Deadlines Fabian Black http://www.fabianblackromance.com Gay romance stories with a D/s theme
Published 2010 Copyright...
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Deadlines Fabian Black http://www.fabianblackromance.com Gay romance stories with a D/s theme
Published 2010 Copyright © Fabian Black 2010
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Chapter one Michael surfaced with relief from a nightmare in which he’d been pursued down a flight of stairs by something sinister in a baby’s pushchair. He stared into the darkness, his heart thudding as the dream faded and slipped away leaving nothing more than an elusive hint rumbling around in his mind. As if to echo it a night train passed on the track that ran alongside the back of the house, leaving its own rumble hanging in the air for a second before falling silent. The silence bothered him and he wished another goods wagon would labour along the track leaving a chatter of conversation in its wake. When he and Joseph had first considered buying the house they’d wondered whether the sound of the trains would be intrusive, but decided they liked the property enough to risk it. Built in the Victorian era it had been the residence and workplace of a succession of Station Masters before becoming a place of domicile only. It retained some original features, including a handsome enamelled moulding of a steam train, which was screwed to the red brick wall at the front of the house. Underneath the moulding was a heavy brass plate engraved with a plain statement, The Station Master’s House. Michael had wanted to replace it with a new plate engraved with a merger of their names, or similar. Joseph wouldn’t hear 1
of it. The plate was a part of the history of the house and it would remain. Besides, he had patted Michael’s’ bottom, The Station Master’s House had a ring to it he rather liked. The garden, cultivated from scrubland at the back of the house, was large and long with plenty of mature shrubs such as hawthorn, which served to filter away the worst of the noise from the tracks. What remained, aside from the sporadic rude shriek of a goods train, was an oddly harmonious background hum, a friendly clickity‐click at intervals during the day, declining in regularity throughout the night. Michael’s nocturnal thoughts turned from trains to other modes of transport, ones that had a less soothing affect on him. They chased away all desire to try to regain the state of sleep. Sitting up carefully, so as not to disturb the slumbering Station Master, he swung his legs out of bed and stood up, intending to go downstairs and get a drink. He was halfway down the stairs when the landing light snapped on making him jump almost out of his skin. “What’s the matter?” Joseph gazed enquiringly from the top stair managing to look authoritative even though he was stark naked and had sleep‐rumpled manga hair. “Why are you sneaking around in the dead of night, again?” “I’m not sneaking. I rather resent that implication. It suggests something covert, when I was just thoughtfully trying not to disturb you. I had a weird dream and I couldn’t get back to sleep. I was just going to make myself a cup of tea. You go back to bed, go on,” Michael flicked his fingers in a ‘off you toddle’ kind of gesture. “I won’t be long.” 2
“I warned you not to read that revolting book before settling down to sleep, it’s little wonder you had a bad dream.” Showing no sign of conveniently toddling off Joseph curled a peremptory forefinger, “back to bed. I’ll make the tea.” Michael’s very pretty face developed an unattractive frown. “There’s no need. I can make my own tea perfectly well. I know you find it hard to believe, but I can actually plug in a kettle without mayor mishap. I don’t need mothering.” “Nevertheless,” said Joseph crisply. “I’ll make the tea. That way there’s less chance of you being tempted to substitute it for something else, like you did the other night when you couldn’t sleep. I don’t want you missing your footing and crashing down the stairs again. It’s a miracle you didn’t break your neck. These stairs are steep and they require sober negotiation at the best of times, never mind in the dead of night.” The frown on Michael’s face deepened as his clandestine intention was rumbled. “I thought a small tot of whisky or brandy might help me get back to sleep. I’ll just have the one this time.” “No. Having one at this hour will simply make you less able to sleep and it will give you a headache. You don’t have the metabolism to cope with spirits, you know you don’t.” “I’m over the age of eighteen, I have the ID to prove it and I want a whisky. One won’t kill me for heaven’s sake.” “I said no. You’re having decaffeinated tea and liking it, so put that scowl away and get back to bed.” “Come on, Joseph, ease off.” “I’m not negotiating with you, Michael. Do as you’re told.” Michael obeyed, heading back upstairs. 3
Getting back into bed he watched sourly as Joseph lifted his bathrobe from the back of the bedroom door, slipping it on before heading down to the kitchen to make the tea. Decaffeinated tea! He hated bloody decaff tea. What was the point of tea or coffee for that matter without the caff? It was like drinking wine without the alcohol, there was just no rhyme or reason to it. It was a trend set by so‐called health experts who had everyone running scared about what should and shouldn’t be consumed. It was taking all the fun out of life. The way society was going if anyone died with a smile on their face, they’d be brought back to life and sentenced to live it over again, while being strictly monitored to prevent them from enjoying it. It was an erosion of personal freedom. People had a right to choose whether or not they wanted to be healthy. He irritably scratched at his head. Besides, what use was tea for brooding over? Even tea with the caffeine left in was no good as a brooding companion. Serious brooding, in order to be properly observed, required a serious beverage, the hard stuff, not bloody tea. Tea was for old people who had gone far beyond brooding over life’s injustices. As if to give voice to his grumpiness a train whistle screeched as a late goods train rumbled down the track outside. He might be mistaken, but there seemed a hint of Joseph’s voice in its whistle blowing. He sighed, reluctantly admitting to himself that drinking spirits did often result in a bad headache, and while a few drinks meant he fell asleep fairly quickly he rarely stayed asleep for long. 4
All in all it was best not to push Joseph on the subject of alcohol, not so soon after the falling down the stairs at three in the morning incident. He had meant to have just one single malt whisky in a cup of hot milk, but he didn’t like hot milk, so he just had the malt without the milk. It went straight to his head and wiped out his ability to say no when he generously offered himself another large one, then a third, before deciding to return to bed. He could have sworn there was a stair where he was attempting to put his foot, but it had been an illusion. His foot hit air and he’d gone arse over tit from the top right to the bottom of the stairs. Fortunately he was inebriated enough for his body to have taken on a rubbery quality, which enabled him to bounce rather than shatter. He’d accumulated a few bruises, but nothing serious. He’d thought it quite funny, but the Station Master had not been amused at all. In consequence he had come over all Government Guideline and limited him to a strict number of units per day for an undisclosed period of time. In this case the units were single rather than plural. In other words just one, a glass of wine with dinner, which was far, far lower than even the Government Guide suggested. As Michael had said at the time, shortly before he ended up over Joseph’s knee, it just went to prove that democracy was simply a dictatorship waiting to fall into the wrong hands and what had once been merely a suggestion or recommendation then became an absolute order and source of persecution. That wasn’t why he ended up over Joseph’s knee. He had ended up over Joseph’s knee not for words, but for action. To be precise it was for throwing an expensive wine glass across the 5
room in a display of democratic bad temper at not being permitted another glass of his favourite Wolf Blass Cabernet. Dictators didn’t care for that kind of freedom of expression, especially not his dictator who ruled the domestic empire with a hand of iron and upon occasion a paddle of wood.
Lying back against the pillows Michael gazed up at the
ceiling hoping Joseph wouldn’t be too long with the tea, not that he was eager to drink it or anything. He just didn’t like being alone for any period of time. The ceiling despite the benefit of several coats of quality white emulsion still had fine cracks in it. The trains caused vibration to pass through the land and gently jostle the house causing hairline cracks in walls and ceilings. It was nothing serious according to the surveyor. The Victorians built solid so there was no danger of the house tumbling down. The cracks were like wrinkles on a face, he had said, an inevitable part of the aging process. Michael stopped staring at the ceiling and abruptly sat up again. He hadn’t cared for the analogy of wrinkles. He turned his scrutiny on the wallpaper left behind by the previous owners as an asset, it being recently applied and appearing in the estate agents’ blurb as: ‘newly renovated master bedroom.’ It was a Laura Ashley pattern, shaggy oriental flowers in bilious shades of mauve. The curtains matched so that when drawn everything blended and you couldn’t tell exactly where the window was. The effect was claustrophobic. It would have to go. The whole house needed redecorating. Michael wanted to hire people in, professional interior designers, but Joseph, Sir Parsimonious, said they could do it 6
themselves at a fraction of the cost. It would be fun, something for them to do together on weekends and holidays. Michael grimaced. Much like decaff tea, DIY was not much to his taste.
7
Chapter two Downstairs, Joseph shoved teabags into a couple of mugs and willed the kettle to boil a bit faster. His feet were cold. He needed slippers. Victorian houses cried out for slippers, even extensively renovated Victorian houses. Somehow, despite modern damp proofing and heating systems, the bricks and mortar retained memories of past Dickensian winters and passed them on to current inhabitants. The Victorians of course, being solid and sensible people, or so history portrays them, had worn slippers made from worthy materials that kept feet snug and protected from the bite of cold floorboards and tiles. England could not have built an empire without slippers. It was a well‐known fact that imperialists had warm feet, cold hearts perhaps, but warm feet. He would definitely have to get a pair, old fashioned though they were. Michael would poke fun at him, but he didn’t care. The kettle boiled with a rush of steam and he poured water into cups, stirring the bags around to aid brewing. There was something on his mind, Michael’s mind that is, he was sure of it. It would have to be gotten to the bottom of because when Michael had things on his mind it usually signalled trouble. He had a convoluted way of thinking and it often didn’t bode well 8
for the people around him. Joseph took the teabags out of the mugs, poured in milk, stirred and picked them up, using his chin to switch off the kitchen light as he exited the chill kitchen. He felt a spontaneous thrust of pleasure as he walked into the bedroom and viewed Michael, and not just because he was easy on the eye, even with a petulant scowl on his face, but simply because he was there, his man in their bed. “There you are, my treasure, a nice cup of tea,” he handed him a mug, placing his own on the bedside cabinet before climbing back into bed. “I did you a favour making it. It’s freezing down there. My feet are like ice after standing on those tiles. We’ll have to buy some scatter rugs from Ikea to act as friendly islands on an unfriendly floor.”
“Power has its price,” Michael took a sip of hot liquid,
grimacing slightly at its caffeine freeness, “in your case cold feet…hey, you sadist,” he squeaked a protest as the frozen extremities in question touched his. Joseph grinned and then picked up his mug taking a drink before saying casually, “second disturbed night this week. Have you got something on your mind that you’re not telling me about?” “No.” Michael inwardly cursed the defensive tint that inadvertently coloured the word he’d meant to sound plainly assertive. Damn it! He inwardly cursed again as the mug of tea was gently removed from his hands and a pair of eyes peered searchingly into his. It was just like Joseph to hone in on the negative‐negative, which he’d hoped had sounded positive. “Michael?” 9
“Correct name, give that man a banana.” Michael gave one of his disarming smiles. He was good at disarming smiles. Most people forgot why they might be annoyed with him after being subjected to one of them. Joseph inclined his head in recognition of the smile and then repeated the question disguised as a name. “Michael?” Michael sighed. Joseph was like a ferret with a rabbit once he’d got his teeth into something and he was one of the few people who seemed immune to his smiles. Sometimes he wondered what even prompted him to keep trying to win him over, vanity or madness, the thrill of a challenge perhaps? “Honestly, there’s nothing on my mind, nothing at all. It’s a blank canvas. May I have my tea back please? I wouldn’t like it to go cold, not after all the trouble you went to in making it…so not like a glass of whisky.” Joseph handed him the mug, “you might as well tell me what’s bugging you.” “Trust me, aside from your good self, there’s nothing bugging me.” He lifted his mug towards his mouth, but a hand intercepted it before he could take a sip. “You’re brooding on something,” said Joseph quietly. “I know the signs. I want you to share it with me, Mike, sooner rather than later when you’ve created an uncontrollable monster from something harmless. That’s if you haven’t already. Is that deadline at work weighing on your mind?” “Why should it be?” “Because deadlines are never your strong point and you were less than keen on the job in the first place. Is it bothering you?” 10
“No.” Much to his annoyance Michael’s mouth seemed to speak the next few words against his will, “well, maybe a bit.” Living with Joseph was beginning to give him a conscience and a guilty one at that, even when he had nothing to feel guilty about. It was Stalin’s Russia all over again. State induced paranoia. He’d have to watch his back or more to the point watch his mouth, in case it collaborated and turned traitor on him.
“A bit, what do you mean by a bit?” asked Joseph
unaware that his concern was being interpreted as a communist ploy to winkle out insurgents, prior to having them shipped to Siberia never to be seen again.
“A bit, you know, as in not a lot, rather than in
something a horse clenches between its teeth.” Michael had said as much as he wanted to say on the subject, in fact more than he wanted to say. That was the trouble with Joseph. He was always prompting him to say more than he wanted to say. Sometimes he didn’t realise he had anything to say until Joseph made him say it. He was like a psychological detective hunting out information Michael didn’t even know he’d hidden. He spoke firmly, “much as I’m loving this tea, I’m going to leave it and go back to sleep.” Joseph, however, had got the bit clenched between his teeth. He wanted to expand on the deadline subject and nothing short of an earthquake was going to stop him. Michael was concealing something. It might be insignificant, but there was something slightly amiss. He could smell it and it was within his nature to trace to source any slightly iffy odours. During a row Michael had once accused him of being a son of a bitch; 11
well maybe the bitch in question was a bloodhound bitch. “Are you still on course for meeting the deadline? I know you when you’re working on something that only engages half your interest. You’ll use every method of procrastination and sit doodling and daydreaming rather than working.” Michael threw out a verbal aniseed ball to try and cover the scent, “I’m tired now, Jossy. I need to sleep or I’ll never get up in the morning and I’ll have dark circles under my eyes.” “Don’t worry,” said Joseph, unaffected by the metaphorical aniseed ball, as well as by Michael’s use of his pet name for him. “I’ll make good and sure you get up on time. Is the deadline a problem? You have until this Friday. Do you think you’ll need an extension? Because if so ask Tom if one can be arranged tomorrow, instead of prevaricating and leaving it until the eleventh hour. You’ll end up bad tempered and stressed otherwise and I’ll cop the fall out.” “Actually,” said Michael with a casual sniff. “I completed and submitted the project for approval on Monday.” “Why on earth didn’t you tell me? You usually insist I take you out to celebrate when you finish a job.” Joseph suddenly smiled and kissed Michael’s cheek, “well done you, and finished ahead of time too, that’s worth celebrating. I bet Tom was pleased. He’s usually snapping at your heels to get you to finish. I’m proud of you. You’re getting so much better at prioritising and organising your time. I’ll take you somewhere nice for dinner this evening. We’ll push the boat out and go to Santoro’s. Champagne and candlelight for my boy tonight.” Michael frowned. “Yeah, well don’t be too proud.” Putting the tea mug down on the cabinet he got out of bed, 12
heading for the window where he irritably flicked the curtains open. “What’s the point of closing these, no one can see in.” He stared out into the darkness, pausing for a second to examine his reflection in the dark pane. “The work landed back on my desk first thing this morning.” He made his reflection look sorrowful, “all red lined and rejected, so there’s nothing much to celebrate.” Warning bells sounded in Joseph’s head as it clicked that Monday had been the night Michael had got up, had one too many and almost broken his neck on the stairs, and now here he was again, wandering sleepless in the early hours. He too got out of bed, walking across to the window, “why didn’t you tell me you’d completed the project on Monday? Ahead of time is something of an event for you. I would have thought you’d have wanted to share your triumph, why didn’t you?” “Modesty, I didn’t want to appear to be bragging.” “Nonsense. You blow your own trumpet more often than a jazz musician,” Joseph turned the slim figure around to face him. “You expected it to be rejected, didn’t you? On what grounds was it rejected, what specifications or target hadn’t you met?” “I did what I was asked to do,” Michael refused to meet Joseph’s eye. “It’s not my fault that fuck‐faced accountants have the last word over what gets passed. Apparently, as it stands, my design is too expensive to produce commercially.” “I don’t expect Tom was happy. I remember him saying he was keen to make an impression with the Company you were designing the product for. They’re a multinational. What did he have to say?” 13
“If you must know he accused me of deliberately ignoring the client’s needs and putting the contract at risk. He’s an idiot. Why would I do that?” “Indeed, why would you do that?” Joseph gazed at him. “Sounds to me like Tom may have a point. It’s your job to develop the product in line with the brief given by the client. You’re supposed to liase closely with them. You must have been well aware of the budget you had to work with and the market being aimed for. You should have tailored the design accordingly.” Taking Michael’s hand he towed him back to the bed and sat down, pulling him down beside him. “Are you still angry with Tom because he gave Stan Fuller the office manager promotion and not you? Is this your way of retaliating, of getting revenge on him?” “No,” said Michael indignantly, “though why Tom promoted Stan, bore the arse off everyone, Fuller is beyond my understanding. Nobody likes him you know.” “And I suppose they all adore you,” said Joseph dryly. He gathered Michael’s hands into his own, “I still don’t understand what prompted you to apply for the position in the first place. You’re not qualified or experienced enough. You’re still cutting your teeth when it comes to work. I agree with Tom’s assessment. You don’t have the emotional maturity for team leadership, nor do you have the right attitude to work in general. You’re a versatile designer, but you’ve still got a lot to learn. It takes years to accumulate the sort of experience that Stan has. Be honest, you’re not good at organisation and 14
management, and you hate any kind of responsibility anyway. You always say it fetters your creativity.” Michael shrugged, “I didn’t want the job. It’s too much like hard work and too much boring admin as well. Fuller‐shit Stan is welcome to it. I only applied to irk him.” He grinned wickedly. “I told him I’d get preferential consideration because Tom is family now I’ve officially moved in with you. It really wound him up. He just about popped a gasket.” “That’s a disgraceful thing to admit to,” said Joseph sternly. You deserve to have your backside tanned. I hope you’re ashamed of yourself.” Michael tried to look as if he was in order to please Joseph’s sense of morality, but he wasn’t. He considered winding up Stan to be one of the highlights of his working day, a perk of the job. He bristled, what was it Stan had called him, office eye candy ‐ a bimbo with balls instead of tits. He said he’d stepped in puddles that had greater depth. Flaming cheek!
“If the promotion isn’t bothering you then what is,
because something is definitely rankling you? You’re not going back to bed until you tell me.” Michael chewed his lip for a moment, and then finally came out with his grievance. “Tom gives everyone else the best client jobs, the most interesting ones, the big money ones. I get all the boring, basic bread and butter jobs. I’ve been on the Company staff for long enough now. I should get a crack at some of the bigger high profile stuff.” “Ah,” Joseph nodded. “Now we’re getting to the crux of the matter, jealousy. I take it one of the others has been given an 15
assignment you deem to be better than the one you were given for some reason?”
“I get lumbered with a no frills, bottom end of the
market, fold away baby buggy, and Stan gets to work on designing a new state of the art bike for one of the most famous Companies in the world. This is the most prestigious commission we’ve ever had and Tom gives it to him, even though I begged him to let me have a go at it. It’s not fair, Joseph. He’s your brother and you have shares in the Company, can’t you find a way of making him give me a shot at it? I’m never going to get nominated for an industry prize if I’m stuck designing boring stuff. You must know things about him, things you can blackmail him with, or things you could tell me that I could use to blackmail him with. I really, really want that job.” “We don’t always get what we want and sometimes that might be because we don’t deserve to. Tom’s work decisions are none of my business. I don’t see why you’re so miffed about it anyway. It’s only a bike when all’s said and done. It’s just a thing with wheels, same as a baby buggy.” “Yeah right,” Michael pulled a face, “only, his thing with wheels is a stunt bike aimed at professional world class riders. My thing with wheels is aimed at little creatures that dribble. You won’t see many baby strollers being ridden at speed up vert ramps by Travis Pastrana and doing mid‐air stunts like the kiss of death! To your average pushchair occupant the kiss of death is something slobbery given by its granny. It’s not fair. What the fuck does Stan know about that kind of thing? The man is a real stiff. He’ll probably add a shopping basket, a fog lamp and a fucking bell to the design.” 16
Joseph’s dark eyebrows morphed into a mono brow of bristling disapproval. “Stop swearing, you know I don’t like it. You have to face facts. Stan has over twenty years experience on you. He’s worked for various high‐ranking businesses on hundreds of different products. I believe he did a stint in car design before joining Tom’s Company, which makes him eminently more qualified than you are for this particular job. Don’t knock the man’s obvious ability, just because you dislike him. Incidentally you only dislike him because he’s immune to your charms and refuses to be bowled over. What was the outcome with Tom on the pushchair?”
“He expects me to rework and submit the design by the
original deadline this Friday. Well he can get stuffed. I’m not doing it. It’s basic junior stuff.” “Face it, Michael, you are the junior and in more ways than one. Your attitude is very junior to say the least. In fact it’s downright babyish. What it amounts to is a fit of sulking because you haven’t been given what you want.” Joseph wagged a paternal finger, “it’s true to say that if it turns out well Stan’s assignment will prove very lucrative for the Company, but the same could be said for the product you’ve been given to work on. The pushchair isn’t likely to be a one off. If it’s commercially successful then the client will use Tom’s business to design more products for their range. It may not be as prestigious or as much fun, but when you think about it, your assignment is just as important as the one Stan has been given to work on. You should be proud to do it.” Michael rolled his eyes, “fine, whatever. Take his side against mine. If you’re done with your little pep talk come 17
morality lecture I’ll be going back to bed now?” He made to crawl across to his own side of the bed, but didn’t get far. The back of the cotton nightshirt he favoured in lieu of pyjamas was roughly seized. “Joseph!” He let out a yell of protest as he was dragged back across the bed and turned over Joseph’s knee with the nightshirt bunched up around his waist. He reached back, frantically trying to grasp the hem in order to drag it down over his bare backside.
“I don’t like your attitude,” Joseph caught Michael’s
hand, firmly pinning it against his back before landing a smack to the centre of his bottom, eliciting a yelp. “I will not be brushed off in such an insulting manner.” He smacked harder, causing more yelps, “and no as it happens, I haven’t finished lecturing.” To prove the point he took his hand on a tour of Michael’s squirming backside. “Purposely sabotaging an assignment because you’re angry about not getting to work on what you consider to be a more glamorous project is not on. You draw a good salary from the business and to my mind that means you’re honour bound to do the jobs you’re assigned to do, without playing the jealous prima donna and messing them up. Tom cuts you far too much slack. He needs to toughen up where you’re concerned and next time I see him I shall tell him so. There,” he applied one last handprint to the under curve of Michael’s thoroughly reddened bottom. “I’m done lecturing now. You may go to bed.” Biting back a sarcastic retort Michael got under the duvet and curled up, rubbing his stinging backside. 18
“I’m annoyed with you, make no mistake,” Joseph shrugged off his robe and climbed into bed. “You should have spoken to me days ago about all this nonsense. I could have helped you keep it in proportion, but no, you wilfully chose to hug your resentment all to yourself, like a spiteful little boy who hasn’t been given the sweets he wants and plans a playground revenge.” He switched off the lamp and lay down, “you’re going to meet that deadline properly. If you don’t, it won’t only be Tom you have to deal with, it’ll be me and unlike him I have a paddle, which I’m not afraid to use. I’ll demonstrate the real meaning of discipline. You won’t be able to sit down for a week. I’m not having you jeopardise an important contract for Tom in a fit of selfish pique. Now, are you going to lie there feeling sorry for yourself on the edge of the bed all night, or are you coming over for a cuddle?” He took the ensuing silence as a vote for the former. “Very well, stay there and sulk like a baby. Goodnight.”
“I’m not sulking. Why is it that whenever I take refuge in
a dignified silence you always claim I’m sulking?” “Because I know the difference between a dignified silence and a sulk, and what you’re doing has all the hallmarks of sulking.” “I’m entitled to sulk. If you’d stayed asleep, like you were supposed to I would have gotten up, had my whisky, come back to bed and gone back to sleep, without having a conversation I didn’t want to have in the first place. It isn’t fair. You make me have tea I didn’t want, a conversation I didn’t want and then you spank me for getting edgy, and it really hurt by the way, not that I expect you to care about that.” 19
“You’re right, I don’t. Punishment is meant to hurt, and I spanked you for holding out on me and for your rotten attitude, not for being edgy. I can tolerate edgy. What I won’t tolerate is edgy crossing the line into unpleasant, uncalled for rudeness. Now, I believe you were engaged in a dignified silence. I’ll thank you to return to it. You’re not the only one who has to get up in the morning. I’d like to try and get back to sleep.” Michael maintained his dignified silence for a good ten minutes, but then capitulated, turning over and spooning against Joseph. “I’m not cuddling you. I’m just cold. I’m going to hunt out the electric blanket tomorrow and I’m upping the voltage on your half. I’ll bloody fry you, see how you like having your rump roasted.”
“A touch more respect from you would be appreciated.
You’re far too lippy,” said Joseph sternly, while grinning into the darkness. He turned over, “and at least being fried will save me from your perishing cold feet.” “Huh, pot calling the kettle black there, bossy Jossy.” “Enough. Not another sound. Go to sleep.” Cuddling into the Station Master’s comfortable arms Michael obediently closed his eyes.
20
Chapter three As night receded and morning crept forth, Michael dreamed again, his unguarded mind leaking a random fragment from the stronghold of memory into his sleeping consciousness. In the dream he was at the seaside. He heard the sound of the waves lapping the shore and the echoing cry of gulls circling in a sun‐drenched sky. He could smell the butterscotch aroma of sun block cream on hot skin. Youthful laughter rode the sea breeze as they jumped over the frothy breakers curling lazily in, their bare feet slapping wet sand. Flopping down at the water’s edge they let the waves tickle their toes while shading their eyes to scan the horizon and watch the ships, pondering on their cargoes and destinations. “Time to go. It’s almost dinnertime.” “I don’t want to go, I like it here.” “We’re going. I promised to have you back for dinner. Come on, I’ll race you back along the beach.” “All right, but you have to let me win.” “No, I don’t have to let you win, it isn’t winning if I let you win.” “Then I’m too tired to race. I want a piggyback.” Teasing laughter, “I want never gets…” 21
“I want a piggyback, I want one! I’m tired. Mummy says you mustn’t let me get tired.” “You’re not tired, you’re just lazy. I’m not giving you a piggyback. You need exercise to build you up. Come on, stop whining and hold my hand, we’ll run together. It’ll be fun, we’ll leave footprints in the sand…” Michael forced open his eyelids, dispelling dream visions. An early morning commuter train ran along the track outside, rushing on into the distance, leaving a lingering echo of its presence, which faded gradually to silence. For a moment the silence hung heavy weighting the air like a farewell left unspoken. Turning quickly onto his side Michael studied Joseph’s sleeping face, the full lips, slightly parted, the dark brows arched above wide set eyes, eyes that when open shifted colour between ocean shades of grey‐blue to blue‐green according to the interior climate of their owner. His jaw was shadowed with heavy stubble. He could grow a reasonable beard in a matter of days. There was no prettiness about his face or body, nothing transitional, they showed no hint of the child or adolescent he had once been. At thirty‐six he was masculine and fully mature, a man in the prime of life. Michael gently traced a finger over the stubble, sexy too. He moved the finger down Joseph’s throat to his chest, stroking the coarse hairs. His body was firm and well toned but not overly muscled. Michael didn’t care for gym built torsos with their bulging pecs and exaggerated egg box abs. He knew from experience that their creators were self‐ absorbed and had little spare time or inclination to adore others. 22
Joseph made a lateral transition from slumber to wakefulness as Michael’s tongue circled the head of his morning erection causing genuine arousal to replace an automatic reflex and keep him hard. He lay for a few moments enjoying the sensation and then he reached for Michael, pulling him into his arms, biting kisses onto his shoulder and neck before seeking his mouth. Michael played cowboy, straddling Joseph and slowly impaling himself on his lube‐slicked cock. He rested for a moment adjusting to the sense of fullness, taking pleasure in having Joseph’s thick, heavily veined penis inside him. Positioning his hands on Joseph’s shoulders he pressed his knees into the mattress and began to ride the shaft, slowly at first, then faster, concentrating on losing himself in the physical sensations of sex, finally feeling Joseph’s body approach climax and arch beneath him, his hands gripping his hips. “That was a wonderful morning alarm call,” Joseph wrapped his arms around Michael’s sweat hazed body as he collapsed on the bed beside him. He kissed him tenderly, “thank you.” “You’re welcome,” Michael completed the little ritual of courtesy that always occurred after sex. He snuggled closer into Joseph’s arms. “What’s wrong?” Joseph rubbed a strand of soft, honey‐blond hair between his fingers. “What do you mean what’s wrong, was I off stroke or something? I thought I performed rather well, brilliantly in fact. You hardly had to do a thing except come.” “I gave you a generous helping hand towards the end, though admittedly you were wonderful, but then why wouldn’t you 23
be.” Joseph smiled and gave a mischievous little wink. “I taught you everything you know.” Michael giggled delightfully, “ah, you only think you did, when actually you fell for my innocent little virgin act. All along I was in fact the hot star of numerous porno movies, going by the working name of Jonnie Hardon and appearing in such classics as ‘fuck me tender,’ alongside renowned porn king Pelvis Pressingme.” “Behave, you bad boy,” Joseph, laughing, swiped Michael’s flank. He sobered, “and getting back on subject, what’s wrong? There was urgency in your action. What hurt, real or imagined, was it a panacea for?” “You know what they say, Joseph, never look a gift horse in the mouth, especially if you’re naked, because it just might chew off your nuts.” He sat up. “Michael?” There it was again, the question disguised as a name. Michael gave it reply, but not answer. “I wanted sex.” Joseph quirked an eyebrow, saying dryly, “and of course whatever Michael wants, Michael gets.” Michael grinned. “See, you do understand how it’s supposed to work. Now if we can just build on that simple principle and take it beyond the bedroom. We could start with that new higher spec game computer I want. It’s not like I’d have to go into debt. My parents would give me the money if I asked them.” Joseph raised himself to a sitting position, suddenly serious, “I said no. You don’t need it and that aside you’re too 24
old to be leeching off your parents. I told you not to mention it again, didn’t I?” “Yes, you did, I’m sorry.” Michael slipped his nightshirt over his head. Re‐emerging he gazed at Joseph for a moment, and then reached his arms around his neck in a silent embrace. “Tell me,” murmured Joseph, gently rubbing his morning rough face against Michael’s smoother one. “Tell me why you’re sad this morning?” “I’m not sad. I never get sad.” “Yes you do, you often get sad, you just disguise it as something else or hide it under an action, like sex.” “I dreamed, that’s all,” Michael gave admission to the fact, “and it made me want sex.” “Was it an erotic dream?” “No.” “Then why did it make you want to have sex?” “I like sex. It makes me feel better.” “So you were sad then, if you needed to feel better so urgently?” “Joseph,” Michael’s voice sounded a rebuke, “sometimes I think you watch too many episodes of Time Team. You’re always trying to dig things up, things that usually aren’t there.” “Was it Jude?” Joseph made an intuitive guess. “Was he who you dreamed about?” He studied Michael’s face, noting the ripple of disquiet that hearing the name always brought to his face. “Yes,” Michael reluctantly whispered the confirming word. Joss had done it again. He’d successfully interrogated him and 25
made him say something he didn’t want to say. He was so Gestapo. “I wondered.” Joseph hesitated then said hopefully, “tell me about the dream.” What he really meant was tell me about Jude, but he knew that to say so would guarantee there would be no answer. Michael got off the bed, “I’ll shower first this morning, I won’t take long, and then I’ll make us some tea, proper tea.” He got to the door, and then turned, “sex was nice for you too. I made you feel good.” It was a question disguised as a statement, and Joseph nodded by way of validation, sensing that this was what was being asked for. Michael stepped over the threshold of the bedroom door, then back again, “Joss?” Joseph waited. “I wanted you, as well as the sex I mean.” “I know,” he smiled as Michael left the room and then lay down hooking an arm behind his head. So, Jude had paid another nocturnal visit. He wished he could say he understood about Jude, but the truth was he didn’t, because he didn’t know enough to understand. Jude was an aspect of Michael’s life over which he had no jurisdiction. He hadn’t even been aware of his existence until Michael called out the name in his sleep a fortnight earlier. It happened the first night they moved into the Station Master’s house and then again the following night. He had asked about him, this Jude, an unexpectedly jealous part of him 26
demanding to know whether he was some former, younger, boyfriend who Michael still hankered after. Jude was not a former boyfriend as it turned out. He was something altogether more surprising. He was Michael’s brother and he was dead. Joseph had been staggered by the revelation. He had asked questions. Why on earth hadn’t Michael ever mentioned Jude before, what had happened to him? He was given one more snippet of information. Jude had been his older brother and had died of leukaemia when he was sixteen. Michael had then strongly stated that Jude was a forbidden subject. He did not want to talk about him ever again. He did not want to be asked any more questions. Jude was gone, end of story. He had then become so agitated and upset that Joseph had backed off, realising he didn’t have the right to demand control over things which had taken place before he and Michael came together as a couple. Not even Michael’s parents, Alma and Robert, spoke of this other son and their home bore no evidence of him. There were no photographs. There were plenty of Michael at various stages of his life, but it was as if this other child had never existed. Soon after the revelation they had paid their first visit to the Station house. It had not been successful. Michael had had some kind of argument with them the night before moving out of the parental home and was still apt to be cool with them. He complained they had mithered him with nonsense when he was busy trying to pack up his stuff ready for the move. He claimed it was because they didn’t want him to leave. 27
They still saw him as a child who didn’t know its own mind and he was sick of them always trying to hold him back. On the day of their visit he laid claim to a headache, leaving Joseph to collect them from the station. He put in an appearance when they arrived at the house, but was irritable and offhand with them, crossly telling them to stop fussing when they expressed concern about his headache. He was especially brusque with his father, almost reducing the big, gentle man to tears with his snappishness. As soon as lunch was over he disappeared back upstairs leaving Joseph to show them around the house and garden. He took the opportunity to bring up the subject of Jude. Their reaction, like Michael’s had been, was one of shock on hearing the name. Robert had then looked hopeful, asking what Michael had told him with regard to Jude. Joseph was forced to admit the circumstances, at which point Alma sharply vetoed the subject. Michael did not want Jude spoken of because it upset him too much and they had promised. Joseph had already formed the opinion that Michael’s parents were a little too anxious to pander to their son’s demands, regardless of whether they were good for him or anyone else for that matter. Two plain people had produced a child of unexpected beauty and were mesmerised by him. You could see it in their faces whenever they looked at him, almost like they were under a spell. He could understand their devotion, but was still shocked by how much they permitted Michael’s wants to dictate to them, even when it came to something as momentous as how they dealt with the death of another son. 28
Nurture as much as nature had helped mould Michael’s personality, an aspect of which was to block anything that might cause him any kind of personal inconvenience or discomfort, or detract from his immediate wants. This flawed policy applied even to the memory of his dead brother. He had blocked him out and demanded his parents do the same. Joseph didn’t approve. It was unhealthy in his opinion. Still, he thought sadly, it wasn’t as if poor Jude were a bothersome ghost. He was no more than a name that Michael murmured in his sleep, a whisper that hung on the air for a moment before vanishing. He couldn’t help but wonder what Jude had been like. Had he been as lovely and as spoiled as his brother? His hope was that Michael would one day choose to share Jude with him, instead of keeping him imprisoned in a corner of his mind. Assigning him a free portion of his memory would ensure he didn’t have to break and enter his brother’s consciousness via the dream world. Painful memories were a bit like deadlines, they didn’t disappear just because you pushed them to the back of your mind and refused to think about them. They were still there, waiting to be met.
“Joseph!” Michael’s peeved voice floated from the
bathroom. “I can’t get this stupid shower to run warm, it’ll freeze my balls off. I want you to come and fix it now.” The command was followed by a heavy thudding sound and Joseph hurriedly flung aside the duvet and got up, shouting, “thumping the unit won’t alter the temperature. Leave it be or I’ll tan your backside.” He hastened to the bathroom. 29
“Not bad, old man, twice before breakfast and you’re not even out of breath. I suppose a hat trick is out of the question?” Michael picked up his nightshirt from the bathroom floor. “You suppose right,” Joseph vigorously towelled his hair, “twice before breakfast is quite enough for anyone, even a superstar porno slut like you. Go and make the tea you promised while I get dressed.” “A lack of sexual stamina is the first sign of aging you know,” Michael gave a cheeky grin followed by a yelp of laughter as Joseph flicked the damp towel at his backside. “Give me a shout when you’re dressed and I’ll help you downstairs. I wouldn’t want you falling in your weakened state.” He dodged another flick of the towel and headed for the stairs, still laughing.
30
Chapter four Joseph, half dressed, walked into the kitchen, halting in the doorway, arrested by the sight greeting his eyes. Michael appeared to have lost his head, or at least it was outside the kitchen, poking through the flap that had been set in the door for the use of the previous owner’s pet. The rest of him was inside kneeling on all fours, his nightshirt, due to his position, doing a scant job of covering his backside. This was eccentric behaviour, even for Michael. Joseph shook his head in wonderment. “I hate to break it to you, treasure, but slim as you are you’ll never get through there, it’s a cat flap not a brat flap. Why don’t you just unlock the door if you want to go in the garden? Better still, use the bathroom, it’s more hygienic and private.”
“Oh very funny I’m sure,” the bottom shuffled
backwards and Michael’s head reappeared. Sitting cross‐legged on the floor he gazed up at Joseph, his vivid blue eyes shining with a boyish excitement. “You’ll never ever guess what I’ve just seen?” “Must be quite something to put that look on your face,” Joseph smiled, taken and held captive by the way Michael could, upon occasion, become an unadulterated child again. 31
There was nothing gamey in it, nothing manipulative. It was a pure and beautiful thing, an ability to be not just delighted or pleased, but wholly enchanted by something, to be absorbed by wonder. Joseph’s grandfather had had the same ability. When it happened the years fell away from him and a boy would gaze out through an old man’s eyes. Michael wasn’t exactly an old man to begin with, but at that moment sitting cross‐legged on the floor, his eyes shining, he had the mien of a child who believed he’d just encountered the real Santa Claus. Pulling out a kitchen chair Joseph straddled it, resting his arms along its back. “All right, my lovely, end my suspense, what did you see?”
“There was a fox in the kitchen when I came down, a real
live fox. It’s the first time I’ve ever seen one in the flesh,” said Michael, his face radiant. “You should have seen it, Joss. I don’t know who was more surprised, it or me. We just stared at each other for a moment and then it shot out of the cat flap. I was looking to see if I could spot where it ran off too.” “A fox?” Joseph tried not to frown, reluctant to nullify any of Michael’s honest joy, but not sharing it at all. He had grown up in the country and foxes were no novelty to him. He was not a fan. He had witnessed firsthand what savagery they were capable of. He spoke gently, as if indeed he were talking to a child, “they’re undoubtedly handsome creatures. I don’t want to pop your bubble, but we’ll have to have the flap sealed up. It must have come in hoping to find an easy meal of cat food. I don’t want foxes roaming around the kitchen, Mike. They carry all kinds of disease and they can be extremely vicious if they 32
feel cornered. Do you remember me telling you how I got the scar on my leg, when I disturbed a fox that was slaughtering my grandfather’s Bantams?” Michael lurched to his feet, a frown of displeasure replacing boyish excitement. Caught as he was on the thorn of his own present desire, the past, particularly someone else’s past, was irrelevant to him. “Have you NO heart. It was beautiful. I don’t want the cat flap sealing. I want it to come back. I want to draw it.” The frown cleared, “I might be able to tame it. It would be so cool having a pet fox. I could take it for walks. Maybe if I buy some cat food.”
“You can put that idea right out of your mind.” Getting
up from the chair, Joseph spoke dryly, “don’t go getting carried away with Doctor Dolittle fantasies. Foxes are wild animals and as such they’re not meant to be pets. Like I said, they carry all manner of disease; rabies, TB, ticks and fleas. We don’t need it wandering around the kitchen. I’ll have to thoroughly disinfect everything.” He kissed Michael on the cheek, “go and shower again. Your knees are dirty. God knows what germs you’ve picked up crawling around the floor in its wake with your balls hanging out.” Michael shook his head in despair, “we have a fox come into our kitchen and all you can do is go on about germs. Do you know, Joss, I sometimes suspect your father is an impostor and you were actually sired under the sink by a bottle of bleach. You are so unromantic.” “I refute that allegation with every fibre of my being. Just because I’m practical doesn’t mean I can’t be romantic as well, given the right occasion.” He delivered a light slap to Michael’s 33
bottom, “upstairs, shower, go on…no, wait, first tell me where you’ve put my work shirts? You said you’d ironed them last night, but they’re not in the wardrobe. Have you left them hanging in the utility room?” Michael’s face suddenly took on an oblique look that was about as far from unadulterated child as you could get and Joseph mentally braced himself to take delivery of what he suspected might be a load of incoming manure.
“Actually, I didn’t say I had ironed them. You said it was
my turn to do the ironing and I said okay, but it was never specified when I had to do it. There was no specific deadline set as I recall.” Yes indeed, there was a distinct whiff of dung in the air. Joseph gazed steadily at Michael, “when I came home last night, I asked if you’d done the laundry and you said yes.” “Ah, but you never asked if I’d done the ironing. I had done the laundry, but laundry doesn’t necessarily include ironing. Laundry is putting dirty washing into the washing machine, at least that’s my interpretation of it.” Joseph folded his arms, “in this house, as you know, doing the laundry means doing the full cycle from dirty to washed to dried to ironed to hung up in the wardrobe, or put away in drawers.” “But not necessarily all in one go. I mean I know that’s how you like to work, but I have a different approach. I like to progress a stage at a time, washing one day, ironing another.” “So, what are you telling me here, that you completed only the washing part last night, and my work shirts are still in the tumble dryer, waiting to be ironed?” 34
“No. They’re still in the washing machine.” Michael, sensing that the sand in the hourglass of Joseph’s patience was fast running out, adopted his appealing look. “I got distracted and didn’t get round to transferring them into the dryer as such. Besides, you’ve got plenty of clean tops and t‐shirts. You look really nice in casual wear. I don’t know why you insist on the white shirt and tie thing. It’s so old fashioned, no one suits up for work any more.”
“I do,” said Joseph. “I like to wear a suit, shirt and tie for
work. I enjoy looking smart, it puts me in a more professional frame of mind.” He ran a hand through his thick brown hair, saddened that the morning was taking a sour turn. “You’re not playing fair. You’re not pulling your weight around the house. You had all last evening to do the laundry, while I was at my meeting. It’s hardly back breaking labour is it, putting a load of washing into an automatic washer and then transferring it to an automatic dryer, before ironing the handful of things that actually need ironing. It’s not as if you had to trawl down to the river with a basket on your head and beat things off a rock. I bet you were sitting in front of your computer all evening playing silly games. It’s just not good enough. I do my share around the house and I expect you to do yours. If need be I’ll draw up a rota.” Michael scowled. His appealing look obviously wasn’t appealing enough where Joseph was concerned. The man had a heart of stone, concrete in fact and probably strengthened with cold steel rods. “Can’t you wear the same shirt you wore yesterday? It can’t be that dirty. It’s not as if you work down a coalmine.” 35
“No I can’t. It has a coffee stain on it. I have another meeting this afternoon. A fine impression I’ll make in a stained shirt...hello, I’m Joseph Townsend, head of the fiscal department and all out slob. Would you like to suck my coffee stain and smell the stale sweat stains under my arms from yesterday?” “I’ll go and shove a shirt in the dryer now, if it’ll take that look off your face. It won’t take long to dry, not if I put just one in, then I’ll iron it, all right?” “No, it is not all right, and you know it. Quite aside from the grudging, ungracious nature of your offer, it’s a waste of money and energy running the dryer for one item.” “Don’t panic. I’ll pay the bloody bill.” Michael pulled at his nightshirt. He hated it when Joseph came over all serious and strait‐laced about piddling things, like laundry. It made him feel oddly uncomfortable, and he didn’t like feeling uncomfortable, not in any sense, let alone oddly. “We’re not exactly knocking on the workhouse door, and I’m sure the ozone layer won’t fall completely into holes just because we run the dryer at under‐ capacity for once.” “That’s not the point. It’s a matter of duty and respect,” Joseph suddenly tired of the conversation. He flicked a hand towards the door. “Go and shower. We’ll discuss this later.” Twisting a portion of shirt material between his fingers Michael peeped forlornly at Joseph from beneath long, lush lashes. “What about your shirt?” “I’ll see to it, go on.” “You’re annoyed, aren’t you?” “Yes, I am, why on earth shouldn’t I be. Just go and shower.” “You think I’m selfish and lazy, don’t you?” 36
“You are selfish and lazy, there’s no think about it. If I typed selfish and lazy into the Google search engine it would come up with your name plus a street map and instructions on how to get to you.” “That’s not very nice,” Michael pouted. “Anyway, I don’t see why we can’t get people in to do the housework, especially the ironing. I hate ironing.” “We may live in a Victorian house, but its one at the working man’s end of the scale, not the Lord of the Manor’s end. The mortgage is crippling enough. We can’t run to servants and a butler as well, and besides, it would only encourage your idleness.” “Housework is a waste of time. You have to redo the same tasks over and over. I’m not cut out for the domestic scene. I’m more your playboy type than your housework type. I do try, but it’s just so boring. I can’t handle boredom. I don’t have the personality for it. It gives me a migraine.” “It does no such thing, now will you please go and shower or you’ll be late for work.” Despite a lukewarm response to his performance so far, Michael optimistically moved into the final stage of his getting off the hook act, presenting his suddenly tearful look. “Don’t be annoyed. I won’t be able to concentrate at work if I know you’re annoyed with me, and I’ve got that deadline tomorrow to think about. You wouldn’t want me to get even further behind, would you? I only meant to play on the computer for a little while, but I got caught up in StarCraft and forgot. You know what my memory is like. It won’t happen again, I promise.” Joseph gave a sigh and held out his hands, “come here.” 37
Smiling, Michael confidently took the outstretched hands, giving a dismayed squawk as he was jerked forward, bent over and tucked under Joseph’s left arm. His nightshirt was flipped up and he yelled as a large hand cracked across his buttocks. Fuck! Why did nothing ever work with Joseph, what was wrong with the man?
Joseph slapped Michael’s bottom a half dozen times in rapid succession and then paused, “that was for not doing the job you were supposed to do last night.” He resumed, depositing another flurry of spanks, “and that was for lying about it.” Keeping him bent over he reached into the cutlery drawer, lifting out a wooden spoon. Securing his arm more tightly around Michael’s body, he lifted him slightly, so he had better access to the lower portion of his backside. “This,” he rested the spoon against the warm rosy skin, “is for attempting to stage‐manage me with your teary‐eyed, sorry little boy act. I am never going to put up with your manipulative techniques and games and one day you will take that on board and keep it on board.” Michael bellowed as the wooden spoon began to trounce his backside, “I’m sorry! I really am sorry. I’ll do the laundry tonight.” “Oh there’s no doubt about it, you’ll do it. Furthermore you’re barred from using the computer until after the weekend, and as befits naughty little boys, your bedtime is at eight for the same period.” Joseph stopped speaking, but continued to smartly paddle Michael’s bottom for several seconds. 38
As soon as the spanking stopped and he was released, Michael flung his hands back to clutch his stinging buttocks. “How could you do that to my backside, after what it did for you this morning, how could you!” He bobbed up and down on the balls of his feet, rubbing at his bottom, “oh God, that hurt.”
“For the last time,” Joseph opened the drawer and
clattered the spoon into it, “go shower and get ready for work before I bring out the big boy’s paddle to teach your backside the real meaning of discipline.” “You’ve ruined my day. You heartless dragon!” Michael stormed out of the kitchen banging the door behind him.
“Brat,” murmured Joseph, shaking his head in
exasperation. When was Michael going to learn that blatant manipulation of the kind he’d just displayed was guaranteed only to bring him grief? It was sheer wilful arrogance that kept him trying and he was not going to put up with it. Still muttering he descended the stairs to the basement utility room. Taking a shirt from the tangled, damp bundle in the washing machine he thrust it into the dryer and turned it on. He no more than Michael enjoyed the task of laundry, but he did like having clean clothes, so it had to be done. Any spare money that might have been utilised to pay for domestic services was still being used to pay off debts accrued by Michael during his student years, and that wasn’t counting the distasteful but bona fide debt of his student loan. Returning to the kitchen he made a pot of tea, setting it on the table to brew, while he brewed on Michael and his antics. He had a knack of making people want to indulge him, consciously using his appearance to magic people into doing his 39
bidding. A flutter of eyelashes, a pout, a frown or a smile brought most people to heel. Even Tom, whom he would have equated with better sense, was not immune. Michael only had to adopt a hurt look and Tom would start making moves to placate him and bring a smile back to his face. Joseph prided himself on being a man who was not easily magicked or manipulated. Well, perhaps it would be truer to say that while he was frequently magicked he wasn’t so easily manipulated. He’d made it clear from the start that he wasn’t going to join the ranks of those who felt bound to indulge Michael’s every whim and excuse his faults, not that Michael saw himself as having any. Like a lot of beautiful people he believed more ordinary mortals owed him homage simply for existing. It was a belief his parents had encouraged. His mother had once related, with a hint of pride, how a smile from her son made her excuse him anything, even stealing money from her purse when he was a teenager and going through a difficult phase. Joseph had not endeared himself by commenting that she would have better served Michael by making clear such actions were unacceptable. Theft was theft, no matter how pretty the thief. Pouring a cup of strong tea Joseph picked it up and sipped at it, allowing it to soothe his vexation. Michael could be as aggravating as a boil on the neck. All the same he did love him, for better or worse, in laziness and in debt. Love they say is a many splendid thing. It’s also a bit of a comedian at times. He gave a wry little smile. If someone had predicted he’d end up sharing his life with a man who looked like a dream come true, 40
frequently behaved like a nightmare and who was a good thirteen years his junior he’d have declared them insane. Cosy domesticity was not a part of his planned life agenda. He had friends, he had an active and varied sex life and he had his work. He didn’t need anything else. It had therefore caused him more than a measure of perplexed dismay when he realised he didn’t want a casual affair with the young Michael Mosse. He wanted him permanently. He had fallen in love behind his own back. It still astonished him. To add to the puzzle he was more content than he’d ever been in his life. Why, he had no idea, and no real desire to go into any philosophical depth about it. You could philosophise forever on the nature of life and love, and still be no wiser at the end of it, better just to get on with it.
41
Chapter five
“I hope you haven’t made me any breakfast.” Michael,
wearing skinny black jeans, a black t‐shirt and a dark look, stalked back into the kitchen, trailing clouds of disaffection and a surfeit of Armani cologne in his wake. “Because I don’t want any.” “Good job I haven’t wasted my time making any then.” Joseph continued drinking his tea. “You’ve killed any appetite I might have had. I’m too upset to eat.” Michael draped himself artistically against the worktop. “I’ll probably lose weight, and you know how much my parents worry if I lose weight. My mother will want me to go back home. She didn’t want me to move in with you in the first place. She doesn’t think you look after me properly. She thinks you’re too old and much too mean for me.” Joseph knew Alma was less than enamoured of him. However, he suspected that the ‘old and mean’ bit of the declaration was more Michael’s spleen than his mother’s spoken opinion. He was trying to hook him into a game. Joseph was supposed to go through a placatory routine involving telling Michael how regretful he was for upsetting him and offering him incentives to cheer up and eat something. Being constantly 42
appeased was part of the pattern of his life, he was used to it, and he expected it. Joseph wasn’t against appeasement as such, it had its place, but its downside was that unless used sparingly, it tended to breed tyranny of one sort or another. He refused to engage in the placatory game, saying, “the dryer has stopped so you can go and iron my shirt.” “What?” Michael’s face fell further still, “I thought you said you were seeing to it yourself.” “I saw to it getting dry, so now you can see to it getting ironed, as you should have done last night. I ironed ten of your tops and five pairs of trousers when I did the ironing last time. The least you can do is iron one shirt for me. Life is about give and take, not take and take. Put the rest of the washing in the dryer while you’re down there, then it’ll be ready for you to iron when you get home from work this evening.”
“I haven’t had breakfast yet. How can you expect me to
work when I’ve had no breakfast, even beasts of burden get breakfast before they’re shackled to the plough.” “You wouldn’t recognise a plough if it scooped you out of a ditch. Besides you said you had no appetite, maybe ironing my shirt will give you one. I’m running out of patience. Do as you’re told and do it now or I’ll take action.” Michael mutinously opened his mouth to talk back. Joseph put down his mug and stood up. Michael dived for the basement stairs. He soon returned, silently holding out a white shirt. “What’s this?” Joseph held it disdainfully between finger and thumb. “What does it look like, a Chanel gown?” 43
“It looks like you’ve only half ironed it, that’s what it looks like. The back and the sleeves are still creased. Do you seriously expect me to wear this?” “You wear a jacket to work, no one sees the sleeves and back, so what’s the point of ironing them? I’ve done the collar and fronts.” Joseph didn’t say another word. Opening the kitchen drawer, he took out the wooden spoon and laid it on the table and then held out the shirt. Taking it Michael hurried back to the basement. He hadn’t expected to get away with only half ironing the shirt. He’d simply given in to a streak of sedition that demanded he try. He finished the job properly.
“Thank you,” Joseph took the warm shirt and slipped it
on, buttoning it. “Did you unplug the iron?” “No. I thought I’d leave it on so it would be nice and hot for me to begin ironing your shirts when I get home tonight.” “Did you unplug it?” “Yes, for God’s sake. I’m not a complete idiot,” snapped Michael opening the cupboard next to the fridge to get out the cornflakes and a cereal bowl. “Then you should have said so. You’ll have to be quick with those if you don’t want to get caught in the rush hour traffic, and bearing in mind you need to change your top before you go.” “Why?” Michael shook a generous shower of cornflakes into the bowl. “Because it’s inappropriate attire for work.” Joseph expertly knotted his navy‐blue silk tie, while looking with distaste at 44
Michael’s t‐shirt. It was one he particularly loathed. Its logo read: ‘Every time you wank off, God kills a kitten…think of the kittens!’ There was a grotesque cartoon beneath the logo, showing a mountain of horribly dead kittens covered in what was presumably semen. Joseph wasn’t a prude by any stretch of the imagination, but there were certain things that offended his sensibilities.
“Tom has a relaxed dress code for the office,” Michael
poured milk and liberally sprinkled sugar over the cornflakes. Picking up the bowl he stirred the contents and then began to eat. “Relaxed maybe, but not completely unconscious. He’s told you before about wearing things that might be offensive to other staff members, as well as visiting clients. Casual is fine, provocative and inflammatory is not. It’s a matter of good manners, respect and consideration for other people, and that includes me. ” Michael finished his breakfast and then dumped the dish and spoon by the side of the sink, before plucking his car keys from amongst the shrivelling contents of the fruit bowl on the table. Neither of them were big fruit eaters, but they, or rather Joseph, felt compelled and driven by government opinion to at least make an attempt on the advised five a day mix of fruit and veg. “Wash that bowl please, it won’t take you a second. If you leave it until this evening the sticky dregs will set like concrete.”
45
Rolling his eyes Michael banged his car keys down on the table and swooshed the bowl and spoon under the hot tap, rattling them onto the drainer. “Thank you. Now, I’m altogether tired of this little game. Go and change your top and then we can put this morning behind us.” Some part of Michael’s brain popped up an image of a train preparing to leave a station. All its doors were closing one by one, but there was still time to get on board. “I thought you said you wouldn’t interfere in Tom’s business,” he snatched his keys back up. “Well, what goes on at the office including my t‐ shirts is Tom’s business and Tom’s only, so butt out. If he tells me to take it off, I will, or at least I’ll give it some thought.” Giving Joseph a bold look, he walked past him. The last door on the train slammed shut the whistle blew, the flag waved and the train left the station. He’d missed it. He made a brisk move towards the front door, but was halted before he could attempt to open it. Grabbing the hem of the disputed t‐shirt Joseph roughly jerked it up and over Michael’s head. “That’s going in the bin, where rubbish belongs,” he flung it on the hall floor. Ignoring Michael’s protests he grasped him by the upper arm and marched him upstairs like an errant schoolboy. Once in the bedroom he thrust him onto the bed and pulled open the wardrobe door, “choose something appropriate or I will and you’ll wear it regardless of whether or not you like my choice.” Michael’s stubborn defiance held out, he didn’t want it to, but it did. The enemy within that’s what it was, a fifth 46
columnist, working against him. Folding his arms across his smooth bare chest he deliberately looked in the opposite direction to the wardrobe. Reaching inside the packed closet Joseph removed a casual, dark blue paisley shirt from a hanger, “this looks suitable.” “I don’t like that one, it creases too easily so you can stuff it right up your arse.” A look swept across Joseph’s handsome face and Michael knew with awful certainty that he’d gone too far, far too far. A surge of panic pulsed through him. Why did he never know when to stop, why did he always have to push that extra inch even when he knew it would bring him nothing but trouble? It was a compulsion. He desired the thrill of danger, but not its consequences. He hastily stood up and reached for the shirt, “don’t look like that. I was only joking with you. I like it really. You need to develop a sense of humour.” “You,” said Joseph coldly, “need to develop a consistent sense of when to stop pushing and start doing exactly as you’re told. It’s not half as difficult as you sometimes think it is. Put the shirt on and be quick because my patience is exhausted.” Michael hastened to obey. “There,” he fastened the last button, managing to produce a smile that was both shy and coquettish, “how do I look, nice?” Joseph nodded, “yes, you’d look good dressed in a bin liner.” “Thank you,” Michael beamed. “I suppose we’d better get going then, before the traffic builds up.” 47
“All in good time. We need to attend to something first.” Joseph picked up the wooden chair that resided in a corner of the bedroom. It had come with the house; a piece of original Victoriana claimed the estate agent. Joseph doubted it. It had more the look of a piece of forties utilitarian furniture, good, solid, useful, similar attributes to Victorian furniture only with less ornamentation. He set it into the middle of the bedroom floor with a stern instruction, “sit down, young man.” Michael’s stomach lurched. He detested being called young man. It was a verbal device that turned Joseph from lover into something altogether different. He glowered at the chair. “We’ll be late if we don’t get a move on. In case it’s slipped your memory I’ve got a deadline to meet.” “SIT DOWN,” barked the Station Master. Michael hastily parked his bottom on the chair. Folding his arms Joseph said, “I want you to explain the business with the t‐shirt.” “What’s to explain,” Michael examined the knees of his jeans. He felt ridiculously small being seated while Joseph stood. “I like it that’s all.” “Your fondness for the article is not at issue, your motivation for putting it on this morning is. You put that vile t‐shirt on for one reason and one reason only, didn’t you?” Recognising that evasion was not an option, Michael gave a reluctant nod. “Which was?” Michael had the grace to blush as he admitted, “to provoke you because I was annoyed with you.” 48
“Is it your place to attempt to punish me in retaliation for my having disciplined you, mildly disciplined I might add?” “No.” “No, it isn’t. You deserved to be punished this morning. I’ve told you time and again about shirking your responsibilities and about trying to manipulate me. It was a fair punishment and in no way harsh. You should have accepted it and moved on with grace, not actively sought petty methods of paying me back. Yours was the lesson to learn, not to teach.”
“I didn’t think of it as trying to pay you back,” Michael
shuffled on the chair. “It sounds horrible put like that. You always put a negative slant on anything I do. I just saw the t‐ shirt in the wardrobe and then the next thing I had it on. I knew you wouldn’t like it, but when all is said and done it is just a t‐ shirt, Joseph. It’s no big deal.” Joseph shook his head. “Wrong. It is a big deal, for us, because we’re not really talking about a piece of clothing here, we’re talking about an attitude. Taking the t‐shirt off the hanger in a moment of temper was one thing. Call it impulse. I don’t think there’s a person on the planet who hasn’t had a misguided impulse at one time or another. However, feeling an impulse is very different to acting on it, and that’s what you did, you chose to act on the impulse in its fullest sense. You put the t‐shirt on and you were determined to keep it on, even if it meant risking offending your workmates and your employer, just to have a dig at me and maintain control. In other words that foul t‐shirt was not so much an item of clothing as a metaphor for defiance.” 49
It was true. Michael’s motives for putting on the t‐shirt were as base as wanting to pay Joseph back, not just for the spanking, but for being cross about the laundry in the first place, and for not being willing to release him from his discomfort over it and let the subject drop in his favour. “I’m sorry, you’re right, it was petty of me,” bowing his head he mumbled the apology at his knees. Joseph hunkered down in front of the chair, tilting Michael’s chin up so he could see his face. “I know it’s hard for you not to be the one in the driving seat, choosing the route and setting the pace. Any control, no matter how unproductive and poorly executed, can often ‘seem’ better than none at all, but we both know that’s not true. I also know it’s very hard to challenge the modes of thinking and behaving that you’ve used all your life. I will never belittle or underestimate how hard this lifestyle is for you, never.” “You’re still going to punish me aren’t you?” “When you behave the way you’ve behaved this morning I can only conclude you’re in need of a clear reminder of my authority. I don’t think I’d be doing either one of us a favour if I failed to give it. You do not defy me, it’s our most basic rule, and you certainly don’t tell me to butt out or indeed stuff things up that butt.” Joseph stood up, drawing Michael to his feet at the same time. He nodded towards the oak tallboy where a certain wood implement lived, “get the paddle.” Michael’s eyes widened with dismay and he shook his head, “I don’t want to.” “Nevertheless you’re going to do it.” 50
Michael searched the stern face looking for some sign of relenting. There was none. He moved towards the tallboy, pulling open the top drawer. At times like this he wished he were in a more vanilla relationship.
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Chapter six Wetting a flannel under the bathroom tap Joseph wrung out the excess water and then wiped it around Michael’s face, discreetly removing a layer or two of his aftershave along with tears. He always overdid his cologne, perhaps to compensate for the fact he only needed to shave once or twice a week and even then the facial hair he produced was as sparse and inconsequential as the growth produced by an adolescent boy. “If you didn’t have other obligations I’d be making you do some serious corner time in order to think about what’s just happened.” He handed Michael a towel to dry his face with and then rinsed the flannel out, setting it on the side of the sink. “However, you do have obligations, as do I, and we’re already running late for them.” He caressed Michael’s flushed cheek, “I’ll drive you to work. You’re not in the right frame of mind to drive safely this morning.” “I’m fine,” Michael’s eyes flashed a protest, “I’ll drive myself.” “If need be,” said Joseph, “I’ll make time to repeat and underline some of the finer points of the discussion we’ve just had on the subject of obedience. Do I need to do that?” “No.” 52
“Good,” Joseph gave a nod of approval, “let’s get going then.” Michael shivered as they stepped outside. It was unseasonably chilly and from the look of Joseph’s car there had been a touch of frost in the night. It was already melting though, sagging into thin mushy ridges on the windscreen, one swish of the window wipers would soon take care of it. His own car, his beloved, midnight blue Mini Cooper, sat on the drive looking forlorn as if it knew it wasn’t going to be driven that day. He directed an appealing look at Joseph, hoping for a reprieve from being driven. What he got was a hand at his elbow. It guided him courteously to the passenger side of the car. The door was opened for him and he got inside, wincing when his tingling backside made contact with the seat. His eyes experienced a fresh rush of tears. He hated the paddle, hated it! It smarted like nothing else. The fact he’d been paddled over his jeans and not on his bare bottom was something he was supposed to feel grateful for when in fact it was little compensation, because the paddle had a bite that transcended even denim. He gave a sideways glance at Joseph as he settled behind the steering wheel. The Station Master didn’t exactly have a delicate touch either. Sniffing pitifully, Michael looked down at his shirtfront, which was crumpled on account of him being over Joseph’s knee. He wouldn’t look so nice now, not with a creased shirt, red eyes and a pink nose from crying. He probably looked like an albino rabbit, a badly dressed one. Pulling down the sun visor he glanced in the vanity mirror, no, if anything the tears had enhanced his eyes, giving 53
them a sad dewy look, a bit like Bambi when he discovered Mama Bambi had been blown away. He cheered up. A strategic slump of his shoulders, a few soulful looks and everyone in the office would be fighting to look after him and bring him cream cakes with his coffee. They’d all try to ascertain what was bothering him and of course he’d say nothing beyond a brave assurance that he was fine. His cheer evaporated as the Station Master suddenly made an announcement, “I’ll pick you up at five this evening. I’ll let you know if I’m going to be any later.” “Thanks for the offer, but being seen in a Ford Mondeo is ruinous to my street cred. I’d much prefer to get the train. I’ll walk home from the station. I’ll follow the track along the embankment. It shouldn’t take long and it’ll help me to get to know the area better.” “I’ll pick you up at five.” Michael swallowed down a flash of temper along with a rude remark about repetitive sentence disorder, managing to say politely, “you obviously didn’t hear what I said, Joseph, I said…” “I heard. I’ll pick you up at five, regardless of any damage to your street credibility.” “I’m only thinking of you, why add time to your journey when…” “I will pick you up at five.” “But…” Joseph interrupted again, the frost on the windscreen had long gone but his voice was laden with icy particles. “It’s not 54
difficult, Michael. We’re not discussing quantum theory here. I will pick you up at five, is that absolutely clear?” Michael folded his arms and looked out of the window, his breath misting resentment on the chilly pane. “I asked you a question.” “You issued an order, there is a difference.” He kept his eyes on the passing scenery. “Still, a reply to show that you’ve understood the order would be nice.” “I understand. You’re the boss.” “Good. I like it when we’re on the same wavelength.” “Bastard,” murmured Michael under his breath. “Excuse me?” “I was clearing my throat that’s all.” “Clear it more politely next time, or I’ll stop the car in order to teach a sharp lesson about respect.” Joseph glanced sideways at Michael’s sullen figure. He could have let him get the train home. As had been pointed out, doing so would mean he wouldn’t have to detour and add time to his own journey, but there were control issues at stake. He suspected part of Michael’s keenness to get the train and walk from the station was in the hope of seeing his foxy friend from earlier. He had probably been planning an excuse to leave work early in order to maximise his chances. It was in short about Michael doing what he wanted to do, when he wanted to do it. In addition getting the train home would be a way of him having the last word on what had happened that morning, an attempt to claw back control and as such he could not allow it. 55
Pulling into Michael’s office car park, Joseph stopped the engine. “I expect you to be here waiting for me this evening. No crying off work early just to try and get one up on me. When it comes to our relationship you’re not in charge, I am. Your role is to fully accept that on a behavioural as well as emotional level, regardless of whether or not it suits your plans.” “And to think I passed up the chance to sell my soul to Satan in order to go out with mister‐I’m‐the‐boss‐of‐you,” murmured Michael as he undid his seat belt and opened the car door. “I beg your pardon?” “I said thank you for the lift, Joseph.” “Don’t I get a kiss before you go?” Michael struggled to keep control of his emotions, and his mouth, but they joined forces against him, the latter giving sound to his mixed frustrations at being so restricted. “No, I don’t think so. A kiss would suggest I have some measure of affection for you when actually I shall be adding your name to every death list I can access via the Internet.” Suddenly he was on a roll, like a ball going down a slope gathering momentum. “Your days are numbered, Joseph. You had your chance with me. I shall of course mourn you for a few days, at best a week. After that I’ll find me a new lover, one worthy of me. One who realises how lucky they are to have someone as attractive as me on their arm. Someone who actually enjoys cosseting me and who’ll take me clubbing every night and who doesn’t mind how much I spend on a pair of jeans or a shirt, regardless of whether or not the bloody mortgage payments have risen or the electricity bill has 56
quadrupled, but mostly,” he glared at Joseph, “one who sees my backside as something that deserves to have only the utmost pleasure visited upon it!” Tilting his chin he waited to see what affect such an impassioned pronouncement would have on the Station Master. “I’ll pick you up at five.” Joseph winced slightly as the car door slammed. He watched as Michael stormed across the car park towards his place of work. Once he disappeared inside the building he re‐ started the engine and headed off in the direction of his own place of work. He got a half‐mile or so down the road before having to pull into a layby. Taking a deep breath he closed his eyes, trying to compose himself, but it was no good. Gripping the steering wheel he started to laugh. Dear God, he wiped his eyes with the heel of his hands. Michael was going to issue a fatwa against him. It was too funny, and the look on his face as he’d fought an internal battle to keep his temper in check and his mouth shut. He’d almost exploded, but he had tried and Joseph was proud of him for that, he really had tried, even if he hadn’t succeeded on this occasion. Grinning, he restarted the engine and drove off. Heading straight for the office plumbing facilities, Michael shut himself in a cubicle. Easing his jeans down he twisted round to inspect his bottom, giving a shocked gasp at what he saw. His buttocks were a mass of black. He’d expected some redness, but not actual deep bruising. Joseph was a brute, an absolute brute. He rubbed the massive bruise on his right buttock, giving a 57
small yelp of fright as most of it came away in his hand. He stared at it dumfounded. Instead of a bruised buttock he now had a bruised hand. Were bruises meant to be transferable between body parts? Scowling ferociously he hauled his jeans back up. Fucking things had cost him the best part of ninety quid and they were bleeding dye all over his bum. Talk about being blackballed. It was still Joseph’s fault though. He’d walloped the colour out of his jeans and onto his bottom with that evil paddle. Washing his hands at the sink a small, unwelcome thought inserted itself into his mind. If he’d done the laundry properly last night he would have had some dry underwear to put on this morning, which would have cushioned his backside a little more from the sting of the paddle, as well as shielding his skin from dye transference. Another unwelcome thought suddenly inserted itself. If he’d done the laundry last night Joseph wouldn’t have got annoyed with him in the first place and he wouldn’t have ended up getting either spanked or paddled. Being lazy and trying to get out of the repercussions of it had triggered off a whole sequence of unpleasant events, and he only had himself to blame. That was probably why he’d cried at being paddled, it wasn’t so much because of the pain, but rather shame because he knew he’d let Joseph down. He sighed a little at these pop up thoughts. He was definitely infected with some kind of conscience virus that had attached itself to his mental hard drive…a Joseph horse. Perhaps there was something he could download from the Internet to shift it. 58
He turned from the sink to the hand dryer, then swayed, gripping the sink, as a glimmer of the dream he’d had the night before suddenly flashed through his mind. It preceded the part with the something sinister in the baby’s pushchair, but his mind refused to hold the image and it was gone in a split second leaving only a sense of fearfulness. He wished he’d kissed Joss goodbye. What if he never got to kiss him again? Bad things happened everyday to ordinary people, fatal accidents, heart attacks, shootings, and stabbings. Fishing his mobile out of his pocket he quickly punched in a text message, feeling better as soon as he hit the send button. Joseph smiled as he viewed the short message, ‘ x for u.’
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Chapter seven “Shit,” muttered Michael as his attempts to glide unnoticed past Tom’s open office door, en route to his own office, failed and he was cordially summoned to step over the threshold. He’d obviously been looked out for and it wasn’t hard to guess what topic would be under discussion once the morning pleasantries were done with. “Good morning, Michael,” Tom Townsend greeted him with a smile. “You’re late, traffic problems?” “Yes, sorry. I got stuck behind a Ford Mondeo being driven by someone intent on dominating the entire road. You know the type, not prepared to give an inch. I couldn’t get past him.” “How very annoying, but never mind, you’re here now. How’s Joseph today?” “Fine, he’s probably goose‐stepping around his office dishing out coloured triangles even as we speak.” Whoops, Tom raised an eyebrow, obviously some domestic contretemps had occurred. The moving in together honeymoon looked to be over. Still, it was none of his business. However he knew what was his business. “Sit down, Michael,” he said pleasantly, turning from relative by cohabitation to boss. “I’ll stand, thanks,” Michael folded his arms. 60
“As you please,” Tom leaned back in his chair getting straight on topic, “how did you get on with those reworks yesterday? I have a meeting scheduled with the client at two tomorrow, am I going to have anything like a final design to present to them for approval?” Michael peeped soulfully through the points of his strategically overlong fringe, “I’m doing my best, but it’s not easy. I kept getting interrupted yesterday, it was virtually impossible to get any calculations done.” Tom frowned, “I asked Stan to make sure you weren’t interrupted and I believe he personally took over another outstanding commitment of yours, just so you’d have more time to work on the pushchair design.” Michael presented a look of deep stress, “actually, Tom, I’m afraid that Stan was the main cause of the interruptions. He was on my bones all day long. I could hardly breathe for him.” “Are you saying he harassed you?” Tom’s brow creased. He knew Stan didn’t approve of Michael, but he couldn’t see him purposely setting out to harass or bully him. “I’m not one for tale telling,” Michael made a show of examining the top of his shoes, “don’t worry. I can handle it.” “Michael, look at me and tell me, has he or has he not been harassing you?” “Yes…no…sort of,” Michael looked up. “It’s just that no sooner do I get my head down to work than he finds some weak excuse to distract me. He wants me to fail to meet this deadline. He wants to prove you made a mistake in taking me on full time. I’ll try and keep on top of it today though. I’ll try not to let him affect me so much, please,” he produced a brave face, 61
“don’t let it concern you, Tom. I know you have more important things to worry about.” “What kind of excuses, what does he do?” Tom looked grim, “answer my question, plainly, or shall I get Stan in here and demand an explanation from him?” “No!” Michael suddenly felt he was losing control of the situation. “Then tell me why you haven’t completed the work we agreed you should complete yesterday. Is there some problem with your work station or your computer?” “No, everything is fine. It was Stan. He kept interrupting me, asking me if I wanted a coffee, or a sandwich, but not in a good way, he did it to annoy me.” Michael faltered. Tom’s face was wearing a very similar expression to Joseph’s just before his patience expired. It was what he called the dragon look. He could almost see smoke starting to come from his ears and nostrils. He was suddenly glad, very, very glad that Tom was Tom and not Joseph. He fished around desperately for something to damn Stan with, “and he kept looking at me.” “Looking at you?” Tom picked up a biro and tapped it impatiently against the edge of the desk. “Yes.” “And?” The biro tapped harder. “That’s it,” Michael picked at his thumbnail, damn he was losing his touch, even to his own ears the excuse sounded pathetic. Still it was all he had, he pressed ahead. “He was...looking at me.” “Michael, he shares an office with you, he can’t avoid looking at you. What do you want him to do, wear blinkers? Is that the 62
sum total of your excuse for not working, because Stan was looking at you?” “No,” Michael flushed defensively. “He was looking at me…funny.” “Funny?” Tom made known his exasperation in his tone of voice, “what exactly do you mean?” “He was looking at me funny, do I need to spell it out? It kept putting me off my stroke. He did it on purpose. He knows that artistic and highly strung people, such as myself, have difficulty concentrating if we feel we’re being looked at, we can’t help it. I think there’s a medical term for it, some form of autism.” Tom dropped the biro onto the desktop and stood up, “I’ll have to dismiss him immediately then, offering you sandwiches and coffee while looking at you funny. The man is obviously an office bully of the worst kind.” “You’re just being sarcastic now, Tom.” “I think I have good reason to be, and I think you’re right, there is a medical term for your condition. It’s called terminal bullshit. Perhaps you’ll focus better if I arrange to have your stuff brought in here and you work under my personal supervision? I promise not to look at you funny or offer you coffee.” Michael baulked at this humiliating prospect, “that won’t be necessary.” “I’m warning you, no more dragging this out. I don’t want to lose this client, they’re important. I want a result for tomorrow.” “I can’t work under this kind of pressure, Tom. I don’t have the personality for stress. Joseph’s worried about me. I’m not sleeping and I’ve been getting headaches.” Michael twisted a 63
portion of his shirt between his fingers, “you don’t seem to be appreciating how much effort I’m making.” Tom felt a pang of guilt as the beautiful eyes misted, but he crushed it along with an urge to pet and fuss and apologise for pressurising him. He was at long last getting the measure of Michael Mosse. He spoke firmly, “I want the plans finished to the expected standard. I have to leave early today, but I’ll expect to find the completed brief when I come in tomorrow. Don’t be late, we’ll go over it together first thing and discuss any potential problem areas and amendments before the presentation.” The tearful look vanished to be replaced with a more honest look of anger. “Joseph thinks you were wrong to give the bike project to mister two point four family man Stan. He reckons you should have given me a chance. He thinks you’re stunting my creativity and holding me back. He’s annoyed with you.” “Is he indeed?” Tom smiled, the urge to pet and fuss suddenly giving way to a very strong desire to put his brother’s petulant brat over his knee and smack his bottom good and hard. “Perhaps I should call Joseph and explain my reasons, just as I’ve explained them to you, several times. Let’s go over them again in brief and then maybe you’ll stop acting like a spoiled sixth former on work experience and start acting like a professional. You’re not experienced enough in general, it simply isn’t your area in particular, and apart from that you’re just not reliable enough. I have respect for your talents, Michael, you’re good, but not as good as you think you are. You have a long, long way to 64
go before you’re on a level with Stan, or with Katie, Mal and Pete for that matter. Completing a degree course does not make you a design guru. You’ve done the theory and now you’re serving a practical apprenticeship, you’ll do well to remember that.”
“Why do you suddenly remind me of Joseph?” Michael
sulkily hooked his thumbs into the pocket of his jeans. “Because he’s my brother,” hazarded Tom, “something you continually strive to take advantage of. I wouldn’t let any other employee get away with half as much as you get away with. You’re no longer a student, Michael, and this isn’t a toyshop. You’re not here to play and you don’t pick and choose what jobs you fancy the look of. You do what you’re told to do, like the rest of the staff and you do it in a professional manner. Go and make a start. You’ve wasted enough time with this bloody tantrum over the bike.” Michael treated Tom to a reproachful look and then stalked out of the office, closing the door heavily behind him, almost colliding with Christina Jenkins, Tom’s secretary. “Morning, Michael,” she gave him a warm smile. “Morning, Chris,” He didn’t return her smile but paid her a compliment by way of compensation. “You look nice, you’ve had your hair done differently. It suits you.” “Aw, you’re so sweet, thank you,” Christina beamed happily, raising a hand to her hair. “I wasn’t too sure about it at first, a bit too short.” “It’s great,” Michael managed a small smile. “It makes you look younger, not that you looked old to begin with. See you 65
later, Chris. I’d better get on with some work, don’t want the boss dragon breathing fire down my neck again.” Christina watched him walk down the corridor and disappear into the main office and then headed to the staff room where she deposited her coat and handbag before going into the small kitchen to begin her first duty of the working day, brewing fresh coffee for the head of Company. “Michael looks a bit down this morning, have you been yelling at him?” She set the tray containing the coffee onto Tom’s desk and then folded her arms, fixing her boss with a secretarial glare. Tom reacted with indignation. “I’ve never yelled at a staff member in my life,” he picked up the cup of black coffee, “though I’ve often been tempted. It’s not easy being in authority you know.” “Well something’s upset the poor boy. I barely got a smile from him, not that he let his personal distress get in the way of noticing I have a new hairstyle, which is more than some have noticed.” “If I paid every female member of staff compliments I’d get done for sexual harassment and Hannah would divorce me, after she’d finished beating me up. Straight men have a hard time of it in the workplace these days. Michael gets away with things because he’s young, pretty and gay and he can suck up to you vain women without you thinking he has ulterior motives. What is it with women and gay men anyway, half of you hope to convert them and half of you want to mother them. It was always the same with Joseph. Both of us could walk into a party 66
and I’d get ignored while all the females fell over themselves to claim his attention even though they knew he was gay. It’s perverse. ”
“Nonsense!” Christina gave him a disapproving look,
“gay men actually listen and they notice things, unlike some. It’s no wonder poor Michael looked depressed if you ranted at him like that. He’s very sensitive. I’m going to go and make him a cappuccino. He likes a nice cappuccino on a morning. It might cheer him up. It’s a sin for a face like his not to have a smile on it. It’s like seeing an angel without wings.” She looked thoughtfully at the fresh, warm chocolate croissant she had set down with the coffee on Tom’s desk. Seeing the look Tom hastily snatched the croissant off the plate. “Make him coffee by all means, but you’re not giving him my breakfast. You’re my secretary and you’re supposed to put my needs first, not my lowly minions.” “Shame on you,” Christina wagged a finger. “That boy is such a fragile waif. I’m sure your brother doesn’t feed him properly and you begrudge him a pastry you could well afford not to eat. You’re developing a paunch. I’m surprised Hannah hasn’t commented.” “She has and I don’t care. I’m at an age when a paunch is acceptable. I’ve earned the right to it and anyway I look forward to this on a morning,” Tom bit unrepentantly into the succulent pastry, grinning as Christina clicked her tongue and went off to make cappuccino for the Company waif. Scattering crumbs onto his shirtfront Tom leaned back in his chair, enjoying his croissant wholly without guilt. He’d had the fragile waif to dinner and seen how much he could pack 67
away at a sitting. There were plagues of locusts that consumed less than Michael Mosse. He sighed, some of his enjoyment evaporating. Stan had expressed doubts about giving Michael a permanent place on staff saying he was too self‐absorbed to be able to give his best to a small Company that relied on teamwork. Maybe he should have listened to him. Michael certainly wasn’t behaving like a team member at this moment in time. It was all about him, all about what he wanted with no other kind of rationale to it, and it was ridiculous. He wouldn’t put up with it from anyone else. Of course there were always dangers inherent in employing family members. Not that the brat had actually been a family member when he’d first taken him on. Tom liked Michael. He had always liked him, ever since he’d walked into his office as a second year student, looking to augment his degree course by gaining some practical experience with a product design Company. He’d presented himself as something of a design messiah, a boast his first year results failed to back up. It seemed the self‐appointed messiah had had some problems settling into the routine of university life. He’d already approached and been turned down by numerous Companies. According to Michael, in an effort at face saving, it was because he was openly and unapologetically gay. Tom had no problem with gay and he sensed that beneath the boastful exterior there was genuine talent. He also sensed a hint of desperation, which moved him to say yes to giving him a placement. 68
Meeting Michael had an unexpected spin‐off for Tom. For the first time in his life he found himself having real empathy with his brother’s homosexuality, not just accepting it, but also truly understanding it. A happily married father of two he had momentarily doubted his heterosexuality when Michael Mosse had first looked at him and smiled. His slender fluid body exuded a kind of innocent yet not so innocent sexuality that transcended gender boundaries. While he himself was certain of his area of interest, those that met him frequently ended up questioning their own. He could convert a lesbian to worshipping at the male altar could Michael, and turn a habitual womaniser away from his usual quarry. The flash of physical attraction quickly passed. Tom recognised it for what it was, a natural reaction to outstanding beauty, which had registered in the very nerve centre of his body…his cock. He had reacted the same way upon viewing Michelangelo’s statue of David in The Accademia Gallery in Florence, no replicas or pictures did the real thing justice. It was simply breathtaking. He had introduced Joseph to Michael at one of the Christmas parties that he and his wife Hannah hosted at their home every year. Company staff were always invited. At the time Michael wasn’t staff as such. He was in his final year at university and floated in and out of the office, as his studies permitted, observing and learning and often getting under the feet and up the noses of various staff members. It was Christina, secretary and office matriarch, who suggested Tom invite Michael to the annual party. She’d observed that he seemed to have no close friends and often seemed a little lost. 69
Joseph’s reaction on meeting Michael was typical of just about everyone who met him, a kind of intake of breath, as his visual aspect registered. However there was no immediate spark. Joseph had never really gone for pretty boys. In his own words his tastes inclined to more mature meat. They exchanged a word or two and that was it. It therefore came as a surprise when some time after that first meeting the pair suddenly started dating. They came across each other at another party. It was an even bigger surprise when they announced they were buying a home together. Joseph had never shown the slightest interest in settling down, commitment wasn’t for him, but there he was playing husband and seeming happier than he had ever been. The relationship suited him and Tom was glad. In his philosophy men needed someone to care for. They needed a life partner and it didn’t matter if the partner had a penis as opposed to a vagina. He jettisoned the final fragments of buttery pastry from his fingers and sipped thoughtfully at his coffee. Leaving liking aside, he was currently out of patience with Michael, well out of patience. He was deliberately pissing him about over the pushchair project and he wasn’t putting up with it, not this time. It was too important. The boy seemed to think he’d been short changed with the project, but he hadn’t. The project might be relatively small but the Company it was being designed for certainly wasn’t. If they liked the design and it transferred solidly from concept to reality and sold well then who knew what else would come from it. He had actually taken a risk in giving Michael the job instead of trusting it to a more experienced crewmember. He 70
wanted him to prove himself. Joseph had said a number of times that he allowed Michael to manipulate him, and it was true. He had a look of fine bone china and it made you want to handle him with care. However, bone china had a toughness that belied its delicate appearance and it didn’t break just because you made it do the job it had been designed to do. Michael was no longer a student. He had been employed to do a job, and he could damn well do it, or face serious repercussions.
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Chapter eight The year was fast approaching the halfway mark of June, but there was precious little hint of summer in the breeze winging around the car park. Michael shivered as it rasped spitefully around him, wishing he’d put on a jacket that morning. He glanced at his watch, irritated by waiting around, dependent on someone else. Especially when they were late. So much for Mr…he mouthed the words…‘I’ll pick you up at five.’ He opened the carrier bag he was holding, peering inside trying to distract from the feeling of unease that had been pressing at his mind all day. He looked up as he heard wheels crunch across gritted tarmac, relieved when they belonged to Joseph’s car. He waited impatiently for it to draw alongside. Opening the door he disguised both his relief and pleasure at seeing Joseph behind a grumpy, “you’re late and I’m cold.”
“I told you to take a jacket this morning,” Joseph leaned
across to kiss him as he got in the car. “You didn’t have to wait outside. I would have come into the office for you and I think late is a bit of an exaggeration, it’s only a few minutes past five.” He frowned, “what’s in the Tesco bag? You haven’t been buying yet more DVD’s have you? We haven’t got around to watching
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the last lot you bought. I meant what I said about taking action if you go over your agreed budget again.”
“Don’t nag me, Joseph, I haven’t been overspending,”
Michael pushed the bag under his seat, and then automatically pulled down the vanity mirror checking his reflection before reaching for the seat belt. “It’s just some cans of coke I bought at lunch time. It’s cheaper to buy them in packs instead of singles.” “Fair enough. Have you had a good day?” “Okay, I suppose, you?” “Fine, the meeting went well and finished on time for once. There’s Christina,” Joseph sounded the car horn and waved to her as she walked towards her car. She smiled and waved back. “She’s had her hair restyled, it suits her.” He turned back to Michael, “and how was Tom today?” “For God’s sake,” snapped Michael, suddenly losing interest in the civilities involved in greeting one’s partner after work. “Don’t you two ever communicate directly with each other, what am I, a go‐between?” “Hey,” Joseph’s eyebrows pushed up towards his hairline, “don’t take that tone with me. I was only asking.” “Sorry,” said Michael ungraciously. “Its just he asks after you every morning and you ask after him every evening. I get sick of it. Anyone would think you didn’t have access to phones or email.” “It’s called polite social interaction. You should try it sometime, grumpy guts,” Joseph turned the CD player back on. He liked music as he drove. It helped him concentrate. “Must we have Rufus Wainwright whining away?” “He doesn’t whine, he’s got a good voice.” 73
“He whines,” insisted Michael, “in tune I grant you, but it’s still whining.” “I thought you liked him?” “So did I, but I don’t, that’s why I passed him to you. He gets on my tits bleating and whining down his nose about the tragedy of life. He seems to think he’s the only gay guy on the planet that’s ever had a hard time, and all his songs sound the same. I allowed my dick to dictate to my eardrums the day I plucked that album out of the bargain bin, it told them that anyone that looked that sexy in a suit of armour had to make a great sound.” “Put something else on then,” said Joseph mildly. “How about the James Blunt album you gave me?” “Pass,” Michael scowled. “He’s another one that whines and bellyaches in song. I wish I hadn’t bought his album either. It’s a shame I can’t leave my dick at home when I go shopping I’d spend less, especially on CD’s. It’s true what they say, you should never judge a CD by its cover.” “You played that album for hours on end last week, you couldn’t get enough of it and now suddenly you hate him.” “I didn’t say I hated him, how can I hate someone I’ve never met? I said his songs get on my nerves. He’s probably quite a nice bloke when he’s not lyrically whinging to a guitar accompaniment. No wonder the suicide rate is rising every day with Wainwright and Blunt making records. Let’s just hope they don’t decide to team up with Morrissey. The Samaritan’s switchboard will explode under the strain.” “You’re a zingy little ray of sunshine this evening, what’s the matter?” 74
“Nothing.” “Have you had a run in with Tom over that deadline?” “I can handle Tom.” “Meaning?” “Meaning nothing. We had words, and yes he made plain what he expected. I’ve got the picture, from you, as well as him, deadline or else, end of story, now I’d like to drop the subject if you don’t mind. I’ve finished work for the day and I don’t want to drag it home with me. I don’t hound you for details of your meetings and deadlines.” “Pardon me for breathing,” Joseph blew out his cheeks. “Judging from your tetchy tone I’d say you were overtired. Perhaps it’s just as well you have an early night scheduled.” “Thank you for so subtly reminding me of that, Joseph. You’ve just made my day complete and for your information I’m not tired. Why the hell would I be, it’s only just gone five o clock, nowhere near time to be tired and I haven’t exactly spent the day breaking rocks have I? I never get tired, not ever.” “You do get tired, Michael, you just won’t admit to it. Just be grateful I choose to interpret your manner as stemming from tiredness, otherwise I’d have to put it down to rude disrespect and deal with it accordingly.” “Never miss an opportunity to remind me of your authority, do you?” “Perhaps because you need reminding of it when you’re in a mood like this,” said Joseph sharply, his willingness to be patient ebbing away. “If you can’t speak to me with at least a modicum of civility then I’d prefer you not to speak to me at all. 75
I’m not going to be used as a wall for you to bounce your bad temper off.” Michael turned away, staring out of the side window, watching the rush of traffic, as if searching for something he might recognise in the blur of vehicles. He’d been doing it a lot lately. He’d almost driven into the back of a van the day before because he hadn’t been concentrating on the road ahead. He’d had to slam his brakes on. The man in the car behind his had then had to slam on his brakes in order to prevent crashing into his bumper. The air had filled with a cacophony of car horns, tyre screeching and cursing, as a motorists butterfly effect took place. It had shaken him and he’d had to pull off the road in order to regain his composure. He hadn’t told Joseph about the incident. There were some things the Station Master didn’t need to know. His mobile phone suddenly sounded, making him jump. He fished it out of his pocket and scowled at it, switching it off before jamming it back in his pocket. “Who was that?” Joseph cast an enquiring look. “My dad.” “Why didn’t you take it then?” “Because I didn’t feel like it, that’s why. I’ll call him back later.” “Make sure you do. You can’t go on keeping the poor man at arms length. It isn’t fair.” From the CD player Rufus whinged about how his phone was on vibrate. Michael seriously considered calling directory enquiries to get his number, so he could call him and put him and everyone else, out of their misery. He had a sudden bad 76
tempered desire to slam both his feet into the player and shut Rufus the fuck up for good, but he knew that giving into the urge would incur very unpleasant consequences. Instead he leaned forward and hit the off button, mustering a polite tone of voice to accompany the action, “sorry, Joseph, but it’s really getting on my nerves, do you mind?”
“Not if it’s really bothering you. To be honest, a little bit
of Rufus does go a long way. He’s a good singer, but one that perhaps needs a certain mood to accompany listening to him.” “Yeah, dead drunk and just been dumped by the shit‐bag you wished you’d dumped first.” “Are you still struggling to accept being disciplined this morning,” asked Joseph quietly, “is that where this mood is rooted? Is it something we need to sit down and talk about when we get home?” “No,” letting his tension go for a moment Michael rubbed a hand along Joseph’s thigh. “I’m not upset about this morning. I asked for everything I got.” His mouth made the shape of a smile, “how is it that you give me what I ask for when I’d rather not have it?” “Because I know what you need and I love you enough to give it.” It was true. He prided himself on having learned to know what Michael needed, not what he wanted or thought he wanted, but what he really needed. “I think I’d prefer you to express your affection less forcefully, with flowers for example.” “Flowers meet a different need, and anyway,” Joseph smiled, “I do that too.” “You haven’t bought me any since we moved in to this house.” 77
“Give me a chance, besides, you’ve never ever bought me any.” “It would upset the natural order of things if I bought you flowers. I’m shorter than you are for a start, it just wouldn’t look right, me presenting you with flowers. I’d have to reach up and it would ruin the effect. Anyway,” Michael fluttered his eyelashes, “nature demands ‘tis the damsel be wooed with floral offerings.’ Besides, I often buy you the gift of manly dark chocolate.” “True, it’s a shame I don’t like it. I much prefer girly milk chocolate. In fact to be honest I like that creamy white stuff they give to children best of all. Still,” Joseph gave an affectionate little wink. “It doesn’t get wasted does it?” Michael chose to maintain a dignified silence over the matter of chocolate bought with ulterior motives. With regard to that mornings events he left his hand resting on Joseph’s knee to show he was accepting of the dominant position he held within their relationship, but mainly because he wanted the contact, the comfort of possession. He was basically selfish, he couldn’t help it, but then everyone was selfish on some level. No lover kissed another with only the thought of pleasing their opposite in mind. Love was an intimate interaction between the selfishness of two individuals, which paradoxically then turned it into a kind of selflessness. With gentle brevity Joseph crowned Michael’s hand with his own before returning to the task of steering the car with both hands.
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Chapter nine “I think I’ll go for a walk along the embankment, get some fresh air in my lungs.” Michael extracted his carrier bag from beneath the seat as he got out of the car and then gave Joseph a hopeful look. “It’s been as stuffy as hell in the office today. Katie didn’t help matters. She absolutely reeked of garlic. She was out last night eating French with that sleazy accountant she’s dating at the moment. She had garlic leaking out of every pore, it almost made me gag.” “No.” Joseph dashed the hope, locked the car and fished his house keys out of his pocket. “I won’t stay out long. Come on, Joss, call the Dom off, just for half an hour.” “I said no. You’ve got ironing to do before dinner and then its bed for you. Besides, haven’t you heard, fox hunting has been banned in this country?” “Oh very droll. You’ll be writing sitcom next, a laugh an hour,” snapped Michael, irritated at having his intention of seeking for signs of their morning visitor so easily read, and scuppered. “Most sitcoms last on average for twenty‐five minutes, exclusive of adverts I believe.” Joseph smiled sweetly, unlocked 79
the front door and directed Michael in ahead of him. “Do you want me to put those cans in the fridge for you?” “No,” Michael hugged the carrier bag to his chest, “I’ve gone off drinking chilled coke. It tastes better at room temperature.” “Fine. If you’ve developed a penchant for lukewarm coke, then go ahead and enjoy.” Joseph slipped off his suit jacket and hung it up before making his way to the kitchen. Michael took one more look in the bag and then shoved it in the cupboard under the stairs. Going into the kitchen he picked up the kettle, intending to make what had become the customary home from work tea. Taking it across to the sink he turned on the tap and stuck the kettle under it, only his hands seemed to have developed a tremor that caused more water to flow down the outside of the kettle than into its interior. Joseph was too busy foraging in the fridge to notice. Michael was suddenly unreasonably annoyed with him. Dominants were supposed to be highly attuned to their submissive’s body language, or so it suggested in the bdsm novels he’d read. Though admittedly it only seemed to apply to sexual situations and the truth had to be faced, most bdsm novels were just one long sexual situation, a great big fucking spree from first page to last. Little attention was paid to the more mundane aspects of relationships, such as making tea and deciding what to have for dinner once the bondage, flogging and fucking were done. As well as annoyed, Michael suddenly felt nauseous, which increased the trembling. “So,” having thoroughly examined the contents of the fridge and worked out several possibilities for the evening meal, 80
Joseph straightened up. “What do you fancy for dinner, labour intensive wholesome stuff or convenient, quick and junky?” “I’m not hungry. I’ll pass. You get yourself something.” Joseph was immediately alert. This wasn’t Michael using an entrenched childhood tool of manipulation, as it had been that morning when he claimed not to be hungry. There was honesty in the declaration of no appetite backed up by a sudden waxy pallor to his complexion. Closing the fridge door he strode over to him, placing both hands on his waist, pulling him close. “It’s not like you to pass on dinner,” he studied the pale face, “especially when I’m making it.” “I’m just not hungry.” Joseph’s brow suddenly creased with concern, “you’re shaking. What’s wrong? Tell me at once.” “There’s nothing wrong, don’t fuss,” Michael’s actions made a lie of his words, as he nestled closer against Joseph, as if seeking safety in his proximity. “Then why are you all of a tremble?” “Desire.” Michael was glad Joseph had noticed he was shaking. It was enough. He didn’t want it to go beyond simple recognition. He had his attention and now he wanted distraction and comfort. He reached to un‐knot Joseph’s tie, pulling it loose, seeking to continue the act of possession he’d begun in the car. “I need release from sexual tension that’s all. A good hard fuck and I’ll be fine.” Joseph stroked the palm of his right hand against Michael’s inner thigh and crotch feeling his flaccid penis. “You don’t feel horny, far from it.” 81
“I could be,” he tugged Joseph’s shirt free from the waistband of his trousers, fumbling with the lower buttons. “If you’re prepared to put in a bit of work, like I did for you this morning.” Joseph prevented Michael from unbuttoning his shirt, holding the finely boned hands securely between his own. “Talk to me.” “I just did. I asked for sex, you turned me down. Fine,” he petulantly tried to free his hands. “I’ll go fuck myself then seeing as you don’t want to.” “Put a lid on the tantrum and listen,” Joseph kept a firm hold of Michael’s hands. “I have no problem with you wanting and using sex as a means of distraction and comfort. That said I am not your puppet to be manipulated at will. If I’m to comfort you I want to know why I’m comforting you. I want to know what hurt or worry I’m temporarily allaying. I want to know what you’re using sex as an escape from.”
“God’s sake, Joseph, why must you always complicate
life? I just wanted sex, but if you don’t, fine,” Michael tried again to twist his hands free, without result. This was the bit he didn’t like, the bit between attention and comfort, and the bit that required words of explanation. Joseph never understood, or at least he refused to accept that life was all about feelings and nothing else. Good feelings and bad feelings and you used the good ones to cancel out the bad. It was simple and needed no analysis. Sex was a good feeling. He wanted sex and he wanted it now. “What problem or worry are you seeking distraction from? Is it work related, some difficulty with that wretched deadline?” 82
“No. I’ve got it under control.” Joseph’s next question was blunt, “have you run up more debts, have you been gambling online again?” “No.” “You’d better not be lying to me. I’m warning you, if you’ve added so much as a penny piece to the pile I’ll thrash the hide off you. I mean it, Mike, I will cane you.” “I hate it when you say things like that, it scares me,” Michael pouted, “and I haven’t, I promise. I’ve kept my word about not going on gambling sites.” Joseph put his head on one side, watching Michael’s face, carefully, as he asked, “is the dream you had this morning still playing on your mind for some reason? It seemed to trouble you.” “No, and it didn’t trouble me, it troubled you. It was just a stupid dream. Stop nagging and let go of me.” “I’m not nagging. I’m worried. I want to know whether I have a good reason to be worried, and I will know,” said Joseph seriously, “even if it means putting you over my knee and keeping you over it until you talk to me properly.” Michael’s eyes widened in indignation, “you wouldn’t?” Joseph didn’t see the point of getting into a would‐you‐ wouldn’t‐you argument, so he didn’t. Using his foot as a hook he dragged a chair out from beneath the kitchen table. Sitting down on it he firmly guided Michael to his right side in preparation for taking him over his knee, “are you going to talk to me?”
“What about, politics, football, the price of fish and crack
cocaine?” Michael’s facetiousness vanished and he let out a 83
squawk of outrage as he was swiftly positioned over solid thighs. “This isn’t fair. I haven’t done anything deserving of discipline.”
“I don’t care about fair. I care about you. There’s
something fretting you and if it takes a spanking to help you articulate what it is, then I consider that to be justification in itself.” He rested the flat of his hand on Michael’s backside, “last chance.” There was a mulish silence so he swung his hand up and then brought it smartly down. It was enough to at least break the silence.
“It’s nothing. I’m not concealing anything important
from you. I haven’t squandered the mortgage money on a game of blackjack. It’s just a stupid feeling and I don’t need or want to fucking talk about…OW!” Michael protested as a second and then a third smack landed in exactly the same place as the first, adding another layer of warmth and the beginnings of real sting to it.
“Curb that language. A mouth as pretty as yours
shouldn’t utter such filth. And I’ll decide whether something is silly or not. You have to learn to share everything with me, papa bear, mama bear and baby bear, big, medium, small, it doesn’t matter.” Joseph kept his hand on the slap he’d just delivered, as if keeping it in place. “I’ve told you numerous times that if something troubles you, then it’s important. Try to put a name to the feeling. Give it a face, it’s easier to deal with then.” The mulish silence returned and Joseph lifted his hand away from Michael’s bottom. He didn’t need to return it. “Anxious, all right, I feel anxious,” Michael gave admission to the detail he’d been attempting to evade all day. “I 84
don’t like it, Joss. I haven’t been able to think straight. I even agreed with something Stan said, twice, because I couldn’t think of alternatives. It ruined my day.” “You’re naughty where that poor man is concerned.” Joseph upgraded Michael to a sitting position on his lap, putting his arms around his waist. “Why are you anxious, what are you worrying about?” “I don’t know, and thats what makes it worse, it’s just there.” “Anxiety has to have a source, love. It doesn’t materialise out of thin air without a reason.” “Well I can’t think of one.” “Let me put it another way. Is there anything you’re engaged in at the moment that I’m likely to disapprove of?” Michael pulled a face, “there’s so much that you disapprove of, it’s hard to keep track, and the answer is no.” It was a lie of course. There were two things he suspected Joss wouldn’t look kindly upon, but as he wasn’t ever going to find out about them and they weren’t in themselves harmful, he wasn’t going to mention them, because he wanted to do them, regardless of approval. Besides they weren’t the cause of the anxiety that had chewed at him all day, so it was perfectly fine not to mention them in the context of the present conversation.
“Then I’m inclined to think your anxiety stems from the
same place as your bad mood in the car on the way home, tiredness. It’s your body’s way of telling you it needs rest. The early nights you’ve earned over this weekend couldn’t have been better timed. They’ll sort you out.” “I keep telling you, I am not tired. I don’t get tired, only old people and sick people get tired and I’m neither.” 85
“It’s all right to be tired, it’s not a weakness,” Joseph kissed Michael’s cheek. “Tiredness is natural, especially when you’ve had a few disturbed nights, as you have this week. It’s nothing to be afraid of.” “I’m not afraid of it.” “Just talking about it has made you tense. It’s funny how you can laze around doing nothing all day long and not give it a second thought, but the moment you feel genuinely in need of rest, you seem to panic. Why do you think being tired always unnerves you?” “It doesn’t unnerve me. God, you can be so irritating. I told you, I just don’t like it. Can we change the subject now?” “No. I haven’t finished with it yet, so be quiet and listen. I think being tired scares you because unlike choosing to be lazy, you feel it’s something that happens without you having any control over it. You always feel you have to be in total control of everything.” Michael gave a scandalised snort, “fat chance I get living with you. You’re the control freak around here.” Joseph smiled, “we’re all control freaks to some extent. We all try to manipulate and control our environment. It’s a basic survival mechanism. As I’ve said any number of times the difference lies in the method of control. Some forms of control are negative and damaging, both to the individual who employs them and the people who come into contact with them.” “Like mine I suppose, while yours, naturally, are all positive and beneficial,” said Michael scathingly.
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“Exactly. I’m delighted you agree. No wonder we get along so well, Yin and Yang. You of course being passive Yin to my strong and masculine Yang.” “And to think you have the nerve to tell me I’m conceited.” “You are conceited, you’re very conceited. It’s part of your charm, sometimes, and when it isn’t I let you know.” Joseph teased long fingers through Michael’s soft hair, then kissed the tip of his nose, “now, why don’t you release the smile you’re trying to force back. You know you want to.” “You’re a very aggravating man,” Michael’s smile made itself public. “That’s better. You have a beautiful smile.” “I know,” said Michael and then gave a howl of outrage as Joseph suddenly straightened his legs and gave him a little push, causing him to slide off his lap and land in a heap on the floor. “I see you’ve found your rightful place,” Joseph gazed solemnly at him, “sitting at your Master’s feet.” He let out a yell of laughter as Michael lunged furiously for his legs and tried to drag him off the chair. Leaning down he easily collared him. Hauling him back onto his lap he pinioned his arms and legs, teasing, “you’re no match for me, little boy, you may as well give in.” “Just you wait,” Michael struggled. “What for,” Joseph’s eyes sparkled with mischief, “the fatwa you issued this morning to come into effect?” “I knew,” shouted Michael, “I just knew you wouldn’t be able to resist bringing that up.” 87
“So, my bad lad, how many death lists have you added me to?” “Hundreds. Once I upload your photo the entire Middle East and large parts of Bradford and Leeds will be completely closed to you, go at your peril.” Joseph’s laughter was contagious. Michael couldn’t help but join in with it. “You say the funniest things sometimes.” Joseph sobered, but didn’t release his hold on Michael, though it was no longer a restraining hold, not as such. “Stupid you mean?” “No, not stupid, funny. I love you.” He kissed Michael on the lips, gently at first and then more passionately. Closing his eyes, Michael concentrated on the taste, the scent, and the texture of the kiss. He tried to free his arms so he could put them around Joseph and take control of some of the action, but he wasn’t allowed to. The kiss was broken and he was put on his feet. He stood passive as his shirt was unbuttoned and slipped from his shoulders. Dropping the shirt onto the floor Joseph stroked Michael’s arms, admiring him. His skin was soft, smooth and as lustrous and creamy as a south sea pearl. His body though slender was finally beginning to lose some of the androgynous qualities usually associated with adolescence and was becoming more defined in a masculine sense broadening at the chest and shoulders. Apart from a net of fine blonde curls that clustered his neat tight ball sack, his body had no hair to speak of. “No,” he stayed Michael’s hands, holding them prisoner when they reached to undo the buttons on his shirt. 88
Michael’s breath quickened as he was turned around and the nape of his neck was hard kissed, teeth nipping pleasurably at the skin. It quickened still further when his arms were drawn behind him and expertly bound at the wrist with Joseph’s silk tie. “Joss,” he whispered, suddenly a little uncertain, “what are you doing?” “Shush, it’s all right,” Joseph spoke softly, “trust me. I know what I’m doing. Close your eyes. Don’t open them again until I give you permission and speak no words, none at all, will you do that for me?” Michael nodded, his pulse rate building as the remainder of his clothing was slowly removed. It was the strangest feeling to be standing naked in front of someone who was fully clothed. Effectively blind and with his wrists bound behind him, he felt exposed, vulnerable, powerless, and something else. Something he couldn’t quite name, because it was at odds with the other feelings, their antonym. He was powerless and yet empowered at the same time. His nerves increased in sensitivity, so much so that when light fingers began to stroke his chest, tweaking the tiny silver bar bells that pierced his nipples, lightly flicking them, he felt as if electrical impulses were darting through him. He pressed his teeth to his lower lip to stop an excited moan escaping as a hand applied light spanks across his bottom making the skin tingle and thrill, rubbing away any sting before it developed. This was the kind of spanking he enjoyed. It conveyed a delicious sense of his partner’s dominance without conveying any real pain. Joseph smiled. There was no doubting Michael’s arousal now. His elegant cock stood proud, the foreskin drawn back, 89
the slit already oozing pre‐cum, which Joseph gently massaged into the silky exposed glans with his thumb. Michael felt light‐headed with sensation. There wasn’t an inch of him that hadn’t been stroked, touched, sucked, caressed and kissed. He’d been taken to the brink of orgasm several times, only to have it denied. He wanted to speak Joseph’s name, but wasn’t allowed to. He wanted to look at his face, but wasn’t allowed to. He wanted to put his arms around him, to touch him, but he couldn’t. All he could do was wait for it to be decided when and how his release would come. He had no say in the matter. Then, just as he thought his excitement was finally going to be given full reign, all contact was withdrawn and Joseph moved right away from him. Michael gave a little whimper of frustration, fighting a strong instinct to open his eyes and locate where he was.
“I’m going to leave the room,” Joseph began to unbutton
his shirt. “You’re going to stand absolutely still, in silence, with your eyes closed to wait my return. Is that understood?” Michael nodded, alert to the change from request to command. The sense of empowerment he’d experienced vanished as soon as Joseph left the room. Without him being there it couldn’t exist, it had no validity. All that was left was a sense of vulnerability and Michael didn’t like it. He strained his ears, listening for sounds of a return. The urge to open his eyes was so potent it made him perspire, but he refused to give into it. Joseph had both asked him and told him not to. He wasn’t sure whether he was complying with the request or the 90
command or both simultaneously. He only knew that he wanted to please Joseph and earn his approval. Relief and a renewed excitement washed over him as he sensed Joseph re‐enter the room. The excitement accelerated as arms came around him and he realised that they now shared the equality of nakedness. His obedience was rewarded with a sensuous French kiss that made his head spin. Placing his right hand gently between Michael’s shoulder blades, Joseph encouraged him to bend forwards, “trust me. Give yourself over to me completely. I won’t let you fall.” He reached his left arm under him, slanting it across his body to support him. Michael moaned as a cool lubricant slicked finger eased between his buttocks and slipped inside his hole, gently preparing him; arousing him still further as it massaged his sweet spot. He wasn’t sure whether he would be able to hold back once Joseph entered him. He was desperate to come now. In the event he didn’t, because Joseph wouldn’t allow him to, pressing a finger firmly against his perineum every time he came close, making the urge pass. Sweat trickled down his body as both the physical and psychological desire to climax became overwhelming, reaching a stage of such intensity that Michael was no longer certain whether he was experiencing extreme pleasure or pain. “All right, baby, nearly there,” sensing that Michael had reached his limit, Joseph pulled out of him, almost, but not quite all the way, before thrusting strongly forward, serving his own orgasm and pumping Michael’s engorged cock in his fist at the same time. 91
Michael let out a series of loud cries as the most powerful orgasm he’d ever experienced tore through him. He felt his legs buckle as cum spilled out of him. Only Joseph’s arms prevented him from crumpling to the floor. The tie at his wrists was suddenly released and he found himself turned and held safely against Joseph’s sweat slicked body. He clung to him, fighting a desire to cry. Feeling slightly weak at the knees himself, and not just because the position had been hard to maintain, Joseph sat down, cradling Michael on his lap. He kissed him, acknowledging the power and equality inherent in his submission. “Well done, my good boy,” he murmured, massaging the faint marks on Michael’s wrists. “You were brilliant. You may open your eyes now.” Michael slowly opened his eyes, blinking as they adjusted to the light in the kitchen. Joseph smiled, “so, how did that rate as distraction?” Taking a deep breath, Michael said, “wow!” “And how do you feel now, still anxious?” “No. I feel tired, but in a good, safe way,” he said the words without even thinking about them. The truth of them surprised him. He wrapped his arms around Joseph’s neck, “thank you.” “You’re most welcome.” “Was that a scene we just played?” Joseph gave a small smile, “if you want to see it that way. I saw it more as a demonstration of what can be achieved when you trust me completely.” “Do you miss it, Joss, all that?” 92
“No,” Joseph gave the reassurance being sought. I’ve told you, it no longer holds interest for me. In retrospect I outgrew it a long time ago, before I even met you. I was just going through the motions.” “Why did you outgrow it?” “It no longer served my needs, not emotionally. The sex was good, but in itself it wasn’t enough, not in the long term. I wanted something more.” He smiled, “and then along came you. I also didn’t like the way things were going. The whole scene began to lose its integrity, for me anyway. The new people coming in were more interested in looking the part than in actually playing. They were ignorant of the rules, risks and obligations, and that’s dangerous for all concerned. They had no real understanding and no deep instincts, it was just a fashion trend that made them feel daring and different. Most of them just wanted to stand around posing and watching without actually contributing anything.” Michael pulled a sheepish face, “you mean like me?” “Yes and no,” said Joseph gently. “You were genuinely seeking something without really knowing what it was and you were just looking in the wrong place with the wrong person. Alex was an ignorant fool, thank God he showed his true colours before you got more involved with him.” “He was an arsehole and a prime reason why you should never hook up with anyone you meet on facebook. We could play together though, Joss, go to clubs and parties, if that’s what you want? You could train me properly. I think I’m more ready now. I understand more.” 93
“No. We’ve talked about this already. You’re attracted to the concept, but not its practices. Your submissive desires and needs run along a different track. You’re not a scene player and neither am I, not any more.” He spoke seriously, “our relationship isn’t a scene, or a game. There’s a very different dynamic between us, you do understand that don’t you?” “I understand fine and I’m glad. I’m your boy aren’t I, Joss, I’ll always be your boy even when I’m old?” “Yes,” said Joseph, moved by the declaration come question. He stroked his hair. “You’re my boy. I want no other.” They sat cuddling for a time. Then Joseph lightly patted Michael’s hip, “I’m getting sore, let’s shower, then I’ll make dinner while you finish the ironing. Make sure those jeans you had on today go in a separate wash. Judging from your zebra striped lower half the dye isn’t exactly stable. I don’t want them finding their way in with my white shirts.” Michael sighed as he gathered up his clothes. Talk about going from the sublime to the mundane; sexual heaven to laundry hell. He picked up the tie that had bound his wrists, dangling it in the air, “can I tie you up some time, Joss, just for fun?” “No.” Joseph draped an arm around Michael’s shoulders, “it’s a matter of context. Just as it goes against the natural order of things for you to give me flowers, so it goes against the natural order of things for you to tie me up. It just wouldn’t work and empires would fall.” “I might have been wrong about the flowers.” “You are not tying me up, Michael, not now, not ever, accept it.” 94
A sudden flash of honest curiosity overrode Michael’s usual disinterest in the past experiences and memories of other people. “Did you ever take a submissive role, Joss, when you were playing?” “Yes, when I first started out. I didn’t intend it that way. From early on I knew I preferred to Top, but the man who took me under his wing told me that the best way to learn how to be a good Master was first to learn how to be a good sub. He was right.” “How old were you?” “I was only sixteen,” said Joseph, “but I looked older and I convinced Ged, my mentor, I was eighteen by borrowing my cousin John’s birth certificate and driving licence, showing them as proof. I lied about my name and my age and I was wrong to have done so. You can’t build any kind of solid relationship on a foundation of deceit.” “As long as he didn’t find out there was no harm done.” “It doesn’t work like that, Mike. I knew and it didn’t rest easy, especially as I got to know him more and to understand what I’d gotten into. I confessed when he presented me with a gift to mark what he thought was my twenty‐first birthday, but was actually my nineteenth. I was glad to have it out in the open.” “Did you love him?” “Yes I did, but not in a romantic sense. I trusted and respected him. He was a good teacher and a good Master who became a good friend.” “Was?” “He died a few years ago, cancer. Now,” Joseph gave Michael’s bottom a playful slap, “let’s get cleaned up.” 95
Chapter ten
“I think you’ve eked that glass of wine out for long
enough.” Joseph stacked the dirty dinner dishes together. “Finish it and go up to bed. It’s already eight.” Michael drank off the wine and stood up, “what are you going to do?” “I’m going to wash up and then there’s a natural history programme about homoerectus I want to watch on Channel Five.” “Great,” Michael affected a pout. “I get sent off to bed while you sit watching porno programmes about the history of the gay hard on.” Joseph declined to be amused. “I’m not in the mood for bratting, Mike, go to bed. You may read until nine.” “What time are you coming to bed?” “When I come up and not before.” Joseph was not going to allow Michael to pin him down to a time. He spoke firmly, “no more heel dragging or I’ll consider it to be defiance and deal with it accordingly.” “Okay, I’m going, there’s no need to flex your boss man muscles.” Michael presented his face for a kiss, which he received. Climbing the stairs he heard the CD player in the 96
kitchen go on and Joseph start to sing along to his favourite Led Zeppelin track as he washed up. It was somehow comforting and he left the bedroom door open so he could hear him better. Getting into bed he groped under his pillow and extracted a book, settling back against the pillows to read. The words failed to hold his attention and his thoughts turned instead to the conversation about Joseph’s past mentor and friend. They rested briefly on the lie told and then flitted away and settled on wondering what the premature twenty‐first birthday gift had been. Downstairs, Joseph finished washing up and then settled down on the couch to watch television. His mind wandered, dwelling instead on the conversation he’d shared with Michael. Thoughts of Ged brought pleasure along with a pang of renewed grief for his death. He’d been fortunate to have a man like him for a guide. At the age he’d been and with his lack of experience he would have been easy to exploit. His fascination with power exchange relationships had begun early, almost from the moment he became sexually aware. Being gay had presented no problem for him. There was no great struggle, no guilt and no soul searching. He was what he was and fortunate enough to be surrounded by people who were willing and able to allow him to be so. Nor did he struggle with what might be called the darker side of his sexual desires. He was comfortable in his skin and determined to explore all aspects of his nature as soon as he could. He figured that expressing his desires in a controlled environment with people who understood them was healthier than trying to suppress 97
them and with that in mind had placed a personal advert in a gay contact magazine, boldly stating his interest in BDSM. He got plenty of replies from men who were more than eager to school a green boy. One of them bluntly stated that he was playing a dangerous game and could end up being hurt if he failed to fully understand what he was getting into. The sender gave him a post office box number and advised him to write a polite note of introduction to a Mr Gerard Foy. Several weeks of written communications finally resulted in a meeting. Joseph’s initiation began. Ged had been a man of honour whose dedication to the BDSM lifestyle was almost religious in nature. It was a belief system with an ethical code of conduct, something Joseph came to appreciate under his tuition, and which made his lie about his name and age rest ever more uneasily. It had been a relief to at last be himself before a man he respected. He had felt liberated by the confession. It was an act of submission in its way, a giving of his entire self to his Master. Ged had not been pleased to discover his acolyte had deceived him. He said it meant a relationship that relied heavily on trust had been founded on a lie, and could have led to serious trouble for both of them. Confession alone did not absolve Joseph from his sin. For the first time he experienced hard cold discipline. There was no eroticism involved, no physical, emotional or mental limits being pushed, no excitement or shared experience and no orgasm at the end of it. It just hurt like fury. Afterwards he was un‐collared and banished from Ged’s presence for ten long weeks. He had humbly accepted the harsh punishment from his 98
Master as thoroughly deserved and made no complaint. When the relationship resumed it was stronger for the addition of complete truth. Joseph’s thoughts moved to Michael. The relationship they shared was vastly different to the one he had shared with Ged, though it had its beginnings in a similar environment. He’d told Tom he’d met up with him again at a party, which was true. He had met him again at a party, but not a conventional one. It had been a BDSM event, a private party at which he was stewarding. Not that Michael or his muscular beau, Alex, had been formally invited. They were to all intents and purposes gatecrashers. It happened from time to time, friends of friends of friends, that kind of thing. Joseph had recognised Michael immediately, his looks being of a kind that set him in memory, but had kept a low profile, discreetly watching from a distance, surprised and a little intrigued. He hadn’t had the attractive young man down as someone interested in bondage and domination activities. His interest sharpened, but he didn’t attempt to make himself known. Much as he loved and trusted his older brother he didn’t want anything getting back to him. This was an aspect of life that belonged to him alone. It was a private world and he wanted it kept private. Though the pair looked the part in their bondage gear it was obvious they were neophytes. They had no idea of party etiquette, especially Michael. He might have been wearing a sub’s collar, but he was clueless as to how to conduct himself in an appropriate manner. He was overexcited and eyes that should have remained downcast flickered everywhere casting 99
bold flirty looks, demanding attention and admiration. It wasn’t his fault. It was the fault of the ersatz Master who had failed to properly instruct him. Michael was also under the influence of alcohol another black mark against him and his posturing Dom. Things turned unpleasant during a very intense torture scene between two seasoned players. Michael, clearly disturbed by what he was witnessing, kept interrupting the players’ flow of concentration by whispering to his boyfriend and at one point even angrily telling the Dominant in charge of the scene to stop what he was doing. Joseph was on the verge of signalling another steward to pull them out when Max, the Dom concerned sharply told Alex to leave the arena and take his ill‐trained bitch with him. Alex offset his humiliation at being reprimanded by brutally pimp slapping Michael across the face for his ‘disrespect.’ The boy’s cry of shock and pain and the look of frightened confusion on his face told Joseph that this was not a part of any established consensual dynamic between Top and sub. Grabbing Michael by the hair Alex made a show of dragging him away from the play area towards one of the designated social areas, slapping him again when he squealed a protest. He had come courting envy as a new Dom on the block, but his beautiful toy had shown him up and he was intent on making him pay. Joseph threw aside anonymity and intervened. He had come across types like Alex before. They were no more than bullyboys, pseudo dominants who gave the community a bad name. They thought the only requirement needed to be a Top 100
was an ability to inflict pain before taking their own pleasure. He felt a surprising desire to protect Michael. At the time he put it down to Michael’s associations with Tom, a duty of respect to his brother, but it was more than that. He came to realise he had sensed a genuine need in Michael, a need for guidance and to be cared for. It had awakened a dormant aspect of Joseph’s own personality. The men he usually played with undertook a role and adhered to prescribed rules within that role in order to fulfil a strong need for sexual domination. Outside of the role they had no need for a protector. Tom had always said that a man needed someone to care for 24/7, a life mate. Joseph had dismissed the notion as heterosexual ideology that bore no relevance for him. Then Michael happened. After preventing Alex from landing another hard blow to the boy’s tear‐washed face he gave him his marching orders. Alex objected to leaving without the accessory he’d arrived with, so Joseph curtly asked Michael if he wished to leave with him. Michael’s reply was plain. Dragging off the neck collar he threw it at Alex and told him he never wanted to see him again. Another steward escorted Alex off the premises while Joseph nursemaided a trembling Michael, tending to a small cut at the side of his mouth. The lovely face had suddenly registered a puzzled recognition. He knew Joseph from somewhere, but couldn’t place him, dressed all in black leather he looked very different to when they had first met at Tom’s party. The face suddenly cleared and Joseph knew he was outed. 101
He told Michael he would take him home. In the event the home he took him to was his own, in order to clean him up after he took ill in the car. Shock and the alcohol he’d consumed caught up with him and he was violently sick. Joseph’s musings on the past were cut short and he was brought sharply back to the present by anguished cries and a thudding sound from the bedroom above. He shot to his feet, heading for the stairs.
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Chapter eleven
“You can’t leave, you can’t! I don’t want you to…” “Jude…Jude!” The name repeated like an echo… The red car with the white stripe down the side was stationary by the side of the road, but then all of a sudden it began to move, slowly at first then faster and faster, a blur of red and white that soon disappeared into the far distance... The scream of a train whistle pierced Michael’s sleep, startling him awake. He sat bolt upright in bed causing the book he’d fallen asleep over to crash to the floor. His heart was racing. It raced harder still as Joseph burst in to the bedroom.
“What happened, why were you screaming like that?”
Joseph moved quickly to the bed reaching for Michael, pulling him into his arms, uncertain as to whether it was he or Michael that was trembling. Michael spoke though a mouthful of the t‐shirt he was in danger of becoming a logo on, “I wasn’t. It was a goods train going down the line. It woke me up, in fact it scared the shit out of me, and you’re crushing me.” “Language,” chided Joseph automatically, slackening his hold. He was sceptical of the train claim. He knew the difference 103
between a human scream and the screech of a train whistle. The latter had sounded after the first. “Did you have a nightmare?” Michael shrugged, “not that I can remember.” Joseph picked up the garishly jacketed book of grisly real life murder stories that Michael had been reading, a look of disgust spreading across his face as he did so. “No wonder you have bad dreams, reading this kind of sensationalised sickness. I don’t know what anyone gets from reading such vile details. I warned you last night. It can join that tacky t‐shirt of yours in the bin.”
“That t‐shirt cost me the best part of thirty quid and the
book isn’t mine, it’s Pete’s and I don’t think he’d appreciate you trashing it.” “Then you can give it back to Pete at the first opportunity, and I don’t care how much the t‐shirt cost. It’s in the bin and that’s where it’s staying.” “Dragon,” muttered Michael as Joseph left the room and went back downstairs. Folding his arms he leaned back against his pillows, a little of the anxiety he thought had been vanquished returning. It deepened when for some reason his mind replayed the incident when he’d almost driven into the back of a van, supplying a detail he had forgotten. Prior to it happening he had seen a car flash past in the opposing flow of traffic, a red car with…he squashed the memory before any more details could emerge, forcing his mind back to that morning and the fox, picturing it. His spirits lifted as he heard footsteps on the stairs. “Chamomile tea with honey,” Joseph placed a mug on Michael’s bedside table, “it calms the nerves.” 104
“A tot of Glenmorangie would work better, not to mention taste better.” Ignoring the comment and the accompanying grimace Joseph began to strip off.
“I thought you were watching erect homo’s on telly?”
Michael gave up hope of single malt and took a sip of the sweet tea, admiring Joseph’s body as he undressed. “Turned out to be a repeat,” Joseph grinned and climbed into bed, picking up the computer magazine he’d been reading for what felt like years. It was dull, but it had cost enough and he was determined to read every last article in it, including the adverts. He made himself comfortable, “drink your tea, then settle to sleep and don’t even think about wandering tonight, not unless you want a nocturnal paddling.”
Michael suspected the programme hadn’t been a repeat
at all, but he didn’t question. He treated Joseph to a flirtatious flutter of eyelashes. “I don’t suppose there’s any chance of sex tonight?” “You suppose right.” “Thought so,” sighed Michael, reaching for his mug. A companionable silence reigned as he drank his tea and Joseph read his computer tome. Once the tea was finished Joseph slung aside the magazine and took the empty mug downstairs to rinse. Michael went to the bathroom to pee and was just climbing back into bed when Joseph’s mobile rang. He picked it up from the bedside table, his lip curling when he saw the caller’s name. He took the call, listening as Max’s deep Scottish voice spoke a 105
greeting. Cutting the call off without replying he switched off the phone and settled into bed. Joseph came back into the bedroom and Michael gave a squawk of indignation when he saw what he was carrying. “How come you get to drink whisky while I have to drink herbal tea?” Joseph saw the question as being unworthy of a reply and set the glass of amber fluid on his bedside table before slipping off his robe. Before he could toss it onto the end of the bed the phone rang in the hall downstairs and he resignedly shrugged it back on. “I bet that’s your dad. You still haven’t returned his call. You’ve barely spoken to your parents of late. Leaving home doesn’t mean cutting off all contact with your family. It isn’t right. I’ll tell him you’re having an early night and that you’ll call him tomorrow, and you will.” He exited the room. Michael craftily reached for the glass of whisky. “If you so much as touch that glass I’ll wallop your backside.” Joseph’s voice floated back into the bedroom. “Bloody warlock.” Michael pulled a face and picked up the discarded magazine instead, flicking through the glossy pages.
“What did he say?” He glanced up as Joseph came back
into the bedroom. “It wasn’t your dad, it was Max.” Joseph crossed to the bed and picked up his phone from the table, compressing his lips in exasperation. He glared at Michael, who smiled sweetly. “It was an accident. I hit the wrong button before I could tell him you wouldn’t be long.” 106
“Leave my phone alone in future or I’ll hang you up by your ankles and flog you.” “What did he want?” “To say he was back from holiday and to ask if I wanted to play squash on Saturday afternoon.” Joseph shed his robe once again and got into bed. “I can’t stand mister north of the border. Shame he didn’t stay on holiday. I don’t want you to play squash with him.” “Life isn’t all about what you want.” “Are you going to play squash with him?” “I haven’t decided yet.” “I’ll play with you.” “No. You lose interest as soon as a point goes against you and then you start whining and carrying on like a spoiled child. It’s shameful.” “I won’t this time, I promise.” “The Phoenix squash club is littered with your broken promises not to mention broken rackets. I told you after the last embarrassing pantomime that I wouldn’t play with you again and I meant it. It’s unrewarding in every respect.” “Fucking stupid game anyway, grown men bouncing their balls off a wall.” “Shut up. I don’t want to hear another word out of you, foul or otherwise.” Picking up the magazine Joseph began reading. Michael lay down, pointedly presenting his back. He closed his eyes. The scattered board game pieces, the spilled milk and broken glass told their own story. “You’re getting too big for tantrums like this,” said a calm voice, “we’re all tired and so are you. You’re going 107
to sleep and you’re going to let other people sleep.” He held out his hand, “come with me, we’ll go outside, it’ll be cooler out there.” It was July, the still warm hours after midnight soft with shadows and honeysuckle, bats bobbing in the scented air. They sat on the garden swing seat, a light blanket drawn around them. Jude pointed at the sky. “Look, the stars are all out…” “Did you know that’s an anomaly because the stars are never in, they’re always there, scattered about the heavens. Daylight masks them and sometimes at night the clouds shroud them from view. People are like stars, you and me, we’re daytime stars. Sleep isn’t something to be afraid of. It’s like a cloud, it covers us for a short time and then we wake up and shine again.” The swing seat gently ebbed and flowed through the night air keeping time with a soft sung pop song…“Hey Jude”… Joseph set aside his magazine, giving an affectionate smile as Michael’s body relaxed into sleep beside him. So much for not being tired. He stiffened, his heartbeat quickening, as Michael murmured a name. It hung on the air like a note of music for a second and then vanished. He reached for his whisky, sipping at it thoughtfully. If only it were possible to access the dreams of another person. He wanted to see the boy who had been confined to the corridors of Michael’s sleeping mind. He wanted to know what had been hidden away along with Jude. There had to be something. You didn’t block good memories. You returned to them again and again, they were anchor posts in the course of a person’s life. He slept lightly, tuned into the pattern of Michael’s breathing, mindful of the distressed screams that had so startled him earlier. Had that been Jude too, he wondered. 108
Chapter twelve The fox’s eyes had been blue, as blue as wayside cornflowers…Michael opened his own blue eyes and stared into the faint light of a fledgling day. The detail that had poked him awake repeated itself in his mind, the fox encountered in the kitchen the day before had been blue‐eyed. No wonder the sketches he’d been attempting to execute at work had not come off. Something elusive had bothered him about the eyes, inhibiting his efforts to reproduce a portrait of the animal from the data stored in his memory. Knowledge derived from articles, stories and nature programmes told him that adult foxes had yellow or amber eyes, but his fox, he had already taken possession of it, had blue eyes, bright blue eyes, he was certain of it. He sat up. The movement broke Joseph’s sleep. He opened his eyes, “what’s wrong?” “It had blue eyes.” Joseph looked at him with bleary confusion, “sorry, you’ve lost me, run it past me again, who has blue eyes? “My fox,” said Michael with ill concealed impatience. “The one in the kitchen yesterday morning, it had blue eyes. Foxes
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usually have yellow‐amber eyes, you as a country boy should know that.” “Yes I do, and I’m thrilled that a fox has finally found the courage to break with tradition and have blue eyes, now kindly go back to sleep and let me do the same.” Michael was determined to convey the momentous nature of the news he was presenting, “aren’t you even a little bit excited? I mean ask yourself, why does it have blue eyes?” Joseph tried to be excited, but it was never going to happen. Foxes just didn’t do it for him, no matter what colour their eyes were. All he could ever see in relation to foxes was a flurry of bloody feathers and all he could feel was the tearing of his flesh as the frenzied animal had turned on him, its eyes blazing yellow venom, as he screamed for his grandpa to come rescue him. It was the fear‐spiked memory of this experience that tinged his tongue with a touch of acid, “I don’t know, Michael. Perhaps it went out and bought itself a pair of trendy blue contact lenses just so it could stand out from its brethren. It’s obviously a vain little devil, much like you.”
“I wish I hadn’t bothered to tell you now,” said Michael,
insulted that his revelation wasn’t being taken as seriously as it ought to be. Suddenly aware that he’d clipped the wings of Michael’s honest excitement Joseph tried to make amends. He set about giving an explanation that didn’t involve detailing something which still troubled the child who lingered like a shadow within his adult self. Michael would not have welcomed the detail anyway. “I’m sorry if I sound grumpy, but I’m tired. I haven’t slept particularly well and I would like at least two more hours 110
of rest before the alarm goes off. To be honest I think you were mistaken about the fox’s eyes. It was a trick of the light or even a trick of your memory, something you dreamed getting mixed up with reality. All fox kits are born with blue eyes, but they always turn yellow‐amber, right across the species from red fox to black.”
“Thank you for that nature fact, Joseph. I can see you
were obviously a devotee of Blue Peter when you were a lad. However, I’m quite able to distinguish dreams from reality and it had blue eyes, which means it’s pretty special and I’ll prove it. I’ll get a photo of it.” Michael swung his legs out of bed only to be prevented from actually getting out of it by a restraining hand on the back of his nightshirt. He scowled over his shoulder, “Joseph?” Joseph replied to the implied ‘what are you doing’ question in Michael’s use of his name, by saying the actual words back to him, “what are you doing?” “I’m going out for a walk.” “In the middle of the night?” Michael gestured towards the window where dawn was pushing its way through a crack in the curtains to brighten the room. “It’s not the middle of the night, it’s dawn and dawn is one of the best times to spot a fox. I remember them saying so on Blue Peter and I know they would never lie to children.” Joseph was unconvinced, not about Blue Peter’s integrity, of which he had no doubt, but of it being morning and not the middle of the night. “I consider certain a.m. hours to be more a part of night’s entourage than day’s, but if you want to go tramping across dew laden fields in search of mythical beasts 111
then you may do so. I only ask that you emulate that man of legend, the Minotaur man, Theseus, and leave some sort of trail you can follow back. You know what your sense of direction is like. Make a mental note of landmarks as you go along.” Joseph released Michael’s nightshirt and curled up under the duvet, “I don’t want to have to hire a bloodhound to track you down and bring you home in time for work.” It being dawn there were no stars, not that you could see. However, Michael staring into the sky of a May turned to June knew they were there somewhere. They were masked behind the fluid scarves of soft pink and blue that rippled the air, as the rising sun sent light dancing through the gas and dust particles of the stratosphere. He rubbed a hand across his forehead as a flash of childhood memory came to him, a scent of honeysuckle, gentle movement, his head on someone’s lap, a faint echo of song. “You didn’t have to come with me,” he laid a hand on Joseph’s knee, breaking the silence. Joseph patted the hand and smiled at Michael who looked ethereal in the morning light, his graceful body clothed in jeans that were faded to a milky blue, topped by a loose shirt of unbleached Indian cotton shot through with delicate threads of silver. “Didn’t I really have to come?” “Yes,” Michael gave admission, “all right, you did have to come. I wanted you to.” “And of course what Michael wants Michael gets, sometimes.” Joseph slipped an arm around his shoulders. He frowned, sensing a change in mood. The childlike eagerness that had prompted the seeking of a blue‐eyed fox at dawn had subsided. 112
He was shivering too, the clothes he’d chosen to wear had been chosen from a point of view of aesthetics rather than for warmth value. Michael’s vanity always had to be served first. They’d walked a fair distance across fields, which over time had bonded with the railway tracks that had once invaded and conquered them, but had seen no sign of the fox. There were plenty of rabbits, a stoat or two, but no fox. Joseph had suggested it might be best to limit their movement and take up position on the embankment. It gave them a good view of the open countryside, but it was chilly sitting. The morning air was as thin as a skin of ice on water, pure and bright. There was a sense of something heavier and warmer waiting to break the skin, but it would be a while yet before it gathered enough strength.
“I told you to put on something warmer, but no, you
have to dress as if you’re about to shimmy down a Paris catwalk.” Joseph peeled off his sweater, “here, put this on, no arguments or I’ll warm you up in a way you won’t like. Hurry up. I don’t care if it doesn’t match your eyes.”
“I like to look nice for you,” Michael pulled the dark
brown sweater on. It felt good, still imbued with Joseph’s solid warmth. He greedily soaked it up, snuggling against him, seeking even more of his heat. “Why did you come, Joss, you really didn’t have to. You don’t believe in my blue‐eyed fox.” “I had no choice, you bullied me.” Joseph manoeuvred Michael between his legs, pulling him hard against his body, wrapping his arms around him, rubbing his chin on the honey hair. 113
Michael snorted, “how did I bully you, I never said a word?” “You gave me the big eyes. I can’t resist the big eyes.” “Huh,” Michael’s snort attained gold medal standard, “I can’t say I’ve ever noticed a lack of ability to resist my big eyes on your part. I’ve seen you mist over at a Walt Disney cartoon and the moment I try to tug your heartstrings you turn into a pebble hearted old dragon.” “Not so much of the old if you please, and manipulative big eyes I can resist without problem. It’s real big eyes that I’m a sucker for. Big eyes that say that you’re worried about wandering out into territory you’re not fully acquainted with, but are too proud to admit to. Big eyes that say how will you live without me if I do get lost and don’t find my way back.” Michael tipped his head back. “How would you live?” “A lot more cheaply and with lower blood pressure.” “You’re so mean, Joss.” Michael dug an indignant elbow into his ribs, “you’d miss me. I am the bright star in the constellation of your existence, say it.” “I am the bright star in the constellation of your existence,” repeated Joseph solemnly, grinning as Michael’s eyes narrowed in annoyance. He quickly kissed his lips, “you are my sun, my moon, my stars, my acid indigestion and I love you deeply.” “Prove it. Fuck me, here and now.” “No,” said Joseph firmly. “For one thing sex is not proof of love and for another, I am not doing al fresco sex anyway, because you can bet your life the moment I bare my credentials a packed commuter train will happen along the line and several farmers with guns and a dozen early morning hikers will 114
materialise out of the morning mist. I just don’t perform well while being shot at.” “I’ll get on top so that no one can see you blushing.” “No.” “I’ll buy you pretty flowers and baby white chocolate.” “No.” “I’ll let you use me shamelessly tonight.” “I was planning on doing that anyway.” “Fair enough,” Michael settled back against Joseph’s body. Amused, Joseph wound a strand of Michael’s hair around his finger, “do you ever stop thinking about sex?” “What do you take me for, of course I don’t. My brain and my prick have a direct line and they’re in constant communication with each other.” “You’re a libidinous boy.” “Is that why you love me?” “No.” “Then why do you love me, because I’m good looking?” “No,” said Joseph honestly. He meant it too. There was a heavy seam of neglected requirements in Michael and it was this aspect that spoke to him far more than his face value. “You don’t think I’m good looking?” “Stop fishing for compliments you don’t need, and I’d be a pathetic kind of man if I loved you only for your looks. I don’t know why I love you. I just do. Love needs no reason. It has no dictator, no dogma. It just is.” “I can understand why you love me. I am rather wonderful.” Joseph gave a little smile, but his tone was serious. “How well do you really love yourself?” 115
“It did have blue eyes, Joss, the fox I mean,” Michael took the role of King Canute halting the tide of the conversation on the nature of love. He felt suddenly flat and his faith in the statement faltered. Perhaps he had just confused a dream with reality. He’d been dreaming just before the revelation woke him up, one of those frustrating dreams where he’d been running down a flight of never ending stairs, but he couldn’t recall a fox being an aspect of it. “I can’t comment, as I didn’t see it.” Joseph let Canute succeed in tide halting for once. “You’re tired. I can tell by your voice. We’re going home.” “I never get tired and that fox is out there somewhere.” “So is Christmas, but I don’t fancy sitting here waiting for it. Apart from anything else my backside is cold and damp. Come on, time to go.” Joseph rose to his feet and held out a hand. “You go. I’ll follow in a while.” “You’ll come now.” There was an unmistakeable command in his voice, prompting Michael to swallow the argument banked up on his tongue. He obediently took the outstretched hand allowing Joseph to pull him to his feet. Their hands remained joined as they walked. One of the reasons they had chosen to buy The Station Master’s house was its private aspect. Apart from a few scattered farms there were no domestic properties close by and while trains passed the house they no longer stopped. The station that had once been served by resident Station Masters had been relocated some twenty years earlier. The relocation had occurred in order to 116
better serve a swelling suburban population as the rural one dwindled. They walked in silence listening to the sounds of dawn, the breeze walking through the grass, birdsong. A bird suddenly flew up out of the grass a little way ahead of them and Joseph stopped walking, drawing Michael against his side, pointing into the air, saying softly, “it’s a skylark. Watch it, listen to its song as it climbs higher.” Michael watched enthralled as the bird soared heavenward, its song cleanly carried on air that was as yes unpolluted with the background noise of a fully awoken day. It was beautiful, a rich, complex note intensifying as the bird hovered in the air for a few moments before plummeting towards the ground almost vertically. He turned to Joseph his eyes alight with pleasure, “she came down like a Harrier Jump Jet.” “He,” said Joseph, smiling, “only the male bird sings, though some country legends claim that the finest and most beautiful song of the skylark is actually sung by the female as she dies.” “That’s sad, like The Lady of Shalott, she died singing in her song.” “I didn’t know you liked poetry.” “I don’t really, my dad used to read to me a lot when I was a kid. He likes poetry, so he often read poetry. Mum thinks poetry is a waste of time so I suppose reading it to me was the only chance he got to indulge himself.” Michael shaded his eyes, watching as another skylark rose into the air. Joseph watched Michael as he watched the bird, captivated, as always by the purity of emotion he was capable 117
of at times. It was as if he’d only ever glimpsed the world as shadows in a mirror and was seeing them clearly for the first time, just like the aforementioned lady of poetry. He looped an around Michael’s shoulder, “come on, gorgeous, let’s go home. I’m starving. I need breakfast, tell you what, I’ll race you.” “You big kid,” Michael grinned. “All right then, but you have to let me win.” “It isn’t winning if I let you win.” The words had an odd familiarity about them, and an auditory memory sped through Michael’s mind…”then I’m too tired to race, I want a piggyback.” “You’re not tired, you’re just lazy. I’m not giving you a piggyback. You need exercise to build you up. Come on, stop whining and hold my hand, we’ll run together. It’ll be fun, we’ll leave footprints in the sand…” They had ran along the beach by the water line and left footprints, perfect footprints, but when he stopped to catch his breath and looked back his were the only set visible in the damp sand. It had inexplicably frightened him. He felt abandoned, refusing to believe an explanation that the sea had washed away the prints closest to the water edge. He became hysterical, sobbing and screaming and had had to be picked up and carried home. “Michael?” Joseph’s arm tightened around his shoulder. “You’re as white as a ghost, whatever’s wrong?” Michael forced away the vision of footprints, “nothing. I’m a bit hungry that’s all. Come on let’s get moving. Last one back makes the bacon sandwiches.” He suddenly bent down and plucked loose Joseph’s shoe laces before setting off at a run, 118
grinning as he heard Joseph’s enraged yell and his threats about what he was going to do when he caught up with him.
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Chapter thirteen
“So,” Michael swallowed a last morsel of bread wrapped bacon, “are you playing squash with,” he curled his lip, “Mr Whiplash tomorrow?” “No, not this week,” Joseph wiped his mouth and fingers on a piece of kitchen paper and stood up. “There are too many things to do around the house. I want to get everything unboxed and put away properly, but I’m telling you this, Mike, if I want to play squash with Max or any of my friends I will. You are not dictating to me.” “As long as squash is all you play. I don’t want you playing anything else with him.” “You have nothing to be jealous of where Max is concerned.” “I’m not jealous, why would I be jealous of him. I’m much better looking, and much younger. I just don’t like him. He’s got no sense of humour and he thinks you’re mad to have shacked up with me. He was hoping I’d be a passing phase and you’d get fed up of ‘babysitting’ me and go back to playing macho dungeon master on the knot, cock and cum circuit.” “Behave yourself, brat,” Joseph stooped and kissed Michael’s pout. “Give Max a chance, you might find you like him once 120
you give up the grudge you’re holding onto. I’m going to get ready for work. You can wash up.” “That’s not fair,” said Michael indignantly, “You made me cook breakfast, even though I beat you back home.” “Call it a lesson in morality, namely that cheats do not prosper.” Michael grinned. “In my experience cheats prosper quite nicely on the whole.” “Not if they get caught by me they don’t.” Joseph pointed at the cluttered table, “get on with it.” He swept out of the kitchen. Michael sat for a few minutes and then with a sigh began to stack the used plates. He was a hard taskmaster at times was Joss, though to be fair he did do the majority of the cooking. He had to, because while Michael enjoyed food he wasn’t overly enamoured of the process of turning the raw materials into the finished product. It was all too much faff on, all that preparation, peeling and paring and all for something that would disappear in minutes. If it were left to him he’d order in takeaways everyday, there’d be less washing up that way too. Hmm, he picked up the plates carrying them over to the sink; perhaps he was a tad on the lazy side? On the other hand Joseph didn’t like dancing, so he didn’t dance, not unless forced and that didn’t make him lazy. He was simply making a decision about what he liked doing and what he didn’t like doing. He liked cooking, Michael didn’t. Joss didn’t like dancing, Michael did. It was a matter of preference and nothing to do with wilful indolence. From time to time Joseph danced if Michael forced him too and occasionally Michael cooked if Joseph forced him to. It was an 121
equality of sorts, though he was fully au fait with the fact that equality was not always what their relationship was about, not on a surface level anyway. Lavishly squirting detergent into the bowl he filled it up with hot water before donning rubber gloves. He turned the radio on and then put the dirty crockery into the bowl, smiling to himself. Despite the fact Joss was a terrible dancer he still liked to dance with him, especially to smoochy songs involving body contact. Evanescence’s Amy Lee sang ‘My Immortal’ from the window ledge radio, her haunting vocals wreathing around the sunlit kitchen. Michael stared dreamily out of the window into the long garden, duetting with Amy, singing tunefully, “when you’d scream I’d fight away all of your fears…” he suddenly shivered and stopped singing, his skin goose pimpling. Why was it that some songs, someone else’s words, could hook your emotions, as if they’d been written as a voice for you alone? He decided he no longer liked Evanescence or their very beautiful and enigmatic lead singer. He had once wondered if he were bisexual because he found some women attractive. He had come to realise he simply appreciated beauty in all its aspects. With women his appreciation was skin deep, amounting to no more than admiring the expertise of brushstrokes on canvas, or the keen clever blink of a camera lens. With men the appreciation went to the very heart of him, as well as his groin and with Joseph it went somewhere else in addition, his soul for want of a better word.
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Reaching out a wet, gloved hand, Michael decisively snapped the radio off, silencing Miss Lee and her Immortal. He would not be buying their latest album at lunchtime after all. Taking a deep breath, one of those diaphragm ones aimed at quelling a panic attack, he hunched his shoulders, pressing his rubber encased hands down into the bowl of frothy water. He focussed attention on the oily, iridescent spheres sparkling in the sunshine, admiring their delicate vibrating colours. If Joseph saw them he would complain and say he’d used far too much washing up liquid to get bubbles like that and it was a waste of money. He grinned. He rather liked Joseph’s mundane tight‐fisted complaints. They made him feel secure even when they grated. The bubbles were like a rainbow hall of mirrors reflecting his face back at him dozens of times over, slightly distorted but no less handsome for that. He studied himself then stiffened as the face held prisoner within the shimmering orbs suddenly seemed to waver and change. A name floated through his mind, soft as a whisper, as if someone were calling it from a great distance. Abruptly pulling his hands from the bowl of suds he stepped back, too quickly, slipping on the soapy water that had dripped from the gloves. He instinctively reached out to grab at something. The plastic dish drainer stacked with freshly washed breakfast pots did nothing to anchor him and he landed hard on his backside amid a cascade of assorted dishes all of which miraculously bounced around him and not onto him. Turning his head towards the kitchen doorway he yelled at the figure standing there, “for fuck’s sake! You scared the 123
living shit out of me. What the hell are you doing, sneaking around like some kind of creeping Jesus?” Joseph flinched as an already wounded mug flew across the kitchen in his direction, thudding against the doorjamb, spraying out shards of spiteful pottery. He spoke sharply as Michael snatched up a second missile to vent his spleen with. “I don’t advise throwing that, not if you want to be able to sit down today. I mean it, Mike, throw it and I’ll leather your bare backside.” He strode towards him, removing the mug from his hands and helping him to his feet. “I’m sorry if I startled you. It wasn’t intentional. Is anything hurt besides your dignity?”
Michael shook his head. Peeling off the rubber gloves he
dropped them next to the sink. “Good, corner please.” Michael’s face reddened, “for falling on my arse?” “Don’t question me,” said Joseph. “Do as you’re told without further argument.” Every fibre of Michael’s being resisted the edict; the palms of his hands sweating resentment, while the nerves in his groin flashed so many mixed messages that he couldn’t dissect them. His feet however carried him obediently towards a corner of the kitchen. “Hands behind your back, no twisting around.” Michael mouthed several silent obscenities at the wall, but did as he was told. He hated being cornered. It was just as hard as submitting to a spanking, worse in some ways, because at least with a spanking he had physical proximity with Joseph. Standing in a corner he felt horribly small and powerless. He fought all the usual urges, to fidget, to turn around, to sigh, to 124
complain, knowing that to do so would simply prolong his time in this hellish outpost of his Dominant’s disapproval. He was learning. Joseph set about clearing up the scattered crockery. One cereal bowl had escaped unscathed, as had one plate. The others were in multiple pieces, so too were the glass tumblers used for orange juice. Michael had been very lucky to escape being cut. After sweeping the floor and putting the debris in the bin, Joseph folded his arms and leaned back against the sink unit, observing Michael’s back for a few moments before ordering, “come here.”
“Just a sec,” Michael raised a hand, “while I finish off
some mental maths. I’ve worked out that the square root of boredom is an interior angle formed by two meeting walls,” he turned round, “commonly known as a corner.” Joseph smiled, he would have preferred not to, but it was done. “Stop smart mouthing and come here.” Michael obeyed and taking hold of his hands Joseph raised each of them to his lips and kissed them. “You did well, until that crack about the corner. I ought to make you do the time over again, as punishment for attempting to wrest back control of the situation by insurgent use of ‘facetious’ comment.” “Are you going to make me do it again?” “No.” He pulled Michael against him, “I don’t feel that desperate a need to prove my authority, not this morning anyway. Besides, you did as you were told when it mattered and I know how much of a struggle that can be for you. I’m proud of you. Did the corner serve its purpose, have you got 125
over your fright, do you feel less inclined to abuse me with vitriolic crockery?” “Yes, and I’m sorry. I overreacted. Are you going to spank me?” “Not unless you especially want me to,” Joseph gently massaged Michael’s neat, round buttocks. “You usually punish me when I throw things.” “I punish you when you deserve to be punished and while it’s for me to decide when that is, rules and principles have to at least have the potential to be fluid to take into account different circumstances. I don’t like you throwing things and I won’t put up with it, you know that, but on this occasion I believe you were reacting to a genuine fright rather than simply exhibiting unadulterated bad temper. It would be very mean of me to punish you for being frightened and upset.” “Then why did you threaten to spank me when I picked up the second mug?” “Because, my pet, that was unadulterated bad temper. The moment of reactive fright had passed and you were consciously looking to vent for falling onto your backside in such an undignified manner. Had you thrown it then you’d be getting that backside tanned right now.”
“I don’t know why I put up with you.” Michael pouted
into Joseph’s chest. “You’re a domineering brute and a domestic tyrant.” “Do you regret making the decision to live with me?” Joseph stroked his fingers through Michael’s hair taking pleasure in its texture. “No, ignore my crass comment, you usually do.” 126
“It took you long enough to say yes, and you were less than buoyant on the day we moved in. You barely spoke to me and you were moody for days afterwards. Were you having doubts, about me or this lifestyle we’ve chosen?” “Neither. I’m happy.” “You were happy when I had my own house and you could run back to your parents home when I didn’t suit you.” “I can still do that if I want to.” “You can’t. This is your home now. We agreed that if we set up house together we’d do it properly with each of us giving one hundred percent commitment to the relationship. You can’t go running back to mummy and daddy whenever things don’t please you. So, I’ll ask again, do you regret making the choice?” “Do you regret asking me?” “Trust you to turn the question round. The answer is no, not for a second. I believe we’re right for each other and I love you, warts and all.” “I have no warts,” Michael reached his arms around Joseph’s neck. “I’m perfect, unlike some I could mention. By the way, seeing as I fell down, it’s your duty to kiss me better. As it was your fault I fell in the first place, I get to choose where the kiss is placed.” Joseph smiled, “all in good time. First of all I want you to tell me what you were thinking about so deeply that you didn’t hear me speak your name three times? You were miles away and when you finally did seem to hear me you reacted as if you’d been shot.” Michael shrugged, “I wasn’t thinking about anything. I was admiring the bubbles in the washing up bowl and 127
wondering whether I’d ever see my fox again and then you scared the wits out of me.” He ground his hips invitingly against Joseph’s groin, “do I get my kiss now?” “Yes,” Joseph inclined his head, “there. You’re kissed all better now.” “That was a peck not a kiss and not where I wanted it!” “It’s a work day in case you’ve forgotten. I’ve got an early meeting and you’ve got a deadline to meet.” Joseph unwound Michael’s arms from around his neck, turned him round and smartly smacked the seat of his jeans. “Go and finish getting ready, and hurry up” He went and Joseph leaned his hands on the sink and gazed out of the window. Something was going on with Michael. He was sure of it, and for once he had the uncanny feeling that Michael himself wasn’t exactly sure what it was. He wasn’t in control of it.
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Chapter fourteen Turning his thoughts away from what was going on in Michael’s mind to more mundane thoughts about what was keeping him upstairs so long, Joseph cast a frown at his watch. How much time did a man need to re‐comb his hair and put on a jacket for heaven’s sake. He headed questioningly into the hall. “Michael?” Placing a foot on the bottom stair and hooking an arm around the banister newel cap he questioned again, more forcefully. “MICHAEL?” There was still no response and clicking his tongue with annoyance he ran up the stairs. On entering the bedroom, all became clear and he rolled his eyes skywards as he observed several discarded jackets strewn across the bed. The man himself was also on the bed, systematically lifting first one foot then the other, as he tried to decide which of the different trainers he was wearing went best with his jeans and chosen jacket.
“Hey!” Michael squeaked a startled protest as his iPod
earphones were ruthlessly plucked from his ears. “You’re going to end up deaf as a result of wearing these wretched things, haven’t you read the health reports. I’ve got to go to work or I’ll be late.” 129
“Then go. You don’t need a permission slip and I haven’t exactly got you walled up in the cellar have I, no one’s stopping you.” Michael turned his attentions back to his feet, or rather what was on them. “You’ll find yourself walled up in a corner awaiting some very unpleasant attention if you don’t guard your manner. I was just paying you the courtesy of a face to face farewell.” “Sorry. Can we go clubbing tonight, Joss, we haven’t been dancing for ages?” “I doubt we’ll have time,” holding his tie against his chest Joseph bent to kiss him, “not in between getting home from work and you being in bed by eight.” Michael’s lips moulded themselves into an unattractive shape. “You don’t really intend to send me to bed early like a little kid all weekend do you? It’s such a bore.” “Tough,” said Joseph bluntly. “It isn’t about being treated like a kid. It’s about boundaries and control. That’s the last comment you’re permitted to make on the subject. You’ll simply do as you’re told when you’re told or incur further punishment. You will learn to submit to my decisions with good grace.” He kissed him again. “I’m going to work and you need to be making tracks or you’ll be late. Drive carefully and don’t wear those earphones in the car, they’re a safety hazard. You can’t possibly concentrate on driving with music blasting your eardrums off. I’ll see you this evening.” Flopping back on the bed Michael hooked both hands behind his head, listening to Joseph’s footsteps descend the stairs. The front door opened and closed. It was followed by car 130
door sounds; the start of an engine and the crunch of wheels on shale and then the silence softly surged back into place. He made a study of the ceiling watching the play of sunlight allowing his mind to freewheel before settling on details of the light bondage play that had taken place in the kitchen the evening before, exciting him all over again. It was the first time Joss had ever done anything like that with him, his reason being that they needed to firmly establish the real, core dynamics of their relationship before introducing play aspects in order to avoid possible confusion. Lowering his right hand he began stroking the growing bulge in the front of his jeans as he recalled how he’d felt standing naked with his hands bound behind him and Joseph utterly in control. Pulling down his zip he raised his slim hips from the bed using both hands to shimmy his jeans and briefs down. Closing his eyes he tried to replicate the feeling of being tied by slipping his left arm behind his back and pressing his weight against it. Spreading his legs as far as the jeans and pants that shackled him at the knee allowed he began stroking his long slender cock, imagining it was Joseph’s hand caressing him and creating delicious waves of pleasure. He made a fist around his erection, pumping it, picturing what he must have looked like bending nude and bound, while being fucked from behind, Joseph’s broad cock ploughing into him. His balls tightened and he arched his back giving a small shuddering moan as he climaxed. After wiping his sticky semen slicked hand and stomach on the top sheet he hauled up his underwear and jeans then lay 131
down on the bed. Curling on his side he closed his eyes again, feeling suddenly lethargic and depressed, as he often did after masturbation. Perhaps it was a result of having no one to cuddle as the sex hormones dropped away, or a result of being completely in control of his own orgasm with no one to serve but himself. That was probably where the myth about masturbation being bad for you originated. Masturbation wasn’t bad per se. It didn’t make you go blind, not unless you were staring the thing in the face went it went off and you had particularly acidic semen. It just made you feel lonely. He suddenly resented Joseph for not being around now, when he wanted reassuring company and a cuddle. He curled his body more tightly, listening as a train rode the track, the sound resonating in the warm air, lulling him to sleep. A dream filtered through his mind. He was running down a circular flight of stairs, running, running, round and round, never getting anywhere, a voice echoing about him… “Life isn’t all about what you want. I need things too. I want a life of my own…open the door, please. I have to go soon. I have a present for you…” Michael woke with a jolt, almost falling off the bed as piercing shrieks rent the air. A goods train signalling its approach to the crossing point half a mile away. Hastily wiping his eyes on the soiled sheet he got up and ran out of the bedroom, leaping lightly down the stairs, leaving the dream lying behind him like a particle of dust on the bedroom floor, something to be brushed away and forgotten. Retrieving the carrier bag he’d stashed under the stairs he carried it into the kitchen and brought forth several tins of cat food studying the labels and pondering what flavour would 132
most tempt a fox to make a house call. He finally selected rabbit and chicken in gravy as being something a fox would most likely choose if it were in a restaurant and could read a menu. Lifting the ring pull with an air of ceremony he opened the can, sniffing the contents. It smelt nice, appetising. Experimentally dipping a finger into the gravy he licked it, not bad, not bad at all. Enthusiastically digging out a spoonful of meaty chunks with a spoon he popped them in his mouth, chewed and swallowed. If he liked it then Mr Fox was sure to love it. He had no actual proof that the fox was indeed a tod and not a vixen, but some instinct told him it was male. He was on the brink of scraping the contents of the can into a bowl when his mobile rang. It didn’t need MI6 to work out who it would be. Fishing his phone out of his pocket he spoke an irascible reply to the caller, “yes, as it happens I am on my way to work, so your call was unnecessary.” His conscience twinged as Joseph humbly apologised and rang off with a kiss. Putting the phone on the table he turned his attentions back to the cat food. It suddenly occurred that a brightly coloured bowl sitting outside the back door would be noticed and questioned. He had a natural proclivity for questioning did Joseph and he liked answers to his questions, they weren’t just cosmetic and there for show. Michael’s right hand strayed to the right cheek of his bottom, rubbing it thoughtfully. He was ninety nine point nine percent certain that Joseph would not approve his attempts at fox enticement. If he were engaging honestly with himself he would have admitted he was one hundred percent certain that 133
Joseph would not approve, and would forbid it. If in fact he hadn’t already done so. However, such an admission would leave him with the dilemma of having to make a straight choice between obedience and disobedience. A percent of uncertainty, no matter how small, at least gave him the leeway to convince himself that Joss wouldn’t really mind, not really, not when he saw how happy it made him, as well as potentially famous. A fantasy enacted itself in his mind where laurels were heaped upon him as the discoverer of the rare blue‐eyed fox. He’d be interviewed on television. The more he thought about it, the more convinced he became that it wasn’t really a situation that warranted considerations of obedience. This time round his disarming smile would work the required magic and turn dominant into submissive if only for a moment. Besides, what Joseph didn’t know couldn’t hurt him and if he didn’t know that he had actively sent out an invitation for the fox to visit, then there was less chance of his backside suffering hurt as a result. Putting the bowl back in the cupboard he opened the back door and after carefully smearing some of the tasty gravy around the cat flap, he spooned some of the meaty chunks directly onto the ground near the door, placing them close to the wall, so that Joss would have to be studying the brickwork to notice them. He then wandered along the garden depositing encouraging morsels onto the grass and under shrubs. Opening another can of food he went out onto the embankment leaving a trail that a hungry fox could easily follow. 134
After clipping his iPod to his belt and inserting his earphones Michael got into his car and fastened his seat belt. He pulled off the drive and had almost reached the end of the single‐track road when he saw it. Putting his foot on the brake he brought the car to a slow halt. Gripping the steering wheel he leaned forward, his breath held prisoner in his throat. It was beautiful. They stared at each other for a split second, then it was gone, a flash of red and white. Flinging open the car door, Michael bounded after it leaping across open fields in his mismatched trainers, heading towards the railway track, trying to keep his sight fixed on the fox.
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Chapter fifteen After a chat with his irate brother, Joseph put his mobile phone down on the desk. Picking up a biro he tapped it thoughtfully against his bottom teeth, his variable eyes shifting shades between anxiety and annoyance. Where the heck had his man gotten too? He had told Tom the truth, as far as he knew it. Michael had set off for work some time ago. He should have been there by now. He offered soothing balm in the form of words that said no, he didn’t think Michael would deliberately ignore his mobile just to wind him up. He probably couldn’t hear it because knowing him he was suffering from iPod‐ induced deafness. He was going to make it a concrete rule from now on that earphones were not worn in the car. Dropping the biro back onto the desk he rang the house phone and then Michael’s mobile, but there was no response. Twenty‐five minutes passed and a second phone call from Tom dissipated the anxiety and heightened the annoyance. When it came to truth and his attractive mate there was often a discrepancy involved. In this instance it centred on where he was and what the hell he was playing at on a workday. Joseph had a terrible suspicion he knew exactly what Michael was playing at. He was working Tom over and doing a good job of it 136
if the phone conversation he’d just had with him was anything to go by. After leaving stern voicemail and text messages with strict instructions for Michael to contact him as a matter of urgency, he left his offices and headed homewards, muttering a promise that if Michael didn’t have a very good excuse for his behaviour, then he was going to bend him over his knee and give him the hardest spanking of his life. He didn’t make it home, not all the way. He was pulled up short on the single‐track road that led up to, or, depending on your directional intent, away from The Station Master’s house. Using the key that had been left in the ignition, Joseph turned the engine over. There was no sign of mechanical malfunction, no sign of a flat tyre and more to the point, no sign of the Mini Cooper’s owner. Cupping his mouth with hands that were still shaking from having come across the car abandoned by the roadside with the keys inside and the driver’s door wide open, he called Michael’s name several times in different directions. He received only a whisper of wind carrying an echo of birdsong by way of reply. Securing the car and pocketing the keys, along with the mobile that had been left on the front passenger seat, he returned to his own car and headed for home keeping his eyes peeled. Anxiety was now his most prevalent emotion. What had happened, where was Michael, why had he so recklessly left his car? If he’d encountered a problem why hadn’t he rang him or Tom to let them know and ask for help? The anxiety increased. What if he hadn’t been able to ring because of some awful 137
chance circumstance? Taking a deep breath he urged himself to stay calm and not indulge in wild imaginings.
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Chapter sixteen His quarry lost, Michael stopped running. Closing his eyes he leaned forwards, breathing deeply, pressing a hand to the stitch in his side. One moment the fox was within sight, weaving across open ground ahead of him then it seemed to drop to its belly and vanish into the rough grasses. On opening his eyes his stomach clenched in sick dismay at what he saw at his feet, or rather what he saw on his feet. Fuck! He had odd trainers on. He would have looked a right tit going into work wearing odd shoes. It would be like a supermodel lurching down the catwalk wearing only one high heel. No matter how gorgeous her face and gown, people would only notice that she had one shoe on, thus corrupting her perfect symmetry. People loved to hone in on the negative, especially if the negative involved someone who was usually viewed as a positive. Beautiful idols were only beautiful idols as long as they remained infallibly lovely. The moment they showed any sign of having clay feet, or odd shoes, the wolves moved in for the kill and all credibility was torn apart, devoured and shit out as so much waste material. Dragging his eyes away from the accidental horror of his asymmetrical footwear he scanned the landscape searching in 139
vain for a glimpse of red and white amongst the green and brown scenery. There was nothing, just the invisible breeze pushing its way through yielding grass revealing the rusted scars of old railway tracks. On impulse Michael knelt down, touching his fingers to the scarred earth. There was history here. The history of men and women travelling on the trains that had once ran along these memorial tracks. They’d had names, those vanished travellers, and lives. Their eyes had looked out of the train windows watching the countryside rush by, as they sat busy with their thoughts. History was perpetually in the making, yesterday was history, a breath exhaled was history. He plucked and wound a juicy blade of broad grass around the third finger on his right hand. The walk he’d shared with Joseph in these very fields in the coolness of dawn that morning was now history. It was gone, and he could never have it back. He felt a surge of anger for its loss. He wanted it back! It belonged to him and he wanted to be forever held in its sweet embrace, but only a fly caught in amber remained in the same place while time moved around it. The anger receded, leaving sadness for a lost, precious portion of life, or it would have done, he defiantly cast aside the bruised blade of grass, only he never got sad, never. Suddenly uneasy and tearful, he rose to his feet, shivering as the breeze coiled around him, rippling the material of his shirt and scraping his face with invisible fingers. During a brief pause between the songs being relayed into his ears he thought he heard a name being called. It echoed for a second before being drowned in music. He glanced around, but there 140
was no one there, no one for miles. He was alone with only the ghosts of long departed travellers on dead railway lines for company. He didn’t care for this haunted solitude. It scared him. A sudden nausea gripped him, which he fought. He couldn’t be sick, not without Joseph nearby. A blur of movement at the corner of his eye caused both uneasiness and queasiness to give way to a fresh surge of excitement and he set off in pursuit once again, inspired and driven by the pure inner child that so enchanted his partner. Any hopes Joseph had of finding Michael at home were dashed when his greeting went unanswered. He bounded up the stairs finding only a crumpled bed and discarded clothes. It was the kitchen that yielded a clue, some might call it evidence, as to where the absent man might be and what activity he might be engaged in when he should have been engaged at work. ‘Chicken in jelly,’ read the legend on one tin, ‘turkey in gravy,’ claimed the label on another. Joseph’s anxiety stood down and was replaced with anger. So much for cans of coke! He shoved the unopened cat food back into the plastic carrier bag on the table. A quick search of the outside dustbin revealed a couple of tins devoid of feline food. It didn’t need a detective to work out what purpose the contents had been used for…inducement. He’d bet any amount of money that a sighting of Michael’s current obsession had led to the abandonment of his car and the abandonment of his obligations. Leaving by the back door, Joseph strode quickly down the garden not bothering to open the wooden gate, climbing over it and out into the open fields. 141
Chapter seventeen The thin icy hymen of early morning ruptured as the sun gathered strength and rose higher in the sky, its radiant light pooling over the countryside like melted butterscotch. It was warm and getting warmer. Michael wiped a shirtsleeve over his perspiring face. He’d lost the fox again and suspected he too was lost. He looked around. What the fuck was he doing, galloping over fields like a straggler from a hound pack? He’d let pursuance of one objective distract him from another. Irritability gave way to sudden uncertainty and anxiety concerning the validity of either objective. In an effort to leave it behind he began walking briskly, searching for jogs to memory, but there were none, well none that registered in his mind. He’d been too preoccupied in keeping the fox within sight to take notice of anything else. A surge of relief accompanied the finding of the railway track again. All he had to do was follow it and it would take him somewhere, if not to where he’d started. The relief strengthened, quickening his pace as he began to recognise aspects of the landscape, like the dead oak tree whose contorted naked torso was powerful and erotically beautiful. He would draw it one day, anthropomorphize it and make it into a piece 142
of erotic bdsm artwork. It would make a fine gift for Joseph. Then there was the piece of ragged, black plastic bin liner wound around the lower wire of an electricity pylon, waving like an ensign in the breeze, signalling that he was getting close to home. The thought of the house he shared with Joseph gave him a thrill of pleasure and quickened his pace still further. It was pointless. Joseph scanned the landscape. He could walk around for hours and not find a trace of his errant man. Best just to return to the house and wait for him to turn up. He very much doubted that Michael would find what he was looking for. Foxes usually went to ground soon after dawn, unless they were feeding young and searching for extra food. His anxiety reawakened, pushing his thoughts into overdrive. What if Michael had gotten himself properly lost? He had a truly appalling sense of direction. Rumour had it that there were old mine workings under some of these fields. He could have fallen into one of them and he had no means of calling for help. Michael was a handful, but he was a handful Joseph didn’t want to relinquish. He had known that living with him wouldn’t be easy or straightforward because Michael wasn’t straightforward. He had twists and turns to his personality that at first weren’t apparent, masked as they were by his physical appearance. He tended to attract the sort of men who wanted to wear a lover like a fashion accessory, something to flatter their outfits and earn them compliments. Such men were too busy serving their own vanity to give Michael the stability he needed. He ended up being discarded like a piece of worn costume jewellery that had begun to snag its owner’s favourite outfits. 143
Accessories were not important to Joseph. He didn’t want a disposable trinket. He wanted a companion for life and he wanted it to be Michael with all his complexities. Cupping his hands around his mouth he shouted his name again, and then again, but there was no reply. Pushing anxiety to the back of his mind, he took out his mobile in order to call Tom and tell him the quarry he so desperately sought was still unfound and incommunicado. Tom wasn’t pleased, understandably so. He had a meeting pending at noon and nothing to present at it. Slipping off his jacket and loosening his tie, Joseph hastened homewards. Michael stood still defeating an urge to clap his hands with joy, as he spied the white tip of a fox’s brush disappearing under the garden gate. It had worked. His scheme of enticement had worked. He stayed where he was for a few moments, and then moved stealthily forwards, watching over the low wall as the fox’s keen nose sniffed out the trail of morsels that had been left for it. His excitement mounted as it began sniffing around the cat flap licking at the gravy he’d smeared there before pushing its way through into the kitchen in search of more food. Taking his house keys from his pocket Michael climbed the gate. In the event he didn’t need the keys. The back door was already unlocked; an unusual oversight for Joseph who was fanatical about checking everything was locked up before leaving for work. Joseph’s relief was paramount, as he spotted a familiar figure scaling the garden gate. He shouted, but Michael’s soundproof 144
iPod earphones did their job, blocking outside noise. Saving his breath Joseph hurried towards the house getting ready to shout again, as he saw him opening the back door, but he didn’t. Something about his stance warned him an event was in progress and it might be unwise to make too much noise. Pulling his jacket back on he moved forwards.
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Chapter eighteen A great wave of disappointment washed over Michael as he slowly hunkered down in the open doorway, viewing the animal huddled against a kitchen cupboard. It was lovely, but it wasn’t the creature he had seen in the kitchen previously, or the creature that had enticed him from his car that morning. It couldn’t be, because it didn’t have blue eyes. It had yellow‐ amber eyes and they were staring at him intently. The fox’s lips drew back and Michael’s stomach lurched as it bared sharp teeth and contracted its body in preparation to leap. Chimera vanished. This was no potential pet. It was a wild animal with all the instincts of a wild animal, attack being one of them. Comprehension of danger should have acted as a spur to movement, but it didn’t. Fear rooted him to the spot. Something flew over his head, exploding into the kitchen, distracting the fox and causing it to spin round and look for whatever enemy was coming at it from behind. It was a set of car keys, his car keys.
“Joseph!” Michael’s paralysis passed and he scrambled
to his feet only to be almost knocked off them again, as he was grabbed by the collar and dragged down the garden path, well 146
away from the open door. His earphones were briskly pulled out. “You were blocking its escape route, you idiot,” hissed Joseph furiously. “Haven’t you ever heard the saying that a cornered fox is more dangerous than…” he abandoned the adage, drawing Michael against him, as the fox took its chance and burst out of the kitchen, streaking wildly through the garden, leaping over the low wall into the open countryside beyond. Michael let out a long breath, then grinned, “oh God, Joss, you should see your face…” He gave a squawk, all propensity towards laughter vanishing, as he was jerked roughly round and struck hard on the backside. “Inside, do you understand me, get in that house!” Michael understood very well. You didn’t argue when the Station Master spoke in that tone of voice. He got in the house at speed, all but running. Standing by the kitchen window he rubbed his buttocks, wincing. The slap had been phenomenal, its sting just blossoming as the numbed nerves recovered. Keeping his back turned to the house, Joseph folded his arms looking in the direction the fox had taken. Taking slow deep breaths he gathered his thoughts and aligned them with his feelings. Neither Michael nor the fox had been aware of his presence; both were too intent on watching the other. He had heard what Michael couldn’t hear, the warning throaty snarls of an animal that felt threatened and trapped and was letting it be known it was getting ready to fight if necessary. He had felt nauseous as he saw its lips draw back from its teeth. 147
All at once he had been a child again, frozen in horror as he viewed the carnage in his grandfather’s Bantam house where a frenzied young fox was tearing apart the beautiful birds. Joseph could smell the blood of the slaughtered creatures and its sticky warmth on his bare feet. He re‐experienced the shock and pain, as the fox turned on him, its teeth fastening around his skinny calve because he was doing what Michael had done, he was blocking the escape route of the door. He could hear his screams as he tried to fight it off and the shouts of his beloved grandpa as he came to his rescue. Afterwards there was shame, guilt and grief because later that same night his grandfather suffered a stroke from which he never really recovered. Deep down in the child part of himself, Joseph felt responsible for the death of someone he had loved, even though his adult self recognised that the stroke would probably have still happened even if the fox incident hadn’t. He was not to blame for being a frightened child and calling for help. Overriding the paralysing flash of childhood memory he had reacted to present danger by throwing the first thing that came to hand, Michael’s car keys, skimming them behind the fox to startle it from an offensive action into a defensive one. If he hadn’t, Michael’s face would have been torn wide open by fox teeth, just as his leg had been torn when he was a boy. He’d needed over twenty stitches in the deep wounds, but the pain of that was nothing compared to the pain of losing his grandfather. Setting the past aside he turned and strode towards the house to deal with the here and now. His boy had some explaining to do. 148
The disarming smile that Michael was priming gave up without even trying to make an appearance, recognising it didn’t stand a chance, as a grim faced Station Master entered the kitchen, closing the door behind him. Striding over to the kitchen table he snatched up a plastic carrier bag. Michael’s stomach gave a great lurch of dismay. Shit! He’d forgotten to hide the remaining cat food before leaving for work, fool that he was. The bag was thrust at him accompanied by a sharp instruction. “Bin it!” He did as bidden without hesitation, dropping the cans into the pedal bin. He turned to see a kitchen chair being pulled out from under the table. “Sit down.” Michael experienced a surge of temper, expressing it in the guise of a small subversive smile. “I’d love to sit and chat, but time, tide and work wait for no man and I need to, JOSEPH!” He used the name as a protest at being firmly manoeuvred over to the chair and even more firmly seated upon it. Rubbing his arm he downloaded a pained expression into his eyes. “I’ve got things to do, shoes to change, cars to salvage. I haven’t got time to play inquisitor and victim.” Joseph ignored both the arm rubbing and the remark. He got straight to the point, “I told you not to try and entice that animal onto these premises. I told you to put it right out of mind, but apparently the only thing you put out of mind were my wishes.” He pointed towards the pedal bin, “and you lied to me directly about the contents of that bag, which as far as I’m concerned contains more than mere cat food. It contains 149
deception and wilful disobedience. While we’re on the subject of wilfulness, Tom has been trying to get hold of you all morning. He’s absolutely frantic, something about a meeting you persuaded Christina to bring forward yesterday on an instruction he didn’t give, a mystery in itself, even more so when you consider you did it without completing the project revisions the meeting is all about. You were supposed to have them done before leaving work yesterday. You assured him that everything was in hand and he trusted you. Yet the work he found this morning was an exact duplicate of the work rejected on Tuesday. You’ve let him down and compromised the Company. You should have said if you were finding the work a problem, you should have asked for help.” Michael stood up, only to be roughly re‐seated. Tilting his chin at a proud angle he said, “for your information I didn’t need any help and I haven’t let Tom down. The project is finished, to spec and within budget. I did it straight off and I know the client likes it because I forwarded it to them directly and they approved it. There was one potential problem concerning the depth of the seat area, which I’ve since recalculated and modified. I think they’ll be pleased with it, in fact I know they will. It’s a good basic design and it’s ready for finalisation, so Tom has no need to get his knickers in a knot. It’s cash in the bank.” Joseph folded his arms, “let me get this straight. What you’re saying is that you’ve been playing a cat and mouse game at Tom’s expense, stringing him out all week over a deadline that has already been met?” 150
The sense of unease that Michael had been keeping in the background came rapidly to the fore. Joseph had a way of saying things that made him feel uncomfortable. It had all seemed so simple at the beginning. How come it was now a complex affair? He tried once again to get to his feet in an effort to equalise his physical position if nothing else, but was again re‐seated.
“When I want you to stand up,” said Joseph curtly, “I
will tell you. Until then keep your backside parked or I’ll skin it.” He shook his head, “how could you treat Tom with such a lack of respect? He’s not just your employer, he’s a family member.”
“What about his lack of respect for me?” Michael went on
a sulky defensive, revealing the grudge he was still bearing in the process. “He knew I wanted a stab at that bike project. He should have given it to me, not lumbered me with another dull task.”
“So,” said Joseph in tones of deep disgust, “this is all
about revenge. You took it upon yourself to punish him for not indulging your will and for making a decision he’s perfectly entitled to make as head of his own Company.”
“It wasn’t like that,” Michael’s voice carried a reproach
at being misunderstood. He decided to give the situation a different slant. “I was just teasing him, you know, winding his key and keeping him on tenterhooks as to whether the job would be finished in time for the meeting. I didn’t see any harm.” He gave a guileful little grin, “especially as I knew everything was perfectly fine. I wish I’d seen his face when 151
Chris told him the meeting had been brought forward by two hours.” ‘You naughty little boy,’ the words sprang to Joseph’s tongue, but he didn’t speak them because to do so would be to make light of Michael’s carefully orchestrated actions. Some naughtiness he tolerated and even enjoyed, it was part of the dynamic of their relationship, but not this. It wasn’t playful teasing. It was plain spiteful payback. “No wonder you’ve been restless all week. You’ve been manipulating Tom, manipulating me, lying to us both and all in the cause of feeding your ego and venting your spleen.” Joseph ran a hand through his hair. “I really can’t believe you sometimes. You deliberately submit work you know will be rejected, that being the objective, while withholding the real thing. You abandon all etiquette and liase with a client behind Tom’s back, get approval for a contract he thinks the Company is still trying to secure and then trick his personal secretary into bringing forward a meeting without consulting him, throwing him into a complete panic when you don’t turn up to explain what the hell is going on. I suppose you planned that as well, to edge up the pressure still further?”
“No,” Michael vehemently shook his head.” I didn’t
intend to be late this morning, well, not quite as late as this. I was going to put him out of his misery, produce the real thing, you know with a flourish, and tell him he needn’t worry because I had everything under control. I just got excited when I saw the fox standing in the middle of the road, like it was waiting for me and I went after it. It really did have blue eyes.” 152
Joseph wasn’t interested in foxes or the colour of their eyes, “you’ve caused no end of confusion, anxiety and stress. I’m ashamed of you.” Reaching into his pocket he extracted Michael’s mobile and held it out, “call Tom, tell him everything he needs to know in plain English, no trying to excuse the inexcusable. If you tell him anything less than the truth you’ll regret it. I need to contact my office. I’ll go upstairs and do it. Come up when you’re done.” Michael reluctantly took the phone, feeling abandoned as Joseph walked out of the kitchen without a backward glance.
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Chapter nineteen Resting his hands on the bedroom windowsill, Joseph gazed out across the fields admiring the view, feeling his tension ease a little. He loved the station house with its quiet solitude and the illusion that civilisation with all its uncivil ways was a long way off. He was no fool. He knew the land would eventually be sold and modern dwellings would grow up around the solid Victorian house, penning it. It would become a relic of a bygone age surrounded by modernity. Not for a while though he hoped, a long while. He turned his thoughts to Michael, which brought back a portion of tension. He loved him, but that didn’t mean condoning and excusing his every action. Love might not need to be called to account, but sometimes the one you loved did. The sound of mismatched trainers treading the stairs drew his attention away from the window towards the bedroom door. He greeted Michael with an unsmiling, “well?”
“Tom doesn’t want me at the meeting. He’ll deal with the
client himself.” Michael dropped down on the bed and plucked at the knee of his jeans. “He doesn’t even want me at work. I’m suspended for a fortnight without pay for unprofessional 154
conduct.” He cast a hopeful look in Joseph’s direction. “Talk to him, you have to make him change his mind.”
“No. You deserve a suspension. You should consider
yourself fortunate he didn’t dismiss you altogether for giving him the run around like that. I wouldn’t tolerate such grossly inappropriate behaviour from a member of my staff. I don’t suppose you’ve given so much as a thought to poor Chris. How do you think she’ll be feeling, knowing you used her and her affection for you to help make a fool of Tom? You’ve embarrassed her. You had no right to drag her into your nasty little game.” Michael hadn’t given a thought to Chris, not for a second. Discomfort shrouded him, heating his skin. “I didn’t mean to upset anyone,” he moistened his lips, ”not Chris anyway. I hope Tom wasn’t mean to her. I’ll send her some nice flowers. Yellow roses, she likes yellow roses.” “A bunch of flowers doesn’t make everything all right again.” “It was just a bit of harmless ribbing, a joke.” “No,” Joseph shook his head, “it wasn’t harmless. Your behaviour was disgraceful, shabby, and you know it, so take responsibility.” “I didn’t mean it to be like this, Joss, really, I thought…I just wanted…” he shrugged, miserable and suddenly confused as to what had motivated his actions. “You wanted what you always want, your own way and control of any given situation, regardless of whether you being in control of it is appropriate or wise. It’s called blind control and it serves no one, least of all you. That’s why you’re in the position you’re now in, suspended from your job for 155
misconduct. That’s a heavy black mark against you. Can you blame Tom for being angry, not to mention hurt that you tried to make a fool of him? He put his trust in you, and this is how you repay him, by trying to score cheap points over him.” Michael rubbed a hand over his face. “I didn’t see it like that. I didn’t think about how it would look to him. I didn’t mean to hurt him. I like him. I was just pissed with his decision to favour Stan over me.” “It was nothing to do with favour. He has responsibility for more than just you. He has other employees and it’s up to him how and to whom he allocates the work. It’s your lot to accept his decisions, just as it’s your lot to accept the decisions I make at home, regardless of whether or not you like them.”
“Don’t be angry. I don’t like it when you’re angry with
me.” The pastel eyes gazed imploringly, the pretty mouth set in a pout of appeal. This was where people gave in and let Michael off the hook, a trend set by his parents, but it wasn’t what he needed and it wasn’t really what he wanted. Joseph suspected Michael had been a child who desperately needed boundaries and his parent’s indulgences had not provided them. He had once confided that he felt his life was lived on glass floors. He could feel something beneath his feet, but when he looked down there was nothing there. It was vertiginous and terrifying because he felt he might start falling at any moment and there was nothing to cling onto, nothing he could see anyway. Joseph understood what he was trying to say. He didn’t want glass floors with all their illusory properties. He wanted a solid floor beneath his feet, one he knew was there and one that 156
did its job and held him securely. He had been a child and was now a man who had an emotional need for boundaries, and not ones of his own making, because they tended to be like a glass floor, something deceptive that offered no real sense of security. Boundaries often needed discipline to back them up. Tom had imposed work discipline and it was now time for him to impose domestic discipline, as was his right under the terms of their relationship. “Get undressed. Put a nightshirt on.” Flopping back on the bed, Michael looped his hands behind his head. “Oh God, don’t say you’re going to make me go to bed. I’m suspended from work, isn’t that punishment enough?” “Not as far as I’m concerned. Aside from your blatant disobedience over that wretched fox, which incidentally could have taken a chunk out of your face and maimed you for life, I warned you that you’d have me to deal with as well as Tom if you didn’t meet this deadline properly. By anyone’s standards you haven’t done so. I asked you time and again if anything was on your mind and you blithely said no while all the time you were stitching up Tom. For God’s sake, man, he’s got to be able to trust the people who work for him, even more so when they also happen to be affiliated with family. Do as you’re told and get undressed.” “Tom got what he wanted. I did the work.” Michael stubbornly remained where he was. “That’s not in dispute, your method is. You’ve behaved like a selfish, scheming brat from beginning to end. I’m disappointed in you.” 157
“I don’t see what the big deal is. You’re overreacting. Perhaps you need to consider investing in a sense of humour. Seeing as I’ve been forced to take a fortnight off work I’ll go on ebay and see if I can bid for one on your behalf.”
“There’s nothing humorous in this situation,” said Joseph
sternly. He knew what Michael was doing, his attempts to charm had failed, so he was resorting to conveying a sense of being misused and misunderstood. It was a sneaky tantrum, a form of covert bullying in order to try and maintain inappropriate control. He spoke more sharply when the figure on the bed still showed no sign of obeying his instructions. “I’m out of patience. Get undressed or I’ll undress you myself.” Michael crossed his wrists, holding them out with a cheeky grin, “will you tie me up again too?” The grin vanished as his wrists were seized and he was yanked to his feet, jerked sideways and slapped hard across the seat of his jeans.
“We’re not playing here and the sooner you realise that
the better. When I tell you to do something it’s your duty to do it immediately, without backtalk and without inappropriate attitude.”
“I’ll do it,” Michael, his heart beating a refrain of alarm,
tried to prevent Joseph from undoing the buttons on his shirt, only to have his hands slapped and his arms placed firmly by his side. He got the message. There was nothing sensual in the undressing. It was just a quick and efficient stripping of clothing. When it was done, Joseph held out a clean nightshirt and Michael slipped it on, glad to feel the cool cotton cover his nakedness. He was then steered towards the corner of the room where the straight‐ 158
backed chair resided. It was removed and he was put in its place.
“Stand there, hands behind your back, until I tell you
otherwise.” “Fuck’s sake,” Michael mulishly turned around to argue, regretting it as a stinging slap landed on his backside. “Face the wall and keep that profane tongue still or I’ll soap it.” Michael’s dislike of the Laura Ashley wallpaper deepened as he stared at one of the untidy mauve flowers, studying it in detail, while listening to Joseph moving around the bedroom. He took a deep breath trying to subdue the nervous ache in his balls and the tremble he could feel starting in his legs at the prospect of being disciplined. Joseph had revealed his authoritarian colours early on in their relationship, on their very first date, the night after they’d met again by chance. He’d made clear his alpha stance wasn’t just a play technique. He was in charge at all times. He asserted his dominance with a single word. They were having dinner in a restaurant, Michael had wanted to order wine, but Joseph had said his body needed to recover from the alcohol he’d consumed the day before and it would be best if he stuck to water. He had tried to argue, but Joseph had said a quiet, but firm no. From the moment he submitted to the judgement made on that occasion Michael knew the relationship was going to be unlike any he had ever had. He liked the idea of having a man willing and strong enough to dominate him, to say no to him 159
and really mean it. It had thrilled and excited him. He wasn’t excited now though. Taking off his suit jacket, Joseph hung it over the back of the wooden chair. He tidied away some of Michael’s clothes and shoes from that morning and then made the bed. It really needed changing, but he settled for straightening the sheets and shaking the pillows and the duvet. Opening the chest drawer that housed his underwear and socks, he withdrew a heavy brown leather paddle and flexed it a few times, loosening and warming the expensive material. Up until now he had only used a wooden paddle as a means of chastising Michael, but wood was not suitable as a tool for extended punishment, it didn’t have the supple give of leather and would be too damaging. He placed it under the chair and then sat down, rolling up his shirtsleeves before commanding, “come here.” Michael turned round, his guts churning as he saw Joseph sitting on the wooden chair. He stared at him, saying feebly, “I’ll go to bed, no more arguments.” “Over here,” Joseph patted his right thigh, “now.” Michael hesitated for a few moments, but then moved across to him. “Jossy,” he tried to hug him, “don’t be mean to me.” Unwinding Michael’s arms from around his neck Joseph turned him over his knee in a single brusque move. Raising his nightshirt he wrapped a secure arm around his waist and rested his palm against his bare buttocks, “you’re not in control, not at work and not at home, because you don’t know how to be. Your behaviour has proven that. You’ve let Tom down. You’ve also 160
let me down and you embarrassed and compromised Christina, a lady who has shown you nothing but kindness.” Michael closed his eyes bracing his fingers and toes against the floor as the hand that had been warmly residing on his bottom drew away, leaving a transitory coolness. The day he said yes to living with Joseph he had known he was consenting to a lifestyle beyond most people’s comprehension. The full reality of what he’d consented to came home to him with clarity the moment Joseph’s hand struck his bottom for the first time. He knew without shadow of a doubt that this was going to be unlike any spanking he had yet received. He gave a shrill cry, his eyes opening wide with shock. “Joseph!” Grasping the chair leg he tried to lever himself up, “I don’t want…” he gave an involuntary grunt as a second shattering slap exploded onto his rear swiftly followed by a third and a fourth. “No more, please, no more! I didn’t mean any harm. I’ll be good.” He managed to fling his right hand back in an effort to protect his backside. His wrist was grasped and held and a fifth impression of Joseph’s hand branded his backside. He yelled and bucked, wildly kicking up both his heels in a desperate attempt to use them as a shield, refusing an order to lower them. Joseph immediately rearranged him. Parting his legs he hauled him over his left thigh, hooking his right leg over both of his to anchor them. A sixth slap scorched his skin and he bellowed. From then on numbers fell by the wayside. The smacks poured down like hard rain, flooding his buttocks with pain and heat that overflowed to his thighs. There was no pause, no 161
let up to allow him to assimilate the pain. He couldn’t move, he couldn’t do anything but take the punishment being meted out. He had no power, none. Joseph had it all. Pleas and promises brought no mercy and nor did tears. The spanking was long, its rhythm consistently harsh interspersed with quick ruthless massages keeping at bay any merciful numbing caused by nerve overload. He felt every hard smack from Joseph’s hand followed by every fearsome stroke of the leather paddle. When he considered discipline had been properly served, Joseph raised Michael from his lap, wiped his wet face and runny nose with a handkerchief and then led him over to the bed instructing him to lie down. Covering him with a sheet he left the room. As soon as the bedroom door closed, Michael threw off the sheet and pulled his sweat‐drenched nightshirt up around his waist in the hope the air would soothe his raw backside. He lay on his stomach, his tears soaking the pillow. He realised he’d experienced his first full‐scale discipline spanking. All those times he’d thought Joseph had been severe, he hadn’t. He’d been treating him like an apprentice, assessing and gradually schooling him in the ways of the lifestyle they’d undertaken and delivering only mild to moderate penalties. He reached a hand back to touch his pulsing buttocks. It would seem that some kind of deadline had been reached and his apprenticeship was over. Downstairs in the kitchen Joseph turned on the cold‐water tap, cupping his hands under the gushing stream, splashing his face 162
several times. He dried off and then filled the kettle and plugged it in, folding his arms, leaning back against the counter to wait for it to boil. Closing his eyes he took slow deep breaths, collecting himself. He felt drained of energy in a way he never had when controlling a BDSM scene. The discipline he’d meted out to Michael was rooted in a different dynamic and mindset. It consumed energy instead of fuelling it. The kettle boiled and he made the tea, let it brew for a few minutes then poured it into two mugs, stirring a spoonful of sugar into one of the mugs as a comforter. He carried them upstairs to the bedroom, setting both mugs down on his bedside cabinet before proceeding to change out of his office clothes into more casual attire. There would be no going back to work today. He chose jeans and a steel grey t‐shirt topped off with a comfortable loose shirt of washed out blue cotton. Taking the sweetened mug of tea he placed it on Michael’s cabinet. “Tea,” he flicked the tail of the nightshirt down over the punished bottom. “It’ll make you feel better.” Michael surveyed the tea‐giver through tear‐beaded lashes saying thickly, “how, has it got anaesthetic in it?” “Drink it.” “I don’t want to.” Michael closed his eyes, “take it away.” “I’ll leave it there in case you change your mind.” Joseph stooped and kissed the tear damp face. Settling himself back against the pillows on his own side of the bed he picked up the computer magazine and his own mug of tea. A mild flicker of lightening followed by a distant rumble of thunder indicated that the cold air of dawn had not submitted to the heat of the rising day without effect. Michael 163
broke the bedroom silence. “Why don’t you go back to work, I don’t want you here.” “Drink your tea before it goes cold, it’ll…” “Make me feel better, so you’ve said, and I don’t believe you, so piss off!” “I don’t want to spank you again, but I will if you swear at me again, I’ll also set you lines to write. You’re on a very short rein, so watch your manners.” “I don’t like you, Joseph.” “It’s not me you dislike, it’s my actions, and we’re even in that respect.” Turning onto his side Michael propped himself up on an elbow, wincing as the movement jarred his hurting backside. He reached for the mug of tea, taking a sip. The sweet warm liquid was calming and he drank a little more before setting the mug back down and curling on his side with his back turned to Joseph. Outside, daylight dimmed and darkened as the storm gathered pace. He listened as the thunder growled louder and spat out bullets of rain that drummed fiercely against the fabric of the house. It was oddly soothing, a hard lullaby and he closed his eyes drifting into sleep. The rain soon cooled the atmosphere and Joseph drew the top sheet up over Michael’s body. He finished his tea and then folded down a corner of the magazine page before setting it aside. Collecting the mugs he went downstairs, leaving the door open. After rinsing out the mugs he got some duct tape and securely sealed the cat flap, inside and out. It would have to do 164
until he could get the materials needed to remove the flap and fill the gap more elegantly. He then called his brother in order to get the full lay of the land with regard to Michael’s suspension. That done he settled down at the kitchen table, turning his attention to some paperwork.
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Chapter twenty An aggressive punch of thunder rent the air, startling Michael from sleep. He rolled onto his back, giving a whimper as his buttocks made contact with the mattress renewing his misery. Curling on his side, he lay still, listening to the storm, trying to fix his mind on something other than his physical discomfort. He began planning what flowers to send to Christina. Yellow roses and a mix of freesias would be nice, pretty to look at and with a pleasant perfume. He pictured them. He didn’t think about Tom and he didn’t think about the reason why he was sending Christina flowers. He just thought about the flowers, mentally arranging and manipulating them into different bouquets and baskets, or at least he tried to. It wasn’t easy, not with his bottom uncomfortably prickling. It wouldn’t have been so bad if the prickling stayed confined to his bottom and thighs, but it didn’t, it strayed into his thoughts and nudged aside visions of flowers. He jumped as a vivid slash of lightening and clap of thunder coincided, indicating the storm was now immediately overhead. The lightening flashed again, illuminating the room. Getting out of bed he made his way downstairs. 166
Joseph looked up as Michael entered the kitchen. They surveyed each other for a few moments. Joseph spoke first, making his voice hard. “Go back to bed and stay there until you have my permission to get up.”
“I don’t want to go back to bed, actually. I came to
tell…” Michael halted as he caught sight of the taped up cat flap. His heart quickened with an irrational fear. “Why did you do that?” He angrily gestured a hand at the door, “my fox won’t be able to get back in now, not with the doorway sealed.” “It isn’t your fox and that’s exactly the point,” said Joseph tartly. “Do as you’re told and go back to bed.” Michael set his chin at a defiant angle. “I came to tell you something. I’m not going back to work. It’ll be too humiliating. I’ll send in my resignation and look for another post.” It was no less than Joseph expected, a bit sooner than expected perhaps, but no less and he was prepared. He’d already done what Michael needed him to do, what he couldn’t do on his own behalf, because pride and vanity wouldn’t allow him to. “There’s nothing to discuss here. The only decision to be made has already been made by me, so there’s nothing for you to fret about. You’ll serve out your suspension and you’ll go back to work.” Michael’s phone, which was sitting on the kitchen table, chose that moment to signal a shrill delivery of a text. Joseph picked it up, glancing at the sender’s name. “It’s from your father.” He held the phone out. “It must be pressing for him to resort to texting. Give him a call to see what he wants, keep it short and then get back upstairs.” 167
“I don’t want to talk to him. I won’t talk to him. Fuck him and fuck you!” Surging forwards Michael snatched the mobile phone and hurled it across the kitchen. It struck a cupboard leaving a deep dent in the softwood. The phone then crashed to the floor separating into component parts, which skittered in every direction. He made to exit the room, but Joseph caught hold of him, thrusting him forwards over the pinewood table. He swore and struggled, but was pinned firmly in place. The tail of his nightshirt was yanked up and he roared as Joseph’s hand made contact with the cheeks of his bottom, stoking the fire already burning there and making it blaze ever more fiercely. “I won’t tolerate foul mouthed, destructive tantrums, is that clear?” “Let me up, you bastard!” Joseph immediately upped the tempo of the punishment, smacking harder and faster, raising his voice to make it heard above the crack of palm on backside and Michael’s agonised yells and shouts. “You’re going to learn to control your temper and to show me appropriate respect.” Michael gave in and stopped fighting, allowing tears to replace temper. The spanking ceased and he was pulled upright. “Pick that lot up.” Joseph pointed at the floor. “If its un‐ repairable bear in mind that the replacement will be the cheapest pay as you go model.” Still crying, Michael gathered the phone pieces together and placed them on the kitchen table. He felt utterly wretched so when Joseph held out his arms offering comfort he didn’t 168
hesitate to accept, moving straight into their embrace. “I can’t go back to work,” he sniffled, “I just can’t. It will be too embarrassing. I’ll find another job.” “You’re not running away from this.” “Everyone in the office will know I was suspended. I won’t be able to hold my head up.” “As far as your colleagues are concerned you’ve taken holiday leave in order to sort out the house properly after our move. It’s not too far from the truth, because believe me, if you think you’re relaxing by the pool for two weeks you can think again. You’ll be glad to get back to work.” Michael pulled away from Joseph’s arms. “I’m not going back,” he said stubbornly. “I don’t want to. I’ll get another job or go freelance.” “There are no choices to be made here, Michael, not by you and that’s my final word on the subject. It’s not open to negotiation. If you insist on pursuance I’ll discipline you again. Do you understand the situation?” Michael did understand, but wished he didn’t. His body tensed with frustration at his lack of control and he felt his temper beginning to rise afresh. He wanted to argue, but it would be pointless and foolish. He didn’t want to be punished again. Joseph wouldn’t change his mind. The only choice he had was to concur with the decision made on his behalf. This was the way of the relationship he’d consented to. It didn’t make it any easier to accept. “I asked you a question,” reaching for Michael’s hands Joseph held them securely and gazed at him, “are you going to reply?” 169
Michael refused to meet the gaze, looking down at the floor instead, his stomach knotting, as he fought an internal battle with what he wanted and what was expected of him. “I need to know that you understand the situation, Michael, do you?” Taking a deep breath Michael stopped examining the floor and looked up. “Yes. I do understand.” The words brought an immediate release of tension, both physical and emotional. There was nothing for him to fret and agonise over. The decision had been made. He freed his hands in order to embrace Joseph. “I’m sorry about Tom, and Chris. I behaved despicably. I don’t even really know why. Once I got the idea in my head I got obsessed and just ran with it.” “You wasted a ton of energy pursuing a negative goal for nebulous reasons. Life isn’t always going to go the way you want it to go, Mike. You’re not always going to get the things you want, disappointments happen. You have to learn to deal with them face on and accept them with dignity. “Are you still angry with me?” “No. The matter has been dealt with and we’ll move forward.” “Tom and Chris will forgive me, won’t they?” “I’m certain of it, they’re good people and fond of you.” “I’m horribly sore, Joss.” “Go back to bed. Try to have a sleep, it will make you feel better.” “No it won’t. I’ll still be sore when I wake up. I’m going to be sore for days.” “That’s enough.” Joseph took Michael by the shoulders, saying sternly. “You were punished with good reason and as such 170
you’ll accept it without petulant whining.” He softened the harsh words by adding, “come on, upstairs, I’ll lie down with you for a while.” Cuddled in Joseph’s arms and comforted by his warm proximity Michael fell asleep, exhausted by the morning’s events. It was stretched out on the railway track, lying on its side, dead? He crept closer, but still it didn’t move. He swallowed, his eyes blurring with tears. It was dead. He hunkered down. Even in death it was beautiful. He reached out a hand to touch it, giving a gasp of shock and falling back on his haunches as its head suddenly snapped up and it stared at him from bright blue eyes. His heart thundered. A train came out of nowhere pulsing along the track disappearing into the distance taking the fox with it and leaving a dark haired young man standing between the iron lines. He was there for a second and then he too began to recede into the distance like the train, leaving a whisper resonating on the shaken air. “Open the door, please, I have to go soon…”a name echoed, repeating over and over…
Michael’s eyes flew open. He felt sick. He began to sweat,
his mouth salivating in preparation. Hysteria gripped him. He lurched to a sitting position almost knocking his head against Joseph’s chin. “I’m going to be sick,” he grabbed for Joseph, shrieking. “I’m going to be sick!” He gagged, which momentarily cut off the shrieks, but once the reflex had passed the shrieks resumed with increased intensity. Joseph quickly sat up and caught hold of the flailing hands, which had already scratched his face in their panic. 171
Pulling Michael forwards over his legs he administered a sharp smack to his tender bottom. It was enough to cut short the hysterical screams and at least reduce the risk of him choking on his own vomit. No one likes being sick, but with Michael it was a phobia. Joseph had first become acquainted with it the night he had taken him home from the party, almost driving his car off the road as his passenger’s fear had taken control of him. Hurrying him to the bathroom he knelt beside him on the floor, rubbing his back and talking him through the unpleasant business of being sick. It was soon over and he wiped a cool flannel over the flushed face, “better?” Michael nodded, giving a weak smile. “Sorry for losing it like that. I think it was the cat food I ate this morning.” “Cat food!” Joseph raised an eyebrow, “why you can’t have cereal like other people is beyond me, and there’s no need to be sorry.” He stroked the pale face. “This has been a stressful day for you. You’ve had some hard lessons, you’re bound to feel a bit shocky.” He stood up drawing Michael with him. “Go back to bed, I’ll clean the toilet and then I’ll be through.”
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Chapter twenty-one The storm had passed. It was still raining, but softer summer rain, kind on the land. Michael wandered over to the bedroom window to look out across the fields where the railway track lay glistening. His heart skipped a beat as he saw it proudly standing between the lines, its nose lifted in the air sniffing whatever scents were carried on the wind. For a second it looked straight at the window, straight at him, then it was gone, streaking across the wet fields vanishing into the rain misted distance, a scintillating blur of red and white. He flinched as if struck, his body breaking a cold sweat, as the dream he’d just had suddenly powered through his mind in startling detail bringing a dagger of memory with it. Childlike hopes of magic died in a single thrust. Illusions fell away. The fox outside didn’t have blue eyes. It had never had blue eyes. They were the product of a dream and his will to maintain control over something that had long since passed beyond his ability to control. Closing his eyes he pressed his forehead to the cool windowpane submitting to truth. Joseph’s senses sharpened as he walked into the bedroom and viewed Michael standing by the window. His 173
sadness was tangible and he instinctively knew it wasn’t connected with what had happened between them. He went to him, resting his hands on his shoulders, “tell me why you’re sad. Share with me.” Michael turned into his arms, but said nothing. He was shivering and Joseph shepherded him back to bed and lay down with him, listening as the rain continued to decant a chorus of soft whispers upon the roof of the Station Master’s house. A train passed on the track outside leaving a rumble hanging on the rain‐drenched air. A name resonated inside Joseph’s head and as ever it formulated as a question. He spoke with care while twining a strand of honey hair around his finger, “are you thinking about Jude for some reason? Is that why you’re sad? The response he got wasn’t what he expected. “If you ever want to leave me, Joss, if you need to go, I won’t try to stop you. I’ll let you go with smiles and blessings.” He began to sob, heavy, painful sobs. “I promise I will let you go with grace.” Joseph gathered the weeping figure into his arms. Michael had cried at being punished, but not like this. These were tears of a different kind. They were an expression of raw, unresolved grief and as such they were unbearable. “I’ll never leave you, why would I want to, or need to,” he passionately kissed the tear soaked face. “I love you.” He cradled him until the tears stopped and his body relaxed. The rain stopped communing with the roof of the house and fell to silence. Michael broke it first, asking a question, “do you remember when we were talking about your mentor and 174
you said a solid relationship couldn’t be built on a foundation of deceit?” “I remember,” said Joseph cautiously, wondering what was coming. “Do we have a solid relationship?” “I believe so. At least I think we’re building one.” “Good, that’s what I want more than anything, a solid relationship with you. I feel real when I’m with you. I know that sounds silly, but it’s true. I love you.” He paused, and then said softly, “I want to tell you something, I need to, but I’m afraid.” “You’re trembling,” Joseph held him tighter. “Do you trust me?” “Yes,” whispered Michael. “Then trust me, tell me what you need to tell me.” “It’s about Jude.” Joseph’s heart jumped in his chest at sound of the name given voluntarily. It represented a significant moment in his relationship with Michael. To be given access to this veiled part of his life was to be given access to all of Michael. It was a moment of surrender, complete submission. He waited. There was a long silence and then…
“I was shocked when you first asked about Jude. Hearing
that name spoken out loud after so long scared me.” He hesitated. “Why,” Joseph gently prompted, “why did it scare you?” “I didn’t want to think about him, I…” “It’s all right, take your time,” murmured Joseph, cuddling Michael as he began weeping again. “Jude’s death obviously had a profound effect on you. You can’t suppress grief forever, 175
sweetheart. It finds a way out eventually. We have to mourn the passing of those we love, we owe them that and it’s a natural process.”
“You don’t understand, Joss. I lied to you when I said
Jude died of leukaemia when he was sixteen. He did have leukaemia when he was little, but he isn’t dead.” “Then where is he?” “Here,” Michael sobbed the words, “he’s here. I’m Jude, that’s my real name, Jude Reynard.” Joseph was stunned. Getting abruptly up off the bed, he paced to the window and then back, sitting on the edge of it to gaze at Michael, or rather the person he thought of as Michael, studying the tear ravaged face. It was still the man he loved, whatever his name. A thought struck him. “I don’t understand, why would you call out your own name in your sleep?” “I don’t know. Maybe I was literally talking to myself.” “You’re turning out to be quite the man of mystery,” Joseph leaned to kiss the wet face, “you look exhausted, treasure. I’m going to make us some tea while you rinse your face and compose yourself and then we’ll talk.”
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Chapter twenty-two Joseph placed two mugs on the bedside cabinet, “tea, it doesn’t cure anything, but it makes a good listening companion.” He smiled at Michael who lay on the bed curled on his side. There was no answering smile. Outside, sunshine had replaced rain and the day was warming up again. Removing his shirt Joseph draped it over the bedroom chair. Plumping up his pillows he then got on the bed and settled against them. “Do you want your tea?” Michael shook his head. Joseph reached for his own mug, took a sip and then put it down again. “When and why did you change your name from Jude Reynard to Michael Mosse?” “I changed it by deed poll when I was sixteen.” “Ah, I see now, is that what you really meant when you said Jude had died when he was sixteen. It was a metaphorical death for some reason?” Michael shrugged, his eyes brimming tears again. Joseph lay down turning onto his side so that they were face to face. “Talk to me. No more secrets. I want to know and understand everything about you.” He draped an arm over Michael. “You said you had leukaemia when you were little. That must have been terrible. How old were you?” 177
“Five when it was first diagnosed. The treatment was horrible, Joss.” Michael shuddered. “I can still remember how sick I was and how desperately tired it made me feel.” “I’m sorry,” said Joseph, conscious of a constriction around his Adam’s apple. Suddenly he understood his man a little better. “At least it worked, thank God.” “That’s the thing, it didn’t, not for long anyway. It returned when I was six. In the end the doctors said the only thing that might save me was a bone marrow transplant if a suitable donor could be found. My parents were tested, but weren’t compatible, and there were no matches in the leukaemia registry. The doctors said a sibling would offer the best chance of a good match, but I was an only child...” “Then who made the donation?” “Let me finish without interruption please!” “Sorry,” said Joseph humbly, “go on.” “That’s when my dad in desperation decided to try and find my half‐brother.” “Half‐brother! I didn’t know your dad was married before?” “He wasn’t. He had a fling with a girl before he met my mum. She got pregnant, but didn’t want to marry him. She went ahead with the pregnancy, but arranged to have the baby boy adopted at birth. Dad wasn’t given a say in the matter and never even saw the baby. My parents traced him to Devon. His adoptive dad had died when he was nine so there was just he and his mum. She was sympathetic and agreed to tell him all about me. He knew he was adopted, so that part came as no surprise. He volunteered to be tested as a potential donor, even 178
when it was explained that the procedure would be painful. He saved my life.” “How old was he?” “Twelve, six years older than me.” “He sounds like a special person. I’d like to meet him. What’s his name?” Michael didn’t reply. Instead he carefully sat up and reached for his mug of tea, taking a drink before setting it back on the cabinet. He tried to draw his legs up in order to hug his knees, but thought better of it, lying back down and turning on his side again, tucking his hands under his head. “So tell me, what was he like, this newfound brother of yours?” “Nice. I took to him straightaway. He said he’d always wanted a little brother to look out for. I suppose he was a bit bossy in his way. He didn’t think twice about telling me off if he thought I was behaving badly. I didn’t mind because he never did it unkindly and somehow he made me feel safe, something my parents couldn’t. They were too afraid of losing me. I could sense their fear and it unsettled me. My mother was obsessed with angels. She told me I was so lovely that the angels wanted me for one of their own. They’d come for me while I was sleeping and I’d wake up in heaven with them. I’d never grow ugly with age, but remain forever beautiful and not feel poorly ever again. I didn’t want to go to heaven. I was fucking terrified to sleep in case a posse of angels came to cart me off into the wild blue yonder. I had nightmares about it for years.” 179
“I suppose it was her way of dealing with the possibility of your death,” said Joseph quietly, “not an ideal way by any means, but all she had. It must have been a hard time for you all.” “It was vile. I had to have high doses of chemotherapy to knock out what was left of my bone marrow before the transplant. All my hair fell out and I couldn’t even drink water without vomiting. I hated being in hospital and I hated the doctors and nurses. As far as I was concerned they were the ones who’d made me feel rotten. I used to scream and cry and throw things at them or try to bite them. He was the only one who could calm me down. It was summer, so him and his mum stayed with my parents while he recovered from the donation procedure. He’d visit me at the hospital everyday. I was in isolation for a while. It was frightening, but he used to read to me or hold my hand and sing pop songs through a surgical mask. He knew dozens of them off by heart. My favourite was ‘Hey Jude’ because I believed he’d made it up just for me. It was years before I found out it was a Beatles song. I cried my eyes out when the end of the summer holidays came and he had to return to Devon for school. I wanted to keep him, have my parents adopt him back. I even offered his mum money to leave him with us.” Joseph couldn’t help but laugh. “What did she say to that?” “She said she loved him too much to sell him on, but she promised that we’d all stay in touch. “And did you?” 180
“Yes. There were phone calls both ways and he used to write to me. It was exciting. I couldn’t wait for his letters to arrive so mum and dad could read them to me. They were like a window into the world. He’d tell me all about his friends and school. I never went to school. I was privately educated at home because my parents were afraid of me picking up infections, even after I was given the all clear. I used to watch kids playing in the street outside and wish I could join them, but mum and dad wouldn’t let me. It was the only time they refused to give into my whining. They’d buy me every toy, book and game I wanted, but they wouldn’t let me mix with other kids. They wouldn’t even let me have a pet in case it brought in germs. I was almost twelve before they finally allowed me to attend school and then I didn’t like it and couldn’t settle. I didn’t enjoy being one amongst many and asked to be taught at home again.” “Your parents did you no favours. I could shake them sometimes, I really could. Did your brother ever come back to see you?” “Yes. He came for a visit the following Easter and then again in the summer to spend a week with us. It was great. He was good for me.” “How did your mum feel about having him around, knowing he was you dad’s son from another relationship?” “She didn’t care. She thought the world of him because of what he’d done for me. Dad was thrilled just to get to know him. His mum persuaded them to take me down to Devon for a visit later that summer. She said the sea air would build me up. It was my first holiday. He’d take me to the beach every day and I loved it. I felt like I’d been set free.” 181
“Did he look like you?” “Not as such. His hair was dark, almost black, but everyone said we had the exact same eyes. His mum, I used to call her aunt Pat, described them as being the colour of wayside cornflowers. She died suddenly of a heart attack when he was fifteen and that was when he came to live with us. I was sad she died because I liked her very much and sad because he had lost his mother, but I was also happy because it meant I got a full time brother.” “So far,” Joseph combed Michael’s fringe with his fingers, “you’ve very carefully avoided saying his name, why?” “I don’t want to say it.” “Why not?” “I’m not ready,” Michael lowered his eyes, “and anyway I don’t need to tell you, you already know it.” Joseph was silent for a few moments and then asked, “where is he now? Was he the one who died, is that why you use his name, as a way of keeping him close?” “Sort of,” whispered Michael. “He loved pop and rock music. He used to DJ, first at school and college events and then around clubs and pubs. He also did a weekend show on hospital radio, the night shift. He said his own name was too ordinary a name for a DJ so he borrowed mine when he was working. He called himself Jude Reynard‐The Night Fox. I got a buzz out of him using my name. It made me feel part of his world. He had lots of friends, girlfriends too, but I was always horrible to them. I was jealous. I think I had a bit of an adolescent crush on him for a while even though he was my brother.” 182
“Did he know you were gay?” “Yes. I told him before I told anyone else and he helped me tell mum and dad. They were upset at first. They hoped it was a phase I’d grow out of. I was fourteen at the time, but he made them and me see that it was nothing to be afraid or ashamed of. It was still hard to come to terms with though. It felt like another barrier between me and the world, another form of isolation. He wouldn’t let me mope over it. He located a support group for gay teenagers and encouraged me to attend. He used to take me there every week. He ended up being a helper, organising social events like discos. It was good.” Michael suddenly rolled away from Joseph. Getting off the bed he walked across to the window, staring out. Joseph waited expectantly for him to continue with his story, but he didn’t and it was clear that he was struggling to cope with his emotions. Getting up, Joseph went across to him, gently massaging his shoulders, kissing the nape of his neck, “you obviously loved him very much, his death must have hit you hard.”
“He isn’t dead.” Turning, Michael put his arms around
Joseph’s waist, clinging to him, pressing his face into his chest, heartrending sobs once again juddering his body. “I don’t want to talk about him anymore, please, let’s not talk about him anymore. It feels wrong, like I’m killing him. I wish I’d died, Joss. I wish I’d died when I was little. He’d be happy somewhere with a wife and kids of his own if my parents hadn’t sought him out to save me.” Joseph could find no words with which to comfort his man, so he just held him, letting him know through the 183
communication of touch that nothing intrinsic had changed between them. There was still so much he wanted to know, but it could wait a little while.
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Chapter twenty-three
The last night of June was hot passing the midnight
equator into a sultry July. The sticky heat made sleep difficult to come by and when it did come it was light and sensitive to any vibration in the heavy air. Joseph stirred as the bed creaked. He opened his eyes watching as Jude padded over to the window, pushing aside one of the curtains to look outside. He was naked, it being too warm for even a light cotton nightshirt. Getting up, Joseph went to him, running a hand down his back to caress his buttocks, “can’t you sleep?” “It’s too hot. I’ve got a headache with it.” “That’ll be the whisky not the heat,” he gave Jude’s bottom a light slap. “I told you before we went out to say no if Tom offered you one of his infamously generous tots after dinner.” “I didn’t like to say no in case he was offended. I wanted to please him.” “You were pleasing yourself, so don’t lie. Outside of work, who is the only person you should seek to please?” “You. I’m sorry. I didn’t intend to defy you. I acted on impulse. I like whisky even if it doesn’t like me. I still think you were mean to punish me when we got home. You spoiled my day.” 185
“Tough, you shouldn’t have disobeyed me. When I give you a direct instruction I expect you to heed it especially when it’s for your own good. It would have been bad enough if you’d stopped at one, but accepting a second, despite my eye on you was sheer cheeky defiance.” “Don’t nag, Joss, I’ve said sorry. It won’t happen again.” Jude put his arms around him, seeking the comfort of skin on skin. “You looked so sexy too in that tight white t‐shirt,” Joseph pulled him hard against his body, feeling a tingle of arousal at his scent, musky sweat tinged with notes of expensive cologne. “I was looking forward to removing your jeans and underwear with an altogether different agenda in mind.” “Fuck me now, it might help me sleep,” Jude ground his groin against Joseph’s so their cocks rubbed together. The invitation was declined. “Much as I’d love to, the answer is no, my libidinous brat, you’re in disgrace and undeserving of the pleasures of the flesh. Besides, you have a headache.” “Ha‐ha.” Jude reluctantly peeled away from Joseph as the gluey heat generated by their bodies became unbearable. “I hate this weather, it even makes cuddles uncomfortable.”
A scream suddenly shattered the night air startling both
men and causing Jude to clutch at Joseph’s arms. The screams sounded again, even louder, making his heart flutter in his chest like a frightened bird. “There’s someone out there, Joss!” “It’s all right. It’s just a fox.” “Why is it screaming, what’s wrong with it? We have to help it. It might be my fox.” Jude made a start for the bedroom door, but Joseph restrained him. 186
“It’s fine. I know it sounds eerie, but I promise it’s nothing to worry about.” “I haven’t sighted my fox in ages, not since…” he paused, moistened his lips and then said, “not since the day I told you about Michael. I hope it’s all right.” Joseph stroked Jude’s face with the back of his hand, “well done for saying his name, and it will be. Male foxes are lone animals with a wide territory in the summer months. They have no choice. The vixens don’t like them on their patch. That scream was probably his mate warning him to stay clear, but come the winter she’ll be screaming for him to come a courting again. You’ll have to get used to screams and screeches then because foxes make a heck of a racket when they’re loving up.”
“I think I’ll go out for a walk, see if I can see anything.”
“It’s twenty to one in the morning, it’s pitch black out there and the only place you’re going is back to bed. You’ve got work tomorrow.” “I won’t sleep.” “Fine. Lie still and rest your eyes, it’s not quite as beneficial as sleep, but it’s better than wandering around outside in the dead of night tripping over railway lines.” It was no good. The stifling air swaddled them. Jude wanted the security and comfort of Joseph’s arms, but proximity brought unbearable physical discomfort and in the end he rolled away from him. He lay sleepless his mind resonating with thoughts of the past few weeks. He tried to block them, but they came regardless. He seemed to have lost the knack of controlling and blanking painful thoughts. 187
Joseph sensed rather than heard Jude’s tears. He turned to him, stroking his shoulder and arm before leaning over to kiss his cheek, the salt tang on his lips confirming the tears. He made a decision. “Get up,” he patted his hip, “get dressed.” Jude sat up, wiping his eyes with his hands, “why?” “We’re going outside, so put some shoes on. I think we need a higher roof to sleep under tonight.” Joseph spread the summer quilt from the bed on the grassy embankment just beyond the garden wall and Jude put down their pillows. With an infinite sky above them rather than a confining ceiling the air was comfortably warm instead of cloying, draping over them like a gossamer blanket. The perfume of lavender and dog roses added to the ambience, floating like incense from the garden behind them.
Jude cuddled into Joseph’s arms, “I like this,” he
murmured. “It’s nice, thank you.” He was quiet for a moment and then asked, “do I really have to go back to work tomorrow?” “Yes. It’s time to get life back on track. There’s nothing to worry about. You’ve made peace with Tom and Chris. Tom has made it known that you’ve suffered a close family bereavement and that’s why you needed more time off work. What happened prior to that is all water under the bridge. No one will even mention it.” “How will I explain my change of name?” “You don’t have to explain anything you don’t want to. Lots of people change their names for lots of reasons. It isn’t that unusual. Your colleagues will probably put it down to one of 188
your eccentric little vanities, a fashion trend you’ve read about or something. They’ll eventually get used to it, just as I will. I’ve only lapsed a couple of times this week.” “Maybe I should just stay Michael, it would be easier all round.” “We discussed this. You have to learn to be yourself again. You can’t do that if you continue to hide behind his name. Michael was Michael and you’re Jude. Retaining his name as a middle name is honour enough to his memory. Besides, Jude is a nice name. I like it. It suits you.”
“They’re beautiful aren’t they, Joss, the stars I mean.”
Veering away from the subject of names Jude raised a hand towards the heavens, “they’re always there you know, even in the daytime, only they’re masked. Michael told me that when I was little and kicking up a storm about going to bed because I was frightened to go to sleep in case child snatcher angels came for me. He said people were like daytime stars and sleep was a cloud that covered us for a short time before we woke up to shine again. Only,” his voice cracked as tears overwhelmed him once again, “it isn’t true, because some people never do. I still want him to wake up only I now know he never will. Do you think he knew I was there, Joss, do you think he heard me say how much I loved him?” Joseph had no way of knowing what Michael had experienced in his state of altered consciousness, if anything, but he didn’t say so because it wasn’t what Jude needed to hear. “I’m sure that on some level he knew you were there and I’m certain he knew how much you loved him anyway.” 189
“I think he was waiting for me. I think that’s why he lasted as long as he did. He was waiting for me to say goodbye properly this time, so I wouldn’t feel bad all over again. I’m glad he waited for me. I hope he’s with Eva now.” Jude eventually slept, but Joseph remained wakeful. He stared up at the canopy of stars while dwelling on thoughts of the young man whose funeral he had so recently attended. In effect Michael Mosse died twice. First at the age of twenty‐two in a horrific car accident that claimed the life of his fiancée and a friend and then again seven years later when his life support system failed to sustain a body made frail by inactivity. It would have perhaps been better if the paramedic first on scene at the time of the crash had not tried to resuscitate him. He put a heartbeat back into a body, but not a life in any real sense. Michael never regained consciousness. He lay in a deep persistent coma dependent on machinery to keep his body functioning. At first there was hope he would come back, open his eyes, smile, but the weeks passed and he stayed in a state of limbo caught somewhere between life and death. His family were told that as time went on the chances of recovery grew less and even if by some miracle he did reawaken then it was likely he would be significantly disabled. Aside from machinery there was another thing keeping Michael alive, the will of his younger brother. Michael would come back one day, because Jude wanted him to come back. For a year he kept vigil by his brother’s bedside, refusing to believe he would never wake up from his long sleep. Once the milestone year had passed the health authority responsible for 190
Michael’s care began to press for a decision on whether or not to continue the expensive business of life support for a patient who showed no signs of progression and recovery. In the pain and twisted confusion of grief and guilt a sixteen‐year‐old boy made a vow. Michael had saved Jude’s life, so now Jude would return the favour. He would not allow life support to be withdrawn. He made his father promise never to consent to its withdrawal, no matter how much the medical authorities pressed for it. In addition he would safeguard Michael’s place in the world and keep him in by proxy until such time he woke up. Just as Michael had once borrowed his name he now borrowed Michael’s, only he took it a stage further. He changed his name by deed poll. He would resume his own name only when the real Michael recovered. By becoming Michael Mosse he effectively put Jude Reynard to sleep, not just for love of his brother, but as self‐punishment. In the weeks before the tragedy Michael had announced his engagement to Eva, the girl he’d met in his second year at university, not only that, with finals over he was going back to her native New Zealand to meet her family and to hopefully pursue a career in music journalism over there. Jude was devastated. He stormed and raged, pleaded, bullied and begged him not to go, but Michael was in love and he wanted to make a life with the girl he loved. He told Jude he was being selfish and tried to explain that nothing would change between them. They were still brothers, and they would always stay in touch, there would be visits both ways. Jude 191
could see only that Michael was going far away to make a new life that didn’t include him. He felt abandoned. On the eve of their departure, having decided that an airport farewell would be too painful and emotional for all concerned, Michael and Eva arranged to take Alma, Robert and Jude out for a special dinner. Jude wouldn’t attend. He told Michael and Eva he hated them, told Eva he wished she were dead and then locked himself in his bedroom and stayed locked in, even refusing to come out next morning so Michael could hug him before leaving for the airport. He had told Jude how much he loved him through a width of sullen wood and promised he would call as soon as he arrived at his destination. A friend was giving Michael and Eva a lift to the airport. He duly arrived and Jude watched from behind his bedroom curtains as the car was loaded with their luggage. Before getting in the car Michael had looked up at the window sensing Jude watching. He placed a kiss on the palm of his right hand and then held it up in a loving gesture of farewell. Jude watched the red Ford Escort with its customised white stripe begin to pull away through a haze of tears. He capitulated and flinging open his door had raced downstairs and outside, shouting his brother’s name, but it was too late, the car was gone from view and he had missed his chance to say a proper goodbye. Michael had left a gift for Jude outside his bedroom door, a plush toy fox with bright blue eyes wearing a pair of headphones. It had a note attached, I’m so glad we found each other, little brother. I might be going far away in miles, but I’ll always 192
carry you close in my heart and I promise I will see you again soon, be good, with much love, Michael. Jude had lain down on his bed, hugging the toy, crying because he had missed the opportunity to hug his brother. When more composed he had tried calling Michael’s mobile phone, but he didn’t answer it, so Jude texted a message to say he loved the fox and to also say sorry for the way he’d behaved. Michael never read it. A heavy goods lorry travelling at speed on a busy motorway had a tyre blowout. The driver, tired from a long overnight drive, lost control of the vehicle and ploughed into a red Ford Escort making its way to an airport. Police and paramedics found three young people dead in the wreckage of the car. One was brought back from the dead, sort of. After news of the accident was broken to Jude he tormented himself on two counts. First over the angry, childish wish he’d made with regard to Eva and then with the idea that if he’d managed to catch Michael he would have delayed his departure long enough for their car not to be the one in the path of the lorry when it went out of control. After the first year Jude never visited his brother again, or spoke of him, or allowed his parents to speak of him. It was too painful. He mentally and emotionally cordoned off that part of his life, shutting away photographs and letters and locking down memories. All he retained was his brother’s name, which he took out into the world while the real Michael remained in stasis. Joseph suspected that Jude had what amounted to a nervous breakdown. What the heartbroken teenager had really 193
needed was guidance and counselling in order to help him come to terms with what had happened. Instead as ever his parents indulged his will and played his game of denial. They continued to pay visits to the intensive care unit, but didn’t speak of them. Then came the terrible day when it became clear that Michael was failing. He’d developed a chest infection. His doctors didn’t want to treat it. In their view it was time to let him go, but Alma and Robert honoured the promise they had made and insisted on treatment, as they had several times before. The doctors complied but also stated an intention to take the sad case to court to have an independent judgement made on future care. In the event they didn’t have to. On the eve of his youngest son leaving home Robert received a call from the care facility to say that Michael’s condition was deteriorating. He had developed pneumonia and it wasn’t responding to drugs. He was critical. They suggested it might be wise to inform family and friends of the situation in order for farewells to be facilitated. Robert at last found the courage to broach the matter. He chose completely the wrong moment to do so. Upstairs in his bedroom Jude was packing up stuff in preparation for moving out. In process of clearing a cupboard he came across a plastic box he had forgotten about. It gave him a jolt. He knew what it contained, letters, photos and mementoes of his brother, which he had packed up and hidden out of sight. He was in process of returning it to the back of the cupboard when his father entered the room and said he needed to talk to him about Michael. 194
After years of silence and pretence it was all too much of a shock for the surrogate Michael. The only news he wanted to hear with regard to his brother was that he had woken up and was ready to reclaim his name and leave his own footprints on the world once again. He became totally hysterical and refused to accept what his father was telling him. Just as he had shoved the box of mementoes to the back of the cupboard so he tried once again to shove all thoughts of his brother to the back of his mind. It was a kind of reverse magic. If he didn’t think about Michael then Michael would get better. However, the gateway had been breached and little by little the barriers he’d assembled began to crumble. While he could manage to keep his brother out of his waking mind, he could no longer keep him out of his sleeping mind. In the background of the dreams he could hear Michael calling for him. It probably explained why he said his own name. He was simply echoing what he was hearing in his dreams, either that or it was his psyches way of saying it was time to reclaim himself. Jude’s revealing of his real name to Joseph was surrender in more ways than one. It was the meeting of an emotional deadline. He had begged Joseph to help him, to tell him what to do. Jude was present in the last hours of his brother’s life. Joseph’s throat tightened with emotion at the memory. Taking hold of Joseph’s hand he had placed it in Michael’s hand, solemnly introducing them to each other. He then lay on the bed alongside him, stroking his face, talking. He told him how sorry he was for staying away for so long and how much he 195
regretted not having said goodbye properly the day he had left with Eva. He told him how he now understood what it meant to want to make a life with someone. As the machine monitoring Michael’s heart began to register the slowing of its beat, he told him how much he loved him and then pleaded with him to wake up, to come home again. There was no miracle. The machines fell silent. At the moment of death Michael’s eyes opened and Joseph experienced a stab of shock as familiar eyes of cornflower blue shone like a summer sky for a split second before darkening. The doctor had quickly closed them again and the sunny little room that had held Michael for seven years filled with the sound of grief. Jude was quiet and withdrawn in the days that followed. While his grieving parents finalised funeral plans he kept a daily vigil in the Chapel of Rest, sitting beside the open coffin. Freed of all the contraptions that had kept his body functioning for so long Michael looked serene. It was a time for Jude to make peace with himself as much as with Michael and as such Joseph kept a background presence. He was there when Jude needed arms to comfort him and someone to tell him when to eat and to sleep. It was decided Michael should be laid to rest alongside his adoptive parents. It seemed right to give him back to the people who had loved him so dearly and who he had loved in return. Before the coffin was sealed in preparation for the journey to Devon, Jude placed two items in it, a seaside photograph of two happy brothers on a long gone summer’s 196
day and a handsome blue‐eyed toy fox wearing radio headphones. He wrote a message underneath the one that Michael had written to him years earlier, thank you for my life, for being the best big brother anyone could ever have. You’ll never really be gone because I carry some of your cells within the cells of my body and I’ll forever hold you in my heart. I promise I will not forget you. We’ll meet again one day, with much love, your little brother, Jude. A faint vibration in the ground indicated that a freight train was approaching. Joseph was grateful for the distraction it offered from sad thoughts. It soon rushed by stirring the air, shouting a warning about its approach to the crossing point half a mile away before falling silent again. Jude moved and mumbled, but settled back to sleep when Joseph soothed him with some quietly spoken words. The stars coruscated through a gathering of unexpected tears. Michael Mosse had been an exceptional young man, kind‐ hearted, loving and generous of spirit. If the tracks of his life had not merged with Jude Reynard’s then Jude would have died in childhood and Joseph would not be lying beneath the heavens with the love of his life. Michael was on another journey now, travelling a single track to an unknown destination, but he would never be forgotten. Joseph would help make sure of it. He would encourage Jude to talk about him, to look at photographs and remember the happy times they had spent with each other.
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Chapter twenty-four
The heavy heat of night waned as a new day approached
bringing cooler fresher air. Jude woke first. He lay on his back watching as morning twilight thinned the darkness. The sun still lay beneath the horizon. A thin thread of gold appeared in the blue‐black sky, the crack of dawn. He drew in his breath as the sun’s leading edge appeared above the horizon widening the crack. He’d never witnessed the sunrise like this. It was stunning. It had to be shared and he shook Joseph awake.
Joseph was mesmerised not only by the lighting of the
sky as the sun gathered strength, but also by Jude’s reaction. He would never tire of his capacity for wonder. It lit up his face the way the sun lit the sky. It was breathtaking. Looping an arm around his shoulders he hugged him to his side and enjoyed the making of a wonderful memory as the day took shape around them. The landscape gradually illuminated. The fields and trees and of course the railway lines came into sharp view, and so did something else. Joseph gave Jude a discreet nudge, directing his attention to the creature sniffing around the tracks. Jude sat stock still, fearful of startling the fox. It was beautiful, its red coat glowing in the early light. It suddenly 198
caught their scent and looked up, staring straight at them. It stood for a moment, its head proudly raised, as if inviting them to admire it and then it turned tail and ran, winding across the fields, wild and free. Jude had a painful premonition that he wouldn’t see it again and tears stung his eyes. He didn’t want it to leave, but he couldn’t own or pen it, and besides it needed to be free to live while it could. The lifespan of a wild fox was short and every moment was precious to it. He knelt up putting his arms around Joseph’s neck in a silent demand for comfort. Joseph cuddled him for a few moments and then placed a tender kiss on his lips. “You’re cold, my love. Let’s go back inside, we might be able to catch a nap before we have to get ready for work.” He stood up, pulling Jude with him. “I can think of better things to do than nap.” “I suppose we could catch up on the laundry, and the sitting room carpet would benefit from a going over with the hoover.” “I didn’t mean bloody housework!” “No, you never do, and stop swearing,” Joseph aimed a slap at Jude’s behind. “Pick those pillows up, I’ll bring the quilt and we’ll see what use we can make of them indoors.” “Why don’t we put them to use out here, there’s no one around.” “I’ve told you before. I don’t do open air sex.” “I don’t get it. I mean in your dungeon days you’d happily fuck in front of an audience, but when it comes to making love to me in the great outdoors with no one around, you’re suddenly shy.” 199
“Sex in a strictly controlled and sympathetic environment is vastly different to sex in the uncontrolled outdoors where any audience is likely to be hostile and unsympathetic. Besides I don’t want to share you and what we do together with anyone, let alone a train full of Monday morning commuters heading for their offices. You’re my boy and you’re for my eyes and my pleasure only.” “Fair enough,” said Jude, pleased with the response. He bent to pick up the pillows. Reaching across the breakfast table Joseph used his forefinger to brush a cluster of toast crumbs from the corner of Jude’s mouth. “I’ll drive you to work today, with it being your first day back. I’ll…” “Let me guess, you’ll pick me up at five,” said Jude with a grin. “Too sassy by far you are. I’m going to get ready for work,” Joseph leaned across to plant a kiss on his lips and then stood up, tightening the belt of his bath robe, “and you need to be making tracks too.” “I’ll just finish my coffee. I don’t know how you drink yours so fast, you must have an asbestos mouth.” Joseph left the room and Jude sipped at his coffee trying to quell the bubbles of nervousness that were beginning to surface in his gut at the prospect of returning to work. While he was looking forward to getting back into a familiar routine, he loved his job, he was anxious about how he would cope with questions regarding his change of name and anxious how such questions might then lead to questions about the brother he had never mentioned to anyone. 200
Tears came to his eyes. It still hurt so much to think about him and to know he would never come home. Joseph said in time the pain would ease and he would be able to think and speak of Michael with joy instead of aching sadness and regret. Even though such a time seemed a long, long way off the words lent him comfort. Wiping his eyes he composed himself and made to rise in order to go and begin getting ready for work, almost jumping out of his skin as Joseph’s cell phone rudely vibrated on the tabletop, heralding a text message. He picked it up, pulling a sour face at the sender’s name. Before he knew it he had opened the message from Max and was reading it. It was a lament and a reminder. The lament was that he hadn’t seen much of Joseph lately with one thing and another. The reminder was that he would be in Joseph’s neck of the woods on business today and they had arranged to meet for lunch at the pub over the road from Joseph’s offices at noon. He asked for a confirmation that the ‘date’ was still on. Date! Jude bridled. His thumbs seemed to act of their own accord flying over the keypad texting a reply, ok, see you there. He hit send, deleted the original message and then turned the phone off before heading upstairs to get dressed. Before getting in the car Jude smoothed the front of his red t‐ shirt. “How do I look, Joss?” “Gorgeous, red suits you,” Joseph smiled and made a kiss at him, “there’s no need to be nervous.” 201
“I’m not nervous, I never get nervous, not really,” Jude chewed his lower lip for a second and then peeped an appeal from beneath his lush eyelashes, “Jossy, do you have anything planned for lunchtime today?” “I don’t think so, not that I can recall, why?” “Will you meet me for lunch, just this once? I know it’s a bit out of your way, but I think it will help me cope better if I know I’ve got something to look forward to.” “Of course I will,” said Joseph, touched by the request. “What time?” “I’m on first lunch so meet me for twelve. We can go in to town.” “Twelve it is.” Joseph put his suit jacket and laptop case on the back seat of the car and then opened the front door and climbed into the driver’s seat. Jude settled into the passenger seat. Pulling down the sun visor he inspected his face in the vanity mirror, smiling at his reflection before popping on his designer sunglasses. He fastened his seat belt. “Can we go to a club this weekend, we haven’t been dancing in ages.” “I don’t see why not,” Joseph winked, “as long as you’re a good boy.”
“I’m always good,” said Jude suppressing a twist of
guilty regret over the text and the thought of Max sitting twiddling his thumbs in a pub on his own at lunchtime. Maybe he should confess about the message? He could say he’d just remembered and then quickly apologise for both reading and answering it, saying he’d only done it to save Joseph time and hassle in saying yes himself. He’d been considerate really. 202
However, he wrinkled his nose, if he did confess then he’d have to lunch alone while Joseph ate a cosy meal with the Highland butt plug king. “Radio or CD,” asked Joseph, putting the key in the ignition. Taking a deep breath Jude shoved aside guilt and put faith in his ability to disarm Joseph with a smile when he found out that he was the cause of him inadvertently standing up Max. “Radio, please. I don’t want Blunt and Wainwright dragging me down or Pink Floyd droning on. You need to buy some new albums for your car, something more recent and upbeat. We’ll take a look in EMI at lunchtime to see what we fancy.”
“I’m meeting you for lunch, Jude, not a shopping spree. I
am not trawling around shops buying stuff you want, but neither of us need. I’m quite happy with the music I’ve got, if you’re not then it’s tough. You can buy your own albums when you get paid again, within budget of course.” He suppressed a grin as Jude scowled and muttered something about tight fisted old dragons. “Tell you what,” he patted Jude’s knee. “If we get time after we’ve eaten lunch I’ll buy you a bunch of flowers. How’s that?” “Okay, I suppose, but I want nice flowers, from a florist, not a supermarket. I want chocolate too, proper chocolate, not that horrible stuff you like.” “Don’t want much do you?” “Yes, actually, I want lots, but living with you I’m not likely to get it!”
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“You’re catching on at last.” Turning the key in the ignition Joseph started the engine, put the car in gear and eased it towards the road.
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