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    Mark Arbour
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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. 

9.11 - 72. Chapter 72

November 7, 2001

Escorial

 

I drove up the drive slowly, appreciating this beautiful property, this spot that I’d grown to love so much. I was surprised to see Matt’s GMC parked out back at this time of day, and even more surprised to see him loading things into it. He and I hadn’t talked at all since Sunday. It was actually pretty easy to do, since we were both pretty busy, but this avoidance seemed to be conscious on both our parts.

I hopped out of my car and walked up to him. “Hey there. What are you doing?”

“What business is it of yours?” he snapped.

“Seriously?” I asked acidly. “I don’t have enough status in your life to ask you what you’re doing, when it looks like you’re packing?”

That checked his attitude a bit, and he responded in a normal tone. “I just need some space, so I’m moving on campus.”

“Can I ask where you’re moving?” I was still pissed, but I was trying to be nicer.

“On campus,” he repeated in a nasty way, dodging my question. I didn’t get this. I figured he’d at least be pleasant. I just shook my head and walked away. “Wade!” he called, but I ignored him.

I wandered by JP’s office and noticed that he was in there, so I went in. “Good afternoon,” he said when he saw me.

“Is it?” I asked. “I noticed Matt’s moving out.”

“He informed me of his intention to do so approximately one hour ago,” he said.

“Was there some conflict that caused this?” I wanted to ask if he’d gotten into a fight with Will, but I opted for a more generic approach.

“While that is certainly a possibility, I am not aware of anything, and I generally hear about those incidents.”

“Generally,” I said, teasing him.

“He did not discuss it with you?” JP asked, and then seemed nervous, as if he were probing when he should not.

“Nope. I found out when I drove up and saw him loading the GMC.”

“That is unfortunate,” he said. “So are you two still a couple?”

“Well, there has been no formal break up, but he seems to think I’m asking too much when I want to know where he’s living, so I’d say that I’m a single man.”

“I’m sorry,” he said, but it was actually a question.

“I’m not,” I said. “I’m tired of the fighting and the tension. I’m not getting anything out of this relationship. It’s just a drain on me. So now I don’t have to worry about it.”

I think he was surprised by my sincerity, but not as surprised as I was. Was it really this easy for me to end things with Matt? And if it was, what did that say about our relationship? Had it all been just a big sham? “I’m glad this is something you’re not unhappy with,” he said. I actually laughed at his non-committal comment, and that got me a smile. “I know you are aware of this, but if there’s anything I can do for you, you have but to ask.”

“I know that,” I said, smiling. “That’s why I stopped by here first.”

I went back to my room and stood in front of my dresser, looking at myself in the mirror, and my eyes wandered down to my hands. I took the ring off my left ring finger, the ring Matt had given me when we’d promised to be partners, and put it in the drawer where I kept my jewelry. I allowed myself to shed a tear or two, and then I wiped my eyes dry and promised that I wouldn’t let him see me cry. There was a knock on my door. “Come in,” I said.

Matt came in, looking sheepish. “I’m sorry I was a dick to you.”

“I’m used to it,” I said, my bitchiness betraying that this was bothering me more than I admitted. “If this makes you happy, then go for it.”

His eyes migrated toward my hand. “You took off your ring.”

“When you move out and don’t say shit about it, and then you won’t even tell me where you’re living, then I think it’s pretty obvious we’re not partners. We’re not even a couple anymore. It’s not pretty enough just to wear as jewelry.”

“I always thought they were really pretty,” he said sadly, referring to the rings.

“They were pretty when they meant something,” I said. I opened the drawer and pulled my ring out and handed it to him. “Here. You can give this to the next guy you decide to lie to.”

“I didn’t lie to you,” he said.

“Matt, I don’t have the energy to argue with you about that. It would take too long, and you wouldn’t hear a word I said anyway. So just go, walk out that door, and out of my life. We’ll both be happier.”

“That’s not what I want,” he objected.

“What do you want?”

“I don’t know,” he said, and I felt sorry for him. He really was confused, and floundering, and if he wasn’t being such a dick to me, I probably would have at least tried to help him.

“Well when you figure it out, send me an e-mail,” I said dismissively. He showed no signs of leaving, so I did. I pushed past him and walked out the door, down the hall, out to the garage, and got back into my car. I went down the drive at a much faster pace than normal, and went for a drive in the hills around Woodside, venting my mood on the road.

I finally headed back to Palo Alto, conflicted about what to do next. There was a GLBT event tonight, and I could go to that. I was in the mood to party, and to be sociable, but I wasn’t sure I wanted to hang out with that crowd. The irony was that even though I was the former president of the club, it was more Matt’s venue than mine. Lately he’d spent more time hanging around with the gay guys on campus, while I’d spent most of my time hanging out with the straight crowd. I called Klip.

“Dude, I’m taken tonight,” he joked as he answered the phone.

“Oh yeah? Who’s taken you?” He’d broken up with Shannon, so now he was living the single life big time. Kind of like Matt, I thought ruefully.

“There’s a party at the DG house. No way can’t I bang a sister tonight,” he said. I laughed.

“I don’t want your dick, I’m just looking for a party,” I said.

“Then I can help you out,” he said. “Come by and we can walk over together.”

“You got it,” I said. I drove over to the dorms and amazingly enough, I got a decent parking place. Matt’s GMC was three cars down from me, and as I held my keys in my hand, I had to repress the desire to scrape them along the side. I chided myself for thinking like Will, and that made me chuckle, and shook me out of the melancholy mood that kept trying to envelop me.

I went up to Klip’s room and found him and Gathan getting ready for the party. “Wade!” Gathan shouted, and gave me a big hug.

“You’re like a fucking freshman,” I said, giving him shit. “You’re already drunk.”

“Just a little bit,” he slurred, cracking us up. We left their room and walked over to the DG house, laughing at what an ass Gathan was being. I was having a blast, really enjoying myself, when I saw Matt and Tony walking toward the building where the GLBT meeting was going on. I hid the anger that threatened to consume me; anger that after all the shit that had happened, Matt would still be hanging out with Tony. If Will were here, he’d absolutely lose it. “That’s Matt!” Gathan said loudly, attracting their attention.

“Shut the fuck up,” I said, but I was too late. We waved at them, but stayed far enough away from them so we avoided an actual conversation.

“How come he’s going there and you’re going here?” Gathan asked.

“Because his legs are walking north, and my legs are walking south,” I said, being a smart ass.

Klip chuckled, then looked at me and got a concerned expression on his face. He took my left hand and held it briefly in his. “Where’s your ring?”

“You guys are like the fucking Spanish Inquisition,” I said.

“Nobody expects the Spanish Inquisition,” Gathan said, in a bad English accent. That was too funny. We laughed about that, and that seemed to leave the unpleasant subject of Matt and me in the dust.

Or so I thought. “I heard Matt moved onto campus,” Klip said.

“That’s what I heard too,” I said, as if I weren’t more interested in what Matt did than someone in the gossip chain.

“Well, since we’re here in this premier academic institution, let’s put all the facts together and draw a conclusion,” Klip said, mimicking our boring-as-fuck statistics prof. “You’re not wearing your ring, Matt’s moved back to campus, and you’re going to different parties. I’d say you’re a single man.”

“Glad to know all those tuition dollars didn’t go to waste,” I quipped.

“Dude, are you OK?” Gathan asked me plaintively, but that was emphasized by his drunkenness.

“I’m totally fine,” I said firmly.

“You hear who Matt’s rooming with?” Klip asked.

I shook my head. “No. I assumed he got a single. He’s a senior.” Single dorm rooms were more expensive, but that usually didn’t deter people from getting them. They were a hot item, and upper classmen got first pick.

“Rooms were assigned a long time ago,” Klip said. “You move in now, you take what they can give you.”

“Maybe he scored one anyway,” I said.

“Nope, he’s sharing a double,” Gathan said. We stopped walking and stared at him.

“With who?” Klip asked, the question I wanted to ask too.

“That guy,” he said, pointing down the street, to where we could just barely make out Tony and Matt heading toward the meeting.

“With Tony?” I asked, unable to hide my shock.

“Yeah. Tony’s roommate bombed out, so Matt moved in with him,” Gathan said. “They know each other, right? I mean, I’ve seen Tony up at Escorial.” Gathan actually looked a little uncomfortable when he said that. Did he hook up with Tony too? Was there anyone at Escorial who hadn’t fucked Tony besides me? I forced myself to calm down, which wasn’t easy.

“They know each other,” I said. I felt fury pulsing through my veins, and I was trying to decide why Matt moving in with Tony bothered me. And like everything that had to do with Matt these days, it was just too convoluted for me to try and figure out. We had broken up, we weren’t together, so what he did didn’t concern me anymore. There was no reason to let his deal with Tony ruin my evening. I forced my mood back into positive turf. “Let’s party.”

“Party!” Gathan howled, cracking us up. We got to the DG house, and I had a blast. I decided to turn my anguish over Matt into something fun. Every time I thought about him, I took a drink, my own personal drinking game. I guess it said something about my feelings for him that I was totally hammered.

Gathan was making the moves on some DG girl, and he vanished. Klip wasn’t around either. It was one of those things that happen when you’re drunk at a party, and you realize all your friends have moved on. I’d gone from having a great time, surrounded by people I knew, to feeling pretty alone, even though there were a lot of people around. I staggered outside and found a bench to sit on, then called Escorial and asked them to send a car down for me.

“There you are,” Klip said, and sat next to me. “I was looking for you.”

“Dude, you are so busy in there, you weren’t looking for me,” I joked. He’d had damn near every DG hanging all over him.

“Well yeah, actually I was,” he said. The limo drove up and stopped, and Pedro got out and opened the door. “Want to give me a ride home?”

I smiled. “Yeah.” We hopped in, and I was so drunk, Klip had to talk to Pedro, and tell him to drive around. And then, just like we had last time, I blew Klip for a while, and then he fucked me. God, he was sexy, and so much fun.

When we were done, I cleaned us up pretty fast, sensing that it would bother him to hang around with my cum all over us, and a nasty condom sitting there. “You know, I never really wanted to do that with another dude, and after last time, I told myself it was just a one-time thing.” He shocked me by leaning in and kissing me, then shocked me even more by what he said: “But I liked it a lot. Too bad you don’t have your own place.”

“If I did, would you come over and visit?” I asked, flirting like a whore and cracking both of us up.

He kissed me again. “I would.”

“When?”

“Tomorrow night,” he said.

“You got a date,” I said. Pedro dropped him off, and then took me home, and I was on cloud nine. I didn’t need a boyfriend, I just needed a hot guy who would appreciate me, and Klip definitely fit the bill.

 

November 8, 2001

Stanford

 

I sat in one of the cafeterias alone, eating lunch and studying for a test I had that afternoon. I was usually overly prepared for exams, but I’d gone to that party on Wednesday, and that had thrown my whole schedule off. I sensed a presence near me and glanced up briefly to see Matt and Tony walk over to a table with some of the other GLBT club members. I made sure to just glance over there so they didn’t see me looking at them.

I tried to focus on my notes, but that wasn’t happening, I was too interested in the dynamic at Matt’s table. He was laughing and having a good time, flirting with all the guys. He sure as fuck wasn’t upset about us breaking up. I moved beyond that, beyond my instinct to become self-absorbed about this and get all pissed off that he wasn’t moping around, and watched the interplay. He may be living with Tony, and it was obvious to me that they were still fucking, but they weren’t exclusive. I shrugged internally at him. I guess Matt was totally incapable of growing up, and of being with just one person. A guy like Tony, who was newly out, would be an ideal guy for him to have around. Someone who would fuck him, but wouldn’t want any commitments or obligations. I fought back the jealousy that sparked, and had to really struggle as I thought about how they both probably brought guys home and fucked them together. This was not a good environment for me. I needed to get out of here. Graduation couldn’t come soon enough to end this nightmare.

I forced my mind to refocus on the notes in front of me, and was so successful I was surprised when a chair scraped on the floor next to me, and then groaned as someone fell into it. I looked up to see Matt sitting at the table with me. “I thought I’d say hi,” he said.

I stared at him, saying nothing, and making him feel incredibly uncomfortable. “Now I understand why you didn’t tell me where you were living.”

He sighed. “He and I are at the same place right now, both of us struggling to figure shit out. We’re friends.”

“Friends?” I asked sarcastically.

“I didn’t come over here so you could bust my balls,” he snapped. “I was just trying to be nice.”

“I wonder how everyone at Escorial will react to the news that not only did you fuck Tony, and not only are you continuing to fuck Tony, you decided to move in with him?” I asked acidly.

“I suppose you’re going to tell them,” he said snidely.

“Tonight, at dinner,” I said.

“Guess I won’t be going back there,” he said, like it didn’t matter to him.

“Guess not,” I confirmed, like it didn’t matter to me either. It did matter to me, but in a positive way. It would be good to know it was a safe haven and that I didn’t have to worry about running into him.

“Thanks a lot, Wade,” he said rudely and stood up.

“My pleasure,” I said sarcastically. He stormed off, and I focused on my notes, or tried to. I wanted to feel good about making him feel like shit, but I couldn’t. I wanted to feel good about where we both were, but I didn’t.

I headed to class and took my test, and I was pretty positive about it, but academic success just wasn’t the rush it used to be. I felt pretty apathetic about it, and about almost everything. The sooner I was out of here, the better, especially since, with this attitude, I may end up blowing my GPA up if I had to endure too much more undergrad work.

I had a lot of things to do tonight, but most of the people at home were leaving for New York tomorrow. This was the last chance I’d have to see them for the weekend, so I made an effort to be at Escorial for dinner. I walked in and found a larger crowd than normal for a Thursday night. Claire and Jack were here, and so were Marie and John. There were the other usual attendees as well: Will, JP, Stef, Frank, and Isidore.

“Hey there!” Will said enthusiastically, and made me sit next to him.

We sat down and started eating. “Is Matt not joining us?” Claire asked. Evidently no one had told her what was going on.

“Matt decided to move to campus,” I said flatly, working to keep the emotion out of my voice. I was getting really tired of having to explain that, and to explain that we’d broken up.

“You’re not wearing your ring,” Will said with alarm in his voice.

“I’m a single guy now,” I said, hoping that would suffice. There was silence at the table, as everyone digested that. I decided that I was lucky that Nana had decided to stay in Virginia. If she’d been here, this would have been a lot tougher, both for me and for Matt.

“He’s just trying to get his head together, and to get some space to do that,” Frank said, making excuses for Matt. That really pissed me off, to the point where I couldn’t hide my anger.

I looked at him, stared at him, making him uncomfortable. “Please do not insult me by trying to spin this. He’s being an ass. That’s the simple explanation.”

“I was hoping you’d give him a chance,” Frank persisted. I put down my fork and knife for emphasis as I responded.

“I found out that Matt was moving out when I came home yesterday and he was packing up the GMC. He didn’t talk to me about it, he didn’t tell me what he was thinking, he just decided to move out. If I wouldn’t have come home when I did, he would have just vanished without a word. When I asked him where he was moving, he refused to tell me. We’ve been together for three years, and he thought me asking him where he was going to live was a ridiculous question on my part. He was rude, and he was obnoxious. He was an ass,” I said to Frank, and that effectively shut him up.

“He did not tell you where he was living?” Stef asked, expressing the shock that everyone felt.

“He did not,” I confirmed. I hadn’t been sure that I was really going to tell everyone at dinner that he was living with Tony, but now I was backed into a corner. I felt like I needed to lay it out there, let the situation blow up, and then be done with it. “But we know a lot of the same people, so I was able to find out.”

“And where did he move?” Jack asked.

I put my hand on Will’s thigh to steady him. “He moved in with Tony.” As I said that, I was looking at Frank. If he’d made himself Matt’s big defender, he was going to have to answer for his actions. There wasn’t a person at the table who wasn’t stunned by that announcement. But as soon as it was out, I refocused my attention on Will.

I could feel the anger surge in him, pulsing through my hand, and when I looked at him, he was just about to explode. I tried to convey a sense of calmness to him, a sense of understanding, but he was too far gone. “So much for being calm about this. So much for worrying about family harmony,” he said, his voice getting louder quickly. He turned on everyone, but his eyes really zeroed in on JP. “I was supposed to just put up with his bullshit, and ignore it. I was supposed to pretend that it was just fine that he slept with a guy I was into, who was a good friend, and one of my key supports. Not that I needed any support or anything. This has been such an easy time for me. A breeze. A cakewalk. Who needs friends around when three-fourths of your parents are wiped out? People deal with that all the time. I was being selfish and unreasonable.”

“I’m sorry,” I said, but he didn’t hear me.

“Be nice, keep things harmonious. That was the plan that you all approved and rammed down my throat! And what does Matt do? He spits in my face by moving in with Tony.”

“You don’t even like Tony,” John said, trying desperately to calm Will down before he completely lost it.

“That’s not the point,” he snapped at John, and then turned back to JP. “I suppose that after all this, I’m still supposed to roll out the goddamn red carpet for him when he comes to visit? Heaven forbid I should actually tell him how I feel, because I may hurt his precious feelings.”

JP looked at him evenly. “I think the way you handled yourself in that situation was admirable.” That had a very calming effect on Will, but as mad as he was, that wasn’t saying much.

Will zeroed in on Frank. “You want to give me crap about being nice to him? You want to make excuses for him now? You want to sit there and tell me how to live my life, and how to deal with Zach, while you ignore what an absolute and complete scumball Matt is?”

“I’m not happy about this either,” Frank snapped.

“You people keep doing this,” Will said. “You set up these standards that I’m supposed to follow, all this crap I’m supposed to put up with, when none of you, not one of you, would be willing to tolerate it.” He looked around the table, glaring at everyone, demanding a response, but got nothing. “I am sick and tired of always having to suck it up for the good of the family, only to turn around and be treated like shit.”

“We aren’t doing that,” JP said firmly, even though he was very embattled.

“No?” Will challenged. “What happens to Matt when he comes up here to visit Frank?” Frank was reeling too, everyone was, but there didn’t seem to be anyone who could calm Will down. Until Claire spoke up.

“Will, I recognize you are upset, and I think you have every right to be, but you are demanding answers to questions I haven’t even thought about yet,” she said. Her tone was soft and elegant, and conveyed a very maternal and supportive attitude. It stopped Will dead in his tracks. He sat there, looking down at his plate, trying to digest this.

“I’m sorry,” he said, and then the tears came. He got up to leave, but I stopped him.

“It’s OK,” I said soothingly. He broke down then, sobbing, and gripped me tightly, so much that it was almost painful.

He finally pulled himself together. “I’m really sorry,” he said to everyone. “I thought I had that beat.”

“What?” John asked.

“These rages. I get really mad and just lose it,” he said.

“You’ve always done that,” Marie said. Will gave her a dirty look, but we were all snickering, trying not to laugh, and eventually even Will saw the humor in it.

“It’s worse that normal,” he finally said.

“Well, I think that if everyone is ready and willing to forgive Matt for his transgressions, the least we can do is forgive you,” I said, being slightly snarky. “And for the record, neither one of them is worth getting mad about.”

“So you’ve completely written Matt off?” Frank asked me, as if I were the callous one.

“Duh,” I said to him, a word I never uttered, and one so out of character it got some snickers from Marie, John, and Will. “The way he’s treated me is enough to do that, hands down. But tack on what he’s done to Will, and I’ve ended the chapter and closed the book.”

“So have I,” Will confirmed. No one else said anything; they were too busy pondering the situation, and all that had happened.

I turned to face Stef and Will. “I have a hot date tonight, so I have to run. Have a great trip to New Jersey.”

“Thanks,” Will said. “It’s going to be awesome.”

“Maybe I’ll go with you,” Frank said, referring to the jaunt to New Jersey.

Will looked at him. “I realize that I have no real say in this, but I’d prefer it if you’d go next weekend. I’d like to have one more weekend with Zach before you try and sabotage that relationship.”

“I am not trying to sabotage your relationship with Zach,” Frank insisted.

“I’m sorry. Wally and Clara are the ones trying to do that, not you,” Will said, implying that Frank was in league with them. “Do what you want to do.”

“I’ll go next weekend,” he grumbled, probably realizing that with all the shit that had happened with Matt, it wouldn’t be a fun flight for him.

“Thank you,” Will said. I smiled at them, a fake smile, and got up to leave.

“Will Brad be back next week?” I asked.

“That is his plan,” Stef said. “Why did you ask?”

“I’ll have to see if he has a free night to do dinner,” I said. I walked out the door, smiling, knowing that would get back to Matt, and that would set him free. Some slight payback for the shit he’d pulled on Will.

I went back to my room to finish getting ready. I wasn’t surprised to hear a knock at my door, and I was even less surprised to find that it was Will. “Hey,” I said, and opened the door to let him in. He was still a mess, so I gave him a hug, a very meaningful one. “I’m sorry I sprung that on you at dinner. I didn’t really want to talk about it at all, but when it came up, I decided to just get it all out there.”

“It’s not your fault,” he said. “I guess, now that it’s come down to this, it really doesn’t matter. I’ve already written Tony off, so now I’ll just take Matt completely off the list.”

I sighed, and sat down with him. “Look, this is tough for me, because it puts me in the position of trying to defend Matt, and I’m a little pissed off at him.” He smiled at me. “We’re all dealing with this shit, with the 9-11 attacks, in different ways. My way was to reach out to Matt, to use him to prop me up. Maybe that was too much pressure for him. But regardless, his way was different. His way was to push everyone he cared about away. He’s severed his ties now with pretty much all the people around him who were important to him, except maybe his parents back in Ohio.”

“So that makes what he did alright?” Will challenged.

“No, it doesn’t. It’s not an excuse, it’s an explanation. It’s like when a plane crashes. Knowing why won’t fix the plane, or bring the people who died back to life, but it is important. Matt has crashed and burned, and while I’m really pissed at him for how he treated me, and how he treated you, it makes me feel a little better to know why.”

He nodded and got up. “I’ve got other shit to worry about. He can do what he wants.”

I smiled. “That’s my feeling on it, exactly.”

He walked out of my room, and with that, I put all their issues and drama behind me and drove to the Stanford Terrace Inn, the same place I’d met with Trevor and the bankers when I’d taken control of my trust. “May I help you?” the lady at the front desk asked.

“I’d like a room,” I said. She looked at me dubiously, probably because she was used to college students booking rooms for parties.

“For how long?” she asked.

“Until November 21,” I said.

“Let me see what we have,” she said. She went into the back and came back with a man who looked relatively severe. Clearly he was the manager.

“You were looking for a room?” he asked.

“The best suite you have,” I said. I handed them my American Express Platinum card, and that definitely got their attention. When they saw my name that changed their whole attitude.

“Certainly, Mr. Danfield,” the manager said. “We were just confused, since you didn’t have a reservation.”

“I’m sorry about that,” I said, even though I wasn’t. “I just wanted a quiet place to do some studying. The quarter is getting pretty hectic.”

“Of course,” he said. They gave me one of their better suites, and charged me out the ass for it, but I didn’t give a shit.

I went to the room and called Klip to give him the room number, then waited for him to show up. He knocked on the door about half an hour later, and walked in, grinning. “Nice digs.”

“Yep,” I said, and then I shut him up with a kiss. For the next three hours, he took me on an amazing ride, and then we cleaned up and left. “See you tomorrow?”

“Same time,” he confirmed, and winked at me.

Copyright © 2014 Mark Arbour; 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.
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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On 02/09/2014 12:41 PM, davewri said:
Mark, the amount of reviews for this chapter tells me how deeply involved your readers are in this story. Please keep up the excellent writing and write it the way you want it to be. We can only marvel at the quality and appreciate your commitment.
Thanks Dave. The involvement is flattering, and it is the reason why I keep writing. Well, one of them.
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On 02/09/2014 06:32 PM, jkeele777 said:
Mark,

I just wanted to let you know much I enjoyed this chapter, along with the hundreds of other chapters and however many stories it is now. This story means a lot to me, particularly, because the time frame is right aroud my own coming of age. That said, I want to take the opportunity to thank you, publicly for all the wonderful characters, plot twists and cliffhangers you have busted your ass to give to us over the years. FOR FREE!!! I cannot believe the absolute gall of some people to dole out personal attacks based on how they thought a story on should begin \ end \ arc, whatever. I hope those people realize some day the role they play in turning good authors off to this kind of publishing. I am not inserting myself into the same category #as you, but a good deal of the reason I have never finished my story here or n nifty, is because of people and their snide, useless, pointed comments. Love your work! Keep'em rolling out!

 

Jeremy

Thanks for that Jeremy. If a review pisses me off, I generally try to avoid responding until I am a bit calmer. As I've noted in the past, I can sometimes replicate Brad with my temper. ;-)

 

In the end, it generally comes down to one of four things:

1. The reviewer had a point, in which case I need to evaluate my story direction.

2. The reviewer was having a bad day, and I was the bearer of their ire.

3. The reviewer is a complete idiot (I usually think this for a while, if for no other reason than ego defense...SMILE)

4. The reviewer was really upset about the direction of the story, and that is a sign of how invested they were/are in the story (as Jack noted in his review).

  • Like 2

Mark,

I first came across your Bridgemont series in 2010 and devoured the stories during one week. While waiting for updates, I browsed your other stories and noticed the CAP series. At the time I only wanted to read novels set in the 18th and 19th century, however seeing your constant updates I became curious and started to red them, too. And I am so glad I did. I've been hooked on the CAP series since then. Your stories have captured my interest now for nearly five years and still I'm insanely happy every single time I see that you have posted a new chapter. Usually they are the highlight of my day and I am always a bit disapointed to reach the end of a chapter and that I am not able to simply continue to read the story, but that I have to accept "That's it for today" and have to wait for your next update. Because every single time I read a chapter, you manage to make me forget everything around me and I get absolutely absorbed in the plot.

And I do love your plot, ideas and twists you come up with. I never seem to know where you are going with your story line, but that is actually something I really enjoy about your writting. Most of the time, the things which I hoped would happen, do not happen. Somehow, this doesn't annoy me. Whatever you are comming up with, I usually end up thinking that it fits beautifully into the setting you have created for your characters and it simply works. If the things, which I imagine should happen, would actually happen, the stories wouldn't be so good, intricate and lively and would soon loose their appeal. You are doing a superb job here.

Even though I am a sucker for happy endings and hope every time one of your characters hooks up with someone (JP, Brad, Wade, Will...) that they will be happy and make it work, I love the drama. In nearly every other book I read, the things that happen to your characters would drive me up the wall and make me immensely unhappy. But your fiction simply makes me fall in love with every new pairing you come up with and hope they will be happy until they get together with someone new and the process starts at the beginning. You somehow manage to make me not resent those break ups instead I am usually happy about them (e.g. JP and Jeff (and I loved Jeff!)). I haven't found out why, yet. I can only say that everything you have come up with makes sense to me. Even tose break ups. Because live is like that. People change, so do their priorities, their surroundings and relationships. And somehow I love all the drama. Even while I root for nearly every couple. The drama and tension you create in your fiction is just awesome. Brad, Wade and Will are my favourite characters and observing how Will and Brad butt their heads repeatedly is so amusing (in a "thank god my parents and I weren't like that" and "please, if I ever have children, don't let this happen" kind of way).

So, "9.11." is one of my favourite stories (of yours and fiction in general) which I simply wanted to let you know. You are doing an amazing job in writting this. I am very glad Wade and Matt have broken up (although when they first hooked up, I was totally charmed by them). It makes sense. The change in their characters (or lack thereof), 9/11 and their priorities in their lives make this a logical outcome. It is what people do when they are in different places in their lives and one ore both of them don't want to work on their relationship. Now I am very curious where Wade's path will lead him and with whom he will hook up next. I would love to see him and Brad together. I just can see them working well because of their personalities. Well, I won't be too disappointed if it doesn't happen, simply because I know whatever you will choose to do, you will write it in a style which will charme me completely and fit perfectly. Like it always does.

I hope I will be able to read the next chapter very soon. I am very curious how Will's and Zach's relationship will work out, about what will happen with Matt's relationship with everyone up at Escorial and the lives of Brad and Wade in general.

And just now I have noticed, that while I have been writting this review, you have put up another chapter! So, thank you for this amazing story and for another chapter! You are fabulous!

  • Like 2
On 02/10/2014 08:19 AM, tannne said:
Mark,

I first came across your Bridgemont series in 2010 and devoured the stories during one week. While waiting for updates, I browsed your other stories and noticed the CAP series. At the time I only wanted to read novels set in the 18th and 19th century, however seeing your constant updates I became curious and started to red them, too. And I am so glad I did. I've been hooked on the CAP series since then. Your stories have captured my interest now for nearly five years and still I'm insanely happy every single time I see that you have posted a new chapter. Usually they are the highlight of my day and I am always a bit disapointed to reach the end of a chapter and that I am not able to simply continue to read the story, but that I have to accept "That's it for today" and have to wait for your next update. Because every single time I read a chapter, you manage to make me forget everything around me and I get absolutely absorbed in the plot.

And I do love your plot, ideas and twists you come up with. I never seem to know where you are going with your story line, but that is actually something I really enjoy about your writting. Most of the time, the things which I hoped would happen, do not happen. Somehow, this doesn't annoy me. Whatever you are comming up with, I usually end up thinking that it fits beautifully into the setting you have created for your characters and it simply works. If the things, which I imagine should happen, would actually happen, the stories wouldn't be so good, intricate and lively and would soon loose their appeal. You are doing a superb job here.

Even though I am a sucker for happy endings and hope every time one of your characters hooks up with someone (JP, Brad, Wade, Will...) that they will be happy and make it work, I love the drama. In nearly every other book I read, the things that happen to your characters would drive me up the wall and make me immensely unhappy. But your fiction simply makes me fall in love with every new pairing you come up with and hope they will be happy until they get together with someone new and the process starts at the beginning. You somehow manage to make me not resent those break ups instead I am usually happy about them (e.g. JP and Jeff (and I loved Jeff!)). I haven't found out why, yet. I can only say that everything you have come up with makes sense to me. Even tose break ups. Because live is like that. People change, so do their priorities, their surroundings and relationships. And somehow I love all the drama. Even while I root for nearly every couple. The drama and tension you create in your fiction is just awesome. Brad, Wade and Will are my favourite characters and observing how Will and Brad butt their heads repeatedly is so amusing (in a "thank god my parents and I weren't like that" and "please, if I ever have children, don't let this happen" kind of way).

So, "9.11." is one of my favourite stories (of yours and fiction in general) which I simply wanted to let you know. You are doing an amazing job in writting this. I am very glad Wade and Matt have broken up (although when they first hooked up, I was totally charmed by them). It makes sense. The change in their characters (or lack thereof), 9/11 and their priorities in their lives make this a logical outcome. It is what people do when they are in different places in their lives and one ore both of them don't want to work on their relationship. Now I am very curious where Wade's path will lead him and with whom he will hook up next. I would love to see him and Brad together. I just can see them working well because of their personalities. Well, I won't be too disappointed if it doesn't happen, simply because I know whatever you will choose to do, you will write it in a style which will charme me completely and fit perfectly. Like it always does.

I hope I will be able to read the next chapter very soon. I am very curious how Will's and Zach's relationship will work out, about what will happen with Matt's relationship with everyone up at Escorial and the lives of Brad and Wade in general.

And just now I have noticed, that while I have been writting this review, you have put up another chapter! So, thank you for this amazing story and for another chapter! You are fabulous!

Thank you for such a nice review!!! I'm glad you have enjoyed the series, and I'm glad you are tolerant when things don't go like you hoped they would.

 

Happy endings are nice, even in a story like this, but all endings can't be happy. In other words, there are bound to be characters whose lives don't conveniently settle out happily at the same time that a story closes. So while I used to try to make universal happy endings, that isn't really possible all the time, so I'm going for mostly happy endings. ;-)

  • Like 2

I like Matt and I feel sorry for him. I wonder if Robbie dying made him feel that he'd lost the only person who loved him unconditionally and without expectations. Wade, JP, his adoptive parents also love Matt, but at the same time they put pressure on him by demanding a certain behavior and maturity. Robbie may have been the one person Matt relied on to care about him no matter what, and now Matt is sort of adrift in an ocean of sorrow with no idea what to do. And somehow noone seemed to realize that Matt didn't get counseling right from the start or how badly he was hurt by his loss.

It doesn't excuse or explain his behavior altogether, as the various mistakes are mostly something we've seen before, but maybe if Matt had gotten some help from the start, he would not have broken down and fallen victim to his flaws and insecurities. No matter how much I like and prefer Wade and Will, I cannot hate Matt or think of him as a bad guy. He's not acting rationally or sensibly, and even if he's hurting people around him badly, I fear Matt will pay the price tenfold in the end and be very sorry that he pushed every one away.

I hope we'll one day see Matt return to the CAP family as a whole person, happier and more mature - though I have to admit it's hard to see how it could happen. Unless his adoptive parents manage to realize how bad things are with Matt and actually manages to persuade him to get professional help.

  • Like 2
On 02/11/2014 02:57 PM, Timothy M. said:
I like Matt and I feel sorry for him. I wonder if Robbie dying made him feel that he'd lost the only person who loved him unconditionally and without expectations. Wade, JP, his adoptive parents also love Matt, but at the same time they put pressure on him by demanding a certain behavior and maturity. Robbie may have been the one person Matt relied on to care about him no matter what, and now Matt is sort of adrift in an ocean of sorrow with no idea what to do. And somehow noone seemed to realize that Matt didn't get counseling right from the start or how badly he was hurt by his loss.

It doesn't excuse or explain his behavior altogether, as the various mistakes are mostly something we've seen before, but maybe if Matt had gotten some help from the start, he would not have broken down and fallen victim to his flaws and insecurities. No matter how much I like and prefer Wade and Will, I cannot hate Matt or think of him as a bad guy. He's not acting rationally or sensibly, and even if he's hurting people around him badly, I fear Matt will pay the price tenfold in the end and be very sorry that he pushed every one away.

I hope we'll one day see Matt return to the CAP family as a whole person, happier and more mature - though I have to admit it's hard to see how it could happen. Unless his adoptive parents manage to realize how bad things are with Matt and actually manages to persuade him to get professional help.

I agree with pretty much everything you said. I think it's important, in a time of crisis, to know when to intervene and when not to. I'm not sure it's fair to lay the blame on 'the family' for not jumping in for Matt. I think he has to go off and work things out on his own for a bit. But at his core, Matt is a strong person, a person who can stand on his own if he has to, even if he doesn't want to. I honestly can't see Matt showing the character weaknesses that someone like Jeff did, and devolving down that path.
  • Like 2

I just want to say that even though Matt is an important character in the story, his actions pre 9/11 and after leaves me wondering if he's taken anyone else's feelings into account or if he was just thinking with his dick or his head. Either way he may have just kissed the best thing that's happened to him or should I say the best thing he had going for him. He doesn't seem to understand that his relationship with Wade and his extended family is now just about lost to him because of the choices he's making at this time. I wouldn't blame Will if he doesn't want anything more to do with Matt even though he is supposed to be his brother. The decision to sleep with Tony really drove more of a wedge between Matt, Will, and possibly with Darrius and JJ as well. It would be a good thing if Matt would wake up and start repairing the rift he has set up against himself and the family including Wade.

  • Like 2

MDK is still expressing his insular European opinion about Will's actions. Somehow that makes me want to express a contrary opinion. Yes, Will is very opinionated and expresses his opinions easily and quickly, but we must remember that even though he is legally an adult, he is only fifteen-years-old and sometimes expresses opinions that are more appropriate to that age group rather then being adult.

  • Like 2
On 2/7/2014 at 2:49 AM, Guest said:

I can’t give you any been-there-done-that-got-the-t-shirt, one-of-the-guys, intersubjective personal narrative type of insight on this, however, based on direct personal observation over the years, I can say that Matt is a lot like a lot of Navy SEAL officers I have met, particularly the younger ones. The reason I bring this up is that I think it gives some insight into one of the incidents in the recent Wade/Matt drama; the hockey team thing.

An interesting observation. While I do have a cousin who is a SEAL officer, I don't know any of them, but I do know a lot of Naval Aviators as both my father and grandfather are former Navy pilots, specifically carrier pilots. Top Gun was damn near a documentary when it came to portraying the pilots at the Navy Strike Fighter Tactics Instructor program as sophomoric adolescents flying $65 million pieces of machinery. 

On 2/7/2014 at 2:49 AM, Guest said:

I have never been well acquainted with a professional or serious college athlete, but based on my observations of the Teams guys, they have about as intense a psychological attachment to their teammates is a human being can have.

I was a serious college athlete, and as I've said before, these club hockey guys are not serious college athletes. They are one step above a pick-up basketball game.

On 2/7/2014 at 2:49 AM, Guest said:

As long as I have my judgment rod out, I would like to take a swing Will’s way. Unlike Matt, I like, and have always liked Will, both as a character and as a narrator. I understand, and have even made the argument in previous posts, that he is still a kid and maturing. But somebody needs to tell that kid to chill out. Specifically, somebody needs to tell him that he needs to back way the fuck off on categorizing and judging everyone in his life. The way to get past his episodes of sadness and rage is not by being more aggressive and rigorous in how he orders the people in his world, but by being less so. 

But no one will because they are afraid Will is going to put them in the cornfield.

On 2/7/2014 at 3:31 PM, PrivateTim said:

I continue to be perplexed as to where things are heading and based on most of the reviews, wonder if we are reading the same story.

Matt didn't move out of his and Wade's quarters, Wade did and did so very publicly. Wade is the one who didn't call Matt back while he was on the Georgetown trip, Wade is the one who rebuffed Matt's attempts to talk to him on the ride back from the airport. What is Matt supposed to do?

Nothing has changed my opinion on this. For the last several chapters Matt has been reaching out to Wade, only to have Wade rebuff him. Wade didn't discuss his plans to move out of his and Matt's room, but he expects Matt to talk with him about moving out? Wade seems to have been pretty explicit about not wanting Matt around these last few chapters. Even when Matt came to Wade's new room to apologize, Wade was rude, indifferent and threw Matt out. Then he was indignant that Matt left.

On 2/7/2014 at 3:31 PM, PrivateTim said:

And Will's reaction is typically over the top. He is done with Tony and has been treating Matt like shit (whereas before he just sort of tolerated Matt, never, ever treated him as a brother) so what right does he have to have any say in who Tony has a roommate? He won't even return Tony's phone call and screamed "fuck off:" in his ear? What gives him standing to be pissed off at either person?

Will wouldn't listen to Matt when Matt was trying to apologize, so why should Matt now care what Will thinks and listen to him?

On 2/7/2014 at 3:31 PM, PrivateTim said:

I am also perplexed by the "Wade & Brad would be a good couple" crowd? Wade and Brad as in such different stages of life. Maybe they had good sex a couple of times, but that isn't a great foundation to build a relationship on.

Just yuck to Brad and Wade, that is damn near incestuous.

1 hour ago, PrivateTim said:

But no one will because they are afraid Will is going to put them in the cornfield.

Okay, @Mark Arbour, you have to enjoy the Twilight Zone reference here.

The idea of Will being Billy Fremont is pretty hilarious. LOL Like, what if Billy Fremont was a handsome, tall, Malibu teenager from a rich family instead?

Like now I can see a conversation between Stefan and JP where they admit they don't actually like Will, but they're terrified of him and don't want to be put into the cornfield. LOL

For what it's worth, I think Will does manage to chill out a bit by the time he's 17. 

Edited by methodwriter85

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