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    Milos
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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.
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you. 

Lem - 16. Legacy

"God, I don't want you to leave." Joey leans back and scratches her head, ruffling her mohawk a little.

"You're one of the only decent people left around here." I take a drink of this truck stop coffee; it’s mud. “I wish you could come with me.”

A crash rips out through the diner as someone in the kitchen drops a stack of dishes.

Joey smiles. "Job opening," she says through her teeth. "I'd kill to get the hell outta Havre. This place sucks."

"You only have a year left." I try to sound convincing.

"You're 'bout the only one I ever talk to anymore. You ever feel like running away?"

"All the fuckin' time." I lean forward. "I tried it once. Didn't get me much past Conrad."

She glances at a clock hanging above the coffee machine. "Sheesh. When did Matthew say he was getting here?"

"He said whenever he could sneak out. His mom has him on a short leash."

The radio starts playing an old Eddy Raven song. The waitress walks up to the table swinging her hips to the beat, and looks like she's about as old as Momma. She holds her pad up in one hand, and clicks her pen with the other. "You kids decide yet?"

I look over at Joey. "Guess we should get something. We've been here for an hour."

Joey sings along with the song and holds her menu out to the waitress. She stops singing long enough to say: "I'll have an order of cheese fries. The shredded stuff, not the nacho cheese."

"I guess I'll have a piece of blueberry pie. With chocolate ice cream." I smile at the waitress.

Joey sings a few more bars.

I look at Joey, then back at the waitress. "And, a little more coffee if you’d please."

The waitress scribbles down our order. "Your friend gonna be here soon?"

"Hopefully." I fake a smile as she walks off, and watch Joey. "What, we in a music video or somethin'?"

Joey clinches a fist and moves it like she's jerking off. "Smartass." She leans on her elbows. "If you could run away from here, just, fuckin’ go anywhere, where would you go?"

"I don't know. Don’t think I’d mind traveling around from place to place."

"Who'd you take with you?"

"What kind of question is that?" An old, rusted ford truck drives in past the truck-stop sign and catches my eye. "Speak of the devil."

Joey looks around the lot. "Is he here?"

"I think reckon he did."

"So, what if you could run away?"

"My whole life is a huge fuckin' what if."

The waitress walks by with a pot of hot coffee and tops me off. Mattie comes around the corner as she's pouring and stands behind her; she looks over her shoulder. "What can I get 'ya to drink, hon?"

He blushes a little and smiles. "Sprite." He slides in next to Joey, setting a book on the table in front of him.

Joey hugs him. "God, I've missed you!"

He squeezes her and rubs the back of her head. He gives me a loaded smile, like he’s got something on his mind.

I smack his arm. "Took ya' long enough!"

"Ronnie had my ear for a while."

"Did you tell him you were coming?"

"Heh. Yes sir!"

I fall forward. The silverware clinks as I slam my head on the table as a joke. The bump spills some of my coffee on the placemat.

"What's that about?" Joey asks.

I roll my forehead back and forth on the table. "Nothin'."

She laughs at me.

I sit up and rub my forehead. "How'd he take it?"

"We got in a pissing contest. Just glad Mom wasn't around to hear it." He looks between Joey and me. "Said he didn't want to see me hurt again. I told him to mind his own business, and he just walked off and said 'don't say I didn't tell ya'!'"

"Momma was kind of pissed when I told her that I ran into you."

"Guess everyone thinks we're all basket-cases." He grabs a packet of sugar by the edge and starts shaking it between his fingers.

The waitress comes back and sets a tall glass of Sprite in front of him. "Back in a minute to get your order." She smiles at Mattie and walks off.

Mattie tears into the sugar and drops it in his drink.

Joey wrinkles her nose. "Gross. Ain't you worried about your teeth?"

Mattie shakes his head while he stirs his drink with a butter knife. "Ain't never had a cavity in my life."

I lean forward. "Yeah, because you brush your teeth four times a day." I pick up the book and examine the cover: Ecce Homo by Friedrich Nietzsche. "Who the hell's Fredrick Nitz-chee?"

"It's pronounced Neat-cha. That’s homework for my philosophy course next semester. I thought I'd get ahead."

"But it's summer."

Joey smiles at me. "A lot of colleges send out homework before you start. You didn't know that?"

I roll my eyes. "Ugh."

"Where did you get in at?" She asks Mattie.

Mattie blushes and grins. "ASU. Full ride."

"Is that right? That's great, isn't it, Lem?" She looks at me--they both do. "What's wrong?"

I didn't realize I was frowning. "Huh? Sorry, I was off in space for a minute there." I find myself wishing we could go back and do things right—it sucks we're going separate ways in a few weeks. I smile at him. "I think it's awesome. You better come and see me, though."

"Or what?" His ears slide back a little when he grins, which makes them look a little bigger; I think I love him for it.

"Or I'll come down there and..." I poke the table and try to pretend to sound serious. "...and, and I'm gonna..."

"Does it involve kicking my ass?"

"I'm gonna do something to your ass!"

God, I should really think about these things before I say them.

"Ready to order?" The waitress has been standing there for a few seconds, and I didn't even know it.

Joey's trying so hard not to laugh right now. I feel like crawling under the table.

Mattie just smiles at her. "Can I get the grilled cheese and fries off the kids meal? I'm not too hungry."

She just grins and writes it down. "Comin' right up, hon." She points her pen at me. "And you watch your mouth, young man, or I'm gonna tell your mom on you!"

* * *

Red Rock (1987) Pacific Bell (1988-90), Playboy (1991), Bodacious (1994-95), Baby Face (1996), Panhandle Slim (1997), Moody Blues (1998), Promise Land (1999), Dillinger (2000-01), Little Yellow Jacket (2002-04), Tahonta (2003-04), Big Bucks (2005), Headhunter (2006), Mossy Oak Mudslinger (2006), Chicken on a Chain (2007), White Magic (2008), Troubador (2009), Versus Copperhead (2010), Backdraft (2011-12)

* * *

Today was the last day of high school, for good. I try to remember back to where I was two years ago. Back then I thought I knew what freedom was: doing nothing all summer long; being out in the fields with Mattie while we walked along and talked about nothing; watching the sun set in a west far wilder than either of us would have even known.

We didn't know shit about the world, seeing we were stupid kids back then. Hell, we still are.

I hang my arm out the window and let the wind roll over the back of my hand. I know I'm going to miss the sweet, warm breeze when I move away.

Mattie and Me, we drive through town, cross the highway, and pass the old grain silo across the street from the Safeway store. It's aging pretty bad, lately. There’s paint chipping off here and there, and you can hardly read the letters on the side—where it used to say Winslow Grain Inc.

We pass by the trailer park where Jeff lived, and houses dotted here and there. If you blink, the best parts of your life pass you right by. It's the bad moments that stick with you forever.

Mattie grins at me. "A little birdie tells me you're riding your first bull at the fair."

I lean my head against the window. "God, that's creepy."

"What is?"

"Déjà vu. Memories. It's nothing." I'm getting that after school kind of tired where I just might conk out and nap anywhere I rest my head. That floating head feeling where I’m a little drained, a little horny, and a little relieved. I always get horny when I get sleepy like this. I sigh. "Pretty stoked about it."

"You don't sound too excited."

"Just a little tired. Feel like I need a little turkey nap."

"You goin' to the dance?"

I yawn and stretch the best I can. "Yeah. Prolly' just hang out and see who's around. I can only think of one person I'd want to go with, and we'd probably both end up dead if that happened."

"There're always chicks there without dates."

"You goin'?"

"If you do, I might. I don't know how I'd explain myself, just showing up outta' nowhere and all." Mattie slaps his hands against the steering wheel in beat with the radio. He bobs his head, looks right at me and sings like Keith Urban; he's got a really good singing voice. I bet if he wasn't so shy, he'd be a damn good singer.

I try not to laugh because I've never seen Mattie sing before.

He beams at me. "You're blushing."

"Yeah, for once, it's not you changin' color." I put my hands in my lap, look forward, and snort.

"What?"

"You can go an' serenade me anytime you want."

With a shy little chuckle, he turns beet red.

"Hell, I didn't know you could sing so good."

"Never really tried. You know me an' doin' stuff in front of people."

"What about doing rodeo stuff? You're always in front of people."

"That's different."

"How's that different?"

He shrugs. "I'ono. Just is."

I squeeze his knee. "You should do it more often. Sing, I mean."

He glances at me. "What the hell we doin', anyway?"

"No fuckin' idea." I think a minute. "I ain't got anywhere to be, for once." We drive for a few minutes, still trying to think. "Ronnie settle down any?"

"He's kept himself pretty busy with Jenny. She's a little overdue, so they're staying in my old room."

"What's wrong with his room?"

"Mom wants her on the main floor in case she pops. Can't imagine it'd be too easy for her walkin' up stairs with something the size of a watermelon trying to claw its way outta her hoo-hoo."

I laugh and shake my head. "Thanks for the mental image, Romeo. You got anything goin' on tonight?"

"Not that I can recollect."

"What do you wanna do?"

"I don't care."

* * *

I've been trying to wake up from this nap for a few minutes now, but I don't want to move. I can feel Mattie's warm skin against me, and the texture of this couch against my back. I’m lying across his body with my head on his chest. I admire the smell of his skin, and his sweat. I can still smell the gasoline vapors a little; I had to open the windows to get a cross-breeze. The old clubhouse reeks from the tractor, and it smells like a garage in here.

I open my eyes and see part of his arm lying across his chest. The sky is getting a little darker, but I don't want to be anywhere else.

He jerks a little, like he's having a dream, and I can feel his heart beating. The air's getting a little colder, and Shadow's got goosebumps all over his skin.

I guess he was a little tired, too. We got into a snuggle fit and both fell asleep.

I rub his chest as soft as I can, and my thoughts start drifting.

"Hey."

I look up at him. "I thought you were still asleep."

He smiles. "Light sleeper."

I keep rubbing his chest, huging him hard as I can.

He squeezes me back. "What time is it?"

I lean over his body and start picking through the shirts on the ground. My timepiece hits the floor. Thud! I look at the face and squint at it. "Watch says it's just after seven."

"Bet mom's wondering where I am. Shit, I bet I missed dinner."

"We'll figure something out." I kiss his side, right on one of his ribs. "I wanna ask you something."

"What's that?"

"Why are you taking philosophy? I never figured you for the type."

"Guess I changed some. Maybe I just want to understand the universe better. Make sense of my death."

My heart skips a beat. "Shadow, don't you dare tell me you're a ghost."

"No. I'm all here. Just... sometimes feels like I woke up in a different universe or something. I've had this idea that we're all these little balloons floating around in nothing. Like, the balloon is our soul part, what makes us what we are inside. Right? But we're also tethered down by others, so we don't float away.

"Like, if we pop or we drift off, we're still here. We're just empty, like we don't have drive."

I chew on the thought for a bit. "Did you think that because you almost died?"

"I did die, Lem."

"I don't mean, like, a philosophy or something."

"No. I was clinically dead for three minutes."

I run my finger around his belly button and put my hand flat on his stomach. "What was it like, being dead?"

"That's what bothers the shit out of me."

"Why?"

"I thought I saw an angel when I was dying in the bathtub, and I started feeling warm. There was this ringing in my ears that was really loud, but I couldn't figure out where it was coming from. It was like time was slowing down. My vision got blurry, and I thought I saw a shadow, or a person." He sounds like he's drifting off a little. "There was light behind it, like, wings...

"He picked me up out of the tub, just lifted me out like I was light as a feather. He had your face; I couldn't make sense of any of it. It told me to hang in there, and all I remember after that was seeing lights blinking here n' there--hearing voices. I remember hearing a beeping for a while. After that, it just all faded into blackness.

"There was no light at the end of a tunnel. There weren't white puffy clouds. I didn't have an out of body experience. I didn't see God. Didn't hear God. Didn't feel God.

"It was empty, like floating around in a black ocean, knowing you're above an abyss and falling slowly." He keeps fixed on the ceiling, and talks like a teacher. "There was no way back. It was a scary place to be, Lem. Next thing I remember was waking up in a hospital bed. When I told the doctors, they said I was hallucinating and it was probably Ronnie what I saw."

I'm holding my breath a little. I scoot up next to him, and look into his eyes. We touch noses and lips; I can feel his breath on my face.

Our eyes stay hooked; his are everything honest, and good--a burst of amber melting into a ring of gold, flecks of green and copper at the edges, held in by a ring of bronze.

* * *

I lead Mattie toward the front door.

Mattie stops short of the stoop. "I don't know, Lem. I don't wanna cause any trouble. My mom's gonna be pissed as it is." He scratches his arm.

"Don't worry, I'll deal with my parents later. You're my best friend, and none of that's gonna change just because they say so." I open the door and step in.

Mattie looks at the side of the house like he's thinking, takes a slow step forward and follows me in.

We walk through the living room and into the kitchen.

Momma's putting the dishes in the washer. She stops when she realizes I'm not alone, and gives me that look like she's going to smack the crap out of me later. She half-asses a smile to Mattie. "Hello, Matthew."

"Hi, Missus Taylor." He looks at me. "Maybe I should get on home."

"It's okay, dude," I tell him.

Momma puts a few dishes in the washer. "Where you been?"

I put my hands in my pockets. "Mattie and I were hangin' out. Didn't realize it was getting on so late."

She nods. "Well, since you missed dinner, the leftovers are in the fridge." She stands up and washes her hands in the sink. "How you been, Matthew?"

"Good. Moving to Arizona for college in a month or two." He grins uncomfortably at her.

"That's wonderful. Congratulations." She sighs and turns off the tap. "How's your mom? Haven't talked to her in a while."

"She's good. Keepin' herself busy, I guess."

I can feel tension, but it could just be me; maybe I should have let him go home.

It surprises me to see her walk up to him and give him a hug. "It's good to see you again, kiddo." She steps back, looks up at him. "God, you've gotten tall."

Mattie turns red and giggles. "Good to see you, too."

"If you're hungry, please help yourself. I don't want to send you home hungry." She smiles and glances at me. "Make sure you clean up after yourselves." She walks out of the kitchen.

"God," I say under my breath. "I'mma get it later."

"You think so?"

"Did you catch that look she gave me when we walked in?" I hesitate. "Let's eat. I'm fuckin' hungry." I start pulling things out of the fridge; looks like we had chicken and dirty rice.

Mattie gets some dishes out and starts going for the chicken.

I fix myself a plate and sit at the table next to Mattie. We don't really say anything while we eat, but I catch him looking at me every so often.

We're almost done when Momma walks back into the kitchen with Mattie's mom's right on her heels.

* * *

Yeah, Momma's pissed. "His mom was beside herself when I told her Matthew was over here. And don't you ever undermine me in front of people like that again!"

"Why is this an issue with everyone?"

She clenches her teeth. "You don't need to yell at me." She puts her hand over mine. "You've got to understand that she doesn't want to lose him. And I don't want to see you hurt again."

"Momma! I almost lost him once. I just wanted to make the most of our friendship before we go to college. Just to put shit back together."

"There's only two months before you leave Burlee. You'll make new friends and start a different life. You don't need to be dragging his problems around with you. It's luggage you don't need."

"Luggage? I'm his only friend, and he's my only friend. I'd carry his luggage from here to the tip of Texas if it'd make things better."

She stands up and takes a few steps around the kitchen. "You can make other friends."

"How the hell do you expect me to make friends in a town with three hundred fuckin' people?"

"Eric Lemuel Taylor, you watch your mouth or so help me, I’m gonna bop you one on the face. It's only two months."

"Can't I just have this one thing? Can't I just have my best friend? Can't I just feel normal?" I stand up and scream at her. "You know, this almost feels worse than him trying to kill himself. He's just trying to get back to normal, just like me. Then you go and call his mom--I mean... shit!" I breathe hard and just stare at her. "You know, the last few days were the only time in two years that I've felt like things were back to good."

"I know he was your best friend..."

"Is."

"Lem, I thought we were over this."

"I don't much expect you'd understand."

She slaps me across the face, hard enough I'm looking at the other wall. "Don't you hedge me."

"You didn't hafta sabotage us." I turn around to find somewhere to go; anywhere but here.

"Goddamn it, don't you turn your back to me!"

I turn around. "Good for you, you have your mommy pants on. Did you ever stop to think about what my friendship with Mattie meant to me?" I blink at her. I want to say hurtful things. I know if I push that button, I'm not going to get anywhere. "I didn't think so." I back out of the kitchen door.

Momma's face never changes: she looks mad, and a little hurt.

* * *

I'm perched up on the gate to Smokey's stall in the barn, giving his nose a good rub; I think they can tell when you're not feeling good about things. He's being more affectionate than usual.

Chase walks in, leans over the gate and looks up at me. "You okay?"

"I don't know. Yes? Maybe?"

"I heard you and Momma fighting. What happened?"

"She came uncorked when I brought Mattie over. Fuckin'... acted all nice to him, then went and called his mom. Why would she do that?"

"You know what I think?"

I don't say anything.

She reaches up and pats Smokey on the neck. "I think she's scared of him."

"Why you think that?"

"Because he almost died and took you with him."

"Chase, I wasn't ever gonna try to commit suicide. I was upset, but it wasn't worth losing a friend over."

"I wish I had a best friend like Mattie."

"Don't worry, you will some day. Find yourself a husband. Have a few kids."

My God, what the fuck did I just say?

She cocks her head up at me. "I guess so."

"That didn't come out right."

"I'm not dumb, Lem. Or blind." She scratches behind Smokey's ear.

"What's that supposed to mean?"

"Hmm." She shakes her head. "Maybe I don't understand what best friends are."

"I didn't say you were stupid, Chase. Boys are just different than girls."

She's rolling her foot back and forth, and I can feel it shaking the gate. "You love him, don't you?"

"Like a brother, yeah." I scratch my nose, rest my arms across the top of the gate, and rest my head against my arms. "Not something guys can go around saying to each other."

"Liar."

"What would you know about it?"

"My window faces the shed out front."

Suddenly, I feel like the world isn't even underneath me anymore; I’ve gone and shot myself in the foot. "Just let me pack before you go and tell Dad and Momma. I got precious little to give, so don't even think about blackmailing me."

"Why would you even say that?"

"Because they're gonna kick my ass to the curb. Shit like that don't fly around Montana, and you know it."

"I'm not gonna say anything." She punches me in the arm, hard. "You're still my big brother."

I don't feel easy about any of this.

After a minute, she hops up on the gate so she's sitting the other way, leaning her elbows against her knees. "So, are you?"

I sigh. "Am I what?"

"One of those, um... lesbians?"

I bust up laughing. "Do you know what a lesbian is?"

"Isn't it two guys or girls who..."

"No. Lesbians are two women."

"Oops. I guess I mean... queer." She looks at me. "Are you?"

"No."

"So, what are you, then?"

I shake my head. "I don't fuckin' know, Chase. I don't know."

"Are you and Matthew boyfriends?"

"I don't know if I feel comfortable talking about this with my kid sister."

"Come on, Lem. We can be friends, too, can't we? I won't have anyone to talk to when you leave."

I guess I didn't figure that we do talk a lot; more than most brothers and sisters. After what happened to Mattie, she and I talked quite a bit, but never about this. "I don't know. Maybe. Well, I wish we could be. I love him so much, just... I can't describe it. I don't even know when this shit all got so complicated. Just seems like Momma doesn't want us to be friends because of that."

"What really happened with Mattie?"

"I don't want to drag you into this."

"Please?"

"I was a jerk, Chase. I'm pretty ashamed of it."

She nods at me, like she's nudging me on.

"Mattie and I started messing around, like a man and woman often do. That's when I was dating Brooke. I was stupid, and I told him it wasn't right, and people would say stuff. Told him I was official with Brooke, and he freaked out on me."

"You were cheating on Brooke?"

"No. It's complicated. We weren't official then, and I never liked her to begin with. I just felt so guilty about doing stuff with Mattie, having those feelings, that I wanted to be normal. I thought dating Brooke would hide that, and it made me feel worse about who I was. It must have been like a slap in the face to Mattie." I pause and look her in the eye. "Why are you being like this?"

"Like what?"

"I don't know. Just, being okay with it?"

"Maybe I don't understand it, but it's your life and I want you to be happy. I like it when you’re happy because you smile, and you know what? When you smile, it makes me smile. It always has. I think Mattie's better for you than any girl or guy you'd ever find out there. He's not gonna lead you around like a dog on a leash."

“Chase, I…”

"You remember what Missus Jensen used to say? Don't be ashamed of who you are or where you came from, because if you're afraid to be yourself, you're afraid of who you are."

"I bet you'll be just as smart as her one of these days."

"Maybe."

I hug her. "Thank you, Chase."

"I didn't do anything."

"You've done more than you know."

2007-2011, Dave Milos. All rights reserved.
  • Like 7
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.
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you. 
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Chapter Comments

I ditto Bugeye; every chapter gets better and better.

 

Chase is so mature for her age and so insightful. And Lem finally admitted to someone other than Reagan how he feels about Mattie.

 

And this whole thing with his mom. Being a mom, I do understand where she's coming from. I think I'd be more upset if I were Mattie's mom, thinking that that kid Lem was going to set him on a self-destructive path once again. But these moms don't realize is that they are best friends and that means something to them. It's not like they can turn their feelings on and off for different people. They need each other.

 

Chase was to astute mentioning that Mattie was good for Lem and how she just wants him to be happy, b/c when he's happy, she's happy. She's the best sister I've ever read about!

 

Excellent chapter Dave; as usual. Let's see, it's been a few days, maybe when I check back to GA and hit my refresh button at 12:45 a.m. I'll get an awesome surprise....lol :)

On 05/28/2016 04:20 AM, Cole Matthews said:

Is the story over? I'm loving the complexity, the honesty, the brutal reality of Lem and Mattie's love. I hope some day you finish it.

It is finished on Nifty, but I had tried to do an edit. My plans are to finish the first book of die catfish die, and then to do a major edit and post the story in its entirety. I want to add Shadow to it, as well, but I'm trying to figure out how I want to write that story.

 

http://www.nifty.org/nifty/gay/young-friends/lem/lem-16.html (There was an extra chapter added on GA, so the next chapter for you starts with 16, if you want to continue.)

 

It will be over here in its entirety at some point. :)

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