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Stories posted in this category are works of fiction. Names, places, characters, events, and incidents are created by the authors' imaginations or are used fictitiously. Any resemblances to actual persons (living or dead), organizations, companies, events, or locales are entirely coincidental.
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Travelling Home - 1. Chapter 1: Stockholm

Now: 2010

The first time I realized that my dad wasn't always right, I was eight years old. He told me that bullies always back down when challenged, and I found out that just wasn't so, or at least not when the challenger is about a head shorter than said bully and happens to be the shiest kid in third grade. Still, when I look back at that morningor maybe it was afternoon, not all the details are clear anymoreI'm kinda proud of the little guy lying flat on his back in the middle of the school playground and gingerly wiping his bloody nose and upper lip with the cuff of his sleeve. It was the first time I stood up for myself and showed everybody that I would not be pushed around, that I, Jordan Petersen, was a force, albeit not an overwhelming one, to be reckoned with.

I wasn't the only new kid in third grade that year. That was the nature of the American Community Schools in Athens. They were there to educate the children of soldiers and other American expats, who were posted in Greece for a period of time, so kids came and went all the time. For some reason, though, I was immediately tagged as an outsider. Maybe it was because I didn't speak English very well, or that I'd lived in Athens most of my life. I'd barely even heard of London or Tokyo, let alone of Patrick Henry Village. I'd never seen a game of football or baseball, not that I could remember, and at first I would respond in Greek when somebody spoke to me, not realizing that not everybody in the world switches between the two languages like I did with my mom and older sister (though never with my dad). I don't even know why my parents decided to yank me out of Greek school and send me to ACS in third grade; I think mostly because my Greek mom knew how happy it would make my American dad, who'd left everything familiar behind to be with her, to have a more American son.

Until the day of the incident, David Ives had more or less ignored me. Most kids had, until our teacher noticed that I was squinting to see the blackboard, told my parents, and I showed up that fateful day wearing glasses. A couple of kids made fun of me, then it seemed like they all did, even the ones that wore glasses themselves. At first the teasing didn't bother me, at least not much more than being ignored did, but by the time David picked on me, I'd had just about enough.

David was the biggest kid in third grade and a natural leader. I think his dad worked for a bank, rather than the military, and David could say hello in four or five languages. I don't think he was really a bully, at least not in the sense that he systematically picked on the weaker kids, or stole their lunch money or anything. It's just that he knew his size was part of his advantage, and he wasn't averse to using it. When he teased me, I shoved him, both hands on his chest, barely pushing him one step backward, and he shoved me back, knocking me on my ass. He turned away, already having lost interest in me, not expecting me to come back at him. To this day I don't know why I did. Maybe it came from reading too many of my sister's comic books, and wanting to be a hero for once, like Superman or Captain America. I jumped to my feet and shoved him again, making him stumble forward. So he turned around and cold-cocked me.

I imagine that by the middle of fifth grade David must have been relieved to see the last of me. By that point, he was almost two heads taller than me, and we got into scuffles at least two or three times a month. For some reason, I'd concentrated all my resentment on him, all those hot feelings that I didn't know how to deal with otherwise, about being an outsider, about not being good at sports or even understanding the rules, about being shy and being made fun of for everything from my Greek accent to my glasses to the lumpy wool scarf that my grandmother had knitted for me and that my mom made me wear to school every day in the winter. When he'd see me approaching to pick a fight, he'd get a bored look on his face, almost like beating me up was just another school assignment he needed to take care of. One of the last times we fought, he even reached down to pick me up and set me on my feet and he patted me on the shoulder, as if to show me that it was nothing personal on his side. I like to think that what I saw in his eyes that day was reluctant admiration instead of the firm conviction that he was dealing with a nut job.

One day David didn't show up. It wasn't uncommon for kids to leave in the middle of the school year, but we generally had a going-away party for them, and we'd have cake, and talk about the next place their dad was being sent to, and somebody would say that they'd been there, or had a pen-pal or something, and that it would be fun. Kids didn't just vanish from one day to the next like David did. Later somebody said that his father had died, and that his mom had taken him back to the States.

Sixth grade, I begged my parents to send me back to Greek school, so that I could be with my friends from the neighborhood, and they did. There I found that, once again, I didn't quite fit in. Maybe it was the three years in a different school system, maybe it was my American name at a time when Americans weren't really liked in Greece, maybe it was something else entirely. Most probably, it was just me. I wasn't exactly unhappy, but I always felt that I had to compensate for the fact that I was somehow different than the others. Standing out, even in a good way, made me feel uncomfortable.

I haven't thought of David Ives in almost forty years, at least not as anything other than one small, though oddly significant, part of my childhood. It's certainly strange to be thinking of him now, as I stand against a wall in a ballroom in the Stockholm Sheraton, a strategic one-step distance from one of the open bars. I hate the inevitable networking events that follow the mind-numbing hours of PowerPoint presentations that pose as professional conferences, but since the company is paying for my attendance, I feel duty-bound to hang around and give anybody that wants to network with me the opportunity to do so. I've managed the last three of these events without exchanging a single business card.

At least, there are two compensations this time. For one, there's a big bowl of wasabi nuts on the bar that I've more or less appropriated for my own consumption. I love wasabi nuts and can rarely find them, so this is really a treat.

And then, there's The Guy.

I first noticed him this morning, while the conference coordinator was welcoming us to the event, pointing out the fire exits and asking us to set our mobile phones to meeting mode. I was sitting in the first seat to the right of the center aisle, in the second to last row, and The Guy was several rows in front of me, in the first seat to the left of the aisle. He was sitting sideways, his legs in the aisle, his back to his neighbor, so I could see his profile. He was furiously thumbing his BlackBerry, scowling at it, dark eyebrows knit together over a longish straight nose, mouth pursed. He was directly in my line of sight, so that I didn't even have to turn my head to check on him every so often. I liked the way a hank of wavy dark brown hair flopped over his forehead, how he combed his long fingers through it to push it back, how he gnawed at his bottom lip as he continued to pay more attention to his BlackBerry than to the speakers throughout the day. If somebody asks him tomorrow what the conference was about, I doubt he'll be able to tell them more than the title. I know that's all I'll remember, except for him.

I shift my position slightly, so that I can observe The Guy standing with a group of four or five men and women, his elbow resting on one of the tall round tables placed around the room. For the first time I see him smiling, and I realize why David Ives has been on my mind. The Guy looks like what David might have grown up to look like, and it's odd that it would be his smile that allowed me to make the connection, because David Ives never smiled at me, not once in three years. The Guy scans the room as he raises a beer bottle to his lips, and he catches me staring. Our gazes lock for an instant, then I turn away, heat climbing to my cheeks.

"Yordan?" I hear a voice next to me, the initial 'J' pronounced the Swedish way.

"Jordan," I correct automatically, relieved to recognize a colleague from my company.

"Magnus," he points to himself, as if not really expecting me to remember. Just like me, Magnus doesn't appear to be a born networker or a natural extrovert, and we spend a happy half hour together bitching about downsizing and expense cutting initiatives, and assuring one another that the IT (his) and Accounting (mine) divisions are the only ones in our company that really know what they're doing. I try not to check too often on The Guy's whereabouts, but I'm aware of the moment he leaves the room, and I kind of wilt.

After Magnus takes his leave and the bartender's glare makes it obvious that he doesn't intend to refill the decimated bowl of wasabi nuts just for me, I decide it's about time I headed home, as well. Even though it's after seven, we've got a full three hours of daylight left. Maybe I'll go for a run, shake out the cobwebs.

Unfortunately, instead of the sun I was expecting, I walk out of the hotel into a downpour. I own three umbrellas, but I never seem to get lucky with having one actually with me, when necessary. It's two blocks to the Stockholm Central Station, where I can catch the tunnelbana to my home, but I'm wearing one of my nicer suits, so I hug the side of the building under the canopy, trying to make up my mind whether to go for it.

"Do I know you?"

I don't realize the question is aimed at me until it's repeated, with a simultaneous light touch on my elbow. It's The Guy. Standing next to him, I see that he's maybe an inch shorter than my own 5'11" and his eyes are almost the exact same dark blue-gray as the sky over Stockholm right now.

"I don't think so."

"Because you've been staring at me." He has an American accent, as most Swedes do, but there's a tinge of something else underneath that hints at a different nationality.

I fumble for an answer, opening and closing my mouth like a guppy, and he smiles, full lips curving upward, a small dimple forming in his left cheek.

"Would you like a cigarette?" he offers, holding out a pack of red Marlboros, and I take one, even though I quit smoking a couple of years ago.

"Thanks," I mumble as he lights it for me, and I inhale deeply, and I'm not sure if the sudden dizzy spell is due to the nicotine hit or to how his eyes crinkle at the corners when his smile deepens.

 

Then: 1981-1985

"You just know," Benny intoned in a voice made squeaky by his effort not to exhale, and he handed me the fat joint.

"But how?"

I was aware that Benny was interpreting my urgency as conservative Jordan trying to ensure that he would never give out that vibe that caused others to know, but actually just the opposite was true. I wanted people to stop assuming that I was Benny's straight friend, so that it wasn't always me having to do all the work. All Benny could do was shrug, and hold out his hand for me to give him the joint back.

I ran into Benny Siegel my first day at Dartmouth and my second day in America. I had arrived a day before the Freshman Trips, and was exploring the still mostly empty dorm, when Benny walked out of the communal bathroom, a towel wrapped around his waist, water still dripping from his hair onto his shoulders. Olive-skinned and brown-eyed, he looked Greek. He looked like home.

"Hey, 'shman" he nodded at me. "Did you just get here?"

He pronounced it "hee-uh" and I was later to learn that he used expressions like "you don' gotta" and "yous guys" and "capiche", as if he'd just stepped out of a Godfather movie. He'd actually grown up in Old Westbury and attended Phillips Exeter, although at the time I didn't know the privileged background those things denoted. I just assumed Benny was like me, middle-class and relying on work-study and scholarships to attend an Ivy League school.

That afternoon Benny drove us both to West Leb in his decrepit, rusting Mustang, and he laughed hysterically when I expressed the opinion that the local Kmart was a shopping paradise. After that, he appointed himself my guide to Dartmouth, the US, and to life in general.

It was Benny, who got me to join the track team. I was envious of the athletic duffel bag he carried, of the team clothes, of the specialized running shoes, of all those signs of belonging that always seemed to elude me. My Greek school hadn't had an athletics program, but I loved running and had always done well at the various informal races. I knew that I was probably a better middle distance runner than anything, but I knew nothing about racing strategy, and at first lacked the discipline to train. I almost gave up several times, but Benny called me a pussy and alternately bullied, cajoled and shamed me to keep on going. I made all-Ivy and all-American by my sophomore fall, and there's a lot of things I owe Benny for, but I think leading me into a sport, where I was part of a unit and yet could still do my own thing, is one of the biggest.

One Sunday morning, my sophomore and Benny's junior spring we were running the Storrs Pond loop and headed back home, when Benny twisted his ankle. A big meet was coming up, so we decided not to push his luck. We stopped, stretched a little, then started to walk back. Benny threw his arm around my shoulders, leaning against me and favoring his ankle, hamming it up, and we collapsed laughing on the side of the path, lazily swatting at the zillions of midges, having nowhere we needed to be. We were shooting the breeze about something or other, when suddenly Benny leaned over and kissed me on the lips. I stared at him, my heart thumping slowly, almost painfully, and he stared back, color rising to his cheeks. "I'm sorry," he finally blurted out, at the exact moment that I squeezed my eyes shut, put my hands on his shoulders and kissed him back.

At first, Benny and I were each other's guides in this new world, but by the following spring he'd pulled ahead again, knowing things that I could only guess at. We shared an apartment, although not bedrooms, until he graduated.

Benny and I are still best friends, even though there have been more than a few hiccups in all these years, and he now boasts that he fucked every gay guy in the Ivy League, and lived to tell the tale; I don't think it's funny, because the AIDS epidemic was ripping through the gay community, killing young men in their prime, and we knew nothing about it yet. And even if we'd known, we probably would have thought that nothing bad could ever happen to us. Both Benny and I, especially I, should have known better.

 

Now

Even after college and grad school, I never figured how a conservatively dressed, introverted accountant can reliably ping on someone's gaydar, when necessary. And my own gaydar is by no means an accurate instrument. In fact, it's generally the wiser choice to ignore my instincts about another man unless there are obvious other clues, like us meeting in a gay club and him groping me.

Standing in front of the Sheraton with The Guy lighting my cigarette, I'm not sure if that quick flick of the eyes as he steps back is one of interest or just curiosity, if the husky bedroom voice is due to too many cigarettes or an effort at seduction, if the way he leaned in as he was lighting my cigarette was simply him shielding the flame of his lighter against a breeze I didn't notice.

"David," he introduces himself, pronouncing it the Central European way, with a long 'a', and I blink. David?

"Jordan," I respond cautiously, but he gives no sign of recognition, and I tell myself to stop being an idiot. It's just a coincidence, and not a very big one at that. There must be hundreds, thousands of Davids with dark brown wavy hair and blue-gray eyes, and so many years later I probably don't really remember David Ives' face or eye color with any degree of accuracy anyway. Besides, it's hard to imagine David Ives being shorter than me.

"So. Why were you staring at me?" he insists.

"When?" I ask, trying to ignore my gut, which tends to react to my hopes more than to reality. And even if he is gay and flirting a little to pass the time, it doesn't mean he's really interested. Guys don't come on to me in the middle of the street. Never have.

"During the presentations. And afterwards, during drinks."

"I wasn't," I say, blowing out a stream of smoke nonchalantly, and he laughs.

"Okay, well then, neither was I."

"You were?" I ask, surprise robbing me of what miniscule amounts of cool I may have displayed until that point.

"I just said I wasn't," he replies, his mouth still curving upward, and I have to drag my eyes away from those full lips. He's just playing. God knows I'm not much to look at. Light brown hair, which I've always kept short in an effort to tame the cowlicks and lately, to keep the gray from being too evident. Brown eyes, long nose with the distinctive Petersen bump. I still run, so I'm trim. About the most I can say for me is that I look groomed and pleasant, and I like to think that, graying hair notwithstanding, I don't look middle-aged, despite the fact that, at forty-six, that's exactly what I am.

I turn to face the street, savoring the taste of the cigarette. The rain looks like it's easing up; another few minutes and I can probably head for the station without completely ruining my suit.

"Would you like to have a drink with me?" he asks.

I flick a quick glance at him; he's facing out towards the street, as well, not looking at me.

"Tonight?"

He nods. "I'm flying out early tomorrow. I was only here for the conference and to touch base with a few business contacts."

The sharp stab of disappointment surprises me. A second ago I was ready to walk away myself, and it's not like I anticipated ever meeting him again, even if he lived in Stockholm; it's not a large city, but it's not that small, either. Still, now that external forces are imposing deadlines on me, I want to resist them.

"Where are you staying?"

He jerks his head backwards, indicating the Sheraton.

"Does your room have a minibar?"

This isn't me, this direct, bold person, but he doesn't know that. He smiles easily.

"Let's go check," he suggests, stubbing out his cigarette in the tall ashtray and striding towards the hotel entrance. I follow two steps behind him, my mouth dry and my stomach coiling with nerves. I feel more alive than I have in years.

When we reach his room, I expect him to pounce on me, and I'm psyching myself to pounce on him in case he doesn't make the first move, but he murmurs a brief apology and slips into the bathroom, and I'm left standing awkwardly in the middle of the bedroom, trying to ignore the two large beds, the small pile of gym clothes on an armchair that makes the whole setting oddly intimate, like I'm stealing a glimpse of his personal life, my own reflection in the mirror over the desk. His laptop bag is propped against the chair, the name-tag indicating that he's a platinum member of the same hotel loyalty club as me, only I lost platinum privileges last year, when I finally received a more fixed assignment. I flip the name-tag over, ridiculing myself for needing the final proof that this isn't David Ives. His last name is Hamvas. Hungarian then.

I walk over to the window and look out. The gray clouds are dissipating slightly, and where the sky is visible, it's tinged with orange and red. I like Stockholm. I don't love it, but I like it well enough. And tonight even more so.

I turn around at the slight noise behind me. He's taking off his coat and at first it looks like he's about to toss it on the armchair, where his gym clothes are. He hesitates, and with a sheepish look my way, he hangs the coat neatly in the closet. It's the first time he's looked anything but completely self-assured with me, completing this little task that shows that he's thinking about tomorrow, not only tonight, but I may have imagined it, because he's smiling confidently again as he briskly unbuttons and rolls up his cuffs, displaying strong forearms with a light dusting of dark hair.

He bends over to peer into the minibar.

"What would you like?"

"A Coke, please."

He throws me a brief, surprised look, but doesn't comment. He snags a beer for himself, opens it, and then walks over to me and hands me the can, his fingers sliding deliberately over mine as he pulls his hand away.

"Take off your coat, stay a while," he murmurs, his smirk acknowledging the corniness of the line, and I grunt a nervous laugh. I start to shrug my coat off, then realize too late that I'm holding the drink, and the logistics seem beyond me, especially when he adds the complication of pressing his lean body against mine and sliding his arms around my waist, his rough cheek rubbing against mine as he nuzzles my neck in a move that sends heat to my groin and yet feels oddly tender at the same time.

"You're uncomfortable," he notes. "Why? Are you experimenting?" I try to find amusement or irritation in his voice, but he only sounds curious.

I sigh and put my hands on his hips, one flat against the light wool of his trousers, feeling the firm flesh and hard bone underneath, the other still holding the damn drink, so that I can only rest the heel of my palm against his belt.

"No," I tell him, my eyes on his loosened tie, then on the small patch of skin displayed by the open collar. I can see his pulse beating there, and I want to put my lips on the spot, lick it, feel if it's as smooth and soft as it looks.

"Are you in a steady relationship?"

Startled, I tear my eyes away from his throat and look into his eyes, then I frown and shake my head. I'm suddenly having a hard enough time with the idea of a one-night stand with David; I can't imagine the added baggage of a steady relationship, not least because I haven't actually really been in one since grad school.

"No," I say out loud, and he slides his hands up and down my back and smiles.

"What then?"

"Nothing." I give into the temptation and bend my head. His skin really is that soft, and it tastes salty against the tip of my tongue. "Nothing," I repeat, and push his collar aside with my face, trying to find the bare curve of his shoulder.

He twists his head to the side, giving me more access, and his pulse flutters against my lips. He inhales sharply, then again in a kind of stuttered breath, and his hands clench on my shirt, and just like that, my awkwardness disappears.

"David," I mutter against his warm skin, and he grunts, ducking his head and shoving it against mine, forcing it up so that he can reach my mouth with his.

You watch sex scenes in the movies and it's either a perfect choreography and/or guys slamming each other into walls, leaving a trail of discarded clothes behind them. Real life isn't like that, especially not the first time. It's not elegant or graceful or smooth, and at some point you've got to get rid of your shoes and clothes (and the fucking Coke can), and you find out that he likes his nipples kissed and licked but not pinched, after you've been doing not enough of the first or second and way too much of the third, and you start to wonder if this is convenience or passion for him, because if it's only the first, it's been a long day since your shower this morning. So it's nice, sort of, and intriguing, and exciting, but not so much so that you want to be risking cracking the plaster or the back of your head by slamming around too much.

He nearly knees me in the balls when we fall onto one of the beds, his body hard against mine, our mouths glued together, and I accidentally backhand him when he grabs my arms and tries to flip me over onto my stomach. He collapses onto his side, muttering something that sounds like a curse and laughing breathily at the same time.

"If you don't like to bottom, just say so."

Yeah, and there's figuring the part of who does what to whom, as well.

I stretch out on my belly, rest my cheek on a folded arm, and look at him as he lies next to me. There's still enough light coming in through the window that I can see the tangled hank of hair falling in his eyes, and I brush it back.

"How old are you?" I ask him, because his smile is that of a boy, and his hair is soft and silky between my fingers, and his body leanly muscled, but I can also just make out the silver in his stubble, and there are lines around his eyes and mouth that dig deeper than mere good humor, and a hint of spreading softness at his waist that I recognize only too well from my own body.

"Forty-six. Why?"

I shrug. I don't really know why, but I find it unsettling that this man can be my age and still flirt and throw himself into one-night stands, notwithstanding the fact that from his point of view, I'm doing exactly the same thing. For some reason I needed him to be younger, not because I find him any less attractive now that I know his age, but because now both of us are too old to be this impetuous, because we both know better. I wanted at least one of us to be young enough to honestly believe that this could lead somewhere.

He must see my withdrawal in my eyes and his mouth straightens. His brows knit together, like they did this morning when he was poring over his BlackBerry, and he pushes himself up off the bed. He walks to the closet and I think he's going to start pulling clothes on, but he only fumbles in the inside breast pocket of his jacket and then returns to bed, holding something in his hand.

"Here," he says, lightly tossing the object so that it lands near my hand. It's his wallet.

What the hell is he doing? Trying to pay me? I push myself onto my elbows, starting to get up, when he flops down next to me on his side again, then opens the wallet and holds it in front of my face, showing me a photo.

My eyesight isn't what it used to be, and I have to use one hand to push his wrist a little further away. In the gloom, all I can make out is that it's a blond boy.

"Who's this?"

"My son."

It takes a while for me to get my mouth working, not realizing that my fingers are tightening around his wrist until he twists it free, grimacing a little.

"Maybe I should have asked you. If you're experimenting. If you're in a relationship."

"Does it make a difference? You know what I want, and we'll only be here tonight."

If I admit it makes a difference, I also admit to a bunch of other stuff that I don't want to admit to, like the fact that I can suddenlyabsurdly!—imagine myself wanting more than a one-night stand with David, just on the basis of watching him exchange e-mails all morning and of his smile. I should get up. I should dress and leave. Instead I lie back down, pillowing my head on my arm again, trying to decide if I'm angry or disappointed or feeling anything real at all.

"Why did you show me his picture?"

He sighs, looking at the picture himself before flipping the wallet closed and twisting around to place it on the nightstand. He turns back towards me, and rests his palm on the small of my back.

"He's twenty. He hasn't spoken to me since he was fifteen, since his mother explained to him the real reason we were getting divorced."

He's silent for a while, his eyes seeming to follow the movements of his hand on my back as he rubs small circles. Maybe he started out trying to somehow soothe me, but I think he needs the comforting contact of skin against skin himself.

"It's his birthday today."

"Do you still try to talk to him?" I think of the morning spent on the BlackBerry, wondering if he was trying to e-mail his son.

His hand pauses for a second, then resumes, kneading a little at my muscles.

"No. I did at first, but I have to respect that he's an adult, that he knows what he wants."

I think of how absolutely and totally innocent and naïve and fucked up I was at twenty. I wonder why he's telling me all this. I feel guilty that I'm reminding him of stuff that, especially today, he maybe just wants to forget about.

"I'm not experimenting. I'm not in a relationship. I'm on the road three to four days a week, and I've been to almost every country in the world, except that I've seen nothing but hotel rooms and airports, and the roads between the two. If I'm lucky, the trips will include a couple of dinners that aren't in the same hotel."

He speaks matter-of-factly, just describing his life. He's not asking me to feel sorry for him, and I don't, because otherwise I'd have to also feel sorry for myself, as that's pretty much been my life until now, and what it will go back to being after my assignment in Stockholm ends next year.

"I saw you looking at me all day, and then you came out of the hotel and stood next to me."

"I didn't see you," I say defensively.

"No, I know. But I recognized you."

"What do you mean? Recognized me from where?"

He shakes his head in frustration. "Maybe recognize is the wrong word. I saw you and I knew that we're alike."

My breath catches at that. He's wrong. He's extraordinary, full of energy and intensity and he burns brightly enough that he made me focus on him, and nothing else, when he was just sitting there, and I'm none of those things.

"No," I whisper, trying to correct his impression, but he ignores me. He leans over and kisses my back, near where his hand was stroking, then licks a stripe up my spine and nuzzles into my shoulder, making me shiver.

"Maybe not," he concedes. "But I want you, anyway. I haven't wanted anybody in a long time, but I want you."

I don't resist him as he swings a leg over me, so that he's lying on top of me, pinning me down with his weight and grinding his dick against my ass, but I tense up and clench my butt. If we weren't the same size, or if at any point he'd shown actual aggression, I'd have shoved him off of me, but as it is, I'm willing to wait and see what he'll do.

"I don't bottom," I tell him, closing my eyes and pushing my face into the crook of my arm. It's actually not true. If for some reason I had to pick one for the rest of my life, I'd pick bottoming without a second thought. But it makes me feel vulnerable and out of control, and I don't want that right now, not with David.

"That's okay," he whispers in my ear, and I shiver, but he doesn't stop moving against me, his cock sliding against me, his chest slick with perspiration against my back. "Let me come like this, and then you can fuck me. Okay?"

He kisses my nape, and I moan. His body is warm against mine, almost burning me with its heat. I slowly relax under him and I focus on how his dick feels against my crack, on his damp, quick breath, on the strong fingers that are digging into my shoulders. I focus on my own dick, iron hard and trapped between my belly and the sheets, rubbing against them as his body forces mine into a slight rocking motion.

"Jordie," he mutters, and nobody except Benny has called me that since grade school, and the sound of it makes me arch up so that I can feel him better, so that he can settle against me more firmly.

He cums quietly, the changing rhythm of his movements and the liquid warmth pooling on my back the only evidence. He rests on me afterwards, and every so often I think I feel his lips moving on my shoulder. It should feel uncomfortable, because we're both sticky with sweat, saliva and his cum, and it's way too hot in the room, and my erection is almost painful, but I find myself wishing that he'll fall asleep on me, so that I'll never have to move, so that this will last a while longer.

All too soon, though, he gives a small groan and slides off of me, one leg still draped over my thighs, his hand between my shoulder blades.

"Are you going to move?" he asks, shaking me gently.

"Nuh uh." I miss him against my back, and every so often I flex my butt, rubbing my cock against the sheets.

"Lazy bastard," he laughs. I feel his body come up off the bed, and hear splashing in the bathroom, then I flinch away from cold water dripping on my back. He rubs my back with a washcloth, and I arch into his hand, sighing contentedly.

"Lazy bastard," he murmurs again.

I turn my face a little so that I can speak.

"Flattery will get you nowhere."

He's right. I am lazy. I'm even too lazy to do anything about my raging hard-on.

"Or maybe you're just too old."

"Hey now!"

I've been running all my life. I love it, and yet I still hate those first few steps, not because I don't want the pleasure that will follow, but because I know that bringing pleasure closer also brings its end closer. So I'm reluctant to turn to David, as if I can somehow control time, even make it stop, if I simply do nothing. Still, if he expects me to retaliate for being called old, I will. I don't back away from challenges, not anymore.

Suddenly he jerks upright again, and a second later I hear him in the bathroom, and I'm pretty sure he's cursing in Hungarian.

"What's wrong?" I call out, but he ignores me. I roll onto my side, raising my head to brace it against my hand, looking at him as he walks into the bedroom and squats over his small case. He unzips it and rummages through pockets, still muttering. Finally he kicks the case with his bare foot and flops back onto the bed, lying on his back with his arm covering his eyes, his lips moving. It's the first good look I've gotten at his dick, and it makes me reconsider my decision not to bottom for David. I reach out and run my finger along its length, and it twitches and thickens a little against his thigh.

"What's wrong?" I repeat.

"I don't have stuff with me."

"Stuff?" I repeat stupidly, then I realize. "You're kidding me."

"No. I thought I might have had at least a condom somewhere, but . . . I really don't do this very often."

"Well, hell," I mutter.

He rolls into his side and grins at me as his fingers wrap around my cock and his thumb swipes across the tip.

"When's the last time somebody jerked you off?"

"Other than me, you mean?" I groan, my hips already pushing forward into his fist, and I drop my head and close my eyes. "Jesus, do that again," I beg, and he twists his hand, pressing his thumb into a spot right under the head before he moves it over the now leaking tip again. I have to remember to try that myself some time. "A couple of months," I lie.

It's over embarrassingly quickly and much as I like hearing David laugh, I'd rather he wasn't at this exact moment. He wipes his hand on the sheet.

"Okay. Maybe you're not too old. What are you, fifteen?"

"I wish. Then I'd be ready for another round, even as we speak."

He scoots over for a kiss, his hand cupping the back of my head.

"Will you stay? I'm flying at seven, so I need to leave here at five fifteen at the latest. Will you stay until then?"

I don't know if he's expecting a cuddle or more non-penetrating sex or just to hear someone breathing next to him. Whatever he wants is fine with me. I nod.

I wake up, just barely, to the smell of his minty fresh breath and aftershave and to the tickle of his tie against my back as he leans over to kiss me.

"I left my card on the desk. Don't be a stranger," he tells me, then his lips press against mine once more.

I snap fully awake when the door closes behind him a second later. He somehow managed to shower, dress and pack without my knowing a thing.

I've never seen the tunnelbanna really crowded, and Swedes are casual dressers for the most part; still, I think they're giving the guy in the wrinkled suit a wider berth than normal. My goofy smile probably isn't helping matters. It's only later, in the shower, as I wash the last of David's smell off of me, that my giddiness is replaced by a sense of loss, and before I have time to censor myself, I admit that I'm lonely. I turn the water to cold and let it beat down on me, and I deliberately think about my schedule, and this morning's meeting with our auditors, and, ever so slowly, I move back into my normal life.

Copyright © 2012 podga; All Rights Reserved.
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Stories posted in this category are works of fiction. Names, places, characters, events, and incidents are created by the authors' imaginations or are used fictitiously. Any resemblances to actual persons (living or dead), organizations, companies, events, or locales are entirely coincidental.
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Chapter Comments

There is so much promise in this I really hope to read more. I loved the way you laid out Jordan's life story, the lonely forty-six year old man who still wonders what happened to the bully he fought with when he was in six grade. Wow. That's a lonely man. Very good description, i felt like I was standing right outside that hotel watching him stay away from the rain.

Please put up more :)

How could I not read this? Even if it is just this chapter, and even if it isn't my city; a Swedish setting in an online fiction is so rare I just had to read it. And I'm glad I did. It is an interesting, well-written chapter that also works as a 'stand alone piece'.

 

Apart from the Swedish setting (and really, business hotels looks pretty much the same all over the world, but you had the tunnelbana and a few comments about the Swedes) this story had other contents I really enjoyed reading about:

 

an older protagonist (so 46 isn't that old in RL but in romantic fiction it's practically ancient, and I truly wished there were more fictional characters past their twenties). And I enjoyed the way in which his age showed; the graying hair, his changed eye sight and not the least the way he is reasoning, showing life experience (although it seems to be a lonely life).

 

a realistic sex scene. I once heard (or read) someone saying porn should come with a warning text concerning body image and unrealistic and sometimes dangerous and/or health hazardous sexual performances, the same could apply for a lot of romantic and erotic fiction. Awkward first time sex scenes are great - and sexy -in my opinion.

and finally a - for me - appealing style. I like the way you move between now and then at the beginning of the chapter, and maybe you wouldn't really need the years written out. It worked without the specific years at the beginning.

 

So will he call David? I guess the next chapter will tell.

On 07/10/2012 04:32 PM, lilansui said:
There is so much promise in this I really hope to read more. I loved the way you laid out Jordan's life story, the lonely forty-six year old man who still wonders what happened to the bully he fought with when he was in six grade. Wow. That's a lonely man. Very good description, i felt like I was standing right outside that hotel watching him stay away from the rain.

Please put up more :)

Thank you for your review!

 

This is a complete story, so the chapters will be added fairly quickly and I won't leave you hanging; it's just that I wrote it a couple of years back, so I want to go over a couple of aspects again.

On 07/10/2012 10:09 PM, sorgbarn said:
How could I not read this? Even if it is just this chapter, and even if it isn't my city; a Swedish setting in an online fiction is so rare I just had to read it. And I'm glad I did. It is an interesting, well-written chapter that also works as a 'stand alone piece'.

 

Apart from the Swedish setting (and really, business hotels looks pretty much the same all over the world, but you had the tunnelbana and a few comments about the Swedes) this story had other contents I really enjoyed reading about:

 

an older protagonist (so 46 isn't that old in RL but in romantic fiction it's practically ancient, and I truly wished there were more fictional characters past their twenties). And I enjoyed the way in which his age showed; the graying hair, his changed eye sight and not the least the way he is reasoning, showing life experience (although it seems to be a lonely life).

 

a realistic sex scene. I once heard (or read) someone saying porn should come with a warning text concerning body image and unrealistic and sometimes dangerous and/or health hazardous sexual performances, the same could apply for a lot of romantic and erotic fiction. Awkward first time sex scenes are great - and sexy -in my opinion.

and finally a - for me - appealing style. I like the way you move between now and then at the beginning of the chapter, and maybe you wouldn't really need the years written out. It worked without the specific years at the beginning.

 

So will he call David? I guess the next chapter will tell.

Tak, sorgbarn, for your detailed review!

 

You're right about the sameness of business travel (and there are a couple of references to this aspect in the story), so unfortunately Stockholm got 'lost' a little. Still, for me there's nothing quite like its sky after a hard summer rain, so consider David's eye color a constant homage!

 

As to the rest, I'm glad it appeals. One of the factors that led me to write is because I also wanted to see some older characters in romance and maybe share my experience that we don't have all the answers, that we still enjoy learning new stuff, and sharing a good joke, and sex, and we still feel that little flutter of attraction, and I'm pretty sure most of us still like falling in love and being in love, and we're no wiser about what to do when that happens than we were at twenty. :)

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