Date: Sat, 7 Dec 2013 23:20:26 +0700 From: J S Subject: Gavin Gavin Disclaimer: This story is a work of fiction. Any resemblance to any real person alive or dead is coincidental and unintentional. CHAPTER I I was beyond amazed as I dragged my paint board and easel into class only to find an attractive, young face amongst my regular cast of Picasso wannabes. The day had started as just another Thursday afternoon painting workshop that I had been coaching for several months at the local community center. Gavin, as the kid's name turned out to be, was a handsome sixteen year old boy, not without some extent of self-taught drawing skills. His forward planning mum must have calculated that a painting workshop would fit in nicely amidst his potpourri of after-school activities. The remainder of my cast of Picasso wannabes being a uniform bunch of middle-aged mums and retired granddads clutching at anything to occupy their afternoons with, you'd understand how this teenager in his crummy white t-shirt and faded khaki board shorts, which conveniently revealed a pair of lean, athletic legs peppered by a soft covering of light-colored hairs, became the de-facto centerpiece of my classroom. Gavin, or Gav as I preferred to call him, turned out to possess a mild, unassuming disposition which stood in such a jarring contrast to his athletic built. He also had a very attractive kind of vulnerability, a habit of cocking his eyebrows as he concentrated wholeheartedly to the task at hand. He had an innate flair for painting, but he was always addressing me in the relaxed non-combative curiosity of someone who attended a class for pleasure rather than ambition. Despite myself, I began to look forward to Thursday workshops as being the real highlight of my week. I would find subtle excuses to praise Gav on patterns well-drawn; I'd put my hand over his as nonchalantly as I dared, on the pretext of helping him correct a difficult stroke. He had a distinctive kind of warmth emanating from the back of his hand that always felt electrifying to me. If Gav noticed any of this camouflaged, tender attention I was subjecting him to, he gave away no sign of acknowledging it, and no sign of backing away, either. If anything, he seemed carefree and pleased to be in my class. I had often wondered whether it was swimming, track and fields, or team sports, that gave rise to those well-defined biceps, but being in a classroom surrounded with savvy mothers and prudish old men put a lid on my yearnings to blurt out personal questions or to show uncanny interest in Gav's well-being.