch, and then the odometer, calculating. He should reach home with the dawn. * * * Andy shivered, feeling the presence of Teng's two hoods too close behind him as he watched Gilles punch the security code into the staff door of the Litz-Conway hotel. He hadn't wanted to see the inside of the Con again, ever. Yet here he was. Guilt rose up inside him, mixing with the fear; but there was relief, too: perhaps it was karma. It would be a relief to finally pay old debts. The hallmark of Marcus's club was discretion. Ordinary people could go to the Grid hunting boy pussy, but the Chief of Police, or a judge, or a prominent businessman could not. So, the club: invitation by word of mouth, fees in cash, and no publicity. Marcus introduced members to boys, and if a member chose to get to know other members, they would also introduce boys to one another. So if one of them was going to find a boy-loving multimillionaire, it should have been Andy, welcomed at the Club, rather than his flaky, blackballed cousin. Yet it was Jase who met Sherry: in a public park - and not even in the cruising area, but by the ornamental ponds, where he was watching the wildlife. Jase had battered Andy's ear about the wonderful man he'd met, and Andy had nodded, tolerantly. It had been at the peak of their popularity, so Andy recalled paying scant attention at first: concentrating on trying to get his flitter-brained little cuz to show up at the right places, at the right times. Gradually it had penetrated that little Jase had gotten it bad again, so it had come as no surprise when Jase announced that they were both going to trick with Sherry. Jase was always like that. Andy figured his little cuz was so far up the Kinsey scale that emotionally he couldn't believe there were guys who *didn't* fancy guys, but he couldn't decide if Jase really was "sharing", or whether he was trying to fix him up. It couldn't be that Jase needed some cousinly stamp of approval: he always continued to see the guy no matter how carefully Andy pointed out all his defects. Whatever: once he was getting serious about a guy, Jase'd want to share with Andy. It wasn't like when they tricked with an unknown john, or a group: those guys treated them as interchangeable, as advertised. Jase's guys didn't do that. Nervous, some of them. All of them horny sooner or later: Andy prided himself on that. Some wanted to see him privately, separately afterwards - "the shits" he always called them in his mind. Sherry hadn't been the shit that night. Teng was fussy. Hustlers didn't usually actually get inside "his" hotel: not unless they were top drawer, aiming at marriage, and willing to give him his cut, anyway. The street trade - and especially the underage street trade - were all farmed out to one of Ten-per-cent's nearby fire-traps. So when Jase told him that his latest light-of-love had a suite at the Con, Andy had suppressed a sigh, resigning himself to staring up at dusty, fly-blown light fittings during another encounter in a flea-bag hotel: cardboard-thin walls, damp sheets, grimy, narrow corridors and extra towels in a fungus-smelling, tap-dripping bathroom. He'd been wrong. Sheridan Conway was more than just a guest, it seemed. They'd been let in the staff entrance by a Mr. Teng so subservient that his sneer had been confined entirely to his eyes; ushered to a small, thickly carpeted silver and blue elevator which had sighed upward while delicate, old-fashioned music played. When the mirrored doors opened again it was onto a small, private lobby, which opened onto a comfortable sitting room where hidden speakers played the same twiddly music as in the elevator. Spicy cooking smells drifted from somewhere. Jase had bounded ahead, calling: "Sherry! Sherry! Andy's here!" while Andy had stood stranded in the middle of the room, wiping his sweaty palms on his best tan pants and wondering if he should remove his shoes: the carpet was deep, luxurious, and white. The huge rectangular couches were both black leather, which looked as soft as his mother's gloves. The paintings on the walls weren't like the ones at the club: these were bright squares of color and overlapping dribbles and splashes of paint. They didn't seem to be actually *of* anything, but they went well with the shiny chrome fireplace - a fireplace! In a tower block! - the small bronze statues, and the other lean, angular furniture. *Nice place,* he'd thought, guessing at the rent and coming up with a comfortably fat figure. Cynically he'd pictured Sherry prowling the apartment after they'd left, counting the ornaments. Then Jase had returned, towing behind him a small, ash-blond man of uncertain age. Andy had looked him over, approving. Finally, he'd thought, Jase had latched onto someone with a bit of money, and not so young he'd have to wait forever to inherit, either. Sherry had patted Jase on the shoulder and advanced on Andy, holding out a manicured hand and smiling easily, his gray eyes twinkling. "So, I'm getting to meet the family at last, eh?" he said. His grip was cool and firm. "May I take your jacket? Grayson has the evening off." "Sherry's cooking Chinese food!" Jase announced as Sherry helped Andy off with his jacket. The man's cologne smelled of cinnamon and lemons. "He makes it just like carry-out!" Andy had looked back at Sherry, ready to apologize for his little cousin's gaffe, but the man had laughed. "I decided to stick to my strengths," he said. "My pizza last week was a miserable failure." "No, it was okay," Jase said, "- I just didn't expect it folded up like an omelet," He wrinkled his nose. "Although those truffle things tasted weird." "Well, I shall await your verdict," Sherry had said, winking at Andy. "Jase tells me you're the real expert on carry-out." It had been obvious from the first moment that Sherry was as smitten as Jase. To Andy he'd been charming, and polite, but Andy sensed that he always was; a useful social polish that allowed him to dissociate himself, to slip through unwanted social gatherings or dull meetings with the minimum of friction. It was the gift of a scamster, a con artist - he recognised it in himself. But Sherry had hung on Jase's every word. They already had the in-jokes of lovers; the private language of eye and hand, and for every time that Jase touched him, Sherry touched the boy twice. And how they talked! Andy had listened in amazement as his flitter-brained little cuz asked Sherry detailed questions about how shares and futures worked. Jase had never been interested enough in money to even open a bank account, but it seemed this was what Sherry did, and so Jase was fascinated. "But," Andy had said, "this hotel - your name: I'd thought-" It had seemed better not to specifically mention the exception Teng had made that night. Sherry had laughed as he stood at the kitchen counter, slicing raw chicken meat into slivers. "Oh yes: several actually, but that's family money - not mine. My father went to a great deal of trouble to make sure no black sheep could get his fingers on it." "So you made your own!" Jase's eyes had been aglow with hero-worship, but Sherry had just smiled and then pulled a face. "Betting on the stock market," he'd said. "If I'd made my money betting on horses, at least I'd have spent my time looking at beauty." He'd stroked Jase's cheek with the clean back of one blood-smeared finger and then asked him to fetch vegetables out of the icebox. Most amazing of all, the Monosodium Glutamate Kid: Jase, who'd taken every vestige of "green yuk" out of every burger he'd ever eaten, had not only fetched the vegetables and sliced them up, but had later eaten some, too. Andy always remembered the sex because he'd never seen Jase so happy. Of course, compared to a young man, Sherry had been slow, but he'd used that time to lavish attention on Jase. Andy suspected that if some magic wand had sliced twenty years off his age, Sherry would still have been the same: a considerate lover; a giver. Sherry had paid attention to him as well, but with a knowing smile between them, a warm conspiracy whose sole purpose was to bring happiness to Jase, who loved to share. His body had been pleasant too: clean, carefully tended, and what you would expect of a middle-aged man who played racquetball and took walks rather than going to the gym, and who enjoyed cooking for friends. At the end of the evening, standing alone in the elevator and waving as the mirrored doors slid shut over the sight of the happy couple, Andy had been thoroughly jealous, although of which one of them he wasn't completely sure. The elevator had sighed down again, and when the doors had slid open, there had been Mr. Teng, whose gaze had seemed to leave a sticky trail of dollar signs wherever he looked. Andy jumped as the hood behind him jabbed him roughly between the shoulder blades. "Well? Don't just fuckin' stand there, kid!" Gilles was standing, holding the thick security-style staff door open, for all the world as though he were a concierge at the front of the hotel. His expression was calm, but Andy could see the hunger beneath. He swallowed, his mouth dry, and stepped inside. He wasn't taken into the plush public areas but down a familiar, narrow cement staircase. Down past the steaming, clattering bedlam of the kitchens and along a narrow, whitewashed corridor. Relief flooded him as they turned into a side corridor, away from Teng's office. Gilles stopped by a cheap, varnished plywood door, and opened it. "Call me if Mr. Teng should return," he said to the hoods. "It is not expected," he added to Andy, urging him into the room with a hand between his shoulder blades. "We shall have the night, I think." The rabbit-hutch of an office was what Andy had expected: harsh fluorescent light and the sigh of forced ventilation; sticky-tape specked, whitewashed, cement-block walls covered in planner charts and notices; a cluttered desk. In the not-very-far corner, two gray metal filing cabinets supported a kettle and a collection of bottles, glasses and mugs, and jammed into the remaining space was a stained and uncomfortable-looking striped couch. Hearing the click of the lock, Andy looked round, to see Gilles flip his key-purse closed and drop it into his pants pocket. He backed up as Gilles advanced a half-step toward him, and then stopped, realizing the futility of retreat. "Your jacket," Gilles said, gesturing at the couch and then discarding his own jacket onto the desk. Andy noticed it "clonked" as it hit the desk, as though something heavy were in one of the pockets. He smiled at Gilles, trying to calm his nerves as he unzipped his jacket and threw it toward the couch, watching the tall man tugging down his necktie and trying to gauge his temper. He forced himself to stand still as Gilles approached. "Good," Gilles said, putting one hand on Andy's shoulder and sliding the other beneath his shirt. "We do not need the pretence, no?" He pressed Andy against the wall and leaned down to kiss him. His lips were firm and strong; his dark chin subtly rough against Andy's own. His exploring hand was insistent, stroking and squeezing Andy's nipples as they kissed. Not having Marcus's security nearby was bizarre and familiar at the same time: scary knowing he could say all the trigger words he liked and nobody would burst in the door and drag this man off him. Familiar because, after Sherry, the only times he'd tricked outside the club had been when he doubled with Jase, or when the guilt got too much and he needed to be hurt. He wanted Gilles to hit him, and some other time he might have provoked him into it - except he knew he'd need his wits about him, later. As it was, Gilles was demanding rather than rough, with no more than the garden-variety carelessness of lust-fuelled impatience. He pushed Andy's shirt up around his neck, stroking first his chest and then down his stomach as his mouth mauled Andy's lips and his tongue invaded the boy's mouth. "Ah," he murmured, breaking off to kiss Andy's neck. "I think I am not your choice, no?" "No," Andy gasped, and then hastily amended the admission. "- not that. Just nervous, you know?" Gilles laughed softly, tugging Andy's shirt up over his head. "A boy as 'andsome as you, he is used to make the big eyes at men who sigh, and let him lead, no?" Andy felt a flutter in his stomach as the big, dark man leaned down, feeling rough stubble grazing his neck as Gilles kissed it, sucking; his tongue probing muscle and tendons. "Tonight," Gilles murmured, his large, strong hands stroking over Andy's chest and belly, "you have the holiday from care. I shall make the choosing, and you shall not regret." It was a fair trade, Andy decided: a pretence of attraction in exchange for distraction. He'd far rather practice his trade than sit here all night, letting his imagination paint and re-paint his coming meeting with Teng. So he managed a smile, and ran his fingers through Gilles's dark chest hair when the man took his shirt off too. The man was a good kisser: he gave it his whole attention. Feeling oddly safe with the hard chill of the wall against his back, and the pressure of Gilles's crowding warmth against his front, Andy felt his defences slipping. Gilles's hands were strong, and if his touches were firm, they were also careful, generous: he could feel Gilles was sharing the honest excitement he felt. Telling himself it was crude lust - that Gilles's response was only about the beauty he could see - didn't help. Andy turned his head aside, gasping, feeling the sick gorge rising in the back of his throat. *I could make him step back,* he thought. *I could tell him about me - about what I did.* It would be better to speak now: one less weapon in Teng's armory. Andy swallowed as he heard Teng's harsh, chain-smoker's drawl in his imagination, and saw Gilles's face changing, the look of disgust chasing across it as comprehension dawned. Andy groped after the shreds of his professional detachment; his everyday armor of lies in tatters. "This is not good," Gilles said, his breath warm on Andy's neck. "Teng is harsh, yes. He keeps the discipline. But he does not war on children. Do not be so fearful. It is this Marcus who should fear, for sending you out so unprepared - you will, no doubt, be just the messenger in this. Answer him and you will be safe." Andy could have laughed. He wondered how short a time Gilles must have worked for Teng - or perhaps Teng found his naivete useful, somehow. He looked up: a mistake. Seeing the concern in Gilles's face, he felt the courage to speak drain away. He felt another featherweight of guilt settle upon himself. As well as a liar, he was a thief: stealing an undeserved night of care. "Or you can answer me," Gilles said, his fingers soft on the back of Andy's neck. "If your cousin is well, or not - Teng wishes to know, yes. The briefing says to ask. There is some past amour there, I think? But most, he will wish to know about this deal: the man in the suit, and how you know of it - and how Marcus knows. Tell me of these things and I shall speak for you." Andy swallowed. "No," he said. He could not. He knew nothing of any negotiations - he wished he did: he'd gladly spill anything he knew about power-struggles in the town's vice set-up if it would distract Teng's attention from Jase. But the man in the suit had asked about Sherry, and the last thing he wanted to talk about was what he'd done to Jase, and Sheridan Conway. He looked down, watching his hand stroking the dark treasure trail leading beneath the belt of Gilles's dark pants. He reached lower, and stroked the bulge there, concerned to find it only half-hard. "Perhaps later," he whispered, lying again, relieved to feel swelling beneath the cloth. He unbuckled Gilles's belt and unsnapped his pants, sinking to his knees as he pulled them down. Gilles looked big, and was strong and virile. In his experience nothing distracted men like that more effectively than a little submission. "Your clothing also," Gilles said, above him, and Andy nodded, feeling a surge of nervousness. He'd hoped not to advertise his lack of arousal, but perhaps Gilles would think it was due to fear. He toed off his sneakers at the same time he unfastened his jeans, and then stayed hunched down against the wall as he pushed them off, shorts as well. "Mon dieu," he heard Gilles breathe, and then some more soft, admiring French that he didn't understand. "So beautiful," he murmured, bending down a little to help Andy to his feet. Andy cast a look of real regret at Gilles's big, veiny cock; giving up the fantasy of it jammed down his throat, choking him while his head smashed back against the wall; of the big man using him and discarding him like the piece of shit he was. He felt helpless: every time before in this situation he'd been by turns awkward, contrary and insulting until he'd gotten what he wanted, and he'd crawled back to Marcus to be patched up so that he could put the honeyed layers of his lies back in place again. The only time he hadn't done that had been with that guy - he'd forgotten his name - the one whom he'd thought was Vice. He'd taken a risk: taken him back to the Club; tempted him, hoping for something rough and mindless. Well, he'd been well served for that, with the bastard trying to rip him open with words. He'd fed him sweet lies, and run. Run down to the truck lot by Faggot Park where he'd provoked two big black guys into beating him all shades of blue. Marcus had been so angry. He looked up at Gilles, seeing the big muscles, the strength that could give him the escape he wanted, but telling himself again that he must put Jase first. Being already bruised and battered going into the encounter with Teng would be stupid, stupid. God, he was scared. Andy felt himself responding a little when Gilles hastened him across to the couch; pushing him onto it. The nubbled material was coarse against his back as the big man made him lie down. But then Gilles sat on the floor beside the couch, and Andy saw the expression in his eyes and felt his thumb trace a line down the side of his face, down his neck and over his chest, to stroke first one nipple into hardness, and then the other. "Pauvre petit," Gilles murmured. Andy looked down, humiliated to see Gilles less hard than before - where was his technique now? The easy ways he could tease and excite men; his professional tricks; the lies he could tell with little gasps and moans all seemed to have been wiped away. "Please," he whispered, "please let me suck you." "Non," Gilles murmured. "I said before - relax. Tonight, I decide. Perhaps we shall not even have the sex, huh? Perhaps we shall talk instead." Andy couldn't imagine anything he'd want less. "No," he said, making himself reach out and stroke Gilles's firm shoulder. "Please - I need it." He sat up and leaned over, wrapping his arms around the man's neck, laying his head on firm muscle, breathing in a smell of musk and cigarettes. He wanted to say that he was frightened, but knew that such honesty could unravel the few lies he had left. "Please," he whispered again, and felt a surge of triumph as Gilles put a strong arm around his waist. He moved nearer, feeling the hard nubbled cloth against his bare bottom as he inched closer until he was able to lean his side against Gilles's chest. He could feel Gilles's heartbeat, and knew that he was excited. Andy manufactured a soft moan and began kissing at the man's throat, shifting slightly so that his smooth skin would rub against Gilles's front. Gilles held him tight, but Andy forced his mind away from the undeserved comfort, only letting himself feel triumph as he felt the man's fingers begin to stray down over his back. He stroked Gilles's arm, feeling the curve of strong muscle as he kissed down over his chest, nuzzling for his nipple. He could feel the kindness in the way Gilles held him, and carefully avoided thinking about how easy this guy's buttons were to push; instead focusing on the role he'd chosen for himself. Naive, helpless: he sucked on Gilles's rubbery nipple like an infant, feeling it erect itself in his mouth. He licked and teased it with his tongue, careful not use his teeth, or appear too "professional". He was an innocent schoolboy, overpowered by lust: he felt himself shiver, and as he created the story in his mind, his descending fingers had just the right degree of hesitancy. Andy breathed against Gilles chest as his fingertips explored first the coarse, coiled bush at the base of his cock and then the hot, soft-skinned harness of his cock. He traced its length with his fingertips; stroked its smoothness with his palm as though by accident when he stroked the man's balls. As Gilles knelt up, Andy pushed his own, knowing smile far, far back into his mind, telling himself, as he kissed down the "treasure trail" that he was nervous, unsure, but determined. He'd noticed already that Gilles was uncut, as so many European men were, and it was a relief to find that he was clean. Above him, Andy heard Gilles groan as he lapped clear, sticky pre-cum from the head of his cock before taking it inside his mouth. He teased beneath the crown with his tongue, working the man's excitement, feeling Gilles's body heat against his cheek, and smelling his musk as he took more cock into his mouth. Gilles stroked his back, gasping his name and soft endearments as Andy stroked his balls, sucking him strongly, but with none of the embellishments that would suggest experience. He decided against pretending to choke - Gilles was no credulous fool - but did allow himself to whimper, as though from unbearable excitement. It had the effect he'd hoped: Gilles moaned and held him closer, stroking down his back as far as his hip, and back to his shoulders again. Andy could feel him shivering, and, in his mouth the man's cock was an iron bar: he was nearly there. Gilles gasped, and Andy had to restrain himself from playing with the guy's asshole. Had he been playing a different persona, he could have had the man climbing onto the couch, twisting his hands in Andy's hair and ramming his cock in deep, but not this shy little schoolboy. Still, enough excitement leaked over from that raunchier scenario that Andy found himself sucking that cock with genuine rather than ersatz enthusiasm, and *that* had Gilles lifting his knees off the floor, humping up into his mouth, gasping. He pretended not to hear Gilles's gasped warning, letting the hard cock spurt once, sweet and salt against his tongue before pulling back to take the second and third spurts warm over his face and neck. He was hard himself now, so instead of just looking up, he rolled over onto his side, looking up at the gasping man and smiling in triumph. Gilles was a good lover - better than he deserved. Andy found he couldn't accept the kindness, the gentle attentions, unless he persuaded himself they were directed at the shy schoolboy he was pretending to be. Nevertheless, he was by turns nervous when Gilles brought him off; aroused when, later, Gilles fucked him with surprising force, and always grateful for the distraction. The most difficult time was when, spent, Gilles took a thin blanket from the bottom drawer of the filing cabinet and covered them both. Lying there, cradled against his warmth, hearing the slow double drumbeat of his heart, Andy began to feel more and more frightened as his imagination painted steadily crueler and more deserved scenarios of when Gilles learned the truth about him. When someone tapped on the door and called that mr. Teng had returned, the rush of relief was painful. Gilles helped him to dress, telling him not to be frightened, that cooperation was best. Andy noticed though that when Gilles opened the office door, the same two goons were waiting outside, and he was walked in the same secure "sandwich" formation along the corridor. The main corridor was busy, and it sounded like bedlam in the kitchens: the crash of pans almost drowned out by shouting. Gilles looked at his watch and smiled. "Six o'clock," he said. "The kitchen: so busy for the breakfast." They turned the corner, and Andy felt his gut knotting up as they approached Teng's office. Part of him wanted to turn and try to claw his way past the hoods, but he knew it was futile. Best to put off the pain for as long as possible. Gilles turned to him. "While mister Teng speaks with you, I must supervise the 'otel. But I wish very much to meet with you again. If I do not see you before mister Teng releases you, then you will leave a message?" Andy could have cried: relief that Gilles wouldn't witness his interview with Teng mingling with regret. But he nodded, and tried for a smile as Gilles knocked on the door. Teng's office was just as Andy remembered: larger than Gilles's office; dimly lit as always by an incandescent bulb in a green glass shade which hung from the center of the ceiling, throwing three of the four corners of the room into shadow. The fourth corner was brilliantly lit - the door to Teng's private bathroom stood open and harsh white light flooded in, reflected from white tiles. Teng sat where he had always sat: behind his desk, his long, thin hands folded neatly over one another in the pool of light from his desk lamp, his face half shadowed. Andy swallowed as he recognised the square box of the safe behind Teng; re-living the gut-clenching fear; remembering the feeling of the cold sweat running down his back as he quietly turned the dial; the combination: Right 12, Left 42, Left 8, Right 17. He wondered how soon after that night Teng had changed it. All this passed in a flash as the door to the corridor closed, shutting Gilles and his two personal goons outside. He saw the liquid shine of his eyes as Teng nodded. "Cuff him hard, Rex," he said. Part of the darkness itself seemed to rush out from the shadows behind the door and grabbed him hard. Andy whined as fingers bit deep into his arm and chill metal locked around one wrist with a multiple snick. He didn't get a chance to cooperate as Rex efficiently grabbed and cuffed his other wrist, twisting his hands up painfully behind his back. It was only that grip which kept him on his feet as Teng came around from behind his desk, his half-shadowed face expressionless. He crossed the room in two strides and spat in Andy's face. "Bring him to the bathroom, Rex," he said. The harsh light made Andy squint as he stared at the tall, bony man; fear, loathing and hate roiling together beneath his breastbone. Some people said that Teng's exquisite understanding of beauty came from having none himself. It wasn't just that he was ugly: a thin slash of a mouth in pallid, pockmarked skin; a figure that was all straight lines; a square, bony face - it wasn't just his continual unremitting hate of every single other person on the planet; it was the flat, black, animal stare of his eyes. They never changed expression, never seemed to blink. "We had an understanding," Teng said. "At least, I thought we did. But it seems the world has changed, again. New money come to town, and Marcus wants to dip his greedy little fingers in it. Or is it that he's got new money: new muscle and he wants to push me out?" "No!" Andy gasped as Rex twisted his hand in his hair. "I don't know! I don't know those people!" Teng took a half step forward and slapped the boy viciously across the face. "Gilles heard them call you 'friend'. They warned you about something, or asked you about something. Or they gave you a message for Marcus. Which?" Andy could feel himself shaking. The only thing those guys had asked about was Jase: where he was. And now Teng wanted the same information. He didn't know where his little cuz was, or what he'd been doing - and for that he felt gratitude mixed with terror. He was glad he didn't know any of that, because you had to be spectacularly brave or stupid to deny co-operation to Teng, and he just wasn't brave enough. "Now those guys were amateurs," Ten said. "They didn't know how to threaten a hustler. But I do." He glanced at Rex, and Andy felt the man take a fresh grip on his hair. He braced himself for the pain, but it was always worse than you expected. He sobbed as Rex lifted him higher so that his pale, bruised face showed clearly in the mirror. Now," Teng said. "Can you see properly? Rex, tilt the little bitch's head for me." The twisted angle of his head prevented Andy from seeing what Teng took from his pocket, but he didn't need to see anyway. If he hadn't already heard details of Teng's other, gory interrogations, the flat "click" of the switchblade would have told him all he needed to know. Teng lifted the thin-bladed knife and laid the cold of it on Andy's cheek. "Now, bitch," he said, his voice soft as ever, "-let's start again. Tell me everything you even think they wanted to know, and maybe you won't be carrying your face home in a plastic bag." "I don't-" Andy began, desperate to be believed, and then broke off, gasping in pain, staring at his reflection in horrified disbelief at the red now running down his cheek. The cut stung, and then shrilled into agony as the nerves awoke to the outrage. "That was just a warning," Teng said. He waited a moment longer, staring at him with that flat, dead-shark gaze, and then moved the little knife, sliding the flat of the blade over Andy's shrinking skin and then inserting the tip into his nostril. "Let's start again." * * * Georgette, power-dressed, and currently with a crimson, high-piled hairdo sprayed glass hard with enough lacquer to resurface a good-sized ballroom, glared at him, her eyes much harder than her hair. "We're going to talk," she rasped, diminutive hand on hip. The indoor smoking ban was obviously biting particularly hard today. The window wall of her office which led to her private balcony was currently closed and the air-con apparently set to "sub-arctic." "Later," Ben agreed. "I'm still the golden boy?" "Boy?" she echoed, raising a sharp, black eyebrow as she leaned back against the rounded, toffee-marbled corner of her modern teak desk. Whatever her pose, it never looked right without a cigarette. "Dressed like that? Thank fuck you don't smell of booze, though you look like you fucking should." She stared at him, and then tilted her head. "Don't apologize," she said. "In fact, act royally pissed. Our Beloved LTB has been screaming about confidentiality - well, she's going to discover it's a two-way fucking street." Her desk phone chimed, and she lifted the handset; listened briefly. "No. We're not fucking going over there - tell her here. My office." She lowered the phone again until the cradle chirped. "I am never working for a god-damned woman again!" she screamed. "Yeah," Ben said. "They're so hard to train." *That* got him a sharp look, but hell: mid-thirties, unmarried, no visible partner, or track record of same - *ding!* - it hardly required a tithe of her renowned gaydar. He wanted to kick himself. Damn! Ben drove an average car. He did an average job averagely well. He dressed like an average straight man. He lived in an average - if old - apartment, and although he seemed genetically incapable of talking about sport, talked shop and reality TV with his female colleagues, and shop and big-breasted women with his male ones. Geoff Dennington, Georgette's crony and the only "out" gay man in the department, he avoided as much as possible - the last thing he wanted to do was to have to fake an interest in big-dicked gym-bunnies as well. Besides, Geoff had several times complained of press coverage that lumped gays and pedophiles together, saying it was much the same as lumping them in with murderers or rapists. So now he shook his head. "I'll see her in an interview room - the small one overlooking the lot." "The air conditioning is still busted," Georgette said. Ben nodded. "And very noisy in consequence." That should keep Georgette away from him for a while. Ben stood, staring out of the window of the little interview room, watching the rain hiss against the blacktop. He'd seen the client's gleaming wet-black Mercedes pull into the lot, and a square-built, crewcut guy in a neat gray suit - obviously her security - had held an umbrella over her as she hurried across to the building's entrance. It wasn't yet 7 a.m. and Ben pursed his lips. It looked as if Georgette had, if anything, understated Elaine Fageauld's urgency to meet him. He heard a brief commotion outside - a woman's voice saying no, no, she'd be fine - and turned just as the door opened. Ms. Fageauld was a stocky, mannish, heavily built woman somewhere in her forties. Her ash-blond hair was cut in a simple bob, the tips brushing against her flushed cheeks as she looked down, unbuttoning the last buttons on her white raincoat, which she then stripped off and bundled into the hands of her security. Beneath it, she was wearing a conservative navy business suit and a white blouse. Gold gleamed at her ears and wrist, but the only thing she wore around her neck was a gold cross on a simple chain. "Wait outside," she told her security, and then to Ben: "You're Winters?" "Yes," Ben said, shortly. "Do sit down." She frowned a bit at his tone, and drew breath to speak, but Ben shook his head and motioned toward the chair again. When she moved, he crossed to the control panel next the door and flipped a switch. At once the faulty air-con unit began to hum, and the air vent resonated with the hush-and-throb of unbalanced fans. He crossed the room and pulled a chair close to hers. "A little privacy," he murmured. "Georgette said you seemed concerned." Elaine Fageauld nodded. She leaned forward. "You do understand that this is confidential?" Ben nodded likewise: "We protect our clients, of course, but -" he paused and looked her directly in the eye. "You should realize that it's not like talking to your lawyer - it's not a legally 'privileged' communication. We can't protect you if a court decides it wants to know what you're about to tell me." She smiled, her expression tired. "If it were only the courts. No, I'm concerned about my political rivals. With the election so close, any kind of - family embarrassment draws them like blood draws sharks." She sighed and closed her eyes for a moment before she began. "My brother has been sick for a long time. We've prayed for him and tried to guide him, but without success. I've spoken to ministers and tried to understand that God's time is not the same as mine, but likewise-" she smiled, but Ben could see the pain in her eyes. "There has likewise been limited success." Ben nodded patiently, and waited for her to continue. "He had - has, rather - a mental condition. It renders him blind to the harm his actions cause other people." "A, uh - sociopath, you mean?" Ben shifted uneasily. "Oh, not a madman; I don't want you thinking he was running around cutting people's throats or something, though he is, of course, extremely dangerous. His very charm and apparent reasonableness are what make him -" she squeezed her eyes shut and pressed her knuckles against her mouth. "Evil," she whispered. "Oh, I know it's a terribly old-fashioned word, and I love my brother dearly. So after the last time, we - the family - made an arrangement. He would live quietly at Cedars, and nobody else would get hurt." "You said he wasn't' a criminal?" She shook her head. "We made arrangements - compensation. We made promises. The minister - reverend Truegood - said he could help: there were procedures, treatments that would help, and of course he would pray for him." She smiled as though it were a heavy weight she was lifting onto her face. "I honestly think that was the only part of the treatment I had any hope in." "Ms Fageauld - why are you telling this to me? Elaine Fageauld pulled a handkerchief out of her clutch-bag and dabbed at her eyes. "He's been missing for almost two months now, and our best efforts to find him have failed." Ben raised his eyebrows. "The police have no leads?" She moved her broad shoulders in a minuscule shrug. "I would have thought you would have understood the need for information control. Besides, he's not a fugitive, nor a criminal. He's an adult, and so in their view quite capable of looking after himself." She smiled. "The sole effect of going to the police would have been to sell a few more newspapers - and ensure Bill Rush's election victory." She opened her leather folder and slid out a blank envelope, which she held out to Ben. "It's a letter of introduction," she said. "I want you to go up to Cedars; to talk to them and to anyone else that you think you need to. You did such a good job before: with the park project, and when the minister proved to be - such a flawed vessel. I just want us to be ready -" she gulped and went back to twisting her handkerchief again, "- if we have to tell poor Sherry's story to the newspapers." ------ End of part 5. Feedback appreciated and welcome. Please send any comments, criticism or feedback to: tooluser@hushmail.com