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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. 

Brittle as a Bird - 12. Chapter 12

“I asked, what are you doing here?” This time Gene’s words sounded harsher. I guess the last person he expected to see in his house with just a towel wrapped around his waist was me.

 

“Your mother asked me stay,” I managed to stammer. Both of us were staring at the other. I became embarrassed when I realized his eyes were wandering up and down my body.

 

He lifted his eyes and met mine. “Why?”

 

“Allen got hurt tonight,” I informed him, “and I was at the hospital with your mother.”

 

“Oh.” He let his eyes wander down my body one last time before turning and going back into his room. I stood for a few seconds and looked at the closed door. I couldn’t believe that I had just had an encounter with Gene Albright in his hallway with nothing but a towel wrapped around me.

 

I don’t know if it was because he was sleepy, and he hadn’t fully comprehended my presence; but he didn’t seem too upset by it. He acted like running into me in the middle of the night in his home was a common occurrence. I just wondered how he would react in the morning.

 

I walked into the bathroom and turned on the light. I thought was in the bathroom of a luxurious hotel room. I had seen pictures of suites where movie stars stay. The bathroom looked like it might have come from there.

 

The counter was marble, and the walls had a sort of terra cotta finish. The fixtures were brass, and artificial plants added a feeling of some tropical island. I unwrapped the towel from around my waist and stepped into the double shower. When I turned on the water, it pulsated over my weary body. I stood for fifteen minutes letting the water cascade down my body. I had never felt so relaxed in my life.

 

After toweling myself off, I left the bedroom and tiptoed across the hall. Before reaching it, Gene’s door opened, and he stuck out his head.

 

“Is he all right?”

 

“Yeah,” I informed him. He nodded and then closed his door.

 

I went inside and walked around the room. I had been too tired to notice anything earlier. It didn’t seem like a guy’s room. I expected posters on the wall and perhaps dirty shoes in the closet, but the room seemed to have been stripped of all remains of Allen.

 

The furniture seemed immense for a room that a boy would have lived in. There was a large poster bed with a canopy top. Along the wall was a heavy bureau with a gaudy lamp on top. The curtains were a thick and heavy material. I assumed that it looked nothing like it would have when Allen was here. His stepfather probably had an interior decorator come in and redecorate the room.

 

I put on the pajamas that Mrs. Albright had provided me, and then I lay down in the bed. My body sunk deep into the plush pillow top mattress. I pulled the pillows to my head and enjoyed the luxurious feeling. “So, this is how the other half lives,” I thought to myself before I fell asleep.

 

I don’t know what time it was when I awoke, but I could tell it was late in the morning. I looked around for a clock, but I didn’t see one. I started to dress, wondering if anyone was still in the house. After smelling my shirt to make sure I could wear it, I headed downstairs.

 

Gene’s door was open when I passed. The bed wasn’t made, and clothes were strewn all around the floor. It appeared like a typical teenage boy’s room. The television was blasting a song on MTV; however, I didn’t see Gene.

 

I found my way to the kitchen, looking around the house as I went. All the rooms were immense and filled with very expensive looking furniture and pictures. I didn’t know what Mr. and Mrs. Albright did for a living, but it appeared they were loaded.

 

I had always assumed that Gene came from a wealthy family. Some people just have that look, like they were born with a silver spoon in their mouth. You could put dirty, ragged clothes on them and take them to the poorest area of Appalachia, and they would stick out like a sore thumb. Gene was one of those people.

 

I sat down on a bar stool at the kitchen counter and looked around. Since it wasn’t my house, I wasn’t sure how much liberty I should take in making myself at home. I was famished, but I was afraid to look for something to eat.

 

Suddenly, I heard a tapping on the back door. Star was standing outside and waving in at me. She opened the door and walked in.

 

“It’s about time you got your lazy ass out of bed.” I looked at the clock on the microwave. It read 2:23. I couldn’t believe I had slept so late. School would be out in about a half hour.

 

“And what time did you wake up?” She looked at the clock.

 

“Fifteen minutes ago,” she laughed. She walked over to the refrigerator and poured us both a glass of orange juice. I could tell by the way she moved around the kitchen that she was a frequent visitor in the house.

 

“What the hell do these people do?” I looked around the enormous kitchen and then out the window to the Olympic sized pool.

 

“Mr. Albright and my father are partners in a corporation that handles defense contracts for the government,” she said.

 

“Damn,” I responded. “So, they are the ones who charge the military $500 for a bolt?”

 

“Where did you hear that?” she laughed.

 

“Well, it is true, isn’t it?”

 

“I doubt it, Silly.” She hit me gently on my arm. “Actually, I’m not quite sure what he does. He never talks about his job.”

 

“He’s probably protecting you from going to prison,” I laughed. Again, she hit me.

 

I gave her a serious look. “You don’t act like a rich kid.”

She started smiling. “I take it that’s meant as a compliment?”

 

“Yeah,” I responded. “It is. Most rich kids are stuck up and self-centered. You care about people.”

 

“You have to remember,” she giggled. “I don’t have any money. It belongs to my parents. I’m actually quite poor.”

 

“Yeah, right,” I responded. “I could probably live quite well on your allowance.” I laughed when she started to blush.

 

“Let’s talk about something else,” she said quickly. I could tell she was becoming uncomfortable talking about herself.

 

“Did you get a chance to talk to Gina? I mean Mrs. Albright.”

 

“No. When I got up no one was here.”

 

Star looked again at the clock. “Gene should be getting home soon.”

 

“Whoopee,” I replied. “I ran into him last night in the hall.”

 

“What did he say?”

 

“Not much really. I think he was shocked to see me in his house.”

 

“Gene’s not a really bad guy.” I rolled my eyes. “Seriously. His father keeps such a tight rope on him. After what happened to Allen, Gene can’t make a move without his father knowing about it.”

 

“What did his father say when he got suspended from school for fighting me?”

 

“I was over here for dinner that night,” she explained. “Gene lied about it. He told him you were fighting over some girl.”

 

“What!” I shouted.

 

“Yeah, seriously. That’s why it surprised me when I found out you were gay. I knew he had to have been lying to his father.”

 

“Why would he do that?”

 

Star looked blankly at me. “I don’t know. Maybe he was afraid his father would be angry if he found out the truth.”

 

“That doesn’t make any sense,” I said. “From what I’ve heard about his father, I would think he’d be happy that Gene had hit a fag at school.”

 

“I don’t know,” she said. “All I know is that Allen’s name isn’t mentioned around here. It’s as if he doesn’t exist anymore.”

 

I now understood the hurt in Allen’s voice when he said he had lost his family. It must have been hard being thrown out of your home and losing contact with most of your family. At least his mother still cared about him.

 

I asked, “Have you talked to Allen today?”

 

“I called his hospital room, but no one answered.”

 

“He was probably in therapy,” I laughed. I suddenly saw him sitting defensively in a chair while Dr. Conrad tried to get him to tell a roomful of strangers why he didn’t want to live anymore.

 

“I’m going by later,” she informed me. “Would you like to go with me?”

 

“I guess,” I said skeptically. I wasn’t sure if Allen wanted to see me. We still hadn’t talked about him seeing me in the car with Roger, so I wasn’t sure if he still wanted to see me again.

 

“Come on.” She reached out and grabbed my hand.

 

“Where are we going?”

 

“To my house,” she said. “I know you don’t want to be around when Gene comes home.”

 

“No shit,” I laughed.

 

We held hands as we crossed the lawn to her house. In the dark the night before, I could tell the home was huge, but I was immediately surprised when we walked around to the back door. I had never seen such a beautiful landscaped yard. There was a gravel path circling an ornate fountain that spanned the backyard. It reminded me of courtyard in Italy I read about in a magazine last year.

 

After grabbing a snack in the kitchen, we headed to her room. I grabbed my eyes and shouted, “I’m blind!” when I entered. Star started giggling. Everything was bright pink. And I mean everything- the carpet, drapes, bedspread and even the lampshades.

 

“Too much?” she laughed.

 

“You don’t like pink, do you?”

 

“I did when I was about eight,” she said. “I told my father I wanted an all pink room.”

“And Daddy buys Star whatever Star wants.” I tried to make it sound like a joke, but it came out as an insult.

 

“I’m not a spoiled, rich kid,” she responded defensively.

 

“I’m sorry. I know you’re not. It just came out wrong.” She pouted before leading me over to her bed, complete with pink satin covers.

 

“I’m going to redecorate this room next summer,” she said. “I’m so sick of pink. I gag when I see Pepto Bismol anymore.”

 

“Just don’t tell your father you like green,” I laughed. “He’ll have your room looking like your backyard.” She slapped me on the arm. “What time are you going to see Allen?”

 

“Probably after dinner,” she replied. “Are you going?”

Reluctantly I said, “I’ll meet you there. I’m going to Ticker’s and clean up. I’ll be there around seven.”

 

I stayed for about another fifteen minutes. Star said she would give me the money for bus fare, but I felt like walking. I wanted to clear my head from what I’d been through the past twenty-four hours.

 

                                                                                                                         ********

 

Ticker’s father offered to drive me to the hospital, but Ticker insisted on taking me. I was sitting on his bed waiting for him to get dressed. “You only want to go so you can see Star,” I kidded. His ruddy cheeks turned even redder.

 

“Shut up, Fucker,” he said playfully.

 

“Admit it,” I insisted. “Tell me you don’t like her.”

 

“Of course, I like her.” A sad expression came over his face. “But…”

 

“But, what?” I had an idea where this was going to lead. We’d had this conversation before. Ticker thought that because of his size, no girl would ever be interested in him. I had argued that most people were more interested in what someone was like inside, rather than what they looked like on the outside. However, I had never convinced myself that was true.

 

Ticker had just walked from his closet, pulling over his head one of his new sweatshirts. He had taken a shower and shaved, so I knew he was trying to make a good impression.

 

“Look at my fat ass.” He turned and looked at himself in the mirror on the door. “I’m just kidding myself.” By the look on his face, I was afraid he would burst into tears at any moment.

 

“Look, Ticker.” I walked up to him and put my hand on his arm. “You’re one of the nicest people I’ve ever met. You care about people, and you don’t turn your back on your friends. You’re big, so what? You have a heart just as big, and that matters. If you were gay, I’d have you as a boyfriend.”

 

He stared at me a few seconds, and then a big grin appeared. “That’s about one of the nicest things anyone has ever said to me.”

 

“Well, I mean it.” I held out my arms. “Give me a hug.” He looked around the room before reaching out and pulling me into a giant bear hug. I loved it when he did that. After a minute, he stepped back.

 

“Too gay?” I laughed.

 

“No.” His face began to turn a crimson red. “But if we keep doing this huggy shit, I might have to take you up on that boyfriend thing.” I looked down and noticed the beginnings of a bulge protruding from his pants. I fell back on the bed and roared with laughter. It was time for Ticker to find himself a girlfriend.

 

                                                                                                                    *********

 

“Who is this Allen?” Ticker and I were walking down the corridor of the hospital to the elevators. The receptionist had told us that he was in room 4112.

 

“We kind of met by chance a couple of weeks ago,” I said. “I guess you could call him a friend.” I really didn’t know how to describe our relationship. There was a bond between us, but that didn’t really qualify as friendship. If anything, we had only briefly shared each other’s pain.

 

“You guess?” Ticker pulled me by my arm and stopped me from walking. “I’ve known you for a long time, Joey. You’ve put up a wall stopping people from getting near you. What I saw last night wasn’t the you I know.”

 

“What do you mean?” I didn’t think I had acted differently than I had in the past. I was just trying to help someone who had fallen down a flight of stairs.

 

“I can’t explain it.” He stared at me, as if trying to analyze something. “When I saw Allen in the backseat with his head on your shoulder, and you were holding him tightly telling him everything would be all right, I don’t know. I can’t explain it. It’s like you two fit or something. You know what I mean?”

 

I had to think about what he was saying. It was true. Allen’s fall had scared the shit out of me. I was worried all the way to the hospital that he had really hurt himself. I even wished that it was me who had fallen and not him. I couldn’t stand to see him suffer any more than he had already.

 

“I think you’re full of it,” I laughed. I turned and headed to the elevator, wondering if what Ticker had said was true. Did we fit?

 

I hesitated outside Allen’s room. Ticker waited patiently for a minute. “You going in or not?”

 

I took a deep breath and opened the door. His mother and Star were sitting in chairs beside the bed. Star jumped up, ran over and hugged Ticker. He blushed and looked over at me with an embarrassed smile.

 

Mrs. Albright stood and gave me a hug. “I’m glad you came,” she whispered in my ear. Star then walked over and hugged me.

 

I looked down at Allen, but he turned his head away. “You have company,” his mother announced harshly. “Don’t be so rude.” She looked over and gave me a worried look. She had assumed that Allen and I were close, so I think she was rather surprised by his behavior.

 

He looked over at Ticker and said hello. He then closed his eyes and pretended to fall asleep. I can’t describe how hurt I was. I knew he would probably still be angry at me for being in the car with Ralph, but I wasn’t prepared for his outright hostility.

 

We sat in awkward silence for several minutes. With Allen unwilling to speak, no one knew what to say. I think everyone was surprised with Allen’s attitude towards me. Ticker just minutes before had us married. Star was completely baffled. She knew that there had been some falling out the day before, but even she didn’t understand Allen’s coldness towards me.

 

“I need a cup of coffee,” announced Mrs. Albright softly. She looked over at Star. “Would you go down to the cafeteria with me?” She looked at Ticker. “And bring your friend.”

 

I started to get up, but she put her hand on my arm and stopped me. “Someone should stay here with Allen. Do you mind?”

 

I knew what she was doing. She was trying to get me and Allen alone, so we could talk without anyone around. Call it mother’s intuition, but she understood that something was wrong with our friendship, and the only way we could solve it was by talking about it- alone.

 

When Allen heard everyone leave, he opened his eyes and looked around the room. A disgusted look appeared on his face when he saw me still sitting beside him.

 

“How are you feeling?” I asked nervously. He laid his head back on the pillow and closed his eyes.

 

“What is wrong with you?” I asked angrily. “Why won’t you talk to me?”

 

He sat up and gave me a deadly look. “How long have you been a fucking whore?” His words were filled with so much venom that they stuck into my heart like a knife.

“Fuck you!” I spat back. “You’ve got some right to call someone else a whore. That’s why you‘re sick now.” As soon as I said it, I regretted it. The expression of his face went immediately from anger to hurt. He closed his eyes and laid his head back on his pillow. I could see tears falling down his cheek.

 

“God, Allen.” I rushed over to the side of the bed and grabbed his hand. “I’m so sorry. I didn’t mean to say that.” He pulled his hand away as his shoulders began to shake with emotion.

 

“Please, Allen,” I begged. “Don’t cry. I’m sorry.”

 

He turned his head and looked at me through tearful eyes. “I thought you were different. I was starting to really like you.”

 

“You don’t understand,” I pleaded. “I had to survive.” I walked over to the chair, sat down and buried my head in my hands. “I had to survive,” I muttered softly. I wasn’t sure if I was trying to convince Allen or myself.

 

After a minute, I stood and looked down at Allen. “I really am sorry. The last thing I wanted to do was hurt you.” He kept his face to the side, refusing to look at me.

 

I walked over to the door. Before opening it, I turned and said, “I was beginning to fall in love with you.” I heard him let out a loud wail as I closed the door.

 

                                                                                                                         ********

 

So, I’m at the lake again. Figures, doesn’t it? It’s my refuge. It’s where I can get away and think. The lake is too cold to swim in today, so I’m skimming rocks across the water. I’m not very good. Most of them hit the top of the water and sink; but I’ve had a few that have sailed across the lake.

 

Life’s a lot like that. Some people can just sail across a lake, unaffected by the waves that form on a clear day. Other people hit the water and sink to the bottom. I’m one of those who sink.

 

I guess I’m having another pity party. Damn. I can’t believe I told Allen I was falling in love with him. Me. Joey Carpenter. I haven’t loved anyone my whole life. The closest I came to it was when I loved my Uncle Mike. But that was only because my mom and dad didn’t show me any love, so I sought out someone who did seem to care about me. Even then, he probably only wanted the sex I could provide him.

 

And that’s what I’ve done since I was twelve- provide sex for other people. How sick is that. And somehow, I always knew that it was going to come back someday and bite my ass. Who would want damaged goods? Even Allen, who himself had a checkered past, was disappointed. Love. What do I know about love? I’ve spent years shielding myself, so I wouldn’t get hurt. Then the first time I let down my guard, the same hurt resurfaces again.

 

I wonder if it is possible for someone to go their entire life without love? Can a person go on day after day without feeling anything for anybody? Love is a basic human need. Does a person who can’t love minimize their own existence?

 

I don’t know why I told him I was falling in love with him anyway. I wasn’t, or at least I’m not sure I was. We didn’t even know each other. I knew more about him than he knew about me. All he knew was what I was willing to share with him that one night. Even then, I left out a key element, the one he found out on his own. Perhaps, I could have saved myself a lot of heartache if I had told him that night. Then I could have walked out of his life and not looked back.

 

But I had to stay. I had to become a part of his life until I felt that he was a part of me. And I don’t even know him. All I know is when I hold him, when we touch or talk, I wanted to be more to him than just an acquaintance.

 

The deck is stacked against us. He is seven years older than me. That doesn’t matter, though. I am used to being around older men. I never really feel a connection to guys my age. I find them shallow and vain.

 

And he is sick. Not the kind of sickness one goes to bed and rests for a few days and then gets back up and goes on. No. Allen’s sickness could be terminal. Looking at his skeletal body, it appears that the illness has already taken its toll. But the doctor said that the virus was not the problem. It was his refusal to take care of his health. It was as if he was inviting death.

 

Then there is his past. He said he had whored around with anyone who wanted him. He had abused alcohol and drugs, and he had engaged in numerous sexual encounters. Why doesn’t that turn me off? It seemed to turn him against me when he saw me sucking Roger’s cock. But why doesn’t it matter to me? I don’t see a whore when I looked at him. Why does he see me as one?

 

One thing I realize, it is a pipe dream. I guess after all the years of not having anyone, I grasped at the first lonely figure I thought I could attach myself to. Maybe I thought that since we shared a similar background, then we could share a certain bond that would unite us.

 

So, I guess that’s it. I really did try. For the past couple of weeks, I’ve been trying to change. I mean I’ve tried hard. And where has it gotten me? Fucking nowhere. Things have no more changed for me now than when I was at home. It’s just that the landscape is different.

 

There goes another rock. It takes one bounce on the lake and sinks to the bottom. My life. I take a bounce and sink. Nothing ever changes. One step forward and three steps back.

 

 

Thanks for reading Brittle as a Bird. I hope you are enjoying it. Thanks also for the likes and comments. They are appreciated very much.
Copyright © 2008 by Ronyx 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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All the characters, with the possible exception of Star, are badly damaged. (In Ticker’s case, it’s his weight. With Gene, it’s his bullying father. With Mrs Albright, it’s her marriage and her shattered family.) Everyone is struggling with their own baggage. Joey doesn’t realize how much that affects some of them, he sees Ticker’s pain to a degree and he’s beginning to understand some of Allen’s issues. In many ways, Allen is exactly like Joey, he’s so caught up in his own suffering, he doesn’t always stop to understand why Joey has done what he has to survive. They’ve both placed the other on an impossible pedestal that will only cause the other to fall in their eyes when they prove to be human.

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Joey knows his walls are breaking; his reflection at the lake shows that. He thinks he's just lowering them, but I don't think it's in his control. They're breaking, not being voluntarily lowered. The interesting part is that others are seeing it, too. Ticker's comment about how he saw Allen and Joey together in the back of the car and how that just seemed 'right' is just one example.

 

I disagree with Joey's comment at the end, though. It's more three steps forward and two steps back. There is still some net progress, even if the backward steps at the time seem overwhelming. Yes, there are backward steps, but they're not as big as Joey is feeling them to be.

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Poor Joey. He's doing the right thing by visiting Allen and trying to help him, and he shouldn't have to prove to Allen why he does what he does. As Joey threw it in Allen's face, Allen is one to call the kettle black. Though I don't agree with how Joey threw it in Allen's face, at least he realized what he said was wrong and apologized.

 

It was sort of odd that Gene didn't blow up at Joey. And you could tell he did care about his brother; he did ask about him, after all. I think their father is a horrible person; he's turning one son against the other one. At least the mom is showing concern for Allen. And thank God for Star! She's an angel! No pun intended! :lol: 

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