Date: Wed, 31 Jan 2007 21:19:12 -0700 From: americas 1stborn Subject: Curious Condition Ch. 1 Revision Curious Condition ----------------- Chapter One This is a revised version of chapter one. I had some helpful emails that pointed me to some areas that needed improvement. Particularly the dialogue; It should be easier to understand who is speaking to who. For this revision, Special thanks to: Ashley Hardic SpoX Bobby Michaels Josh The usual Disclaimer, charachters are imagined and based off of the author's life experience. Likeness to events and people are coincidences and unintentional. This story contains sexual interactions between underage boys. Do not read this and proceeding volumes if this is offensive to you or illegal where you live. ----------------- Jace looked out of the window. Pale flakes floated gently to the ground, blanketing what bare ground remained. It was cold by the window. Jace breathed, fogging the window. He raised a finger, and made a frowning face the moisture. It was still early for him, ten o'clock, on a saturday. The counselor would be here any minute. Moments earlier his mother had come in his darkened room, light had burst upon him and his covers removed from where he lay, in underwear and a dark shirt. "mmm...go...away," jace murmered, his face buried in the pillow. "Get up, Mr. Reiner will be here soon, and you're not showered or even dressed," fatigue was in Mrs. Talbot's voice. She, in fact, was naive of the exact reasons the psychaitrist had suggested this specific counselor to meet with her son. Doctor Veagan asked her to be patient, and that Jace would tell her in his own time what was wrong. For a long time Jace's grades had been falling, he had become argumentative and seemed disinterested in anything with family. He was once close to his older sister, Taylor. But now, when she called he refused to talk to her. When she visited he said as little as possible and avoided her. Once in a while she would catch a glimpse of her little Jason, the sweet boy he had once been. Something was different now, and that is why she had gone to a psychaitrist. All this flashed through her head as she looked upon 15 year-old Jace. "I'm up, I'm up...get out..." Jace mumbled. The door closed. Outside the black suv was negotiating slick turns on the snowy dirt road that lead to the house on the edge of a small town. As the vehicle came to a stop and parked a few meters away, Jace began to wonder if he should have put pants on. Outside a young fit looking man stepped out of the Vehicle. Jace glanced at a mirror at his left. He stood about one and one half meters tall, from his head to his bare feet. He wore only a pair of gray boxers, and a black pocket t-shirt. His hair was uncombed and his mother would make a big deal about it when she saw that he hadn't changed or tried to clean up. He had been outside the whole day before. Out in the woods, where it was quiet. His face was smudged with soot from a fire he had made. Knock Knock. Jace didn't move for a long time, finally just as Mr. Reiner was about to knock again, he went and opened the door. "Hey," the man smiled broadly, "you must be Jason." Jace rolled his eyes just enough to let the man see him, turned and left the door, letting it swing wide. He threw himself down into his chair next to the fire place. Mr. Reiner poked his head in. "May I... come in?" Mr. Reiner asked. "Yes," Jace muttered. A second later he asked, "Where's your tie?" He liked to tease them, putting his eyes on them as much as they did to him. "I thought all of you wore ties," Jace added. "A tie? Jason, I'll wear a tie next time, if you'll wear pants, how's that for a bargain?" Mr. Eric Reiner was experienced with these kinds of kids. He new just what to say to throw the boy off his 'i don't care attitude.' Jace was taken back, my pants? He wrinkled his forehead, "I don't care about if you wear a tie or not, and... i can wear whatever i want." Mr. Reiner sat down on the couch across from him. Jace's mother came in and gave Mr. Reiner a glass of water. "Thank you for coming Mr. Reiner. I hope you can help Jace... reconnect," said Mrs. Talbot. Jace glanced at his mom, then back at Mr. Reiner. He was not happy that she would think him 'disconnected.'He was fine afterall. He didn't all of this 'conseling and psycho-whatever,' he would work out his problems alone. He'd done that for a long time before the counselors got involved a year ago. Mr. Reiner read the boys expression and looking back at Mrs. Talbot said, "I'm just here to get to know Jason...' "Jace," Jace interupted in a raised voice. His mom glared at him. Slightly humbled Jace said softer, "uh... just call me Jace, ok?" "Jace, okay," Mr. Reiner nodded. Looking at Jace's mother again, "I'm here to get to know Jace," he glanced at Jace with a quick smile. "And see how I can help him make some- important choices." Oh great, jace thought, we're gonna talk about feelings... ughh. "Mrs. Talbot, I'd prefer to visit with in private, do you mind?" Mr. Reiner said. "Of course, not." Mrs. Talbot walked over to Jace touched his arm, leaned and kissed him on his head and whispered, "let him in, Jace, let him help you." she had tears welling up as she left. Jace followed her with his eyes, and for a moment wished things were the way they were before all this. Tick..Tick..the clock was all that broke the silence between the two. Mr. Reiner bit his lip and was about to speak when Jace asked, "Why'd you come to my house. Usually I have to go all the way to Sudbury to meet with you." "Well, jace," Mr. Reiner said, "Doctor Veagan and I decided that you would be more," he paused, glancing over the boys very casual condition, "comfortable at home." "Hmm... good," Jace responded just as casual as his appearence. "I didn't get your name." "Just call me Eric." This surprised Jace. Doctors were always very profesional and didn't seem to really care about you. Maybe Eric was different. Maybe he was a good guy after all, and not some last ditch effort by all the Doctors. Jace decided to talk with him, just get to know him, nothing important. He wouldn't dump his crap on this guy. Not until he really thought he could trust him. Maybe not even then. Eric tilted his head to one side, as if gauging what the boy was thinking. The boy has honest eyes. His unkempt appearence is more a sign of internal turmoil than simple bad hygene or attitude. These things were an outward manifestation of an inner conflict. Hold on, Eric, he told himself, you don't have him figured out yet. Wait until you know some more, and then make your diagnosis. He liked Jace, so far, he seemed like every other emotionally detached teenager, just sorting out new feelings and emotions and having it tear your world apart before piecing it back together. Eric noticed Jace's tongue sliding from side to side touching the bottom of his top, front teeth, then ran over his lower lip before he spoke. Nervous habit. He was thinking, but what about? "If we're gonna talk, I... I want to go to the bonus room," Jace said. "Sure, but what's the bonus room?" Eric got up and followed Jace through the warm front room into a cooler kitchen and then into an enclosed patio at the back of the house. The house was mcuh larger than he could see from the road. It must have a second story, and maybe a basement too. The patio was colder, nearly as cold as outside. The lack of wind made it tollerable. The room was large, nearly four meters by ten. The floor was carpeted on one half the other had a table and chairs and was covered by linolium. From the door in the middle of the room, Jace turned right and lead Eric to some cushioned wicker chairs. There were two chairs and a couch. A old, stained, and crumpled blanket lay on the couch as if someone had been sleeping there. There was even an equally old and filthy pillow complete with pillow case. Situated in the ring of furniture was a wood burning stove with a likeness of Benjamin Franklin on it. Eric sat down and Jace set up a fire. Smoke poured out at first, "You need to open the flue," Eric said. "Oh yeah," Jace said, taking care of the problem, "this was my dad's dad's. He bought it brand new." "It's very cool, Jace," Eric said. He tried to sound as interested in Jace as possible. The boy seemed willing to talk and Eric didn't want to ruin his resolve. Jace finished and sat down on the couch, pulling the blanket over him. He didn't quite lay down, he just leaned against the arm of the couch, stretching out. The room began to warm up. The view from the room was beautiful. The room looked out over the back yard covered in snow and 10 meters further became a forest of large trees evenly spaced. The snow fall had gotten heavier making it impossible to see far into the woods. Jace watched him gazing at the beauty. He swallowed hard. "There's a pond Back there, in the trees. I go swimming there sometimes. And I built a tree house. You can see far. I put a rope up, too. To swing on, into the pond," said Jace. He studied Eric's reaction. He seemed to not even hear, too busy looking. Jace pursed his lips. Try again, he thought. "It's hard to find. I even get lost sometimes. But no one else has ever been," Jace said. Would it kill you to look at me! Finally Eric spoke. "When I was ten, my father took me out by myself into our woods. Alone." Jace raised his guard immedietly, he didn't like where this was going. Eric turned and looked at him in the eye. Not harshly, or accusingly like the others, just- looked at him. Jace returned his gaze, cautiously. "Jace, I am seventh of nine kids. Time alone with my father was precious, if not unheard of. In those ten years I had spent only a few moments alone with my father. He talked about all sorts of things, but i couldn't figure out where we were going. It seemed like we'd been going in circles. Finally we stopped by a huge boulder." Eric smiled, remembering, "I mean this thing was huge," he motioned with his hands. "And it really had no business being in the middle of indiana," He's from America, Jace thought. Eric Continued, "I remember touching it, and how cold it was, all covered with moss. We stood there for a while not saying anything, then Dad knelt down, and whispered to me, "Son, this world is big, and sometimes we can feel very small. Now, tell me, a boy of ten, could you climb this big guy alone, get over it to the other side?" Of course, I said I couldn't climb it, not alone. My Dad said, "Then why would you even want to try?" "Well maybe we shouldn't," I said. "We are going to climb this rock," Dad said, "together. On the other side of this monster, this thing in our way, is something wonderful." "He pushed me and I pulled him, and together, Jace, We made it over. When we got to top, I heard the sound of falling water. We walked another few steps and the ground in front of us dropped away, revealing a towering waterfall, maybe thirty feet high. At the base was a clear pool of water. Perfect for swimming. "That whole ten years this had been there, and my dad knew about it. Why he chose that moment to show me, and why he even showed me instead of anyone else, I don't know." Jace sat listening intently. He was drawn into Eric's voice, his honesty. He hardly realized he was staring, and that Eric had stopped. Jace blinked, relaxed, and then shifted his weight awkwardly in the silence. Eric looked up. "You know, Jace, I learned something then. That in life, we run into boulders, problems, and we can't get over them ourselves. We want to get to the cool refreshing water on the other side. To let it wash over us, to be at peace from a long journey." Jace felt his penetrating gaze, and looked away, outside, anywhere. He felt like Eric could read his mind. "But, Jace, we can't do it alone. We are not always strong enough. We need people, we need friends, and family, we need to feel- loved." Jace blinked hard. His face was hot, he thought he would cry. What was going on! Tears were coming. He blinked again, sniffed hard. He got up fast, throwing off the blanket, he walked quickly out of the bonus room wiping tears with the collar of his shirt. Mrs. Talbot watched painfully as jace scrambled up the stairs to his room. She didn't know what to think, she hadn't seen him cry for the longest time, years even, and after one visit with this Mr. Reiner he was reacting! She ran to Mr. Reiner her own tears flowing. He stood as she came in. Mrs. Talbot ran into him hugging hard, and bawling. "It's okay Mrs. Talbot, He's fine, I think I just touched a cord. Found a soft spot. I'm not really not sure what it was that triggered it," Eric said. ---------------- Jace threw open his door, then slammed it, and locked it. He flung himself on the bed, clothes were everywhere, the place was a mess. He was crying uncontrollably. Truthfully, what had gotten to Jace, though he was still unaware, was how Eric understood why he went to the pond so much. He went there to get away. Leave behind these problems. His own house was the worst reminder, his room, his clothes, it all reminded him. His sobbing slowed, and he was able to calm himself down. He could hear mom and Eric talking, probably in the kitchen. The air vents in the old house carried the sound to every room. It was unintelligible, but for now the focus was off of him, and he was alone. He could hide his face from the world. After a few minutes Jace got up and stripped off what little clothing he had on. He threw on the floor. He started for the washroom, for a shower, but looking back at his clothes scooped them all up, smelling pairs of underwear and boxers to see if they were any clean pairs mixed in. He saved two and threw them in a drawer. The others he stuffed in a basket near the door. He and Taylor had shared the bathroom, but now that she was away from home he had it to himself. He locked both doors and turned on the hot water. He let it run till it was as hot as he could stand. Then he stepped in and shut the curtain. Closing himself off to the world. He pulled the lever that shut off the faucet and turned on the shower. Then he plugged the tub, and carefully sat down. A memory flashed, Jace remembered slipping in the tub. blood running down the drain. The shower head was aimed to high, the water hit him in the face. He got up and adjusted it lower, now it hit him in his chest. He pulled his legs up tight to his body, held them with his arms. This was another place he could think. The pond was quiet, here the water drowned out every sound even his own sobs. He rested his head against the wall, his wet hair splayed over his face. Focus. What just happened. He closed his eyes. Thought back to the many visits with doctors. What were they after? He knew of course, but Jace wanted to solve his own problems, to be in charge of his own life. He hated the thought that someone else could have control of him. Maybe that's why he pushed away his mother and sister. He'd cooperated today, and look what it did. He felt embarressed, But what did he care, this was just some guy that would probably never want to come back to this house again. Jace opened his eyes. "What do I want," not realizing he spoke aloud. He looked up at the falling water. His face was thoughtful, "A water fall," he answered. End of Chapter One. This is my most successful story yet. And it just keeps evolving in my head. This is not as sexual as most of the other stories here. I've written a few like those. But this time, However, I feel a special kinship Towards Jace Talbot. Many of his experiences will be very much like my own, although, the story will be largely fiction. Particularly his coming of age, struggle of same sex attraction, spirituality, and simple wanting to belong. I would like to hear from you. americas1stborn@gmail.com