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    Ronyx
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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. 

A Delicate Situation - 22. Chapter 22

/

When I left the restaurant, three large black Suburbans were lined up in front. Several people were milling about to see what was happening. One woman remarked, “It’s Dorian,” when we exited, and several people took my picture with their cell phones. The secret service agents pointed toward the middle SUV, as another opened the door for me to enter.

My mother sat with her arms folded and glared at me. “Get in, Dorian,” she ordered. The agent slammed the door when I sat down beside her. “What did you do to your hair?”

I replied sarcastically, “Hello, Mother.”

She looked over angrily and shouted, “What is wrong with you? Are you trying to sabotage your father’s election?”

“No, Ma’am,” I replied nervously. I had witnessed my father’s rage on several occasions, but I had never seen my mother so angry.

“You got arrested!” she screamed. “It’s all over the news. Everywhere your father or I go, we’re being bombarded with questions.” She glared angrily at me and asked, “Why, Dorian? Why?”

“I’m sorry...” I started to explain, but she interrupted me.

“Sorry!” she shouted. “You’re sorry?” She glared angrily at me. “You were just supposed to come to school and attend classes. Leo told you what to do.”

“But...”

She shouted again, “No buts! We’re in the middle of an election! We don’t need this.” I wanted to melt into the seat from her glare. “Arrested? Your father and I can’t even begin to explain your actions.”

“But...”

My mother tapped the driver’s shoulder and demanded, “Take us to the dorm.”

I asked worriedly, “Why are we going there?”

“Because you’re packing,” she replied angrily, “and coming home.”

“No!” I shouted. “You can’t make me leave!”

She hissed, “Watch me.”

Just then, the SUV stopped for a light. I opened the door and sprang from the vehicle. As I tore down an alley, I turned to see if any secret service agents were following me, but they weren’t. However, I could hear my mother shouting out my name as I ran away.

I stood inside an alcove to a closed shop for several minutes to see if my mother’s caravan would look for me. When I was sure they had left the area, I took my phone from my pocket to call Wes. I was going to ask him if his mother would come get me. However, when I tried to use it, I received a message that my phone service had been disconnected.

“Shit!” I muttered as I placed the phone back into my pocket.

Fortunately, I wasn’t too far from my dorm. It took me fifteen minutes to arrive. When I did, I noticed the three Suburbans parked in front. Two secret service agents were standing guard at the lobby door. A few minutes later, two more agents left the dorm carrying large boxes. It appeared they were removing my belongings from the room. They put the boxes in the back of the SUV, returned to the dorm and reemerged minutes later carrying out my laptop computer and a few other items.

“Bitch!” I muttered as I watched the caravan pull slowly from the parking lot. I was too afraid to approach the dorm because it might be under surveillance in the event I would return.

I cautiously snuck around to the back of the dorm where my room was located. When I came to my window, I peeked in. I saw Seth, Sydney, Jade and Amanda sitting in the living room talking. Sydney and Amanda seemed very upset as they wiped tears from their eyes with tissue.

Seth sprang from his chair when I lightly tapped on the window. Soon, the others were peering out. “What are you doing out here?” Seth asked softly as he opened the window.

I asked, “Is the room being watched?” I examined the window to see if I could crawl through it, but I couldn’t. Since it was a ground floor room, extra security measures had been taken to prevent someone from entering it.

“I don’t think so,” he replied. “Are you all right?”

“Yeah,” I replied.

“What happened?” asked Sydney. “They came a few minutes ago and took everything.”

“I know,” I responded. “I was watching.” I examined the window again. “I need to come inside.”

Jade looked out and said, “Wait there. I’ll be right back.” She left the room, and I continued to talk to the others. I told them how I had run away after my mother said she was pulling me out of school.

Suddenly, I saw Jade approaching. She was carrying a duffle bag. “Here,” she said as she placed the bag on the ground, reached in and pulled out a woman’s sweater. “Put this on.” I pulled it over my head, and then watched as she reached into the bag, pulled out a blond wig and handed it to me.

“I’m not wearing this!” I protested.

“We’ve got to get you inside,” she insisted. “This is the only way.” She thrust the wig at me and said, “Now put it on.” My face reddened when Seth and Sydney started laughing from inside.

Sydney asked, “Who’s wig is that?”

“Marlo Gillespie,” replied Jade. “I told you she wore a wig.” She straightened it on my head, stood back and looked at me. “Not too bad,” she remarked. “I don’t think anyone will know you’re a boy.” She then grabbed my hand and pulled me toward the front entrance.

“Wait!” I said. “Maybe we should walk a few blocks away, and then come down the sidewalk in case someone is watching. It won’t be so suspicious as coming around the building.”

“Good idea,” she replied as we headed behind a nearby dorm. As we walked, I told her what had happened.

“You’re all over the news!” she said excitedly. “The media is really running with your arrest.”

“Have they showed my father?”

“Yes,” she replied as she frowned and informed me, “He said you suffering from a bout of depression.”

I stopped and asked, “What?”

“Someone interviewed your father on Fox, and he said you’ve been suffering from severe depression since you were little. He said they make you act irrationally sometimes,” she replied, “and that you are going to get medical treatment.”

“What!” I couldn’t believe he had come up with such a ridiculous story to explain why I had participated in the march. He must have sent my mother to come get me, and then he would tell reporters I had been removed from school to get medical help.

“There’s nothing wrong with me!” I insisted. “I’m not suffering from depression.”

“I know you’re not,” replied Jade.

I reached up and felt my wig. “Do I look okay??” She stepped back and laughed uproariously. “Now I know you’re nuts.”

As we approached the dorm, Jade reached out and pulled me toward her. “Pretend like you’re drunk, and I’ll act like I’m helping you to your room.” I started to stagger, and Jade acted like she was helping me walk. “Damn,” she giggled. “This reminds me of high school.” She continued to help me walk until we got to my hallway. We then rushed to the door. Seth was already waiting for us.

“Took you long enough,” he said as he quickly closed the door. “We thought you’d been caught.” Jade explained the steps we had taken to get back to the room.

“What am I going to do?” I moaned as I took off the wig and tossed it on the floor. “This is turning into a mess.” I looked over at the television and saw Governor Caswell being interview on CNN. I went over and turned the volume up.

It was a videotape from an earlier interview he had done. He had just been asked him if my arrest would have any effect on the campaign. Other than speaking briefly to me at the convention, I had never actually heard him speak. He appeared intelligent and very articulate.

“I don’t see how Dorian’s involvement in a campus march can have any effect on the campaign,” he replied to the question. “As you know, I believe that everyone in America has a right to voice his or her concerns with the issues that affect them. I admire Dorian for standing up strongly for the principles he believes in.”

Seth looked over and muttered, “Holy Shit. He’s supporting you.”

“Shhh,” hissed Sydney as she listened to the interview.

He was then asked, “But doesn’t your support of Dorian’s involvement in a gay rights march conflict with the radical views of your running mate, Senator Gale?”

It was obvious that Caswell was searching for an appropriate answer. I’m sure that his answer would affect the relationship he had with my father. “Well,” he replied as he sat back and took a deep breath. “Our party is inclusive. We don’t expect everyone to agree on every issue...”

He was quickly interrupted. “But Senator Gale is a staunch advocate of the anti-gay rights movement of your party. How can you justify his extreme views?”

“Damn right,” muttered Jade. “Let me hear you support that homophobic prick.” She looked over and apologized, “Sorry, Dorian. I keep forgetting he’s your father.”

“That’s okay,” I assured her. “He is a homophobic prick.”

“Senator Gale is evolving,” replied the governor. “Sometimes it takes a while to change a view that one has held so long.”

“So are you telling me,” the interviewer asked, “that the Senator accepts his son’s involvement in the gay rights protest at his school?”

I grabbed the remote and turned the volume up on the television. I was interested in hearing Caswell’s answer to the question. “He supports his participation in the gay rights organization that sponsored a peaceful assembly to disseminate literature.”

“But he opposes his participation in the march?”

Caswell frowned and said, “It wasn’t an authorized march.”

“So you believe that the campus police were right in arresting Dorian and the others?”

“I didn’t say that,” quipped Caswell.

“So what are you saying?” The interviewer continued to probe for a response, “Do you believe that Dr. Avery, president of the university, was justified in ordering the protestors to be pepper sprayed and arrested.” He turned toward a monitor. “I want you to watch a video clip.”

A clip of the protest flashed on the screen. It looked like it had been taken by someone’s cell phone. It showed Joseph and the rest of us standing in front of the campus police as we were warned to discontinue the march. It showed the police chief look to his right, and then he ordered his officers to pepper spray and arrest us. There was mayhem on the tape as we were forcefully pushed to the ground and handcuffed. The final clip showed me being taken away and placed in a van as I gasped for air.

The interviewer leaned forward and asked Caswell, “So I ask you again, do you believe the actions of the campus police were justified?”

Caswell leaned back in his chair, folded his arms and responded, “No. This is the United States of America. We are not a third world country living under a dictatorship. One of the fundamental rights we have is the right to peacefully protest when we feel our rights have been violated.”

“So you feel Dorian’s arrest was unjustified?”

Caswell looked over at the monitor which was still streaming the violent attack on me and the others. “The video speaks for itself,” he replied. “This was an unprovoked attack on innocent students.”

The interview concluded, and a roundtable panel began talking about the protest march, and if the arrests were justifiable. Seth took the remote and turned off the television.

“Wow!” I said. “Governor Caswell is on our side.”

“He has to be,” responded Jade. “He needs votes, and right now most of America is pissed at what happened to you.”

“Where is Wes?” I asked.

Jade informed me, “He’s in his dorm. His mother dropped him off there before she brought me here.” I asked to borrow her phone. When she asked me why I didn’t use mine, I told her that my father had cut my phone off. “Fucker!” she spat as she handed me her phone.

I went into Seth’s bedroom and closed the door before calling Wes. He had given me his number at the restaurant earlier, so I could now contact him. His phone rang three times before he answered it. “Hello?” he mumbled into the phone.

“Wes?” With everything that had happened during the evening, I forgot how late it must have been. I looked at Seth’s alarm clock. It was almost two-thirty. “I’m sorry,” I apologized, “I didn’t realize it was this late.”

I started to hang up, but he shouted out, “Wait! Don’t hang up.” He asked me if I was all right, and he wanted to know what happened when I left with my mother. He got upset when I told her that she wanted me to leave school, and how she had removed everything from my room.

“You can’t leave!” His voice was filled with emotion. It sounded like he was trying hard not to cry.

“I’m not,” I assured him. “I’ll find a way to stay.”

He asked, “What are you going to do?”

“I don’t know,” I replied. “Right now I need to find a place to stay. I’m sure my mother will return here to look for me.” I added quickly, “And I need to get some clean clothes.”

“Come stay with me,” he insisted.

“I can’t,” I responded. “What about your roommate?”

“I don’t have one,” he replied. He then explained how his roommate had requested a room change after the first week of school because of personality conflicts. Anger surged through me because I had made the same request, but was denied. Wes’s roommate must have been straight. “So?” he asked, “Wanna be roomies?”

“It may be too dangerous,” I responded. “My father is bound to find out where I am.”

“If he does, I’ll tell him to go fuck himself,” laughed Wes.

I replied seriously, “You may have to tell him that as he’s surrounded by secret service agents.”

“Oh, right,” he laughed. “I forgot about that.” He then asked, “Where are you now?”

“In my dorm room,” I replied.

He said, “Wait there,” and then hung up the phone.

Jade and Sydney left because they were exhausted. Sydney looked over at Jade and joked about rooming with an ex-con. Seth made the comment that he had to do the same. He became upset when I told him I was leaving soon.

“Why do you have to leave?” After explaining that my mother would probably return to look for me, he reluctantly agreed that I should find another place to stay. He grinned when I told him Wes was coming to get me.

“How convenient,” he smiled.

“It’s not like that,” I insisted. “It will just be for a few days.” We talked about what might happen in the near future. Our biggest fear would be that my father would pull me out of school. However, after listening to Governor Caswell’s interview earlier, it might be more difficult now since I seemed to have his support.

Seth answered the door when someone lightly knocked. I hid in the bathroom in case it was the secret service searching for me. When I heard Wes’s voice in the living room, I opened the door and stepped out. Wes rushed over and held me tightly.

After assuring him I was all right, we had to come up with a plan to get me out of the dorm in case it was under surveillance by the secret service or campus police. I shouted, “No!” when Seth picked up the wig and dangled it in front of me.

“It got you in,” he stated, “now it will get you out.” Wes laughed uproariously when Seth told him about Jade bringing me to the room as if I were drunk. I suggested that it might be too late to leave. There would no students out so late, and we would surely arouse suspicion. I told them it would be better to wait until morning when students would be leaving the building to attend classes.

Wes looked around the room and asked where he would sleep. “You can sleep with me,” suggested Seth. “I’ve got a queen-size bed, or,” he wiggled his eyebrows, “the sofa folds out into a bed.” He wiggled his eyebrows again. “You can sleep out here with Dorian.”

Wes started laughing. “Okay,” he said jokingly. “I can sleep with you or Dorian?” Seth nodded his head as Wes looked at me. “That’s a no-brainer. I think I’ll sleep with Dorian.”

Seth laughed and said, “I thought that would be your choice.” He stretched, yawned and looked at the clock on the wall. “It’s late, and I have a morning class. I’m going to bed.” Before closing his door, he turned and grinned. “Keep the noise down out here.”

I felt awkward as I turned the sofa into a bed. It was late, and we were both extremely tired after such an eventful night. I was sure we would both fall quickly asleep, until...

Until I turned and Wes was standing naked before me. “I hope you don’t mind,” he said nervously as he covered his genitals with his hands. “I can’t sleep with any clothes on. If you’d like, I’ll put my underwear back on.”

“N..no,” I stammered. I couldn’t remove my eyes from his naked body. The lights in the room were off, but a faint outside light entered the window and cast a soft glow on his body. He wasn’t extremely muscular, but his body, nevertheless, was well-defined. His chest had a soft patch of fur, and his legs were muscular and covered with the same soft hair as that on his chest. I could feel my cock hardening inside my shorts.

He asked, “Are you sure?” He removed his hands from in front of himself and stood completely exposed to me. “It won’t be a problem?”

“It...it’s okay,” I managed to stammer nervously as I gazed at his soft, uncut cock. I looked up into his smiling face.

I nodded when he asked again, “Are you sure?” He then pulled back the sheet on the bed and climbed in. He raised himself up on his elbow and asked, “You gonna join me?”

I stood panicked in front of him. I had never slept with another man, let alone a naked man. “Dorian?” I looked down at his face. He started to rise from bed. “I’ll put my clothes back on.”

“No!” I insisted. I then realized Seth might have heard me. “No,” I whispered more softly. “I’m okay. I’ve just never done this before.”

“What?” laughed Wes. “Sleep?”

“No,” I replied. “Of course, I’ve slept. I’ve just never slept...you know...naked before.”

“Then don’t,” he said. “Sleep however you normally do. I’ve slept naked all my life. I just can’t sleep with anything on my body.”

“Okay,” I responded as I pulled my shirt over my body. Wes was intently watching me as I undressed. I felt ashamed because I didn’t look anything like him or Seth. Wes continued to stare as I toed off my shoes, removed my socks and pulled down my pants. I was now standing before him in my white undies. My cock was straining against the material. I had gotten used to Seth seeing me with an erection, but I was embarrassed to be standing almost naked in front of Wes.

I pulled back the sheet and climbed in beside Wes. When I was comfortable, he scooted nearer to me and put his arm across my chest. “I know you’ve never been with a man before,” he said. “And I’m not going to do anything you don’t want me to do.” He kissed me gently on my neck. “I just want to hold you for a little while, okay?”

My heart was pounding inside my chest. I was sure Wes could feel it as he rested his arm gently against it. “Okay,” I managed to gasp out.

We lay there for several minutes, and I thought he had fallen asleep. However, suddenly he raised up and stared into my eyes. “Dorian?”

“Yeah?”

“I love you.”

I didn’t resist when he leaned over and began to kiss me passionately. I could feel his hard cock pressing into my side. He lowered his elbow so it gently brushed against my hard cock. When he pressed his tongue against my lips, and I opened my mouth for his tongue to enter. He pulled me over on top of him, and I lay on his chest with our erections pressing against each other.

I didn’t resist when he pulled at my underwear to remove them. I lifted my body as he pulled them from my body. I slowly began to hump him as we continued to kiss. I raised my body again when he snaked his hand under me, gripped my cock and began to slowly stroke it.

“Oh, God,” I moaned. I was afraid that at any moment I was going to erupt into his hand.

He stopped kissing me, and he looked into my eyes. He then began to pull me onto my back. “May I?” he asked as he continued to stroke me.

“Yes,” I replied nervously, and he started kissing my chest gently.

Two hours later, I was resting comfortably in Wes’s arms. We were spooned together, and his soft cock was resting against the crack of my ass. “That was wonderful,” he whispered in my ear.

He kissed me when I turned my head toward his. “I can’t even begin to express how I feel right now,” I replied. “I feel so...so...”

Wes whispered in my ear, “Loved?”

“Yes, loved,” I replied as I turned to kiss him. Before our lips met, I said, “I love you.”

/
Copyright © 2012 by Ronyx
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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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Chapter Comments

Loving this story. I think it's time for Dorian to play hardball and use the media as a threat. There are things about the way he grew up and his parents that I'm sure they prefer not get out.
His parents are also incredibly stupid. Here you have a gay, intelligent, photogenic and well spokenj young man who could be a real value to the campaign. Maybe he should have a talk with the governor and just ignore his parents.

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That story Dorian's father came up with to explain what had happened is going to backfire on him. It would've worked if he'd managed to get Dorian under his control, but Dorian got away. Now, he's going to have fires to fight, especially since the presidential candidate clearly thinks that Dorian's arrest was inappropriate.

 

Dorian has something he's never had before when it came to standing up to his parents: friends. Seth, Sydney, Jade, and Wes are all there to support him. He's not able to stand up to his parents by himself (the power differential is too big), but with their help, he's got a chance :)

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Does Dorian have contact info for the news magazine writer who was supposed to interview him? Now would be a good time to get his story out!

 

It seems unlikely that the Secret Service would cooperate with the Senator's wife in confiscating Dorian's belongings. They didn't seem to think that kidnapping him was part of their job – certainly they could have found him if they had wanted to.

 

I guess if they're willing to cut off Dorian's cell phone service, they certainly would have cut off his credit card too. Otherwise, that would have been an easy way to replace all the stuff that the Senator's wife stole from Dorian's room. Would Dorian be willing to sell his story to People or another gossipy magazine for big bucks?

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On 08/19/2016 10:04 AM, droughtquake said:

Does Dorian have contact info for the news magazine writer who was supposed to interview him? Now would be a good time to get his story out!

 

It seems unlikely that the Secret Service would cooperate with the Senator's wife in confiscating Dorian's belongings. They didn't seem to think that kidnapping him was part of their job – certainly they could have found him if they had wanted to.

 

I guess if they're willing to cut off Dorian's cell phone service, they certainly would have cut off his credit card too. Otherwise, that would have been an easy way to replace all the stuff that the Senator's wife stole from Dorian's room. Would Dorian be willing to sell his story to People or another gossipy magazine for big bucks?

Not sure how the Secret Service works, but I suppose it would be difficult to say 'no' to a hysterical mother who is hell bent on getting her son to return home. And remember, Dorian cut up his credit card earlier.

  • Like 1
On 08/19/2016 08:21 AM, Graeme said:

That story Dorian's father came up with to explain what had happened is going to backfire on him. It would've worked if he'd managed to get Dorian under his control, but Dorian got away. Now, he's going to have fires to fight, especially since the presidential candidate clearly thinks that Dorian's arrest was inappropriate.

 

Dorian has something he's never had before when it came to standing up to his parents: friends. Seth, Sydney, Jade, and Wes are all there to support him. He's not able to stand up to his parents by himself (the power differential is too big), but with their help, he's got a chance :)

Yes, Graeme. The power of friendship.

  • Like 1
On 08/19/2016 04:06 AM, Puppilull said:

His mother acted like a prick, thinking only of their precious image and the political career of her husband. Weak, just weak.

 

Still, the senator seems to know the score. If the parental units insist on pulling him though, he should go to the press.

 

Two hours..? Way to go, fellas...!

Haha, Puppilull. It was Dorian's first time with a guy. He wasn't going to make it a quickie. :)

  • Like 1
On 08/19/2016 03:44 AM, avidreadr said:

Loving this story. I think it's time for Dorian to play hardball and use the media as a threat. There are things about the way he grew up and his parents that I'm sure they prefer not get out.

His parents are also incredibly stupid. Here you have a gay, intelligent, photogenic and well spokenj young man who could be a real value to the campaign. Maybe he should have a talk with the governor and just ignore his parents.

Thanks, avidreadr. The Senator is so staunch in his views, he can't even see how Dorian could benefit him. Besides, by now I doubt Dorian would even be willing to help him.

  • Like 1

An exciting chapter, Ron. It seems mother is the one who will cause the most trouble for her husband's race. I agree with a few others here that Dorian, while in most ways in an inferior position to his father, has a few powerful weapons. The press--always eager for some dirt--is certainly tops among them.

 

But now that Wes and Dorian are an item, there is another motive for him to fight.
Can't wait for more!

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