Date: Thu, 19 Jan 2017 13:10:10 +1000 From: Storyteller Guy Subject: Prodigy and Prejudice - Chapter 2 Thanks very much to everyone for the support. I have received some lovely messages. I would love to hear what the rest of the readers think – good and bad – please send comments to newstories996@gmail.com. Praise always makes me write more, criticism always makes me write better. Please remember to donate. Nifty isn't here for free. --- PRODIGY AND PREJUDICE Chapter 2 Thwack. Down the middle. Ace. First pump. Smug smile. If the Townsville Tennis Club could have afforded a speed gun, the serve would have recorded very near 200km/h. The North Queensland Age Championships wasn't really the setting for a speed gun, anyway. "Game, Warburton. Warburton leads five games to love." Ray was astonished. He'd never thought the muscular 17-year-old he was watching was ever much good. And yet, here he was, absolutely trouncing his son in the unrelenting Townsville afternoon heat. It was yet another strong service game exhibiting the burly teenager's absolutely massive serve. He sat down at his designated bench five games up in just fifteen minutes, with only one game standing between he and first set. Ray scribbled a few notes down on his notepad, including some plans that Nick might put in place to counter such a beastly serve, and watched the boys cool off at the change of ends break. Dylan Warburton didn't care that much for tennis; at least outwardly, anyway. He told everyone he just played so he could work out in the club gym and get buff, for it was the rugby season that he really cared about. At 6'1", with his `primo rig', as he called it, he was an imposing figure. Powerful thighs, large biceps, and pecs with the surface area of dinner plates adorned his body. He also had the attitude to match. He walked around with his chest out, caring not for anyone he may bump into. His arrogance served him well on the tennis court, it seemed, as his opponent was incapable of providing any meaningful resistance despite the obvious talent the boy possessed. It didn't matter that Dylan was absolutely no scholar. He had to repeat grade one because he was such a dunce, and was therefore already a year older than his peers. His father, the senior Member of Parliament for the area, ironically happened to be education minister and a "good friend of the Prime Minister". Whilst there were many words that could aptly describe Dylan, many of which are unprintable, `untouchable' would certainly be one. He knew it, his classmates knew it, his teachers knew it; hell, the whole city knew it. Nick dragged his heels out onto the court for yet another service game. His first two had been complete disasters – three double faults, weak second serves, and a complete domination from Dylan's forehand. He didn't know how he was going to get out of the rut. "C'mon, Nick! Let's go!" Ray yelled from the crowd, clapping with encouragement. Nick's little sister and his spitting image, ten-year-old Francesca, echoed her father. "Go, Nicky!" It just didn't help; Nick just felt completely flat. Maybe it was spending the morning qualifying for the final, or maybe he'd just woken up on a bad day. He began by hitting a sliding serve out wide, which was smashed back for a winner by Dylan. Nick then tried to belt one down the T – which was smashed back at him, and the ball ricocheted off Nick's frame and out of the court as he didn't have time to react. Maybe a body serve would work, he thought, and that came back at him weakly; but he overcooked the forehand wide trying to match Dylan's power and smash the ball through to China. Demoralised and three set points down, he couldn't find his spots on his serve and weakly double faulted to gift the set to Dylan. The small crowd sighed. "Game and set, Warburton. Warburton leads one set to love. Coaches, you have ninety seconds." Ray jumped from his fading plastic bucket seat in the small grandstand and marched onto the court to impart something, anything, to his young son to get him back on track. Poor Nick looked completely dejected, and laid his racquet next to his bag in defeat. He sighed, took a sip of water from his bottle, and eyeballed his father as he approached. Ray crouched down to meet his son's gaze. "You alright, Nicky?" Ray asked "You look bloody lost." Nick's head dropped. "I can't beat him, Dad. He's so much bigger than me." "You can beat him, and you will," Ray said sternly. "If you think like that, you're dead before you're even out there. Get your head in the game!" "But he hits it too hard." "You've got the best slice at this club, and you know it. You need to try and use it more." "He bounces it up too high, he's so much taller than me." "You can outrun him. He can hardly move. You'll run rings `round him. You haven't hit the corners and tried to get him moving. He's hardly breaking a sweat!" "He's too good, Dad." Nick looked at the ground. "I ... I can't beat him." Ray sighed, and raised his voice slightly, yet purposefully, at Nick. "Look me in the eye." Nick reluctantly raised his head as Ray continued. Ray's eyes burned like lasers into the back of Nick's head. "I have never told you this, Nick, but you are easily the best junior tennis player I have ever seen. And I'm not just saying that, mate. I absolutely believe it. Dylan? He's just a big slugger. Yeah, he can hit a ball, but you – you can think. You can run. And bloody hell, Nick, you can play. You can beat him, alright. But you're only going to beat him if you *believe* you can beat him. *I* believe you can beat him, mate. I really, really do." Nick's mouth fell open as he looked at his father. Ray had never gushed like that to his son. It was always `work harder', `c'mon, you've got to want it', or `stop slacking off'. It was certainly never `you're the best, Nick'. He had no idea how to respond. He wasn't used to being told he was the best at anything by anybody, let alone his father. Ray seized the moment. Judging from Nick's reaction, he thought he'd found something inside Nick he hadn't found before. "Mate, tell me you believe you can win." "I-" Nick stopped, distracted, as he noticed some movement at the front of the grandstand. He noticed a boy, his age or thereabouts. He thought he recognised the sandy brown hair, and when the boy sat down next to Barry, Nick and the boy made eye contact to confirm who it was. Nick was shocked. Ryan had come – on a hot Saturday afternoon – to sit in the sun and watch him play tennis. Again? This couldn't be pure coincidence, Nick thought. "Thirty seconds," came the call from the umpire. Ray pressed his son for an answer. "Nick? Go on, tell me." Ryan smiled and held Nick's gaze, before nodding his head up in that now-familiar `wassup' motion. The effect on Nick effect was infectious. Nick smiled back at Ryan, and nodded his head in return. He immediately began to tingle in a way he had never felt before. This `cool kid' had probably ditched his mates to come to watch him play. His friends were probably surfing, or skating, or cycling, or whatever. But Ryan was here. Was he here for Nick, or did his Dad make him come? `Who cares,' Nick thought, `he's here'. Inexplicably, and immediately, Nick felt ready to take on the world. "Yeah, Dad. I can beat `im." Ray beamed; he'd got through. "That's my boy!" In the ten seconds they had left, Ray reminded Nick to hit his spots, use his slice, get Dylan moving, and use his fast feet to pounce on anything short. "Time." Ray bounded back up the stairs to his position in the grandstand next to his daughter. He sat back down with a smile on his face, and again yelled encouragement to his young charge. It was on. Ray sensed it; something had flicked inside of Nick. It was bloody well on. "What'd you say, Dad? Is Nicky gonna win now?" The young girl asked hopefully. "Just you watch, Franny," Ray said, putting an arm around his daughter, "I think you're about to see something special." Even when lost, every point Nick played in the second set seemed to take him closer to his goal of victory. He started slicing Dylan's huge serve, he started making Dylan run, and he started hitting his spots on his own serve. It was topsy-turvy tennis, and it wasn't until Dylan was serving at 5-6 that Nick's extra effort finally paid off. Nick took the set with a service break, belting a breathtaking running forehand down the line having been wildly out of position. Dylan, visibly sweating and panting, assumed his shot would be a winner due to Nick's position. Instead, the look on Dylan's face when he saw the ball fizz down the line and plop into the corner was a sight to behold. The ignominy of it! The young upstart dared to challenge him, King Dylan! Ray and Fran were up off their feet and cheering. The rest of the 20-person crowd responded with an "ohhhh!" and even Ryan joined in the fun. It was all topped off with one of Nick's catch cry uttered as he screeched to a halt – adopted from his favourite player – "c'mon!!" If watching Nick was a drug, Ryan was as high as a kite. The swashbuckling serve, the fluid forehand, and Nick's incredible athleticism kept Ryan watching like a hawk. It wasn't doing anything to help his growing infatuation with Nick, either. `Was there anything he can't do?' Ryan thought, eyeing Nick as he went to the end of set break with a spring in his step. Ryan nearly let out an audible gasp when, just prior to sitting down, Nick wiped his face with bottom of his shirt. Ryan looked closely at Nick's glistening chest – and the waistband of his underpants – very closely. "Game and set, Rabuzzo. One set all. Coaches, you have ninety seconds." Ray didn't really need to say anything, but he just wanted to reinforce his earlier message. He walked down to Nick, and with a smile, patted him on the back and gave him a few pointers about how to approach the final set. "Thirty seconds." Ray smiled at Nick, as Nick took a final sip from his water bottle. "Now do you see why I believe in you, mate?" Nick smiled back. "Maybe I can still beat `im." "You bet, mate. You bloody bet. Now go and finish this prick off, will you?" Ray finished with a wink. Nick grinned back. "For you and Fran, Dad. And Mum, too." From the first point in the final set, it was obvious Nick had done the damage he needed to in the second set. Dylan was cooked; he knew it, the crowd knew it, and Nick knew it. After Dylan somehow held serve twice, the dam wall was finally breached when Nick toyed with his broken opponent by sending him from corner to corner and back again in four consecutive points. Nick took three consecutive games, including two breaks. All that was left was for Nick to serve for the title. It didn't matter that Nick was up two service breaks, and it didn't matter that Dylan was absolutely stuffed. Nick still tightened up. Weak first serve, pounded by Dylan for a winner. A timid double fault followed. "Love-30." Nick looked up at the grandstand and saw who was still there. His father and Fran; they were always there. They were clapping and egging him on. Some other people he didn't recognise, probably Dylan's crew, were all looking rather forlorn. But Ryan was still there. He wasn't yawning or playing on his phone, he was actually watching the match. Again, he caught Nick's eye. He smiled and clapped a few times. Nick smiled back and had to look at the ground or he thought he'd blush. What the hell was it with this boy? The little burst of confidence was all Nick needed. Nick found his groove on his serve again, pounded a few crisp groundstrokes and the finally, his and his father's well-thought tactics brought Nick three consecutive points and a match point. There was always going to only be one way to finish. Nick smashed a flat ace right down the T to seal the win. The crowd applauded politely, excepting of course Ray and Fran, who got up and roared. "Game, set, and match, Rabuzzo." Nick raised his arms in triumph and yelled "yes!!" before looking up to the heavens. "I did it, Mum!" he said, almost to himself. "I won!" Catching himself in his moment, he ran into the net to thank his opponent with a massive smile on his face. "Thanks for the game," Nick said sincerely, as he extended his hand and looked up at his burly opponent. "That was really hard." Dylan looked down on him with disdain. "Fuck you, little shit. That trophy was mine." A weak, brief handshake was all the older boy offered, as well as a glare with menace that Nick would not soon forget. Nick frowned, felling wholly disappointed. He thought he'd just played and beaten a difficult opponent and would get some respect. What was this kid's problem? Confused, he let Dylan shake the umpire's hand before him, as customary. Some congratulatory words from the umpire propped Nick up, before he eyed his father in the crowd. He smiled, pointing at his father, and waved to his sister who was beaming and jumping up and down like she was about to have a seizure. The umpire spoke up once the boys had sat down and packed up their bags. "Ladies and gentlemen, the presentation will now take place on court. Please welcome Townsville Tennis Club president Barry Masters." Barry, Nick and Dylan all walked out into the middle of the court. As soon as he was handed a microphone, Barry immediately began gushing about the two of them. Nick was so embarrassed he just zoned out. It wasn't until he heard his name finally called, and the applause of the crowd, that he snapped out of his trance. Nick happily took the trophy – and gift voucher – presented to him by Barry. He launched it high in the air with a huge grin, as a professional would; the fact that it was a minor local tennis tournament drew a laugh from the small crowd. Not that Nick cared, of course. He'd just beaten a boy five years older, and to boot, he'd won the trophy he'd been thinking about all summer. He wore a beaming smile that would take some time to recede. Nick's inbuilt humility quickly made him aware of the attention on him and he slinked back from the front of the presentation area, out of the spotlight. He scanned the crowd for his father, who was characteristically on the side, not wanting to be part of Nick's moment. Nick smiled warmly at his father when he located him. In that moment, Ray felt the bond he and his son had. It was one of respect, and hard work, but in the end he saw himself as a fair parent. He didn't chastise the defeats, the same as he didn't glorify the victories. He rewarded the effort, and punished only when it wasn't provided. Still, it was the proudest moment of Ray's life that in Nick's greatest yet victory, he sought out his father. Ray pointed at his son and mouthed 'you deserve it, mate'. He hugged Fran tightly with his right arm, still watching Nick. Ray smiled widely and felt a warmth inside him, in recognition of just how lucky the three of them were. Barry resumed his role as master of ceremonies and began to thank the organisers and local sponsors. Nick looked in awe at the trophy while Barry rabbited on. He couldn't really have cared less what was being said, he was gawking at the nameplate where his name and age - Nicola Rabuzzo, 12 years 289 days - would later be etched. His name would be on the trophy forever; what a treat! A round of applause, the sound of the crowd talking again and a hand on Nick's shoulder broke his reverie as the presentation finished and life went back to normal. "Come and grab a Gatorade on me, son," Barry remarked with a smile. "Your father and I might have something stronger." Nick again felt a pair of eyes on him. He looked around, and saw Ryan walking through the crowd towards his father with an expressionless face. When Nick locked eyes with Ryan, Nick immediately looked down, averting his gaze, and seemed to blush as Ryan opened his face into a wide smile. Barry immediately piped up when he spotted his son. "Ah, Ryan, old mate! There you are! C'mere, we're going to grab a drink and have a yarn." As the adults and Fran went on ahead to the club office, Nick and Ryan followed behind. After a moment of silence between the boys, Ryan immediately felt that he was required to be the one to advance the conversation. "So, uh ... hey," Ryan offered timidly, looking at Nick as they walked. "Hey," Nick offered equally shyly. "Been a while, huh," Ryan mused with a little nose laugh. Nick smiled awkwardly. "Yeah ... guess we're not pee wees anymore." Ryan smiled. "Guess not." If there was one thing Nick hated, it was making inane conversation. He was just inescapably shy. His usual defence mechanism was giving one word answers and looking at the floor. In a one-on-one situation, though, that was never going to cut it. To combat this situation and at least give an outward impression of being a 'normal' boy, he thought maybe stating the obvious would help pass the time. "I, uh ... so you saw the final today?" Nick asked, almost chastising himself at the inanity of the question. `Of course Ryan had bloody seen it, he was there!' "Yeah," Ryan said with a little smile appearing in the corner of his mouth. He almost got himself flustered as he caught himself just before gushing about his infatuation with Nick. Composing himself, Ryan managed, "I mean, Dad said I should come, so ... you played real well." Nick looked down with a little smile, embarrassed by the compliment, and a little miffed he hadn't said he'd come of his own accord. "Thanks." There was a slight awkward silence as neither boy really knew where to go with the conversation. "Dad says you're gonna be in my class at Prindiville," Ryan offered, thinking quickly for conversation topics. "Yeah," Nick said. "Is it good?" "Dunno, I'm only starting there myself. But my Dad went there, so I guess it must be alright." Nick nodded blankly. "Cool." Ryan was searching for more to say. The awkwardness and shyness emanating from Nick was palpable; still, Ryan didn't want to blow his first real interaction with him in years. It was tough going, Ryan admitted to himself, because Nick was hardly offering much up to help him. Barry, Ray and Fran were having a conversation outside the office, so it seemed the boys would have continue to do so as well. At that moment, the most obvious suggestion popped into Ryan's mind. The boys could hang out together! 'You idiot, Ryan, why didn't you think or that earlier!?' he thought. Ryan quickly put the idea to Nick. "Hey, um ... so, me and my friends are going surfing tomorrow, 'cause it's the last day before school starts. Do you, um ... maybe wanna come along?" Nick looked up wide-eyed as his heart skipped a beat. Hang out with people? He hardly ever did that, and even when he did, it was mostly tennis people. And they were just doing it because they were there. But this was different. To Nick, it was like Ryan actually *wanted* to be friends with Nick. That was something new to him; something he had no idea how to respond to. So, of course, default mode kicked in. The timid, self-deprecating Nick came out. "But I've never surfed before," he blurted. "First time for everything, I guess." Ryan said helpfully, and with a smile. "I don't even have a board." "You can use my old one, it's in the garage." There was a pause as Nick was caught off guard at Ryan having an answer for each of his misgivings. Usually, people would just give up by now. But instead, he pulled out the old ace of spades. "I bet I'll be crap at it." Ryan looked a little sad and defeated as he looked down at the ground. "Well, you don't have to come if you don't wanna." Nick gulped. He was already way past his comfort zone even entertaining the idea. But there was this little twinkle in the back of his mind that made him really want to hang out with Ryan. He just exuded this energy; it was infectious. It wasn't like anything Nick felt before. On the court, Nick had felt it; and now, standing two feet from Ryan, he felt it even more. Nick didn't know where the vibe had come from and he couldn't explain it. Maybe ... maybe just this once, he could trust someone. Maybe he could just ... be friends with someone. "No, I mean ..." Nick trailed off because he didn't know what he meant. He didn't know how to say he'd like to, without blurting out something ridiculous. "So you'll come, then?" Ryan was oblivious to how hopeful he sounded, immediately looking up from the floor and smiling at Nick. All that was missing were the puppy eyes and paws set in the begging position. "I guess I don't live that far from the beach," Nick offered, unable to hide a small smile. "I can come by your house on the way on my bike, then," Ryan said, his smile opening up to a grin. "Yeah," Nick said, allowing himself a fuller smile, "that'd be cool." "What's your number?" Ryan asked, whipping out his iPhone ready to take Nick's details. Nick blushed. "Uh ... I haven't got a phone yet." He felt like such a fool. Of course he didn't have a phone, his dad could barely afford the computer they bought so Nick could do his homework this year. Ryan just shrugged. "No matter," he said as he calmly put it back in his pocket just as quickly as he'd taken it out, "I can just come by your place at like, 8?" 'How the hell is he so smooth?' Nick thought to himself. 'Why didn't he make fun of me just now? And how did he just think to set a time out of thin air?' "Sounds, er, great." Nick said, perhaps a little dismissively - although he certainly didn't intend for it to come out like that. Ryan just smiled warmly in return. "Cool." 'OH MY GOD I DID IT!' Ryan thought to himself as Barry approached the boys. 'I CANT BELIEVE I GET TO HANG OUT WITH NICK!' It was all he could do to stop himself from beaming ear to ear. Barry smiled at the boys' seemingly newfound friendship. "Well you two seem to be getting along like a house on fire! C'mon fellas, let's get inside and have a drink!" "Ooh, are there any orange ones left?" Nick asked, forgetting his conversation with Ryan and suddenly realising his violent thirst and need for a chair. Barry smiled as the five of them entered the cool enclave of the office. "You're a bit bloody picky, aren't you, mate!" --- The next morning, Nick bounded into the kitchen right on 7.59am. Ray immediately looked up from his newspaper, surprised at why the youngster was so raring to go. "G'morning, champion," Ray said, "spider in your bed or something?" Nick didn't quite know how to respond and looked at his father with a puzzled expression and furrowed brow. "What?" Ray smiled. "Just kidding, mate. You're usually not up until midday after a tournament." "I'm going to the beach with Ryan, remember," Nick said proudly. Just as he said it, there was a knock at the door. "See ya, Dad!" Ray stopped the excited boy at the door. "Wait, wait, wait ... hat? Towel? Sunscreen? Wallet?" Nick frowned. "I know, Dad, it's all in my backpack!" Ray smiled, and deliberately condescendingly, raised his eyebrows. "And where's that, then?" Nick gasped as he'd realised he'd forgotten the one thing he had to remember. Embarrassed, he ran to his room to grab his bag while Ray went to open the door. He was greeted by a smiling Ryan and a flawless Townsville summer's day. "Ah, Ryan, how are you, mate?" Ray asked with a smile, as the patter of Nick's fast footsteps behind Ray heralded his imminent arrival. "Good thanks, Mr Rabuzzo, perfect day for surfing!" Ryan beamed back, pointing at a spot in the front yard. "Can I leave my bike there?" Ray agreed, before nodding at Nick, who had appeared beside his father. "Old mate here was ready to go, but ended up forgetting everything." Ryan chuckled as Nick frowned at his father. "Daaad!" Nick and Ryan met each other's gaze as they exchanged a smile. Ryan immediately thought Nick looked far more relaxed than the last time they spoke. "Here," Ryan said passing a body board to Nick, "let's roll!" Nick happily took the board, and imitating Ryan, tucked it under his arm as the two boys started their walk to be beach. "Be back for dinner!" Ray called out as he closed the door. There was something about those two, Ray thought, as he went back to his coffee and newspaper. Whilst it was only about a kilometre from `Palazzo de Rabuzzo', as Ray ironically called their tired bungalow, to the beach, it left ample time for the boys to have to maintain a conversation. If you went on the previous day's events, this might have been an extremely awkward walk. But there was just something about being around Ryan that completely relaxed Nick. He felt like he'd met someone who was intuitively tuned to him, someone that he could just talk to without fear of judgment. He'd never met anyone like that outside his family before. Maybe he'd just never let himself be relaxed enough in front of anyone before. Ryan was like an excited schoolgirl. He was completely devoid of his usual last-day-of-holidays depression, and was excited to be spending time getting to know a boy who, until yesterday, was just the object of his masturbatorial desires. Now, it seemed, Ryan's dick didn't get a thought as he and Nick discussed the tennis, what movies they liked, what things they liked to do, and the food they liked. By the time they reached the beach, it had struck both boys just how similar they were. Ryan was beginning to view Nick as not just a hot kid, but a friend. Nick was wondering why the hell they hadn't become friends earlier. Nick and Ryan approached a group of four other boys who were already waiting at Ryan's usual spot. They all greeted Ryan, and looked over at Nick warily. "This is Nick, he's starting with us tomorrow," Ryan said matter of factly to the group. Nick looked around the boys and saw eight watchful eyes and four expressionless faces looking him over, wondering what to make of him. Needless to say, he felt very intimidated. "Nick, that's Charlie, Xander, Ross and Jonno," Ryan continued, pointing to each of the boys as he called their name. Nick smiled nervously, and nodded once. "Nice to meet you all." The boys didn't move. Ryan then added with a smirk, "he fucked Dylan up in the age champs yesterday." The boys' faces immediately turned to amazement as they said, almost in unison, "what!?" Ryan started to laugh. "Yeah, it was fucking hilarious! At the end, he couldn't even run! Then Nick smashed an ace, and it was all over." Nick was shocked at Ryan's transition from club president's son to swear-a-thon Townsville kid. Meanwhile, Xander immediately broke into a huge smile as the other boys looked at each other. "Oh man, is he gonna be pissed tomorrow! Fuck yeah, Nick!" Nick smiled embarrassingly as Xander lightly smacked him on the upper arm. "Uh, thanks. You know him?" Xander, a tall, blonde-haired boy continued. "Hah! Know `im? Oh, yeah, we know `im. He's the school arsehole." "The Prindiville Prick," piped Charlie, who almost looked like a clone of Ryan with his brown hair, but with a bit more puppy fat on him. That caused all the boys to lose it, as they broke in fits of laughter. Nick, not really cottoning on to the joke particularly well, still had a chuckle of his own. When the laughter died down, Ross, a skinny ginger kid who appeared to have completely lathered himself in sunscreen, decided it was time to head into the water. "C'mon, let's get swimming!" He shucked his t-shirt, revealing a skinny, relatively undeveloped torso covered in freckles, and ran off towards the waves. He was closely followed by Jonno, whose mop of wavy dark brown hair almost went down to his neck. As Xander and Charlie de-shirted and applied their sunscreen, Ryan followed suit and took off his shirt, smartly revealing his short-sleeved rash vest. It was well-worn, as Ryan was an experienced board rider. It also had the effect of clinging to his svelte physique. "Why'd you wear that thing again, you fag?" Xander snorted playfully at Ryan, before pointing at Nick. "At least he's normal like us and isn't afraid of a bit of sun." Ryan looked in the direction of Xander's point and was greeted with his first close-up look at Nick's body as Nick finished taking off his t-shirt. Ryan was, to put it simply, lost for words. What he saw in front of him was, to him, absolutely flawless. Nick was standing there, in board shorts that went down to his knees, and underpants of which Ryan could just see the top of the waistband, and nothing else. Ryan, attempting to relearn how to use his throat muscles to make sounds come out of his mouth, answered Xander – almost in a daze – as he took in Nick's athletic body. "Don't, ah ... don't want to get cancer," Ryan said, scrolling his eyes down Nick's flat stomach and chiselled `V', before snapping himself out of his trance and turning back to Xander. His trademark comeback skills contemporaneously returned. "Calling me a fag after having Charlie rub sunscreen all over your back, are ya?" Xander snorted with a smirk. "Just get in the water, you wanker," he added, as he and Charlie headed down to join Ross and Jonno. Now that the other boys had left, Nick timidly asked Ryan the question he hadn't been comfortable asking with the other boys around. "Um, Ryan? What do I ..." Ryan willed himself not to look at Nick's chest and eyeballed him with a smile. "It's real easy. You get on the board, you wait for a wave, and then you pounce." Nick sighed. "But ... I've never done this before." Ryan put his hand on Nick's shoulder supportively. Despite the gesture being in no way sexually motivated, the effect on both boys of the skin-on-skin contact was incredible. A bolt of electricity shot through Nick's body, to every extremity fanning out from Ryan's hand. He felt that tingling feeling he felt yesterday. Ryan thought his hand had become covered in gold. Nick's shoulder was soft, yet somehow bony, but also muscular; his skin was firm, yet forgiving. It was magic. Even though it was only a split second, neither boy had missed out from the extremely brief interaction. "Just look down there, would ya?" Ryan said with a smile. Jonno, who had just got onto a wave, suddenly went wide-eyed as it unexpectedly broke on top of him. "Oh, shiiiiiit!" came his cry, as he completely bought it down the tall, curling, wave. He tumbled off his board and involuntarily rode the white water into shore in an ungainly tangle of arms, legs, arm rope, and board. When he finally surfaced, he hoicked up his boardies, grabbed his body board, and charged back out past the breakers. The other boys paid Jonno no attention, nor did they make any fun of him, as they all eagerly awaited their own waves on their own body boards. "See? I think you'll be just fine." Nick smiled. "Maybe I can get the hang of this after all," he added, looking at Ryan, as the other boy casually removed his hand from Nick's shoulder. "Last one in's a motherfucker!" yelled Ryan, as he shot down to the ocean at full pace. Nick grinned, and sprinted after his new friend. Was it the end of the holidays, or the beginning of something entirely different?