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Book of Daniel
by Glossolalia
1. Carded
=========
Buffy is gone. Giles is certain that the Slayer does not usually receive
holiday, but equally sure that, usually, the Slayer isn't a girl quite
like Buffy. He had briefly contemplated vetting her absence through the
council, and almost as quickly reconsidered. He could hear the
contemptuous chill in Travers's tone: *You allowed her to -what-,
Rupert?*
In her absence, he busied himself with interring the Master, and all the
research that accompanied the act. But here it is, only the third week
of June, and he has nothing but time on his hands.
He had had a hell of a time explaining the library-cum-disaster-area to
Snyder, and clean-up necessitated a great deal of time spent there.
Giles discovered then the sheer joy of air conditioning. Funny, but he
had never realized just quite how wonderful it felt to exit the muggy,
constant sun and enter the dim cold of the empty school.
So on his summer holiday, Rupert Giles attempts to be a high-school
librarian.
/
Summertime is Oztime: open, warm, unstructured. Nowhere to be, except
rehearsal, and that doesn't really rank high on a scale of obligation.
The occasional barbecue or party, and even those are tapering off as
July nears. Otherwise, he's free and unscheduled. Time is his bitch, as
Devon would say. His own to fritter away, as his grandma would say.
/
Giles is busy adjusting the stack of books and notes in his arms, and
starts -- nearly dropping everything -- when he hears someone speak.
"Pardon?"
A small boy leans against the library doors. His hair is vibrant green,
a shade of green Giles hasn't seen anywhere except on the backs of rocks
on the beach at Bristol. "Want me to get that?" Slight incline of the
chin.
"The door, yes, of course. It's locked," Giles says. "The keys are in
the side pocket--" Giles raises an elbow and juts his hip. Watches a
small pale hand pick at the pocket's flap; feels the slight pressure of
fingers against his side.
The boy holds the key ring between them, eyebrows raised. "I meant the
books, actually."
"Oh-oh, yes. Of course." Giles smiles tightly. "Well, no harm done. It's
the large key--there. With the red spot." Buffy's nail lacquer, dabbed
on after her impatience waiting as he fumbled the keys for the tenth,
hundredth, time got the better of her.
The boy unlocks the door, pushing it open and standing aside for Giles
to enter. Stack deposited safely on the counter, handkerchief rubbed
uselessly over his face, Giles turns back. High-school librarian? He can
do this. I *am* a high-school librarian, even just nominally. "May I
help you?"
The boy is bent over the author index of the catalog, flipping through
the cards rapidly. Without turning, he asks, "Do you have anything by
James Baldwin?"
"Most of the novels, yes," Giles says.
Finally the boy turns around. "This doesn't have entries for
collections, right? Like, if there were a piece by Baldwin in some
collection, it wouldn't show up under his name?"
Giles runs his hand back and forth across the counter. Blinks. The boy
just looks at him patiently. "N-no, it wouldn't. You'd need the title of
the book, or the editor's name." The gaze steadily on him. "It's not the
best system, I admit."
The boy nods and straightens up. He really is quite small, perhaps a
little taller than Willow, and lean in a way that Giles has assumed
until now doesn't happen in a land of three square meals and Dairy
Queens. "I'll just check the stacks."
Giles clears his throat. "We *are* on term holiday," he says, loathing
the officious tone, wondering just how he can mimic Snyder, Travers, and
his own father so perfectly in a single phrase. "Perhaps the public
library--?"
The not-quite-a child smiles. Gracefully and brightly, and Giles starts
to smile back, but then it's gone and he finds himself gaping stupidly
at the grave face before him.
"T-that is," Giles continues, trying to frown, "the school is closed for
the summer. Perhaps you were mis-misinformed. As an incoming pupil, you
can't be expected to know the, the, rules. And the regulations."
"I'm a senior." He holds up his hand as Giles tries to stammer his
apology. "It's okay. But, man, have you *seen* the public library?"
"No, I haven't."
He shakes his head, smile faint. "Poor old Tony Panizzi'd spin in his
grave. It's all videos and CDs and a couple crappy computers someone
donated for the tax break. I want a book, I figure I'll come here."
Giles hears his mouth open -- small pop of the jaw -- and close --
whisper of dry lips. Senior? Panizzi? How can a small California child
with hair that color and telltale bloodshot eyes possibly know who
Panizzi was? The boy lopes up the steps into the stacks, evidently
satisfied of his right to be here.
"810s," Giles calls after him. "American literature."
"Got it," the boy answers, out of sight. And: "Thank you."
/
Oz has never gotten over his childhood habit of overloading himself in
libraries and he can't imagine ever wanting to. Who would want to search
deliberately and leave with only what you came for? Choosing far more
books than he can possibly read in two weeks' time is just what he does
in libraries. The calm, content mood of choosing, following little
threads of associations of name, word in title, memory, some connections
that just pop into his mind without prompting: this mood? He'd like to
lose himself in this mood indefinitely.
When he emerges from the stacks, the pile of books in his arms is as
long as his arms, stretches from palm to his chin, which he's stuck out
over the top book to keep balance. He steps carefully toward the counter
and tilts the stack to slide it on top. The odd, incredibly English
librarian is nowhere to be seen. Oz considers ringing the little bell,
but it seems rude. Like saying "garon" to a waiter or something. He
wanders along the counter towards the cage. Sunnydale High has books
rare enough to need caging? Again, odd, if not intriguing.
The librarian has his back to him, hunched over a book that looks bigger
than most atlases. Oz clears his throat gently; he doesn't want to freak
the poor guy out *again*. But the librarian jumps anyway, whirling
around, knocking his glasses to the floor with the back of his hand.
"Sorry," Oz says.
"Quite all right, quite--" Glasses retrieved, the librarian swipes them
on his tie and hooks the stems over his ears. "I thought you'd gone."
"Just have to check the books out."
Nodding, the librarian rises. "You can just fill out the cards in the
pockets at the back. Er, I suppose I ought to check your ID? Just to
confirm-- to be sure, of course."
The guy really needs something to calm him down. Sauna? Ludes? Oz tugs
on the chain to his wallet, reaching into his back pocket for it. He
flips it open and shows the librarian his SHS ID card.
"Right, right," the librarian murmurs, leaning over and squinting. He
glances back. His eyes--Christ, his eyes. They're all hazel and blue and
faintly glittery. And there are flecks in there the exact color of green
tea ice cream. "Everything seems to be in order, Mr. Osbourne. Daniel."
"Who are you?" Oz asks.
The librarian straightens up and Oz sees suddenly how strong he is. Not
that he'll ever figure out how he can see that or know that, but
sometimes he gets these flashes. It's best just to ride them out, since
they tend to be right anyway, and this way there's minimum fuss. So:
Strong, not just physically, but like architecture, designed and poured
and weathered.
"Giles," he says.
"I'll go fill out the cards then." Oz turns away.
At first he thinks that the strength he's seen is hidden underneath the
neat clothes, kind of peeking out but mostly hidden. But as he scrawls
his name on each card, Oz knows that's not right. The strength isn't
hidden; it's everywhere, elemental, belongs somewhere low in the corner
of the periodic table. Rarely used but essential for everything to work
right.
By the time he's finished, Oz has a stack of books to read, the flash of
green-brown eyes to smile over, and the prospect of strength to ponder.
His summer's looking up already.
/
After the library door closes with the nearly inaudible click he has
trained himself to hear, Giles gives in. Slumps at his desk and holds
his head in his hands. Funny how easy it is to forget that high school
librarians need to deal with, oh, students? Human beings? He's probably
the only one on the continent more comfortable confronting vampires than
teenagers.
He busies himself with the mangled neo-Latin of a Watcher in Tours,
1689, willing away all thoughts of teenagers and vampires and other
disturbing creatures.
It is not until much later, after the evening's fourth whisky has poured
him into bed, that such thoughts return. Thoughts such as the fact that
he wasn't unnerved by teenagers in general, although they do irritate
and fluster him. Thoughts such as the suspicion that at least for the
moment he was far more unnerved by the sight of the pale rise of the
boy's hipbone, jutting into sight between low-slung pants and the frayed
hem of a t-shirt when he reached for his wallet.
The truly unnerving thought he saves for dreams. That's the one about
how he'd very much like to run a finger along that hollow of skin,
through invisible down and over scattered freckles. Then his mouth.
/
A long golden-tan finger snakes along the top of the book Oz is holding,
then dips down the valley of the spine. It rises and dips, rises and
dips. Oz resolutely keeps his eyes on the page. "Quit it, Dev."
Devon's finger speeds up, twisting back and forth as it lowers and pulls
back up. Faster and jerkier the longer Oz ignores him. Finally the nail
scrapes down the page, scoring the paper, and Oz slams the book shut.
"Fuck, man!" Devon sucks on his finger. "That fucking *hurt*."
"What were you doing?"
Devon flips him off and crawls toward the front of the van. He digs
around in the cooler and extracts a can of beer, rolling it over his
finger. "Leave me alone, Dev," he whines. "Fucking reading here, Dev.
All you do lately is read."
Oz just looks at him, figuring this mood can go one of many ways.
"Yeah," Devon continues, squaring his shoulders. "You and your fucking
*books*. So I, y'know, fucked your book." He opens the beer and chugs
it, finally handing it off to Oz. He's grinning, obviously proud of the
stunt and the pun. "Get it? Fucking book."
Oz nods and sips the beer. "It's a library book. Can't molest library
books, Dev."
"Good thing I didn't use my dick, then."
Oz lobs the empty can at him, dregs spraying. Devon pouts, and, Jesus,
he's pretty when he pouts. Even if he knows that, and that's why he does
it.
"Fucking violent today, man." Devon tosses the empty over the back of
the passenger seat and slides down onto his back. "Need to relax."
Oz crawls across the van floor until he's over Devon, hands on either
side of Dev's head, one leg trapped between his own. "Yeah? Relax, huh?"
Devon turns his head, still pouting. "Yeah. Fucking bookworm." His
heart's gone out of whatever spat he was trying to provoke, voice gone a
little huskier.
Oz nuzzles the long, salty expanse of Devon's neck. Licks the straining
tendon there as he lowers himself. Trusts the shortness of Devon's
attention span, and is rewarded with a sloppy kiss on the side of his
mouth.
"You don't have to be such a brat."
Devon grins, pushing his hand under Oz's shirt. "But it's so much
*fun*."
/
Head aching from too much translation of too many spurious pamphlets on
demon births and the dangers of witchcraft, Giles turns to the latest
catalogue from the book jobber. Might as well play the librarian, since
it is proving difficult to be a Watcher without one's Slayer. He studies
the glossy pages absently, unable to concentrate.
His tea has gone cold when he sips it.
Willow has gone off to a maths camp, and the Harris boy is apparently
employed by some relative for the summer, doing Lord knows what kind of
manual labor. When they had completed the ritual, and the Master's
skeleton was safely interred, Xander had clapped him on the shoulder
with a muddy hand, shook Giles's hand with the other, equally muddy, and
bobbed his head. "See you in September, G."
As if he did not exist until school reopened.
And is it really possible that he misses the children?
Miss Calendar left shortly after the interment in a convertible VW
beetle for destinations unknown; Angel has melted back into the
darkness, and Giles is sure he will not be seen until Buffy returns.
Giles ran into Buffy's mother at the grocery store a few days ago. The
hoarseness of his own voice when he greeted her surprised him, reminding
him that he hasn't spoken to another living soul in weeks.
This sort of expectant solitude is precisely what he has been trained
for, and he should be grateful for the quiet and absence of impending
crisis. Instead, he is far too alone with far too many thoughts.
He realizes that he has been ticking off titles on the order form
without knowing what they are, based simply on the patterns made by the
length of the words.
A bang, then a long creak, as the door opens sends Giles to his feet and
out of his office. Daniel is backing into the library, the door propped
open with one elbow, his arms full of books.
"Here, let me--" Giles says, crossing quickly to relieve the boy. Daniel
grunts and pauses as Giles grabs the top four books, revealing the boy's
face.
His hair is lavender today, a sort of washed-out violet that sharpens
his wide green eyes. "Thanks."
"Not at all," Giles says, leaving the books on the counter. He takes the
rest from the boy and gets out the box of circulation cards.
/
When Oz likes someone, he gets this feeling. It's like chamois, warm and
softly napped--slightly fuzzy but not too much--only it's in his chest:
hung from his collarbone, the feeling covers his ribcage, tucks him in
for the night, and whispers in the breeze from his lungs.
He's feeling pretty damn chamois-y right now.
"You probably think this is silly," he says, hoping Giles will meet his
eye. But he just keeps plucking cards out of the box and tucking them
into the books' pockets. "All these books about poverty, and pain. Anger
and oppression."
Giles looks up, his glasses slipping down. "I don't understand what you
mean."
"Just, you know. Silly. Like some suburban honky kid could possibly get
them."
Giles licks the corner of his mouth. "Very far from silly," he says.
"Anything's possible."
Oz nods and snuggles back into the feeling. "Cool."
Yesterday's paper is on the counter, and he pulls it over, scanning the
movie listings. He needs something to distract him, otherwise he's just
going to keep gaping at Giles like some retarded toddler.
"You read at an astonishing rate, you know."
"Do I?" Oz glances up from the paper.
Giles waves his hand at the stack. "Yes, I'd say you do."
"Oh," Oz says. "See, I've got a really short attention span. Like,
miniscule, like a bee or something. So I have to pack in as much as I
can while it lasts."
Giles's lips disappear as he frowns, considering this. He looks serious
and concerned, like Oz has just told him some huge, obvious,
three-ring-circus lie.
"It's true. Other people can concentrate for way longer. I can't, but I
like to make it count."
Giles just shakes his head and goes back to checking the books back in.
Oz isn't going to push it; if he gets to hang around long enough, Giles
is sure to see his ADD in action sooner or later. He crosses his arms
and leans on the counter, watching the precision in Giles's fingers,
plucking, tucking, restacking. Measure twice, cut once: Giles seems to
apply that equally to words and gestures. He wonders what it would be
like to have that kind of confidence, that strength that makes you
certain of everything you do and say. If Oz knew the jargon of
copywriting, he'd apply that to Giles, too. He makes a mental note to
look up that jargon; it might be useful. Because it's as if he's faster
and smarter than anyone else, so he has time to edit and correct words,
gestures, before performing them. Everyone else has to hand in the rough
draft, but not Giles.
Giles is saying something. Damn, and he missed it, wondering how those
fingers would move, so strong and precise, over his body. Shivers.
"Hmm?"
As he looks up, Giles is looking at him, glasses off, smiling. "I asked
if you needed anything else."
"I'm good." The lights aren't on over the circulation counter, so
Giles's eyes are darker, green like ocean water. "Oh? Like I should
leave? Right."
"I meant the books. I see you found the Black Panther history, and it
occurred to me I have some at home you might like."
"Really?"
Giles nods. "I'll bring them tomorrow, then."
"So it's cool if I hang here?" Oz can't believe his luck. There has to
be a catch somewhere.
"Hang all you like."
2. 7'23"
========
Hanging is welcome.
So Oz has taken to asking Giles whatever questions occur to him. Giles
doesn't seem to mind, and as for Oz, he's picking up a whole load of
weird info.
It's not a casual process, at least not for Oz. He wants to know,
whatever the question is, he wants to hear Giles answer. They're sitting
at the big table, lunch (tea? it is kind of late for lunch, since Oz
overslept something fierce today) nearly gone.
"What do you do for fun, anyway?"
Giles glances at him; his face is hard to read, but Oz sees a kind of
amusement there. Weirded out, Oz drops his gaze to the table. To Giles's
hands, resting lightly there around his tea cup. Long fingers, strong
and wide, big enough to cover just about all of Oz's face. Weathered,
not into rough callouses, but like cedar, the way it softens and goes
silvery after a couple years under the sun and rain.
Weathered, like the muslin curtains in his dad's apartment after the
divorce. Cheap and unlined, they bleached in the sun, and his dad never
washed them, so they went more and more golden and threadbare. What
would that skin feel like on his? Soft, weathered. Strong.
Giles clears his throat.
"Sorry." Oz scrapes back his chair, making to rise. "Sure I'm not
bothering you?"
"Certainly," Giles says. it sounds like the beginning of a question,
like a hint passed on a game show, but Oz knows he's probably making all
this up. It must be a trick of the accent or something. He'd never make
it past the first round of the $100,000 Pyramid if Giles was his
partner. That accent makes everything sound smart and obscure and really
fucking sexy. He wants to ask questions until his throat closes up.
/
Giles knows, but does not want to admit just yet, that some sort of
routine is establishing itself. When he arrives at the library in the
late mornings, Daniel is waiting for him more often than not. When he's
not, he comes in the afternoon, hair mussed and eyes hooded. Either way,
he appears almost every day.
Giles works at the long main table now, telling himself it is for the
light that never manages to reach his office. Daniel sits nearby,
reading whatever has caught his eye that day. Sometimes he rises, silent
as ever, and looks up a word at the dictionary on its spindly lectern.
Satisfied, he returns, sliding back into his chair and taking his book
back up.
Giles finds it surprisingly easy to work with the company. His
concentration is sharper, and when his mind does wander, he can inquire
after Daniel's reading. He has caught up on the purchasing for the next
school year and has returned without guilt to the usual open-ended
research.
Professional guilt, that is; he usually manages to wrestle off the
personal guilt until the dead of night. It can't be right, a man of his
age enjoying a teenaged boy's company to this extent. And it certainly
isn't right, the tension that has started to spool around his spine,
weaving its way through his nervous system. It has not been so long that
he can't remember what desire feels like, this low thrum of need
threading through his skull, his hands, his groin.
/
Oz likes these afternoons; he could do without the arctic air
conditioning, and has stowed an old blue plaid shirt in the reference
section for when he gets too cold, but otherwise he can't imagine a
better summer. Giles gets so absorbed in his old books and files of
notes that Oz can look at him for minutes on end and not get caught. His
current record is seven minutes and 23 seconds, but if he ever remembers
to wear his sunglasses, he's sure to make ten minutes, easy.
Giles does this thing when he's reading, where his eyebrows knit
together and his lips flatten and disappear. He'll stay like that for a
while, eyes not moving, and then sigh through his nose and extend his
fingers, wiggle them briefly, and go back to reading. Other times he'll
go so still that it occurs to Oz he's about to do the wrinkle-purse-sigh
thing, so he'll peek, only to find Giles staring at the opposite wall,
mouth moving, no sound coming out.
Oz doesn't get the research thing. That's okay; he doesn't get Devon's
rock-god thing, or Uncle Ken's bonsai thing, either. He just likes being
around people who do have a thing. That might be *his* thing, come to
think of it. Accompaniment.
/
"My Spanish isn't as strong as it once was," Giles says. He's peering
pretty intensely at Oz's chest. "But I'm fairly certain that doesn't
make much sense. I hold the feminine-gendered-thing?"
Oz glances down at his shirt and back to Giles. His glasses are off,
eyes crinkled up, lips working silently.
"I hold--not *her*, although that would be a pretty phrase for a shirt.
I suppose the problem is lack of context, really."
"Yo La Tengo."
"Yes, yes," Giles says absently, frowning a little, like Oz corrected
his grammar and he's trying not to show how offended he is.
"Yo La Tengo," Oz says more distinctly.
Giles glances at him, frowning still, and then it's like his eyes focus
finally on Oz's smile. When that happens, Giles relaxes. A little.
"It's a band. Guess that's the context."
"Oh," Giles says. "I beg your pardon. It's just, you see, I read
something and t-the librarian in me kicks in."
"Nah, the librarian wouldn't care." Whoever Giles is would care, but Oz
can't see a librarian giving it a second thought.
Giles apparently can't figure out how to respond to that, so he puts his
glasses back on. "A band? Pop music. Lots of synthesizers, then?"
Oz shrugs. "No, Giles. A *good* band. Guitars and bass. Drums. Normal
human voices."
"I see." He sounds pretty doubtful.
And with that, Oz resolves to show Giles that there's more than insipid
pop (not that there's anything wrong with that) out there.
The next day, Wednesday, he wears a Half Japanese shirt and drops off
his back-up copy of _Painful_.
Thursday: His good Nation of Ulysses long-sleeve and a Jad Fair mix.
Friday: He'd stayed over at Devon's, and has to settle for a Blur shirt
and remix of "Parklife". He would have gone home first, but he's running
late and doesn't want to miss Giles before the weekend.
/
The library is far too bright and clean for the thoughts that occupy
him. As such, it is the perfect refuge.
At night, in the safety of his own double-bolted home, Giles can indulge
himself. Not often, never on consecutive days, but enough to relieve the
tension that tugs at and wraps around the base of his spine, pooling and
pulling in his brainstem. Momentary relief, split seconds during which
his vision clears, his chest lightens, and his thoughts untangle.
Seconds succeeded by the increasingly familiar gathering tension,
slipping, curling, wrapping itself around him and inside him, stronger
now than it had been a moment ago. Always stronger.
He would like to be able to tell himself that nothing is wrong with him.
That he is entirely blameless in this situation, an ordinary man in yet
another set of extraordinary circumstances. He would like to be able to
believe that these circumstances do not touch him, that, rather, they
have everything to do with Daniel. He would like to believe that there
is something extraordinary about the boy, capable of pulling blameless,
ordinary Rupert Giles into an unexpected web.
If he could believe all that, liberation would soon follow. Giles would
then be able to exempt himself from responsibility. He would be free of
this dreadful certainty that he is nothing more than a dirty old man
with designs on an innocent, affectionate, preternaturally kind boy.
Thus free, he could enjoy his transformation into, his accession as,
Rupert Rupert. Free to revel in his own solipsism and what he is sure is
the sweet, herby tang of the boy's skin.
Instead, he suffers through another weekend locked in his house, failing
to resist himself and the flashing, pornographic current of his own
mind. His palms ache with emptiness, with the absence of all that he
longs to touch, and his eyes tear up with need. Glimmers of Daniel,
reaching for him, kissing him, pulling up his shirt: nothing so
substantial as images, just glints spun off from the current, fading
fast under scrutiny.
/
On Monday, Oz can tell that all this is amusing Giles, but probably
starting to piss him off, too. He pushes his glasses up his forehead to
read the small print on the back of the K-Records compilation. He
squints at it but the muscles around his mouth look tight. When he does
look at Oz, his eyes are darker; the glasses are back on like shields.
It seems like the most suitable thing for Oz to do is just shrug and
move slowly away.
Oz heads for the stacks, seeking a little solitude and that other word
that sounds the same. Solace. He can't get a read on Giles, and he'd
rather figure that part out first before fucking this up. Whatever this
is.
As much as he loves the stacks, the way they smell a little like old
paper and a lot like lemon floor polish, how they tower over him so
reassuringly, maybe the library is the problem here. It could be making
Giles feel way too much like a librarian and not enough like Giles,
whoever that is. Oz sits back under one of the windows, holding _The
Strawberry Statement_ open against his updrawn knees, not looking at it.
Still, there has to be some way to get at Giles. The temptation to chuck
it all in and just pull a Devon-stunt is strong: just sidle up to Giles,
invade several layers of personal space, and ask if he'd like to fuck.
Great idea, if he wants to spend the rest of the summer alone in his
room.
Giles had probably been right last week: the context is what's important
here. He hadn't known Yo La Tengo was a band, so the shirt's meaning got
garbled. Meaning happens, but in the wrong context, it's not going to be
the meaning you wanted. Oz doesn't think he's arrogant enough to believe
that the right context will guarantee better results than the library's
currently producing. But it can't hurt. It's not like he knows what the
right context is--the library's probably not a great one, but what's the
opposite of a library?
Not that he wants the opposite, exactly, not really. Just something a
little more neutral.
"Daniel?" Giles calls. No one calls him Daniel, not even his mom, but it
sounds good, and it's not like he can imagine Giles taking someone named
Oz very seriously at all. "Are you still here?"
"Here." Oz memorizes the number of the page he's on and stands up
stiffly, moves out of the stacks.
"I'm making some tea. I thought--. Would you like to join me?" Giles
leans against his office doorway, a jug of water in his hand.
"No, thanks," Oz says. "Should probably get going, actually."
"Really?"
Oz can't tell if Giles sounds sad. Probably, definitely, not. Just
polite. He shrugs. "Yeah. But, hey, listen--" He digs around in his
pocket, finally finding the folded flyer. Bright purple paper, once, now
a little more creased and gritty with crumbs than he'd like. "Here. You
want to go to this?"
Giles unfolds the paper and smoothes it over his palm. Scans it. "This
is a band, yes?" He glances at Oz, smiling, and Oz feels relief in a
weird way, since he hadn't known he was stressed. But there's the
relief, lifting away the stress the way a good detergent gets at stains.
All because of a little, awkward joke.
"Yeah." He smiles back. "No pressure. I mean, we really suck. Hardcore
suckage--"
"Your band?" Giles isn't smiling any more. It's not like he suddenly
looks unhappy or anything, not exactly, just that he's kind of calmly
befuddled. Oz wants to blush, because that's what you do in this kind of
situation. 'Calmly befuddled' doesn't just sound kind of cool; it's also
a really good look on Giles.
"Yeah." Oz shoves his hands deep in his pockets, wondering just how long
he's been silent for. He loses track all the time. "Like I said, no
pressure 'cause we really do, uh. Suck." And if he says *suck* one more
time with Giles looking at him like that, blushing is going to be the
least of his problems.
"I think it could be interesting," Giles says. "Thank you." He refolds
the flyer carefully and slips it into his shirt pocket.
"Welcome." It would be really nice to have a rock to kick around right
now. "I've got some shit--. Sorry. Stuff to do before. I'll catch up
with you later. Tonight."
Giles nods a couple of times. "Tonight, then."
Oz concentrates very hard on his feet and their threadbare checkerboard
Vans as they carry him forward out of the library. That way, he doesn't
have the brain space to over-interpret whether Giles had said that last
part softly, or gently, or distantly, or whatever. Damn adverbs.
/
Giles wants to go.
He knows he should not, of course. He is nothing if not fully aware of
every reason not to attend.
Ripper would go.
/
"Here." Devon tosses something round and spiked at Oz. "Put that on,
slob."
Oz turns it in his hands. It looks like a belt for a very thin baby.
"Why would a baby need a belt? Scratch that. Why do *I* need a baby's
belt?"
Devon is leaning into the little mirror over the sink, so close Oz is
surprised he hasn't knocked himself out yet. "It's a present, asshole.
Put it on."
"Where? My wrist?"
Devon likes to dress up, and he does, Oz will admit, clean up real nice:
tight black pants, tighter blue shirt unbuttoned to about the level of
his spleen. Couple of little sparkly hoops in one ear.
"You're such a spaz--" Devon says, wrestling the belt from Oz. He
unsnaps it and wraps it around Oz's neck, snapping it back closed with a
quick jab of the thumb that makes Oz choke. The collar feels mighty
weird. Snug and weird in a good way. "Better," Devon says, stepping
back. "Still a slob, but that's like a long-term project."
"I'm not wearing this." Oz runs his finger underneath the collar,
feeling the tingles spread around his throat.
"Yeah, you are." Devon smacks him on the ass and returns to the mirror.
He adjusts a few short curls on one side of his head, tilts it in the
other direction, and nods at himself.
"It looks stupid."
"You look stupid. The collar looks good."
"Granted. I'm still not wearing it."
Devon's doing something kind of medieval to one eyebrow with a pair of
tweezers he's produced from god knows where. Oz wants to wince, but it's
fascinating at the same time. He moves a little closer. "It's a present.
Ow! Fuck!" It sounds like Devon ripped out an entire follicle that time.
"It's only polite to say thank you--"
"Thank you. But I'm not--"
"--And wear it."
Oz is never going to Stubborn-Ass MacLeish, whether in a spat, skirmish,
or all-out war. And it does feel weird-good. "Okay. Thanks."
"Welcome. Hey--" Devon holds up a can of silver-glitter hairspray.
"Would this be over the top?"
"Depends." Oz checks the mirror once, just to see the collar. Yeah, kind
of cool. "Are you putting it on your hair or sticking the can down your
pants?"
The sad thing is, Devon looks like he's trying to decide.
/
Who the hell did he think he was?
Later, at home, Giles is never alone.
There are so many versions of himself, half-inhabited, waiting for him
to return to them. Priggish schoolboy, anxiety-ridden son, demonic
lover, piss-poor Watcher, easily-flustered librarian: Wraiths of various
selves, all wearing his face, crowded into a wardrobe and howling to get
out.
For now, however, Giles has turned his back on them.
After all, he can hardly wear any of them to a garage band's concert.
3. The Garage Sound
===================
From the stage, Oz can see Giles. He can see everything, actually, every
nook and smoky cranny of the Bronze, every face lifted up hoping for
Dev's gaze to meet theirs, every lonely face counting bubbles in their
drink, every sputtering light hanging from the grid above.
He strums into the downbeat; from the corner of his eye, he can see
Devon raising his hand over his head. He knows from experience, from
countless practices, that his hand is open, fingers spread wide,
counting the beats down to the end of the song. It's a nice visual, good
corollary to the shift into minor, dwindling chords. It's also a trick,
because when they get to the last two fingers--right...*here*--Eric
slams down on the drums, Devon pumps his fist, and the song careens back
full-force.
Oz watches Giles. He's toward the back, tucked under the stairs. Oz
allows himself a smile at the sight. Wearing a short-sleeve button-down
shirt, marginally more casual than his usual gear. The librarian
looks--not out of place, not really, not even like he's slumming. Just
separate from the rest, a little squiggly glowing line around him. It's
a good separate. He grips a pint of something dark--Guinness? It's the
darkest beer Oz knows of--and sips every so often. He looks relaxed, and
this makes Oz smile again.
Devon dances over, jostles him with a quick slam of the hip. He grabs Oz
around the neck, whirls him into a rough noogie, scrubbing at his hair.
Oz concentrates on playing, and when he's released, he looks back over
to the stairs.
Giles isn't alone any more. He's turned in profile, backed up against
the stairs, and appears deep in conversation with--Jesus.
"The fuck's *that*?" Devon asks, sweeping his fingers wide, but Oz knows
he's pointing exactly where he's been looking. "Holy hottie, Batman."
Oz can't answer, just looks: Tall guy, beautiful sad face, carefully
rakish hair. Damn.
/
Giles has steeled himself to run into Xander or Cordelia, to wince his
way politely through some jangling discordant noise, to meet curious
stares from students who half-recognize him, but he didn't expect,
first, to enjoy the music, nor, second, to meet up with Angel of all
people. In his inimitable way, he simply appears next to Giles, a little
too close for comfort. Giles turns against the columns of the stairs to
make some space.
"Evening," Angel says.
"How are you?"
Angel shrugs. "You? Your summer?"
"Markedly improving." Giles raises his glass slightly. Angel nods, not
smiling exactly but his expression does relax a fraction.
They stand together for a long while, and Giles knows there must be a
reason Angel is here. The man doesn't seem to enjoy the nightlife for
its own charms, to put it mildly. But some stubborn bit of him doesn't
feel like making it any easier for Angel by asking him.
"What brings you out?" Angel finally asks.
"A friend." Giles likes the sound of that, likes even more the faint
surprise it brings to Angel's face.
Angel takes his elbow. "Can we go somewhere quieter?"
And while the grip on his bare skin and the closeness of the vampire
thrill Giles in a way he would prefer not to explore, he finds himself
shaking his head. "I'm afraid not. I'd like to stay and hear the rest of
the set."
Angel releases his arm. "Right. Look, I'm sorry. I was just wondering--"
"If I'd heard from her?" Giles sips his beer while Angel nods. "No. I
take it you haven't, then?"
"She just left so quickly."
"Yes. But she will come back." At Angel's blank, rather desperate
expression, Giles feels himself soften. "Of course she'll come back,
Angel. You don't really think--?"
Angel shrugs again and squints at the stage. Daniel bounces there,
slowly, looking down at his guitar with something like concern. Giles
would like to contemplate the odd position he finds himself in, a
Watcher attempting to comfort and reassure a rather stricken, lovelorn
vampire, but he is struck instead by the firmness in his own tone, the
sense that he actually believes what he is saying. "She's an unusual
girl, admittedly. But she will come back."
He believes it now, and realizes he had not, not fully, not until now.
When he looks back over at Angel, the vampire has disappeared.
Daniel, however, still bobs up there. His face is shadowed, but some
trick of the light makes it seem that he is peering directly at Giles.
/
Afterwards, Oz finds Giles at the bar, patting a small napkin across his
forehead. At least the big hot guy's nowhere in sight.
"Warm in here." He climbs onto a rickety stool beside Giles
Giles balls the napkin up. "To be expected."
"Glad you guys came," Oz says and leans over the bar to get Marly the
bartender's attention. "Can I get a drink?"
"Right," Marly snorts. "Nice try."
"A water, then? Ice?"
He's not usually very thirsty after playing; hungry, sure, but tonight
his lips feel crackly dry. That should be a sign to keep his mouth
closed, but he's not so good with omens and hints.
"Interesting music," Giles tells him as Oz crunches ice cubes. "But--Who
guys? What you guys?" Aware he's making no sense, and still pushing on;
Oz can admire that.
Nice icecube. Good icecube melting its super-chilliness down the back of
Oz's throat. When it's a little sliver on the tip of his tongue, Oz
fakes a cough and swallows. "He your boyfriend?"
Giles blinks, and blinks some more. Oz realizes he must have turned his
head to look at him, and that Giles has too, because a second ago they
were next to each other, facing forward. But now he's looking at Giles
blink. Ergo, something.
"Tall, dark--?" Oz supplies.
The blinking is getting out of control, until something breaks on
Giles's face and he's laughing: a good deep belly laugh, something not
to be expected from his previous tight-lipped chuckles.
"Good lord," Giles finally manages to say, and wipes his eyes with
another napkin. "Dear, dear lord, no."
Oz smiles and slumps a bit. "Good."
Giles's upper lip twitches at that, but before he can say anything more,
Oz feels strong arms wrap around his chest, hauling him back.
"Baby boy!" Devon shouts and presses a kiss on the top of Oz's skull. "I
think I'm gonna fly--"
"Dev, this is Giles," Oz says. "Giles, meet Devon."
Giles straightens up and offers his hand. It hovers there, level with
Oz's eyes, and finally, Devon slaps it, hard. "Dude," Devon says. "The
book guy?"
Giles nods, lips tightening, that awesome laugh long gone, and looks
away. "I-it's been interesting, Daniel," he says. He stands up and
swipes a napkin across the counter, erasing any trace of his presence.
"Thank you."
Oz winces and feels the ache all over his face. He struggles out of
Devon's arms, reaching for Giles. Manages to brush his shoulder,
imagining himself holding on to some piece of flotsam or something.
"Wait a minute, okay?"
Devon grabs Oz by the bicep; his hand hot and damp. "Gotta clear the
stage, man."
Giles nods. Oz nods back, and gets dragged away.
/
And what, precisely, is he doing here in the parking lot? The most
accurate term is *loitering*. But Daniel asked him to wait, and Giles
would like to think he's merely being polite. He leans against the wall
of the Bronze, head tipped back, listening to tinny music leaking out
the door, mixed in with the whispers and shouts of young people. He is
occasionally jostled but maintains his balance.
"Hey," Daniel says. He slips in beside Giles; from the corner of his
eye, Giles sees him lean against the wall, perfectly mimic his posture.
"What're we looking at?"
The sky is dirty-dark, clouded and faintly shimmery with lights. "Not
much."
"Got it."
Giles wonders briefly whether he ought to feel unnerved by the silence
that always seems to settle between them. He should not feel this
unnerved by the quiet. Hadn't he longed for it all term? He is uncertain
(as if uncertainty is new to him) whether it is the silence that
unnerves him, or the expectation that it will be broken.
He likes to think that American teenagers belong to a different species
from other people, possibly even a different genus. Keeping them safely
alien and untouchable. They are excitable and wriggly as puppies, with
none of a puppy's instinct for training and obedience. Instincts you had
in spades, Ripper--at the very least, a distinct taste for the *leash*:
A sneering Ethan in his mind, taking any opportunity to comment.
He is wrong, of course, he knows that, wrong about this particular
teenager. This grave child. Who happens tonight to be wearing a leather
collar, but that's--
A coincidence.
"Where you headed?" Daniel nudges Giles's hip with his own and Giles
considers nudging back, then thinks better of it. "After this?"
There aren't any options, but Giles sifts through them anyway. "Home, I
expect."
"Can I get a ride with you? I wasn't thinking. Gave the van keys to Dev.
I don't like walking home this late. It's--"
Daniel breaks off and looks up, biting that full lower lip, so utterly
guileless that Giles feels something crumple inside of him.
"Of course," he says softly.
He stands there a bit too long, hearing the moments pass with his
heartbeat, looking back into those wide eyes, nearly certain that some
unspoken agreement is forming between them, until a small, dark shape
disengages from the shadows and moves toward them. Giles straightens,
his hand moving to the stake in his waistband, as the figure --
moon-pale face and planed shadows -- comes up behind Daniel, reaching
out.
"Hi," the figure says. Fear drops through Giles's feet and vanishes as
Daniel turns and bobs his head in greeting.
She is a slight girl, eyelids heavy with red glitter. Giles wonders how
she can keep them open. "I liked your show?"
"Yeah," Daniel says. "We pretty much kept in tune tonight."
Smiling, she looks downward.
"You work at the drugstore, right?" Daniel asks.
"Margaret," she whispers. "I met you at Tanya's?" The breeze whips open
her short trench-coat and before she tugs it back closed, Giles sees her
spindly legs, wrapped in fishnet tights. She is as small as a
prepubescent, dressed up like a Halloween whore.
"Giles?" Daniel asks. "Can we give Margaret a ride home?"
The girl steals a look at him from below her lids, and it is clear that
this is the first time she noticed anyone else is there. So this is what
it's like to be a parent: an unseen, unheard chauffeur. "Of course,"
Giles says.
At the car, Giles unlocks his door first. Judging from the grip Margaret
has on Daniel's arm and slow flash of glitter when she looks up at him,
he knows they will take the back. He pushes the driver's seat forward
and steps aside.
"Margaret?" he asks, checking the mirror as he backs out. She has one
leg over Daniel's and his hand rests on her exposed thigh, fingers
drumming slowly. "Margaret? Where do you live?"
The girl frowns and exhales through short lips. He has been around
teenagers enough to know she is communicating that unique combination of
exasperation and boredom.
"What's your address?" Daniel asks. "Man needs to know."
His eyes meet Giles's in the mirror. Giles would like to think he sees
amusement in the boy's gaze. Or at least some variety of consolation.
Sympathy. But it is dark, and he is growing more tired by the second, so
he concentrates on driving, following the directions mumbled
half-coherently behind him.
Giles stops in front of the girl's large house, pushes up the passenger
seat, and resists the urge to give them a fare. He fiddles with the
radio, searching through stations, so as not to seem to hear the
whispered conversation and soft sound of kisses goodbye. He does,
however, and catches a glimpse of Daniel kissing her forehead. They are
nearly the same size, Daniel in his too-large pants, Margaret bound in
corset and skirt: Children playing dress-up. Playing grown-ups.
He is staring out at the street ahead when he hears the knock on the
passenger-side window. Daniel waves at him and Giles unlocks the door
and shoves the seat back.
"Where to, kemosabe?" Daniel asks, sliding into the seat.
"Where do you live?" Giles keeps his tone low and measured, ignoring the
rush of warmth through his chest set off as soon as they were alone.
He expects another drive silent save for murmured directions and the odd
radio tuning, yet feels disappointed when this is precisely what
happens. Daniel settles on staticky public radio. A choice thrown like a
bone to the stuffy old man.
Daniel's house is lit up, the only one on the block that gave any sense
of human occupancy. Giles shifts into neutral. Daniel remains in his
seat. He is just--looking at him, with such studied nonchalance that
Giles's brain freezes. He cannot quite remember how to say goodnight.
"Driveway's around back," Daniel says.
"Eh?" is all Giles can manage.
"Tree's blocking it, but just pull in behind the van." Daniel's eyebrows
raise, and Giles thinks it is not nonchalance the boy is studying, since
he seems to have that down pat, so much as it is Giles himself. "You are
coming in, right?"
Giles swallows dryly. "If you'd like--"
"Around the tree."
"All right."
/
Having Giles in his house? Bizarre. In a good way. Oz doesn't much like
being surprised, himself, since it tends to lead to the panic and the
confusion. Sweaty palms, dry mouth: uncomfortable. But surprising other
people is amusing, and the guys *are* surprised.
Even if only Devon shows signs of it, gulping, scraping, backing up in
mock-fear, Oz can still tell. Eric fixes his posture and tries to hide
the spliff under the table. Lissa ducks into the pantry with half a
six-pack hanging off her fingers, and emerges empty-handed, shirt tugged
down. He could swear she's reapplied her lipstick, too.
Devon hoists himself up onto the edge of the sink. "Hey, book guy!
Welcome. Didn't know you were coming."
Giles gives Devon a tight smile. From where Oz is standing, it looks, in
profile, more like a grimace than anything else. Then Giles nods. Oz
isn't sure, but "curt" comes to mind. Giles nods curtly. "Hello, Devon."
"Want a drink?"
"Water?"
Devon tosses him a glass, and Giles catches it easily, holding it in one
hand and looking back at Dev. Calmly befuddled again, but starting to
verge on irritation.
"Fresh from the tap," Devon says. "Come and get it."
Oz watches as Giles edges around the table, between Eric and Lissa,
making his careful way to the sink. Devon doesn't move, just swings his
feet, banging them against the cabinets, so poor Giles has to reach past
him, brushing his arm, to flip up the tap and fill his glass. Devon
grins across the room at Oz, looking about as innocent as a tomcat. "So,
book guy--"
"He's got a name, Dev."
"Sorry. What's your name again, book guy?"
Giles sips his water slowly, glancing at Oz over the rim of the glass.
His eyes are dark and narrowed, and Oz is suddenly glad he's never
pissed Giles off this much; he couldn't stand that look for very long at
all. "Rupert Giles."
"Not here to bust us, are you, Rupert Giles?" Devon asks, and Eric
chokes back a laugh. Lissa smacks him on the shoulder for that.
"Certainly not." Glass empty, Giles sets in back in the sink and wipes
his hand on his thigh. His voice is about as tight and strained as the
muscles in his face, and Oz wants to look away, he really does. But he
can't.
Giles starts to move back towards Oz, but then pauses in front of Lissa.
"Hello. I'm Giles."
She smiles, the metal of her retainer flashing. "Hey. Lissa." She points
at Eric. "That's Eric." Eric twists in his seat, and Giles shakes his
hand. At least some of his friends know their manners.
"You were at the show, right?" Lissa asks.
"You're quite the dervish on that tambourine."
Lissa ducks her head. "Lame, I know. Can't get much girlier than
tambourine, huh?"
Maybe because he likes to pretend to be nice around Lissa, or just
because he's lost interest in annoying Giles, but Devon jumps off the
counter, tackling Eric, wrestling him for the spliff. Giles takes
Lissa's elbow and maneuvers them gently out of the way. Oz can't make
out their conversation any more, so he just leans in the doorway and
takes it all in: Eric getting Devon in a headlock; Lissa miming the
chord changes Oz is trying to teach her while Giles tilts his head,
watching; Devon thumping Eric's chest weakly, refusing to cry uncle;
Giles adjusting Lissa's fingers.
Oz is liking this, the loud chaos and quiet tutorial, everyone absorbed
in their own thing.
He skirts around Devon, ducking flailing arms and Eric's kicks, and digs
into Eric's shirt pocket, liberating the dime bag. The boys are going to
be wrestling for a while. They're always hyped up after playing. And it
looks like Lissa's not letting Giles go any time soon; she'd never say
so, but anyone could teach her better than Oz can. He elbows chips bags
and magazines off the counter, clearing a good space, and starts rolling
a joint. It gives him something to focus on, something for his hands to
do, because he's scared of that whole idle hands curse. Without
something to do, he might just start ogling Giles again, and he's not up
to handling Devon's comments about that just yet. Or ever.
He taps the roach three times against his palm and twists off the top as
he looks back up. Lissa's gone, probably to pee, because the girl's got
a bladder the size of a chestnut, and Eric and Dev are arguing over the
countdown to their imminent thumb war. Giles leans against the pantry
door, arms crossed loosely, looking at Oz, and Oz can tell somehow that
he's been standing there like that for a while now. Looking at him.
He gives Giles a smile, feeling suddenly really overwhelmingly shy, and
shows him the joint. Look what I made, Mom! He asks Giles something; he
hopes it's clear from his eyes, because his voice isn't working just
now. He thinks Giles nods, getting it. Maybe not, but he chooses to
believe he did, and pushes off toward the back door, hoping Giles
follows him into the garage.
/
Daniel sits on the edge of the work bench in the glare of a bare bulb
when Giles finds him, his nose wrinkling at the dampness of the garage.
Motor oil, and wood shavings, and something else, light and spicy.
Daniel. The boy is looking down at his lap, flicking a disposable
lighter on and off. As Giles threads his way toward him, stepping around
amps and instrument cases and a large hulking machine that might be a
miter saw, Daniel looks up. "Hey."
"Evening," Giles says, like a fool. He stops at the arm of a threadbare
couch, squeezed in between a tower of packing boxes and the workbench
and strokes the upholstery, looking for something to steady him. He
wishes he were intelligent enough to work out how he made his way here,
to this garage, beside this boy, but the riddle has no solution.
Daniel's face is stark under the light, half-glowing, half-shadowed.
Untouchable. "Your friends--"
"Devon's an asshole. I'm sorry." Daniel flicks the lighter again,
holding his palm over the flame.
"Lissa seems like a sweet girl."
"Yeah. She's great." He purses his lips and looks away, and Giles wants
very much to take his hand, or stroke his hair. Some innocent gesture to
soothe him, ease away the tension tightening his face into a cheap mask
and drawing his shoulders in towards his neck. "You know, I'm not--"
Giles steps forward as Daniel pauses, watches his hand reach out
tentatively for the boy's leg, then drop back, empty and ridiculous.
"What?"
"I don't know," Daniel says. "Forget it. I'm going to smoke this." He
leans over, cupping one hand around the joint, protecting it from a
phantom breeze, and inhales slowly. The paper crackles, then goes silent
as he removes it from his lips, holding it between two fingers. He tips
his head back, his eyes closing, and stretches out both hands to grasp
his knees. The entire sequence looks less pleasurable than almost
medicinal. Necessary, but not quite enjoyable.
As Daniel exhales, the sweet, heavy smoke swirls briefly between them,
and Giles has to look away from the boy's lips, gleaming moistly in the
light. He considers Daniel's arm, the depths at which the freckles
float, some faded, deeper, obscured by the darker ones closer to the
surface. Leather cords and woven wool and small glinting beads wrapped
around the wrists: oddments of decoration, their original purpose
probably forgotten. They persevere, though, preserved for the constant
soft rub on the skin.
And the collar, snug around his pale, thin neck, its metal spikes
shining under the light.
/
It's nice and quiet in the garage, just him and Giles, and Oz is
starting to feel better. He offers the joint to Giles, and watches as
Giles pinches it between thumb and forefinger, inhaling gingerly. He
turns his head to exhale, passing it back.
"Why do they call you Oz?"
"Nickname. Why?" He accepts the joint back and sucks in again. "It has
nothing to do with the Emerald City. Present circumstances
notwithstanding."
Giles shakes his head, and that was supposed to make him smile, but he's
not playing along. "I never really thought of you having a nickname, I
suppose."
"People can be surprising."
"Yes." Giles sounds very tired, and Oz needs to distract him. He
balances the joint on the edge of the bench and slides off the
workbench. Flopping onto the couch, Oz steeples his fingers, trying to
decide what to do, peering at Giles like pictures he's seen of Freud.
Tell me all your dreams, Mr. Giles.
"It's all right," Giles continues, fingering the pegboard over the
workbench. "My calling you Daniel?"
"Huh? Yeah, course it is." Oz shifts over and pats the cushion next to
him. Giles sits with a sigh and reaches to retrieve the joint. He
inhales much deeper this time, and holds it in his lungs for an ungodly
long time. Oz hasn't seen him this tense since the first day in the
library. He twists around so he's lying down, head resting against
Giles's leg. "Why would I mind?"
"It's not--" Giles stops and looks down at him. Yeah, Oz thinks, I'm
lying in your lap, big guy. "Your friends call you Oz."
"And you call me Daniel." Oz honestly doesn't get what the problem is
here. He can feel the warm skin under Giles's trousers, radiant against
his cheek. If he wasn't stoned, he'd probably be able to resist the urge
to rub his head against it like a kitten. But he is, so he can't. "What
do your friends call you?"
Giles swallows, muscles in his throat working, and shifts so he's
sitting up straighter, dislodging Oz.
Oz tries again, because something important's going on, even if he's too
dense to get it. Twisting his neck, he squints upward. "It's okay if I
call you Giles?"
"Most people do."
So that's not it. Oz tucks his elbow under his side and sits up, leaning
against Giles. "What's wrong?"
Giles squeezes his hand into a fist. His knuckles redden, then pale.
"I'm embarrassed."
"Oh, okay." Oz rests his cheek against Giles's chest. He waits for a
couple seconds, sure that Giles is going to stand up and let him fall,
but they both remain still, and the warmth of Giles's skin is even
stronger up here. He smells like limes. Not lime *flavor*, but real
limes, freshly sliced. "I thought it was something important."
Giles laughs. Oz can hear it, kind of gurgly, from inside.
"Embarrassment's *not* important," Oz says. "I mean, in the grand scheme
of things, it's not even going to be an extra in the crowd scene."
/
Much later, well past the arrival of his second wind, as well as its
eventual departure, they are back in the kitchen. Giles reaches across
the table for the last bottle of beer, realizing too late, just as
Daniel takes hold of his bicep, that the tattoo is showing.
His friend traces the mark of Eyghon with one finger and looks up, eyes
narrowed. "You've seen a lot of shit." It's not a question, but Giles
says yes anyway. Or mouths it; he cannot hear himself just now. Whether
supernatural or natural, Daniel's touch drew sparks in its wake,
reforming the mark.
"Whoa!" Devon leans over the table, grabbing Giles's wrist. "Awesome
tat--wow."
"Leave him alone, Dev."
"Just looking. Jesus."
Giles frees his wrist from Devon's grip and tugs the sleeve down. "I
have some books," he says. "At home. There are some rather nice
d-designs in them, if you'd like to take a look." He glances at Daniel,
who smiles. "Much nicer than this."
Devon nods eagerly, slumped back in his chair, hands wrapped around his
beer like a microphone. Daniel looks back and forth between him and
Devon, that small half-smile on his lips, though his eyes remain
serious. The gaze settles on Giles, and somehow it is nearly as warm and
substantial as the feeling of Daniel leaning against him earlier.
4. Analogs
==========
Giles allows himself the luxury of sleeping late the next morning. By
the time he finally rises, the sun fills his living room and he has to
narrow his eyes against the glare as he fumbles with the coffeemaker.
The contraption is recalcitrant enough under his hands; attempting to
work the curtain's mechanism would be worse than foolhardy.
He did not dream last night, yet he feels as if he had. Wisps of
sensation and perception cling to him like the remnants of dreams,
hovering around the edges of his eyes and mind: the lean weight of
Daniel against him; tang of marijuana on the back of his tongue; Angel's
cool, hard grip on his elbow; scent of the boy, sweaty and smoky and
still fresh; the intricate curve of his lips, twisting and slipping as
he spoke. Disappointment creeping like sorrow over him, then eroding,
washing away: the night moving with tidal certainty, alone and then not
alone.
Not dreams, for once, but experience.
When he reaches the bottom of the second coffee, his thoughts are
clearer. He is more in control, less prone to wander through his sense
memory, and this can only be an improvement. Less fleshy, more cerebral:
This is his training coming through.
By turning that tide with a few simple words for a vampire, he had swung
momentarily alone and shiftless; when the water rushes out, the sand
sucks wetly at the air. But it cools, then, under the moon.
It must the aftereffects of THC that are driving him from the cerebral
headlong into that twisty, spit-soaked realm of imagination and fantasy.
Likening himself to sand and Daniel to the moon? That is not his
training.
More coffee.
This, however, *is* his training. She will return: He had assured Angel
of this, and it is true. When she does, everything will revert to
normal. Normal is a Watcher and a Slayer. It is supposed to be an
exclusive pair, drawn together and set against the rest of the world.
And although Giles has always been put off by the cloying, inherent
paternalism of the arrangement, he can appreciate its simplicity.
Knowledge and strength, experience and youth.
It is that very simplicity that has fallen apart in Sunnydale. Almost
immediately, the simple arithmetic collapsed, became complicated into
various non-Euclidean dimensions. First, friends in the know, determined
to accompany, assist, and learn. Then a vampire with a soul. All those
complications, however, revolved around Buffy. If she cannot be said to
have instigated them, nonetheless they referred to, affected, her. And
Giles remained as far as possible the traditional Watcher, hide-bound,
bookish, and resourceful.
The Manichean simplicity of the traditional arrangement, light versus
dark, pair versus world, cannot easily hold, not permanently. He just
isn't simple enough to persist like this indefinitely. Giles is very,
very good at playing his father; years of creating disappointment and
fostering recrimination taught him everything he needs to know about
that. He is not, however, his father. Nor is it a simple case of his own
reversal and return, of a short, straight path from good to, well,
Eyghon, then back to good, back to the fold. It was never that simple,
and never can be.
He knows that it is much more complicated than a turn and return. For
the children, and Miss Calendar, even for the deliberate, stubborn
enigma that Angel is, he can and will remain traditional. That is who
and what they need: At least one clear example of the simple version of
the world. For all the others know, he has always been a middle-aged,
sexless librarian. Crows' feet and nary a pinch of skin between his
legs.
For all he pretends, he has lapsed and returned, consigning all hint of
transgression to the past.
Daniel disrupts that clean, linear progression. Well before he ever
touched the ink on his skin, he swerved gracefully into Giles's path. It
took a single swerve, puff of warm, smoky breath, and everything
rearranged itself.
He sees now the rearrangement, sees how without her, he has been a fool.
In a grotesque parody of mourning, he has been clinging to all the old
roles, reenacting all the old familiar patterns out of desperation. Like
the worst kind of spurned lover, unable to accept that it is over, he
has been faithfully donning his Havisham-tweeds.
It is not over. Paused, perhaps, but she will return. And when she does,
he will know who to be. Where simplicity cannot be taken for granted, it
can certainly be constructed. This is precisely how he has always
handled his past. Consignment and construction, invoking every familiar
narrative of fall and redemption to shape his actions.
Daniel's presence is proportional to the time Giles has left: nothing so
overwhelming as wizardry and orgies, simply one small boy with a twisty
lips and wide, shadowed eyes. His presence is thus all the easier to
contain and construct in the space of the summer. And isn't that the
thrill of repression? When you wrap up your shame tight and small, it
tastes all the better for having been hidden.
She will return.
In the meantime, he has all he needs: a fresh cup of coffee,
toasted-cheese sandwich, and an afternoon to think about Daniel.
He moves in contented calm around the flat, tending to all the household
things he has let slip lately. Straightens the books, dusts the
trinkets, folds the laundry.
/
Oz wakes up happy and horny. Pretty hard to distinguish one from the
other, actually, so not really "and", more like a dash. Or a run-on
word: happyhorny. He just sort of drifts up from sleep, feeling his body
coalesce and thicken back into reality, dick and tongue a little thicker
than the rest of him. Edging up on one elbow to survey the room. Devon
sleeps next to him, on his stomach; looks like he was dropped out of a
plane without a parachute, and this is where he landed. Lissa sits on
the windowseat, paging through an old _MRnR_, licking the ink off her
fingers, not that it'll help. She lifts her head and observes, obviously
amused, as he struggles to climb off the bed without waking Dev, to find
the floor without landing on Eric, wrapped up tight in the sleeping bag.
Sleeping on his back like Dracula.
He joins her on the low seat, curling his legs back behind him and
leaning his head on her shoulder. Her hair tickles his nose: damp, and
it smells like raspberries.
"Already showered?" Whispered and croaky. God, he sounds like he has
emphysema or something.
She grins. "I've been up forever, little man." She's whispering, too,
but it sounds better than his. Low and sweet.
"Why?"
Lissa leans back against him. "Cause I went to bed at a relatively
civilized hour. Unlike some people."
"Oh." He raises his head. He wants to kiss her; she smells good, and
she's pretty.
She pokes him in the ribs with a very sharp elbow. "You stink, Oz."
"I do?" He sniffs one pit. "Yeah, I do. Sorry."
Bracing her hand on his thigh, and that just jacks up the whole
happy-horny thing, Lissa leans over and retrieves another magazine from
the floor. _National Geographic_: it's got a whole history of woolly
mammoths. "It's okay," she says. "Just-- morning breath."
"Got it." Oz rests his chin on her shoulder, watching her turn the
pages. It's annoying to watch tv when someone else has the remote, but
watching someone else read is incredibly calming.
"You gonna do something about that?" Lissa asks, running her thumb down
the fold-out map of Borneo.
"Huh?" What can he do about Borneo? He's not even sure where Borneo is;
he used to think it was imaginary and sunken, like Atlantis. But if it's
in the Geographic, it's probably real. Should ask Giles about that.
"Chubby little Oz, Jr. there." Lissa turns to the crappy watercolor
painting of mammoths shuffling across the tundra.
"Yeah," Oz says. "Probably should, huh?"
"I'm no doctor, but it would seem like a good idea."
Oz unfolds his legs and leans over his knees, pressing his belly against
his hard-on. It hurts, like chewing off a hangnail.
"I could go downstairs," Lissa says, closing the magazine. She obviously
doesn't like mammoths as much as he does. "If you and Dev want some
privacy. Or is the librarian stopping by?" Wicked smile she's got there.
He glances sideways at her and slips his arm around her waist. He sucks
at this, knows the expression he's trying to make right now will be way
more Groucho Marx waggle than Steve McQueen smirk, but he tries anyway.
Lissa shoves him away with one small hand. Yeah, Groucho strikes out
again.
"Hit the showers, kiddo." She stands up and rolls her neck. "I'll go get
some grub, okay?"
Devon always claims he gets the best ideas in the shower; maybe Oz is
doing something wrong, but he tends to zone out in here. And, yeah, he
tends to zone out everywhere, so it's not like that's news or anything.
He doesn't know who he wants. Is he allowed to want Lissa and Dev and
Giles? And also that tall Scottish girl at the coffee place who's so
used to him she just pockets his change now? His math seems off; he's
pretty sure there are way too many integers here, but it's not like this
is a situation where he can show his work for partial credit.
Showered and shivering, he helps Lissa make mac and cheese and realizes,
as he stirs in an extra half-packet of cheese powder and she wrinkles
her nose, that he doesn't want her, not really. Because all he's
thinking about as he stirs the neon glop is how Giles was right here. In
his kitchen, only a couple hours ago. Drinking beer and smoking up and
not really caring how hard Oz was looking at him.
"You sticking around today?" He hands Lissa her half of the macaroni.
She picks at it, delicately shaking as much sauce off the noodles as she
can before tasting it with pursed lips. "Thought I might," she says.
"There's that _21 Jump Street_ marathon on F/X."
Oz nods and swallows. "Forgot about that."
"You're going to the library, aren't you?"
"Probably."
"Probably definitely." Smiling, almost smirking, Lissa pushes her bowl
away. "Take this, I can't deal with it."
"Cool." He gobbles it up, feeling it congeal into this huge, warm lump
in the pit of his stomach. "Tell my mom I'll be back for dinner, 'kay?"
"If you still have a stomach, sure."
He walks all the way to school, but the library's closed. Just Dave
pushing a broom lazily down the hall. Shit.
He stops by the coffee place, but the Scot's not working. Shit.
When he gets home, Lissa and his mom are drinking iced tea and talking
about menstrual cups at the kitchen table. Effectively erasing any good
Giles-related-memories associated with it. He retreats upstairs, but
there's no sign of Devon beyond the earring he finds in the covers when
the hook pokes into his arm. Shit squared.
He dozes off, and when he wakes up again, it's almost dark. Still horny,
though.
He wants to talk to Giles. Grasshopper must learn patience, however, so
he flops back on the bed and takes up a book. If he's going to deny
himself Giles, at least he can do something Giles-y. Other options --
basically that Jump Street marathon or old Hanna-Barbera shorts -- are
so not Giles-y. Giles-esque? Gilesian?
Besides, he's probably seen them all anyway.
Patience is overrated.
/
The phone rings as Giles stands in front of the open refrigerator. He
could do all the house-tending in the world, and he would still forget
the groceries. He answers, tucking the phone between neck and shoulder,
returning to contemplate the distinct lack of food in his possession.
"Hey." Daniel? It is Daniel, and were he a teenaged girl, he's sure he
would squeal. "Thought you'd be at the library."
"It's nearly 8:30 at night."
"Yeah, but still."
"What is it, Daniel?"
"I was all set to leave a message."
"Shall I ring off, then?"
"Nah."
Silence. He cannot fathom how young people spend their waking lives on
the phone, although giggles and squeals do seem to fill the time. "How
are you?" Giles asks finally.
"Good."
"Sleep well?"
"Yeah."
The telephone is not, perhaps, the best vehicle for communicating with
Daniel. If he were here, Giles could see his eyes, conjecture his mood
and guess his intent from a lift of the brow or quirk of the lips. He
closes his eyes at the thought of those lips, and grips the counter
until his fingers ache.
"What are you doing?" Daniel asks. "Right now, I mean."
"I'm making dinner, actually."
"Yeah? What's on?"
"That's the question, isn't it?"
Daniel laughs, and transferred through wires and plastic and whatever
computer chips make up telephones these days, the sound is staticky and
quite pleasant. "What've you got on hand?"
"Er--. Hmm." Giles scans the cupboards. "Tinned tomatoes. Tuna, and--"
He checks the refrigerator again. "One rather limp stalk of celery."
"House is overrun with vegetables. I could bring you some zucchini,"
Daniel says. The pause before he speaks again, if he will speak again,
is a long one. Giles thinks he can hear the boy swallow. He really must
be extraordinarily shy. "If that's okay."
Giles leans against the wall, transferring the phone, hot and sticky now
with sweat, to the other ear. "Feed the lonely bachelor, is it?"
"Yeah. Good deed for the day. Gimme like half an hour."
"All right." And the connection breaks.
He cannot imagine, and he does try, inviting Daniel into his house.
Construction of normalcy is one thing, but that requires a great deal of
restraint and dedication. Both are rather difficult to summon when the
subject itself is in your home.
In all likelihood, the boy will never arrive. Once distracted, his
purpose dropped like a loose thread, he'll find himself tuning his
guitar or staring glassy-eyed at cartoons.
Still, it is nice to be thought of.
/
Oz takes another shower; he *was* asleep, hence he needs a shower. This
time he doesn't zone out. He's pretty hyper. Definitely jittery. This
makes dressing difficult, since he's actually putting something on with
buttons, and his fingers are all slippy and jumpy. But it's Giles's
*house*, and that calls for some kind of attention and care. Like the
last of Dev's good pomade and a pair of fairly clean cords.
His mom might be onto something with her whole cleaning hang-up. His
closet is pretty much an extension of his room, so crammed with crap
he's surprised he's managed to dress himself lately. And he can't find
his tie. Last time he wore it was someone's funeral, and it bothered him
like hell, so why does he want to wear it now?
Fuck it.
He grabs enough squash to fill a grocery sack and leaves a note on the
kitchen table, and it doesn't matter any more that the Giles-memories
are gone from it.
Because he gets to see Giles's kitchen. In his house.
And his house is where?
/
"Hey, Giles." Daniel sounds strange, almost insistent. This is hardly
his usual drawl, and it is cut through with strange rattling sounds.
"Um, where do you live?"
"Where are you?" Giles reaches for the decanter of whisky, suddenly
needing to steady his hands.
"Van. Driving."
That would explain the screeching rattle. Giles sips his drink and
closes his eyes briefly.
"So, address?" Daniel asks, and hadn't Giles replied? He takes another
sip.
So it appears that he will be hosting Daniel tonight.
Wonders not ceasing, and such.
/
Giles is a mess in the kitchen, just incredibly hopeless. He gets in the
way, trips over his own feet, and chops weirdly, like he's more used to
hacking at things with an axe than slicing zucchini.
"How long have you lived alone, anyway?"
Oz has positioned Giles in the doorway, because this is going to take
twice as long if he insists on staying underfoot. And the whole point of
pasta puttanesca is how *quick* it is. Just dump veggies and tuna in the
tomatoes and pour over pasta. The Frugal Gourmet talked for almost half
a show about that. Also something about prostitutes.
Giles sips his stinky brown drink and wrinkles his brows.
"That long, huh?"
He gets a smile for that, and Oz pauses for a second, cocking his head
to get a better view of the grooves the smile draws in Giles's cheeks.
The sauce spits at him, landing right on his hand, and he turns back to
stirring the tuna into the tomatoes.
No ogling during cooking. He should write The Frugal Gourmet about that
rule.
/
Daniel insists, fairly sternly, on clearing the table and filling the
dishwasher after dinner, leaving Giles to circulate uncomfortably around
his own living room. The boy is distinctly different this evening:
dressed in trousers only a size too big and a button-down shirt just a
size too small, as if for his confirmation, despite the dark purple
lacquer on his short nails, stern in the kitchen, almost talkative over
dinner.
"Done," Daniel says, emerging from the kitchen. "Hey, music."
Giles flips idly through his records, looking over his shoulder at
Daniel. He perches on the edge of the couch and rattles the ice cubes in
his glass. Slowly, Giles realizes Daniel is trying to get his attention.
"Sorry," he mumbles. "I thought you might enjoy this."
"You're not going to give me that vinyl is superior to digital speech,
are you?"
Giles looks down at the record in his hands. "It's a speech?"
"Yeah. Analog is truer to the performance. The sound is richer. Fuller.
You know." Daniel sits back, arms loosely crossed. He appears to be
studying Giles's face again, and Giles would like to know just how he
manages to look simultaneously intent and serene.
"I had no idea I was so predictable."
"Not you. The speech." Daniel drums his fingers on the couch's arm, but
his expression has not changed. Giles thinks that he knows him well
enough to understand that the gesture is a parody of impatience, and not
the real thing at all.
"I fail to see the difference."
Daniel smiles slowly enough to make Giles's throat ache. "Big
difference, Giles."
"Oh? Enlighten me, then." Harsher than he had intended, and he shakes
his head in apology.
"Snarky much?"
Giles sits on the armchair, leaning forward, towards Daniel. "No. I'm
curious."
"Oh. Okay." Daniel leans forward, tilting his head and squinting into
the far corner of the room, well behind Giles. "You listen to music when
you drive?"
"On occasion."
"All right. So, radio's playing. Or tape. Doesn't matter. Windows down,
wind blowing in. Cars passing. Maybe sirens somewhere across town.
Little snatches of conversation from pedestrians when you're stopped at
a light."
Giles closes his eyes. "Yes."
"Sounds good, huh?" Daniel's voice is soft, nearly coaxing. Giles feels
the Scotch at last, tentative warmth slipping around his belly, through
his chest. Touching his cheeks.
"Yes."
"Or, okay, get this. Someone else's party. CDs on shuffle. Bug zapper
going off, frying 'em dead. Girl laughing. You don't know anyone. Dark
and a little smoky. Bonfire, maybe? Stale chips that stick to the roof
of your mouth and make that damp squeaky noise when you chew."
"Yes."
"Sounds good?"
"It does."
Daniel touches his wrist and Giles opens his eyes. "Right," Daniel says.
"That's all I'm getting at."
"Which is what, precisely?" The boy's gaze is back on him, and Giles
knows he should straighten his posture, perhaps cross his legs, as it
occurs to him, rather vaguely, that he is flushed and half-hard.
"You listen other times. Not just when you're alone. Brandy in hand,
lights dimmed low." Daniel sits back, apparently satisfied that he has
made his point.
"Although that's nice," Giles says, and the protest sounds weak, even to
him.
"Sure it is. But the speech? Those guys *only* listen then."
Giles likes the sound of that. He's not one of *those guys*. It's a
start.
/
Oz isn't drinking tonight. He wants to stay alert, wants to be able to
remember everything. Maybe Giles will teach him how to catalogue
details, cross-reference according to each of the five senses. That way,
when he's old, or drunk, whatever, he'll be able to summon up the
memories with a quick flip through the long box of cards.
He'd have to use the cards, because the memories would be about Giles,
and it only seems appropriate that he should have to write out each
memory by hand on the 3x5 rectangle. He can see himself hunched over
that long table in the library, Giles standing above him with a big book
in his hands, reading out arcane rules. In his fantasy, Oz understands
the rules, and nods quickly. Impatient with himself, somehow embarrassed
that Giles needs to remind him, but then Giles will pat his shoulder,
once, gently, and he'll understand that it's not lack of trust or
anything. Just help. Then Giles will crouch beside him, arm around the
back of Oz's chair, and chuckle at whatever memory Oz is currently
crafting. Draw him close, ruffle his hair as he kisses Oz's cheek and
suggests another memory.
Like this one: that slack, blissed-out look on Giles's face when Oz was
babbling about music.
Or this one: the warmth of Giles's skin, warm just like anyone else's,
but memorable because it's still flaming away on Oz's fingertips.
Or this: the heady, thick scent of Giles's whisky, the way it lightens
and disperses, mixes with the smell of limes, when it's on Giles's
breath.
Or: Giles rising to flip the record, the cords of the muscles in his
back twisting into his waist, so strong it radiates from him and socks
Oz right in the gut.
He's going to kiss Giles.
/
"Daniel? What--"
/
*Fuck*.
/
Daniel gazes at the floor with knitted brows, his lip almost trembling,
shoulders hunched around his ears. Giles knows the feeling, because he
is trembling, too. The brush of lips on his own, the clutch of a small
hand on his shoulder, then the shove away, far harder than he'd
intended: It had all barely lasted a moment, yet the shivers wracking
him are worthy of some cataclysm.
"Please?"
Giles shakes his head and Daniel's sigh is harsh, like fabric ripping.
"Not that," Daniel says. "Just--. Just sit down, okay?"
He is hovering, he knows this, nearly looming, but he can hardly sit
back down. Daniel scrubs a fist against one eye and falls back against
the couch. His eyes are dark and wet. "Sit, please? I promise not to
attack you again."
Giles perches gingerly on the couch, keeping a full cushion-length
between them. "I-I don't know quite what to say."
"Don't say anything."
He has to say something, has to seem to have the situation in hand.
"There are all sorts of masks and roles we must use," Giles says. The
clichs taste bitter on his tongue, but he finds himself incapable of
thinking clearly enough to find an original way of expressing it. "That
we're expected to play. That we need to play."
"For ages 13 and above." Daniel will not look at him, but at least he is
responding.
"Pardon?"
"Oh. Jigsaw puzzles," he says. "They're sorted by how hard they are, who
can handle them. Ages 3 to 103, age 8 and up. And for some reason, the
difficulty is only a matter of how many pieces there are. See, the
really hard ones? They're usually more than a thousand pieces, and
they're always marked ages 13 and above."
It is the longest speech he has ever heard the boy utter. Giles's
stomach clenches at the thought that it was spoken here and now, with
such an empty tone that Daniel could have been reading the phone book
aloud for all the emotion he is showing. Patently unfair that it took a
fumbled kiss and rough shove to shake loose the boy's voice. "Puzzles."
"Yeah, I dunno," Daniel says, giving that faint half-shrug he seems to
use when convinced of his own foolishness. Giles knows that shrug, too.
He uses it often. "Maybe you get a secret solution book at your bar
mitzvah or something."
"Age 13?" Giles asks. Puzzled, but they are talking again, which is more
than he should have hoped for. Perhaps it is his tone, reedy from the
tension closing his throat, or perhaps Daniel feels he has nothing left
to lose after Giles's violent rejection, but he shifts closer to Giles.
He keeps his hands in his lap, and eyes downcast, but the distance is
thinning between them.
"Right. Makes me think that we're all sort of constantly jigged and cut
around, the older we get. More pieces, more edges."
Giles tries to picture this, sees little puzzle people traipsing around
a child's green landscape, their unjoined edges flapping in the breeze.
He smiles at Daniel and believes that he can actually see the relief
flashing in the boy's eyes at the kindness. Daniel smiles back at him,
hesitantly, then more broadly. His emotions are, Giles thinks, more
changeable than the proverbial weather.
"Yeah," Daniel says, smile narrowing, clearly thinking. "Emptier, the
more edges there are. But, like, more opportunities, too."
After that smile, it must be safe now to touch him. Kindly, paternally,
slip an arm around his shoulders. Daniel collapses against him as
quickly as spilled paint: one moment safe and contained, the next
soaking him with his boneless body. "You're an unusual boy."
Daniel blinks up at him, cocking his head. "Oh, I'm pretty usual.
Believe me."
Crisis not-so-deftly averted, but nonetheless averted, Giles tilts his
head back and listens to the music Daniel had chosen. Red Rodney with
Bird, because, Daniel says, of redhead solidarity. Giles does not point
out that Daniel is only genotypically, not phenomenally, a redhead. He
is not interested in arguing, or, indeed, in saying very much at all.
The soft pressure of Daniel against his side, barely heavier than a
blanket, and the eerily high notes off the trombone reassure him.
When the record finishes, Daniel rises and holds out his hand for Giles
to shake. He issues an invitation to a barbecue on Saturday, and then he
is gone, head bobbing away into the darkness before Giles can rouse
himself and closes the door.
That wasn't so hard. He appears to have improved markedly at
constructing the normal.
/
Thinking with his dick? Oz is never going to learn what a stupid idea
that is.
Of course, he's never going to forget the shock and loathing contorting
Giles's face when he leaned in for the kiss, either.
Cross-reference shock and loathing with disgust and disappointment. Oh,
and humiliation. Can't forget humiliation.
And why the fuck did he invite him to Devon's birthday party, anyway?
Suave: Sorry I jumped you, thanks for not punching me, and, hey, come to
my party.
/
Giles finds Daniel in the back yard, behind the squat old barbecue,
mulberry-shaded hair barely peeking over the billowing smoke. He holds a
pair of tongs and turns them carefully back and forth. As Giles moves
closer, he sees that the tongs hold half an eggplant. Its burgundy skin
sizzles over the flames and weeps condensation as it cracks opens.
Daniel flicks his wrist, and the eggplant's pale flesh darkens in the
flames.
"Babaghanoush," Daniel says, lifting the tongs slightly. He is not
meeting Giles's eyes, but, of course, he is busy with the roasting.
"Of course."
"Better when you roast it first. There's tofu pups, too."
Giles raises the six-pack in his hand. "Where should I--?" he asks just
as Daniel turns, dropping the now-charred eggplant into a shallow bowl.
"Glad you came," he says quietly. "Oh, beer. Good." He wipes his hands
on the seat of his shorts and straightens up. "Follow me."
/
He's not going to deal with Giles right now. He's going to concentrate
on passing out the food, emptying ash trays, and tending to Devon. It's
Devon's birthday, it's only right.
Not that Dev needs tending. He's standing on the patio railing, Burger
King crown askew on his head, and declaiming song lyrics to an
appreciative audience. How is that narcissism can be so hot?
Later, when the party's in gear and he's run out of things to distract
himself with, then he'll deal with Giles.
Or not.
/
He is flattered that Daniel apparently sees little reason not to include
him among his other friends, that he is trusted to move among their
company. He is flattered and more than a little confused. He supposes he
half-expected Daniel to play gracious host, set up conversations for
him, circulate expertly, save him from any potential discomfort. The
party is smaller than he had imagined; of course, not every teenage
American party will be a raucous, debauched mob scene, despite what
television and films seem to believe. The party, if something so mellow
can be called a party, is not like that at all. In fact, it's much more
like the parties of his own youth, whose energy pulsed along slow,
twisting paths.
/
Oz replenishes the ice in the cooler on the patio and dumps abandoned
drinks, gritty with dunked cigarette ash, down the sink. He's always
refill-cleanup guy at these things, and he enjoys it. This way, he can
be present without necessarily participating, and gets first dibs on
food: the whole two birds-one stone thing.
He shakes powdery parmesan and oregano over the slices of pita, sprays
on his mom's good olive oil, and slides the tray under the broiler. Eric
and Lissa are already hovering and he shoos them out of the kitchen,
feeling very territorial. When the cheese starts to bubble and brown, he
wraps his hand in the hem of his shirt and tugs the tray out onto the
counter. He's never gotten the hang of dumping them off the tray into
the bowl without losing half, so he settles for the safe method and
worries each piece loose with the spatula.
Eric and Lissa descend on him as soon as he's out the door, and he lets
them grab their pieces, smirking when they shriek, dropping them like,
well, hot potatoes. Hugging the bowl to his chest, he stops in the
doorway, considering. The party's going pretty well: There seems to be a
good mix of people, someone finally took the Offspring off the stereo
and slotted in Syd Barrett, and, hey, the girl next to Devon just took
her shirt off, complaining about the heat.
Oz pushes off from the wall, setting himself adrift on the party's
current of babble, music, and bodies.
He finds Giles half-sitting on the arm of the patio bench, arms loosely
crossed, trying to explain something to a sophomore whose name Oz
thinks, but wouldn't swear, is Nonie. Oz leans against Giles's side,
trying to catch up on the conversation. That's all, just trying to hear
better over the music.
"But it's not like that," Nonie says. "Hippies were everywhere."
Giles glances down at Oz, and this is nice, the way their eyes meet and
a smile goes between them before Giles returns his attention to Nonie.
"Of course," he says. "There's no arguing that hippies could be found
anywhere in the West at that time. B-but we can't let that obscure the
fact that a great deal of fervent activity a-a-and revolutionary results
were accomplished outside of the, er, hippie milieu." At some point, his
arm has slipped around Oz's back. Nice. He forgot how good this feels,
kind of gathered in and held close.
"Like Woodstock?"
"I was thinking more of Prague Spring, the Langlois riots in Paris, or
Stonewall, because Woodstock might--"
Nonie shakes her head, blonde hair whipping across her face. "It was way
important!"
Oz has also forgotten how much he likes Giles's patience, how he tilts
his head just a bit and listens, face impassive. He doesn't agree with
her at all, but he's not going to make her feel bad about it.
"Pita chip?" Oz lifts the bowl. "Anyone?"
/
Giles has not seen Daniel for a good while now, and it is starting to
get late. Late in the party, late in the summer. Nearly a week without
his presence, and he thinks he may be going mad, or at the very least,
lonely.
When the shadows have lengthened nearly across the entire yard and the
first fireflies flicker into evidence, the guests start to rise,
gathering clothes and partners, moving almost as one inside. The
barbecue is doused and the patio doors slide shut and are latched. The
children rearrange themselves in the den and kitchen, conversations
smoothly continued. They are clearly used to getting out of the dark; at
this age, it must be a long-standing habit, so familiar as to be
unconscious.
"Washroom?" Giles asks a vaguely familiar female face that emerges from
the dark. She shrugs. "Toilet?"
"Around there." She points in the general direction from which Giles has
come.
"Thank you," he says, although he's already alone again. He pushes
forward, into the kitchen, into the harsh glare of fluorescent light.
Everything goes sharp but insubstantial.
As his eyes adjust, and the door cuts off the worst of the booming
music, he hears a moan, then that faint, moist slipping sound that can
only be lips on skin. Patches of purple and white, scarlet and pale blue
resolve themselves into figures.
He sees Daniel on the counter, thin legs wrapped around someone's
red-clad waist, ankles locked. Watches the worn trainers flex and push
against Devon's--it is Devon, those molded jeans and shiny red shirt can
only mean Devon--ass. Sees the taller boy's head slide down Daniel's
throat, Daniel's fingers tangling white and bony in the short curls.
Watches as Daniel tips back his head against the cabinets, as his eyes,
heavy-lidded, nearly closed, open for a moment and then flutter shut as
he moans again. Almost keening now as Devon's sharp elbow moves back and
forth, hand working Daniel's cock.
Giles watches; backs out the door; turns blindly in the dark noise;
escapes out of the house; stumbles across the yard. Into his car. His
eyes glued open, breath long gone from his chest, he drives as if in a
nightmare, effortlessly but terrified. Only at home does he realize he
still bites his lip. Blood has begun to congeal around his teeth, at the
back of his throat.
5. Banging into Floats
======================
Oz won't listen to himself. He knows that the party hadn't been that
bad. Kind of small, maybe too many seniors who made the kids nervous,
and there was the fight in the bathroom, but nothing out of the
ordinary. The party wasn't to blame. All the same, he tells himself that
the party sucked, and that's why Giles has disappeared.
Oz knows he can blame the sucky party all he wants, and it's not going
to be true. He's been trying for a week now, and it just won't take. No
amount of superglue and duct tape is going to let him stick the party
with the blame. The party was fine.
He is such an asshole. Stayed out of sight and across rooms and holed up
in the pantry, leaving Giles to wander around like some poor lost dog
begging for scraps. Not that it makes any sense that Giles came in the
first place. It didn't seem like he'd come when Oz invited him. Except
for the whole politeness thing. Man probably thanks the sun for coming
up in the morning.
Jesus, he's hungover these days. Cranky, too.
/
Daniel appears to operate within his own slip of space, more porous and
flexible than others'. So when he was close, Giles never felt crowded or
irritated, simply somehow enlarged. And Daniel likes to be close. Giles
doesn't know if it's his age, although none of Buffy's friends,
especially not Buffy, ever stray, let alone linger, so close to him. At
seventeen, Giles himself was constantly jittery, a moment away from
kicking in a wall. He could barely stand his *own* skin. It could be
Daniel's height, an effect of being smaller, such that he likes sharing
space: It gives him a leg up, as it were.
Whatever the reason, he does know that this is simply how Daniel *is*,
that he likes to be close. He liked to lean against Giles, sprawl on
Devon's lap, give backrubs to the girls, braid hair.
That closeness, that affection, could have been his, almost was his, to
enjoy, but for his own obstinacy and blindness.
And yet Giles suspects in darker moods that no one should be quite such
a fount of physical affection, so freely given. That it must be a mark
of some failing or flaw to exist so porously, with so few boundaries. He
can't help but think that Daniel's affection loses something for being
so casually offered. Much like the sprinklers that have been in the news
lately: In the interests of water conservation, the state outlawed those
whirling spigots that hurl water across most of the sidewalk and up the
hedges. Clearly, he had been spending a little too much time with
Daniel, if he is still thinking in these surreal similes. Affection that
soaks bystanders.
That doesn't mean that he doesn't miss it.
While Eric Blair would be less than impressed with the sequence of
negatives in that particular phrase, Giles finds it far easier to state
it that way, rather than plainly. Positively. To admit that he does miss
Daniel is to admit his own failure, yet again, to act in anything
resembling a decisive manner. He cannot help but feel relegated to the
sidelines once more, stuffed with regret. Starting to choke on it.
/
Every summer Oz forgets how wonky time gets, all stretchy and empty. A
week lasts much, much longer when you don't have anything to do. He's
been sleeping a lot, then staying up late, waiting for something,
anything, to happen. All that happens is this deepening sense of
certainty that he really is an asshole.
He's been playing a hell of a lot of Megaman, too, regressing to this
happy little place where he's twelve again and the SNES is his whole
world. He plays til the pad of his thumb feels raw and blistered and his
hands are curved into freaky claws. No more Zelda, though, not after
that nightmare where Giles morphed into Ganon, complete with the tower
looming behind him and the blue bat face.
In Giles's absence, he's reduced all feeling to something rote, this
boring, shuffled-through routine: the kind of thing he hates, action and
thought boiled down to the simplest catchphrases. Studying for tests is
like this, like he's barely here, just enough to string along until the
bell rings. Playing the same game every day from the first level through
is like this, his fingers better at it than his head.
He stops by school every afternoon. Sometimes he bums a smoke from Dave
the janitor and they talk cars and the Clippers. At 6:30 every night, he
calls Giles and leaves a message. *The* message. Hey. Hope you're okay.
Call me? It's Oz. Daniel. Every night, the beeps on the machine last the
same amount of time, so he knows Giles is checking messages. Or someone
is, housesitter, whatever. Giles is checking them, just not calling
back.
Maybe Oz is going single-white-female here, maybe he's turning into some
kind of bored, shuffly, fairly inept stalker. But the routine of it is
all he has, and definitely all he can handle. Going all Buffalo Bill
with the night-vision goggles, staking out Giles's apartment? Not his
style. He just doesn't have the energy.
/
Once Giles realized, however belatedly, that Buffy would come back, it
was as if the next several weeks became his own. He could see the
calendar in his mind's eye, just as in old films, the pages flipping off
until September appeared. Xander had been right after all; he really
ought to give the boy more credit. He is not needed until September,
does not exist until then. And that had been a relief.
There is nothing wrong with Daniel; he is a child. Nothing wrong with
him, nor with his affection. Certainly it is liberally-granted, catholic
in its range of objects and effects. The fault, however, lies with
Giles, with his choice to believe such affection meant something when it
happened to hit him, however glancingly. He confused his own desire for
the boy with a few innocent, affectionate touches, converted them into
fuel for his own fantasies, conflated an arcing, silver spray with his
need to be touched.
Still, the boy *had* kissed him, or tried to do so.
/
He's the kid, right? He gets to be impetuous and stupid.
So he gets another shove--maybe a black eye this time!--for his efforts.
It's not like he has any dignity left anyway.
And, yeah, stupid. He mentioned stupid already, right?
/
Giles is resting on the bed, suffering through another bout with
lassitude, when he hears the knocking at the door. He fumbles for his
glasses on the bedside table, managing to smear the lenses with the heel
of his hand as he grabs at them, struggling to sit up. He honestly has
no idea who it could be; the sun will not set for hours, yet Angel is
the only, er, soul he can think of. Perhaps Willow has returned from
camp?
He doesn't know what day it is, which, considering the cinematic
calendar in his head, is decidedly pathetic.
Glasses fairly clean and shirt tucked back in, he takes the stairs two
at a time. The knocking has not lessened, and has in fact begun to sound
almost mechanical in its steady repetitiveness. He remembers a beat too
late to check the spyhole, hand scrabbling instead with the heavy latch.
Daniel leans against the trellis, chewing on a thumbnail, looking for
all the world as if he has been there for hours. Someone else must have
come along and knocked for him, because he looks like he has not moved
in a good while.
"Daniel?"
"Yeah." The boy pulls back, although Giles doesn't think he has moved.
He leans a little against the door. "Sorry to bother you. But I just
wanted--"
"Are you coming inside?"
Daniel narrows his eyes at that and shrugs. "Okay?"
Giles steps aside as Daniel shuffles past him, stopping just inside the
door. He turns, crossing his arms around his waist. The gesture tightens
the fabric of his shirt across his chest and waist, setting off the lean
musculature of his arms and torso, but also making him look all of five
years old. A scolded and abashed toddler. Giles motions weakly at the
living room, inviting him to sit. He reminds himself to keep his gaze in
motion, but fails as Daniel shrugs again. The hem of his shirt jumps an
inch, revealing a thin stripe of parchment-pale skin and the ruffle of
elastic on his boxers peeking over the sagging waistband of his pants.
"Giles?" Daniel is almost whispering, his voice hoarse and faint. The
toe of one trainer scuffs at the floor, then slips around the other
ankle. Daniel sways for a moment, and Giles clenches a fist in his
pocket to keep from reaching out and steadying him.
"What is it?" He sounds so strained and impatient in his own ears, and
swallows a few times, succeeding only in drying his mouth further.
"I didn't want to bother you, okay?" He pauses, and Giles reminds
himself to nod. "That was the first thing. Second thing was I'm sorry.
And that sounds really stupid, but I am. Sorry."
"What time is it?" That sounds better, somewhat crisper. Daniel blinks
at him as Giles crosses to the kitchen.
"Um, four? Four-thirty?"
"Nearly cocktail hour, then." Giles takes down two highball glasses and
carries them back to the dining table. "Will you join me?"
"Yeah." Daniel shuffles over, hands in his pockets, head held downward
at what must be an uncomfortable angle. "You heard me, right?"
Giles concentrates on pouring the vermouth without shaking so much that
it spills and spoils the table's finish. "I heard you," he says, setting
down the decanter, handing Daniel his glass. He raises his own and,
without quite knowing why, winks at the boy.
Daniel lifts his glass and sips it tentatively. Grimacing, he sets it
back down on a coaster. "Sweet. You heard?" He lets out his breath.
"Okay. Right. That's good."
Giles swallows half his drink and clears his throat. "But what are you
apologizing for?"
Daniel runs his finger around the rim of his glass, hitches in a breath,
and takes another sip. More boldly, this time. His upper lip twitches as
he swallows. "For the party. For being an asshole."
"Please don't. There's no need to apologize, especially not to me."
Giles finishes off his drink and pours another. "With whom you sleep is
entirely your own business."
With a harsh, wet noise, Daniel sucks in his lip against his teeth. A
small, fleshy wrinkle forms between his eyebrows. With his head at that
angle, Giles cannot see where his eyes are looking. He presses on.
"That is, of course, I'd hope you were, uh, protecting yourself. Being
careful. As for your choice of partners, Daniel--"
"Giles?" Daniel sits down on the nearest chair, wrapping his arms around
his waist again, bending slightly as if cramping up. "I don't--"
"I don't comprehend why you'd feel the need to apologize, I really
don't," Giles says. "To me, of all people."
"Giles? What are you talking about?" Daniel picks up his glass, peering
intently as he swishes the liquor around.
"Er, what?" Yes, perhaps he had fumbled, but the situation could not
have been more clear. After all, he's been replaying the scene like a
scratchy stag film for over a week now.
"What are you talking about? 'Cause I'm trying to apologize and you're
-- What?" Daniel sloshes the vermouth with a jerk of his hand; it spills
over his thumb and he licks it off. It must be a mixture of his tone,
genuinely puzzled, and the sight of the tip of his tongue, but Giles
feels his balance draining away, grips the back of the sofa, lowering
himself into it.
"I don't quite know," Giles admits. "I thought you were--. Good Lord."
He understands now; perhaps not fully, but better. Why, indeed, should
Daniel apologize for what he witnessed in the kitchen? Sine there is no
need for an apology, outside of the crevices of his own jealous heart,
what is the boy sorry for? Surely not the kiss; its end was his fault,
all his. "Oh, Daniel, I--"
"Tell me," Daniel says.
Giles cannot read his tone; he has no idea if he is angry, or stricken
with boredom. He decides for the moment to trust the words themselves.
Shaking his head slightly, Giles hears himself speak. "I was--.
Surprised. To say the least. Surprised when-- when--"
"When what?" Daniel does sound a bit gentler now, and quite puzzled.
Giles knows that he is a fool. "Surprised when I saw you. In the
kitchen, with Devon."
/
"Me and Dev," Oz says. "Okay." This is not what he's expecting to hear.
Giles is a cool guy; he can't really be freaking about him fucking
around with Devon?
"But you like girls, yes? That Japanese girl, at the concert--"
"Margaret? She's Filipino." He *is* freaking. Oh, God. He knows now he
should have paid a lot more attention to his mom's parenting books and
pamphlets. Giles frowns, and his hand twitches upwards. Any minute now,
he's going to polish his glasses. Does he really have to say this? "I
like girls, Giles. I like guys, I like girls."
"Oh," Giles says. His hand's back in his lap: present threat defused.
"T-that's very, ah, open-minded of you."
"You could say that. Some'd say I'm a slut."
Giles apparently doesn't hear that, or chooses not to hear it.
Impossible to tell, most of the time. "And if you don't mind my
asking--"
"Don't mind," Oz says. Giles smiles at that; barely, but it's something.
After a moment, Giles starts to speak, seems to think better of it, and
closes his mouth.
"I had a girlfriend once," Oz says. He needs to take this slow, because
he's pretty sure Giles needs to be led by the hand through this one.
"And she was great. Really great. But it's sad."
He can see the muscles working along Giles's jaw when he swallows, and
watches the bump in his throat go up and down.
"Sometimes I think," Oz says and stops. Giles is looking in the vague
direction of his chest, flexing his writing hand. "Girls are like
trained to believe in this love thing. It's not their fault, it's not
like they're stupid. It's just that there's this ideology? I think
that's the right word. Where they're supposed to match up and never
stray. And it's a pretty good way to keep them in line, if you think
about it." He pauses, hoping Giles is still with him. Little nod, and Oz
is reassured. "I don't like it, and it sucks, hardcore."
"So you don't believe in love?" Giles asks softly.
"No, it's not that." Oz sighs. "'Course I do. I just don't think it
happens all the time, is all. If I met someone who *did*, it might be
worth giving it a shot, but--"
"You just need to meet the right girl." Giles sounds like he's quoting
someone. A not particularly nice someone.
"Or guy. Look, it's not like I'm Cynic Boy, out on a mission to rid the
world of love and happiness." Giles chuckles, and Oz feels his throat
tighten. "Don't laugh at me."
Giles glances at him. He looks serious again. "I'm sorry."
Oz isn't sure he means it. "All I asked is you listen. You don't have
to."
Giles reaches for his hand. Oz lets him touch his wrist and run his
index finger over his knuckles. "I am sorry. I'm not laughing at you."
Oz exhales. "Thanks. All I mean is, there's love, right? Okay, but it's
not as big as everyone pretends it is. Everyone pretends like it's this
huge fucking blimp--. Sorry."
Giles stares at him.
"For swearing. Sorry."
"Go on." He taps on the back of Oz's hand, and, geez, that sends a
silvery swoosh down his back.
"Okay, blimp? And it blocks out everything else. And I -- I --" Great.
Now he's stuttering. Way to make a point. Oz opens his hand, turning it
over so he's holding Giles's hand. "It blocks off a lot of other good
stuff. Stuff that doesn't get to rank. Like friendship, or whatever."
Oz breaks off, sucking at the filling in the back of his mouth, trying
to figure out where this is going. Tries to ignore the swoosh rushing
faster down his body when Giles squeezes his hand. "Remember Sesame
Street?"
Giles shakes his head, but rubs his thumb over Oz's knuckles.
"'Course you don't. Anyway, they go to Hawaii, and Big Bird insists that
Snuffleupagus comes with them, even though he's imaginary. This is when
he was still imaginary, okay? So he comes on the trip. Has to travel in
this huge net underneath the helicopter? I think it was a helicopter. So
sex is like the copter, right, and love is this giant imaginary thing
that gets dragged along. Or something. It's not meaningless, I mean
it--"
Giles works his thumb slowly over Oz's palm, not soft enough to tickle,
just gently. Oz checks Giles's face, sees him looking back at him
steadily, and he grins, wishing those glasses weren't in the way, but
still. This isn't so bad. "I never said I was articulate."
Giles returns the smile. Smiles at him so gently it makes Oz think of
crying. Not that he wants to cry just now; just now he's okay and
swooshy. More like some time later, he thinks he'll remember that smile,
and miss it. And then he might cry. Later.
"I don't love you or anything," Oz finally says. He listens to himself,
can't really hear it right. It's like watching cartoons, trying to place
where you've heard that voice before, but you always get distracted by
the different faces. So distracted it gets impossible to believe that
the same guy acts Chief Wiggum as Moe, even though it's true. Maybe
because it's true. "But I like you a lot. And it would be cool if. You
know. You liked me."
/
Giles cannot compliment Daniel on his maturity, because that would
suggest that he ought to be immature. Oughts, averages, and expectations
do not hold for Daniel. Or for anyone, really; he's starting to see that
now, and if it took a tiny skatepunk talking about comics, blimps and
Big Bird to help him see that, then so be it.
He closes his free hand over their hands, patting, then runs his palm up
Daniel's arm into the hollow between chest and armpit. Daniel rises from
his seat, pushing forward so he has one knee between Giles's legs,
plastering himself over Giles's chest. His mouth is quick and fierce,
opening wide, tongue darting over Giles's teeth. Pressed back against
the cushions, practically immobilized, Giles kisses back, tilting his
head, sucking that full, twisty lower lip between his teeth. He pricks
and worries at it with his tongue, bringing his hands to Daniel's waist,
pulling him closer.
So this is necking, he thinks, as if he had never been a teenager. He's
surprised that the rate of teen pregnancy isn't constantly through the
roof, given how good this feels. Daniel kneads the nape of his neck,
making small growling noises as his tongue pushes deeper. Giles's hips
meet Daniel's, rolling, nearly undulating in counterpoint as he pants
heavily through his nose, nipping and suckling at Daniel's mouth.
Daniel twitches backward, holding on to Giles's shoulder, his mouth
dark, wet and open. He bounces gently against Giles's leg, rubbing their
crotches together. Giles tightens his grip on the boy's slim waist.
"Um-- Okay?" Husky and shy.
Giles laughs and Daniel grins so widely his eyes disappear. The laughter
burns in Giles's chest because he is so breathless, and Daniel shifts to
a slightly less precarious position.
"So we're okay?" Daniel asks.
Giles runs his palms up over the boy's ribs and down his arms, pausing
to squeeze his biceps, the long cords of his forearms, and grips his
wrists. "Yes," he says, bending forward, holding Daniel steady, kissing
that dent below his lip. Just over his chin. "I would say-- Yes."
/
Fuck, this is good.
Giles tastes like the alcohol and Oz's own grape Hubba-Bubba'd spit, and
his tongue is wide and long and so hot that he's melting inside, gone
swooshy-melty, and Giles is *holding* him, kissing him back hard and
sloppy.
And the best part of it is, he gets to touch Giles, feel how his skin
slips smooth and silvery under his fingertips, how his chest rises with
a gasp, filling out, and Oz rising with it, then they deflate together,
and he doesn't think he's ever been so hard as he gets when he starts
sucking on the hinge of Giles's jaw, and it's hard and flat under his
tongue, with tiny barely-there stubble that cuts against his lips and
Giles is mouthing at his ear, biting the lobe and whispering his name
again and again, breaking it up into these impossible syllables,
nyul-d-ann-yil-dannn-ill-yiiiiill-dddd-awww-nyuh-l-daaaaan-yul
and no one ever calls him Daniel so it's like for a second he's this
whole new person, someone hungry and desperate, a long silver swoosh
with an earlobe at one end and then rock-hard cock and aching ass held
in Giles's palm.
Ribs aching, wet spot widening on his shorts, his eyes are glazed but
stuck open unseeingly as Giles twists him by the waist, sliding him off,
propping him up against the cushions, kissing him lightly.
"Better get that," Giles whispers and Oz realizes the phone is ringing.
He clutches at Giles's arm but it slides out from under his fingers.
Giles smiles down at him and cups his cheek. "I'll be right back."
Oz shifts uncomfortably, using just the butt of his hand to cut down on
any accidental extra-stimulation, tries the lefthand-hang, then the
right, and checks Giles. He's at the table, pulling a pad of yellow
paper toward him, speaking quietly. Now's so not the time to whip it
out, but he's dying here. He shifts again, opens the button on his
cords, and that's a little better.
"Yes, sir. I understand. Of course." Giles on the phone sounds clipped
and professional. He keeps his head down, pencil moving rapidly across
the page.
Oz feels his jaw pop when he yawns, and he stands up shakily, holding
his pants up with one hand. Thinks about kicking off the Vans, then
reconsiders when he hears Giles clear his throat and murmur heatedly. He
reaches around Giles for the nearly empty glass and Giles flinches,
twisting away.
"I understand perfectly, sir," Giles says.
There's something in his tone that makes Oz go back to the sofa, stat.
And stay still.
"I'm sorry," Giles says when he's hung up the phone, tidied his notes
and filed them away in the cabinet set into the bookshelves. He bends
over the couch and kisses Oz's forehead, trailing the side of his hand
down Oz's neck. "My superior can be fairly long-winded."
"Snyder?"
Giles cups his cheek and straightens up, hand resting there for a second
before he turns away. "Can you stay for dinner?"
"Yeah. Practice at eight, though."
/
Better than he could have ever hoped, and far, far better than he knows
he deserves: Giles considers Daniel, curled around him on the sofa, one
knee drawn up to his chest, fast asleep.
It's almost seven-thirty, and he nudges the boy awake.
At the door, Daniel hugs him around the waist, pulling him down for
another kiss. Giles tightens his hold as Daniel lazily works his tongue
over his mouth. "Tomorrow?" he asks as he pulls away.
Daniel nods. "Um, should I call, or is it cool--"
"Come by here," Giles says, salvaging a last remnant of sanity. "It's a
bit--"
/
"Safer?" Oz asks. "I get that."
So this is how it goes, and he's swinging back into a good summer. Four
days so far, and he hasn't had to make a call or visit Dave once.
Giles can kiss like nobody's business and then there's the way his hands
spread over Oz's stomach so he's kind of pushing but also tugging, like
his fingers can slip under his skin with electricity, just rearrange the
matter and empty space and make themselves at home.
He's starting to think those fingers, that mouth, could probably make
him rob a bank if they wanted him to. He'd settle, though, for getting
past first base.
That, plus a good long look at Giles's eyes. But the glasses are always
there, and when they're not, his own eyes tend to be closed, and he
forgets. He knows it's superficial to expect that you'd know someone
based on what they look like. He's not Cordelia Chase or anything; he's
not constantly classifying everyone around him according to the labels
in their shirts and the shade of their lip gloss. But he can't help
thinking there might be something to this whole surface-appearance
thing. If it's considered so wrong to judge by appearances, maybe
something else is going on. Social morality's a pretty fragile system,
after all. Most rules seem designed to keep you away from doing what
might make you happy. Or help you learn something.
So he likes Giles's eyes. He'd kill to get a good look at them, a good
long look. And he's prepared to judge Giles pretty favorably. He just
doesn't see what's so wrong about liking the whole surface of Giles.
Especially those eyes.
/
Quick, insistent rapping on his door, verging on midnight, and Giles
wasn't expecting Daniel until the next afternoon. Family dinner,
apparently, and then band rehearsal, although he suspects "rehearsal" is
code for something a bit more intimate.
Giles opens the door and finds Daniel bouncing in place, hands buried in
his pockets, blinking slowly as a lizard up at him, wearing a strange,
thin smile.
"Come in," Giles says after a moment during which Daniel just bounces on
his heels.
Daniel shrugs off his overshirt and hangs it with exaggerated care on
the coat rack. The bouncing makes Giles slightly dizzy. "Could I have
some water?"
"Of course."
When Giles hands him the glass, Daniel gulps half of it. His cheeks are
darkly flushed, and beads of sweat snake along his hairline.
Giles retrieves his own drink from the table and sits on the couch,
closing his eyes as he sips it. Trying to keep his tone light, he looks
at Daniel. "Are you feeling all right?"
Daniel looks up from the book on the table. "Pretty good," he says. He
perches on the arm of the couch, his dangling leg twitching into a
near-blur. "Kind of speedy, actually, but--. Yeah, good."
"You're not sober, are you?"
Daniel laughs, twisting at the waist and collapsing into Giles's lap.
Gasping, he rights himself until he straddles Giles. "No."
Giles tries to breathe regularly, ignore the lapful of warm, giggling
boy, and regain the ground of responsibility. He can do this. "What did
you take? Do you know? Did someone make you?"
Daniel shrugs and squirms closer, steadying himself with a grip on
Giles's shoulder. "Acid. Yes. No."
"What? You've been outside how long? Do you have any idea how
dangerous--?" Visions of a tripping boy, torn limb from limb, giggling,
whilst god knows how many vampires join the feast -- and --
"'Sokay," Daniel says, and somehow Giles has become the one being
soothed.
"B-but--" The demons would probably rape him, repeatedly, before
draining him, long before killing him outright.
"Sssh," Daniel says, rubbing his thumb over Giles's cheek, rasping the
late-night stubble. "I dosed at home. Usually takes half an hour to kick
all the way in. Walked over here, perfectly safe. Kept to major
thorough--thoroughfares. And now--" He lifts off Giles's glasses and
places them gently on the side table. Holding Giles's chin in the palm
of one hand, he leans in and whispers the last. "Now, it's kicking in."
Daniel tilts his head and peers at Giles. His pupils are tiny, breath
ragged. Giles can't feel any trace of the anxiety roiling through him a
moment ago. Rather, he feels rooted to this spot, flushed and still.
"I really like your eyes," Daniel says.
"You'll have to stay here tonight," Giles says at the same time. "I'm
not letting you outside again."
Daniel grins crookedly; Giles has never seen him this expressive. "I
know. Because it's *safe* here." His arm slips around Giles's neck and
he leans ever closer in.
Before he can close the gap fully, Giles lifts him off, hands under his
arms. His feet dangle uselessly for a moment before his legs unfold.
"Daniel, no."
"Came to see you. I want--"
"Not like this," Giles says. He hopes that's firmness he hears in his
voice. "You're in no condition to make decisions."
Daniel wobbles a bit, his mouth working before he manages to speak. "But
we already decided."
"Nevertheless."
He plucks at the pocket on his tee shirt--plain black, no printing,
Giles notices, so dark against Daniel's pale skin that it must be
new--and chews his bottom lip. "I brought you a tab," he says, working
one finger into every millimeter of the pocket. "It's in here
somewhere."
Giles touches Daniel's wrist, stilling his hand. "I don't want any."
"Really?" He sounds hurt, almost confused. "Really?"
"Yes," Giles says. "That is, yes, really. No, thank you."
"See, I thought we could--" Daniel bounces hesitantly on his heels, as
if experimenting with a rhythm. Having rejected it, he scratches the
back of his head and exhales slowly. "Sorry. Got distracted. I mean, I
don't want you to have to take care of me."
"I'm going to, regardless."
Daniel's eyes close and for a flash, Giles sees his mother, offering an
exaggerated prayer for patience to carry her through a young boy's
misdeeds. "No, I mean I didn't come here for that. For babysitting."
"But you are here," Giles says. "And you need to stay." Reasoning with
someone on drugs is only slightly less draining than reasoning with a
toddler.
"Fuck!" Daniel spits out and Giles actually feels his head jerk back.
"Stop being a grownup!"
Some cruel part of Giles understands why Daniel is usually so quiet and
nonchalant: When he's expressive, he sounds exactly like any other
cranky adolescent. The cruelty, however, is quickly replaced by a blush
of comprehension, once he allows himself to listen to the words
themselves.
"You're right," Giles says quietly. "I do understand." Daniel will not
look at him, and Giles reaches forward, certain Daniel will flinch, but
he remains still, allows Giles to take his hand. It feels terribly small
and clammy in his own. "I'm sorry. Thank you, and please, stay here?"
"Oh." Daniel sags and Giles squeezes his hand gently. "Mad at me?"
Giles sighs. "No, of course not."
"Disappointed?"
"No, not disappointed." He is not disappointed; perhaps distantly
panicking over losing more time, but hardly disappointed.
"It's okay? That I came to see you?"
"You're welcome here any time," Giles says. Marvels for a moment at how
deeply engrained politesse is. "You know that."
"Tomorrow?" Apparently reassured, sagginess gone, Daniel bounces over to
the bookcases and runs his fingertips over the spines, back and forth,
as if strumming something.
"What about tomorrow?"
"When I'm--. After I crash. Tomorrow, we can talk?"
Giles watches the pale stretch of skin on the back of Daniel's neck as
he bobs his head, accompanying some invisible tune. "Of course," he
says.
He doesn't know if this is a promise, since he can't be certain Daniel
will remember anything.
"You'll stay in here," he tells Daniel. "Drink your water. There's a jug
in the fridge. Listen to some music, and enjoy yourself." It has been
decades since he babysat for an acid trip, but the protocol is fairly
straightforward. Common sense, really: Keep him calm, happy, and
hydrated. Stay relatively close, but don't hover.
Daniel pulls a large portfolio off the bottom shelf and collapses
bonelessly to the rug to look it over. Giles murmurs a simple binding
charm, extending just to the walls of the flat, to ensure that Daniel
cannot leave until the following morning. Just in case he falls asleep;
the chemistry is surely stronger and longer-lasting these days than it
had once been.
Meanwhile, he returns to his translation.
/
Oz wakes up several times the next day, head throbbing. There's a pillow
under his cheek, soaked with drool, and a flannel blanket tucked in
tight around him. It's quiet every time, and before he manages to sit
up, his head will fuzz out again, and then it's later and he wakes up
again.
The last time he wakes up, the room has gone all orangey, so he thinks
it's probably sunset. He tries to sits up, and makes it this time before
getting all breathless and resting his cheek against the cushion. Little
dragon swirls are cavorting in front of his eyes, but he gets those
sometimes. Not tripping anymore.
"Rejoining the living?" Giles sits on the far side of the couch and Oz
nods, the upholstery scraping against his face. "Taking your time,
then?"
"Yeah." Croaky. "I'm sorry. Again."
Giles, for once, is the one resting *his* head in his lap, and this is a
weird angle to look at him from. His eyes are huge, and his chin a weird
smudge. Nose kind of big. "I thought we covered that."
"We did?"
Giles closes his eyes and Oz pets his forehead. "We did. Don't
apologize."
"Cool." There's something nagging at the back of his mind still, and he
shifts a little, rolling Giles's head closer. "What time is it, anyway?"
"Nearly nine."
"Shit, my mom--" He knows he should be worried, but his eyes are really
dry and his throat's all scratchy, so he says it with as much worry as
he can scrounge up.
Giles slips his hand under Oz's shirt, doing that skin-rearrangement
thing, and Oz slides down. "I called Devon," Giles says. "He agreed to,
quote, cover for the fuckwit, end quote. I hope it will be all right.
Berk."
He wishes he'd been able to hear *that* conversation. Either it was over
in two seconds, or it got dragged out to hours and hours. Oz slides a
little more, and now his face is practically over Giles's. He can feel
the breath on his cheek. "So I can stay over?"
Giles kisses him then, tasting him softly, slowly working deeper,
slipping his hand around Oz's waist. Never answers, just kind of pulses
around and over him, Oz hanging on to one arm, flooding himself with
Giles.
Score.
/
How could he have neglected the condoms? It's not as if he thought
Daniel would ever stay over, but this is worse than embarrassing. Given
his previous officious lecture, this is humiliating. Daniel had one in
his wallet, but the foil was ripped and the exposed latex engrimed with
more than one mysterious substance.
"We could--could improvise," Giles says.
Daniel looks over and shrugs off Giles's hand, roaming down his back. "I
can't."
"Are you-- You're not ill, are you?"
Daniel half-smiles at that. "Nope."
"So what's wrong?" Giles ventures to stroke the soft hollow at the small
of Daniel's back. So warm there, and the boy presses back in lieu of a
reply. "Daniel?"
He twists around, folding up one leg between them. "I've never--" He
shakes his head, and Giles realizes that his hair must have been much
longer recently, because it looks as if he's trying to get bangs out of
his eyes. Giles pats his back, and Daniel meets his eyes.
"You're experienced, surely?"
"Yeah, you know that. I've never-- Huh." He chews on the corner of his
mouth. "I've never done anything without a rubber."
"Well, that's good. Commendable, even."
"Giles."
"What?"
"This isn't health class. Not looking for a gold star."
"No?"
"My mom gave me a box of Trojans when I was twelve."
"Really? That's, er, rather early, isn't it?"
Daniel gives him that faint smile again. "Not for sex, Giles. For
jerking off. Said I'd be doing it anyway, should get used to it with the
rubber."
"Oh. I see. So you've never--"
"Nope."
"My." Giles suddenly feels very large, hairy, and awful. Monstrous,
ancient in front of someone so young, young enough to-- Dear Lord. The
boy had grown up always using condoms? In a world so rife with dark bad
things that he couldn't touch his own skin. He shouldn't be surprised,
but he is. Surprised and rather sick to his stomach.
"Giles?"
He raises his hand, asking for a moment.
"It's not you," Daniel says, bitterly. "God. I get to give the 'it's not
you' speech. Okay. Here goes--"
"Just--" Giles says. "Wait."
Daniel leans in, presses his forehead against Giles's. "No. It's *not*
you."
"Ah, but it is."
/
He was sent to the shower and then downstairs. When is he going to stop
fucking up?
Oz sits cross-legged in front of the shelves full of records, running
his finger down each narrow spine. He'd rather not listen to music right
now. Music is for moods--good, bad, angry, sad--and he doesn't feel a
mood right now. He needs to give himself time to find one. Then the
music will follow.
He sips the orange juice he's poured for himself and feels it slip
coldly down to his belly.
He suspects Giles is reconsidering this whole thing. Can't really blame
him, although he'd like to.
But it's just not in him--blame, that is. Oz closes his eyes, hoping
maybe some kernel of emotion is inside him. It's possible; it could be
buried deep enough. Deep enough, it's got to be there. He pictures his
body from the inside out, the tube of throat-stomach-intestines, the
slow inflation of lungs, the heart's insistent drum. Cage of ribs. It's
dark in there, dark tinged with red and the glints of soft, silvery
gray.
He probably got the colors from the dissection they made him watch in
bio after he'd refused to do it on ethical grounds. He had to sit, hands
folded in his lap, for two weeks while Jenny O'Neill sliced and dug and
lifted organs away to the scale. Everyone else named their pigs--Wilbur,
obviously, and Piglet; Hoo-ey, which led to Dewey and Louie; Trent, from
some chick who hated NIN--but Jenny referred to their pig only as 'it'.
Snyder brought him in for another talking-to on the last day of pigs,
said he hoped Oz had learned something 'from your little stunt'. Oz kept
quiet; Snyder would tell him what he was supposed to have learned
anyway. "It's going to happen," Snyder said. "Conscientious objection
won't stop it." Oz nodded then. Snyder was almost right: Shit happens,
and it's worse to have to watch it happen for credit and do nothing.
"Couldn't find anything?" Giles asks, behind him. "I find that difficult
to believe."
"Nope. Just couldn't decide."
"Oh, well." Giles crouches beside him, pulling him in. Okay, so not
reconsidering. Oz isn't going to ask why, just lean over and kiss his
jaw. Limes again, and that ozone buzz Giles seems to give off whenever
he shivers. "Frankly, I'm relieved. I didn't think my collection was
that poor."
Oz tips his head against Giles's shoulder. Breathes in the faint, harsh
smell of dryer sheets. Giles got dressed in fresh clothes: interesting.
"Your call."
That's it. Let the smart guy choose the mood.
6. Coelacanths and Camphor
==========================
It's weird waking up in Giles's bed, just about fully naked, but not
having any good reason for that. Except that there's no A/C, and it is
California in the summer, and if you're going to talk all night and
dance around the lack of rubbers, you're pretty much going to have to
strip down and hope it doesn't turn the dance into more horizontal.
Asleep, Giles looks really small. Maybe it's the looseness of the white
sheet, drawn up to his chin, but his face looks like it belongs to
someone much smaller. It's slack and pale in the sun, hair kind of
fuzzed out over his ear. Oz won't touch him, since they've only been
asleep for about three hours, but he edges closer, thankful for the firm
mattress so there's hardly any dip as he moves. Giles's lips are parted
a tiny bit, and when Oz leans in, his shadow darkens them so they're the
color of overblown carnations. The shadow of a shadow of stubble has
broken out along Giles's jaw like someone dusted him with pencil
shavings, and it's really hard not to reach out and test how scratchy it
feels.
Oz balls up his fist and slips off the foot of the bed, dislodging the
sheet so now Giles's blue pajama top is visible. Remembering the fear
and revulsion of morning breath, he heads for the bathroom and scrubs
his teeth and tongue with a smear of toothpaste on his finger. When he
slips back into the room and lies down, Giles reaches for him.
"Awake?" Oz whispers. Giles slips his arm over his chest as Oz settles
in. Not awake enough to talk, apparently, so Oz digs the back of his
head into the pillow. The room is warm, but the weight of Giles's arm
feels good, the way it's tucked under Oz's last rib and rises with his
diaphragm.
He concentrates on the arm for a while, trying to memorize the sparse
pattern of curls of hair on Giles's wrist, then switches to feeling the
hint of weight against his side. The sheet's bunched up into a tiny
range of peaks between them, so they're not actually touching, and Oz
shifts, holding his breath, until he's covered the range and feels the
warmth of Giles's leg against his.
Of course Oz woke up hard; he's seventeen, that's what his body does.
But somehow it's surprising and kind of strange to realize, as he slides
in closer, that Giles is, too. And why should that be strange? It's not
like Giles is from another planet, or severely diabetic, or dead. He's
got nerve endings like everyone else; he sleeps next to someone he
likes, it's going to happen. And Oz feels terrible, feels stupid and
selfish for letting this happen, because Giles has probably been hard
for hours and it's his fault.
He turns onto his side, bringing Giles's arm with him, and licks his
toothpaste-dried lips, trying to figure out how to do this.
"Hmm?" Giles mutters, eyes opening, flash of green tea, and Oz presses
his lips against Giles's forehead. "Daniel." Giles tightens his hold
around Oz's waist, and Oz props his head on his folded arm. "What's
wrong?"
"Nothing," Oz says, rubbing slow circles over Giles's chest, fabric
rasping over the hair, prickling his palm, sending tiny stabs up his arm
that swarm together when they reach his face and chest until it feels
like he's blushing. Giles smiles sleepily at him, and without his
glasses, his eyes are so right there that Oz can't look at them, has to
drop his gaze to watch the slow pulse in his throat. He kisses down the
curve of Giles's cheek, inhaling the faint smell of laundry from the
pillow, and his palm rises as Giles inhales and holds it. "Nothing's
wrong," he whispers against Giles's ear.
He nudges Giles onto his back with the flat of his palm and keeps
rubbing, can't think of stopping except he has to get the buttons open,
needs to feel that warm, well-packed strength for himself. Giles turns
his head, kissing Oz full-on. His brain sputters and flusters and drops
at the contact.
Giles tastes--strong is the only thing Oz can think of, and his fingers
are digging and scrambling over Oz's hip as his other hand goes into
Oz's hair, and their tongues are doing that rearing back, twisting
mating dance like antelopes do, so Oz just pushes the pajama top up and
holds onto Giles's skin for all he's worth.
His fingertips skid over the incredibly smooth skin like he's almost too
clumsy to appreciate something this fine, then he's reached the hipbone
and the skin is hotter here, stretched so tight and so hot and his
fingertips are tangling in the curls and he can't help it, he's nipping
at Giles's tongue and whimpering like a lost puppy.
Giles catches his hand at the wrist and pulls away. "Daniel, you
don't--" Voice harsh and scared.
"Want to." Oz hears himself exhale the words, hand twisting out of
Giles's grip, palm going flat over the thickest hair, just above the
root of his cock so it's twitching against his pinky. "Want to--" His
mouth drops to Giles's shoulder, down to the rucked-up shirt, licking
the stubble on Giles's throat, kissing the pulse in the center of his
collarbone.
Giles is tugging himself up, letting Oz slide down, chin running over
skin and bunched shirt, trying to remember to breathe, and when he does,
trying to remember not to pant. As he circles his hand around Giles's
cock, praying for smoothness, not clumsiness, hoping this is right,
Giles draws one knee up and rests his cheek there, watching down as Oz
tongues the folds in his skin, nuzzling soft hairs. He hears Giles
breathing above him, every exhale trailing off into a whining little
wheeze. His fingers goose-step up the back of Giles's thigh, and they're
suction cups leeching out the fine, elegant silver warmth trapped
beneath the skin.
He looks up at Giles and it's like a mirror: head-tilt, eyelids at
half-staff, mouth open and almost panting. So he decides this must be
okay, and looks back down at the cock in his hand, notices the extra
skin, and, duh, foreskin, so he pinches at it and moves it up down
experimentally, testing its resiliency, and Giles seems to like that. He
hitches in a breath and a tremor skitters down his legs against Oz's
cheek, then he exhales and it's the name-song again, so he's Daniel now,
and his mouth is way too empty and dry. Giles's fingers stray and wander
over Oz's scalp and there's pressure there, and then his tongue is
running over the distance between cockhead and lips, closing it,
bringing them together, and he's up on his knees in this surreal yoga
stance, back stretched out, supporting himself with a kung-fu grip on
Giles's calf and his tongue. When he breathes in, it's all Giles, light
salty sweat more like tears than sweat, it's so light, and limes, the
tang of fabric softener, all so strong and clean and his spit's mixing
with precum so neither one's not so sticky nor so runny, somewhere in
between, sweet and plain wet.
And this he knows how to do, hollow cheeks then crazy-manic tongue dance
and lots of swallowing, which he'd do anyway because this tastes good
and he was born to do this and it's his fault that Giles is hard, but
he's making it better, and the warmth is jumping around his mouth,
scraping his teeth, like a downed power line, *writhing* now, Giles's
fingers closing around the nape of his neck, Oz humping the bed, no more
breath, his nose butting hair, hair scraping nostrils, Giles's hips
shaking back and forth, up and down, and he's swallowing and sucking,
Giles's cock taking off, doing a runner past his lips but Oz clamps down
till teeth scrape skin and there's a lot more to swallow, hot and thick
and he's not going to stop until it's all better.
Oz sniffs in air through his nose in tiny, pointless puffs until Giles
softens and the hand on his neck slips away. As he lifts his face, he
feels the layer of sweat on his forehead, trickling into his eyes,
burning so all he sees is a haze. He blinks hard as he licks his lips
clean, and that makes Giles chuckle slowly, like it hurts but he can't
help it. His arm comes up around Oz's back as he stretches out his leg,
and Oz just lies there, ear over heart, getting his breath back as Giles
pets his hair.
/
Monstrous and wheezing, Giles clutches the boy against him. If he lets
him go, this may all be a dream, but if it's real, he needs the delay.
"Need air conditioning," Daniel murmurs.
Breath comes raggedly to Giles, painful and new, and thoughts even more
slowly. He is amazed that the boy can speak; he can hear him only
distantly, and thinks momentarily of the thud of fish against the glass
in an aquarium.
He hugs Daniel more tightly against him as the tremors shooting through
his body slow their pace fraction by fraction, leaving in their wake a
weakening buzz insinuated between skin and muscle.
"I'm serious," Daniel says, propping his chin up to look at Giles.
"Sweating like a pig here."
Giles smoothes the damp hair on Daniel's brow and wipes away the sweat
clustering in his temple with his thumb. "Thank you." Which is a
horribly trivial thing to say, but the best that he can manage at the
moment. He is a monster, new to the air, slow and stupid and greedy, but
manners never fail.
Daniel rubs his face against the sheet. "Welcome. Better?"
"Much." Giles knows that something *is* better, just not what, not yet.
"Good."
Giles tucks Daniel under his arm and shuts his eyes. He has plenty of
time to think about this later, and he knows he's going to need it all.
/
When he wakes up again, Oz's face is shoved into Giles's armpit and he's
lying in a sticky puddle. Context again, he thinks. At home, this'd be
humiliating. But here, it's okay. Just temporarily uncomfortable.
Oz wants to get out. Then again, he also wants to stay in. It's summer!
his conscience keeps screaming, and it's having a dirty little spat with
basically the rest of him, led by his whole body, which would like
nothing more than lounge here for several weeks. After he cleans up from
the wet dream and the A/C's installed, that is.
/
Over a breakfast so late it nearly qualifies as lunch, Daniel advocates
for a long drive to a flea market he likes. Giles feels himself nodding
along, finding all of this, the boy's energy, his own smug calm, the
skittering pace of their conversation, strangely amusing.
"There'll be books," Daniel says. "I can guarantee lots of books."
Giles steels himself for the inevitable jibe, some variation on the
rather doltish observation that he likes books, and that this is somehow
odd and worthy of jest. Daniel, however, folds his sandwich in half and
nibbles at the crust, looking back Giles. There is no jibe, just a
patient wait for a reply.
"You don't have to convince me," Giles says. "I've already agreed to
go."
Daniel grins. "I know. Just psyched."
"Really?"
"Yeah." Daniel rolls a shred of crust in his fingers before eating it.
"Hey, are you going to buy anything big?"
Giles pushes back his chair and brings his plate to the sink. From the
door of the refrigerator, he asks, "How big?"
"Um, bigger'n a breadbox?"
"It is possible."
"Okay. Maybe we should take the van."
Giles returns to the table, handing Daniel a glass of water and sipping
his own. "I don't think we're going to find anything that large."
"You never know." Daniel scrapes his chair closer and slings a fraternal
arm around Giles. "You can drive."
"I'm sure you're an excellent driver." Giles shivers under Daniel's
touch, marveling for a moment at how his fingers find frayed nerves
Giles has long forgotten and pluck at them, tease them back to life and
make them sing.
"Oh, yeah, I'm an excellent driver," Daniel says, pausing to press his
lips on Giles's neck as his fingers massage a slow, keening lilt on his
ribs. "Dad lets me drive slow on the driveway."
/
He's feeling better now. Quick walk home to change clothes, clean out
and pick up the van, stop by the drugstore for rubbers and lube, and
then back to pick up Giles and switch over to the passenger seat.
Now they're on the road and his conscience and his body have come to
some kind of compromise, because he's out, but he still gets to touch
Giles. Oz has his head leaning against the window, one foot up on the
dash, and his arm flung out onto Giles's shoulder. He's careful not to
move much, because Giles is a pretty intense driver, but this is good.
He tends to bliss out when he doesn't have to drive, so he's careful to
keep talking. He doesn't want Giles to think he's just the chauffeur or
anything.
"You know how in India they get reincarnated?"
"Hinduism is founded on a belief in reincarnation, yes," Giles says.
"Yeah. Now, it happens in stages, right?"
"Yes. The balance of karma and one's fulfillment of the present stage's
dharma, or duty--"
"Right. Sorry to interrupt, but I didn't mean that. I mean, there's only
one, um, incarnation-- That's the right word?"
Giles nods, keeping his eyes on the road.
"So there's only one incarnation at any one moment?"
Giles just drives. Oz waits.
"Sorry," Giles says after they pass a huge old brown station wagon
that's wobbling in a not very reassuring way. "That was a question?"
"Uh-huh."
"Oh, well. Yes, of course."
"So it's not like there are various incarnations just kind of hanging
around, depending on where you are?"
Giles shakes his head. "Might get a little crowded, don't you think?"
"Guess so." Oz reaches for his water bottle. It made sense to him;
something about context and calling on the appropriate personality.
"Are you all right?" Giles asks.
Oz shakes his head; he seems to be picking up many of Giles's gestures
lately. They're good and economical, and he thinks he'll probably keep
them. "Yeah. I just thought it'd be kind of neat, is all."
/
Daniel insists on taking the highway, although they're only headed
fifteen miles past Oxnard. Giles's palms were clenched and numb around
the steering wheel with anxiety at the prospect of highway driving until
Daniel observed softly that traffic was fairly light, and offered to
take over. Giles still doesn't know, with only twenty miles left to go,
why he refused, but it calmed him, somehow, knowing that Daniel trusted
him. The reassurance returned him to the near-haze of bodily
satisfaction with which he had gotten out of bed.
"That's so disgusting." Daniel points toward a row of smokestacks near
the horizon. "Check it out."
"Mmm?" Giles glances at the sight, and then at Daniel, who is shaking
his head. "What of them?"
"It's like a filmstrip, or an ad for the Sierra Club. Every time I see
those I picture mobs of swirling carcinogens and sediments dispersing
through the air. Gross."
"I see," Giles says. "Interesting."
"What?"
"What?"
"You said interesting." Daniel noisily drains his large cup of soda
through the straw. "That usually means you disagree but you're too
polite to say why. So. What?"
"Just interesting," Giles says. "When I see smokestacks I think of
energy and prosperity and all that postwar propaganda."
"Really? But-- smoke. Particles. Gross."
"Of course, and I know that. But whereas your ingrained reaction is to
see it as disgusting, the small boy in me cheers and claps."
"Interesting," Daniel says. He drums his fingers on the nape of Giles's
neck. This is what teasing is like, when you're comfortable enough; no
jibes, simply shared experiences.
"As I said." Giles smiles at the traffic and Daniel squeezes his neck.
Silence; companionable and easy, and Giles wonders how the quiet can be
so comfortable when there's another body touching his, when it is so
acrid and anxious when he's alone.
"I like water towers, though," Daniel says, as if it might help. "You?"
"Hmm?" Giles glances over again. Daniel points at the tower coming up on
the right. A wide cartoon smile is painted on its sides, and above that,
a shaky, feeble attempt at a marijuana leaf that more closely resembles
a decapitated bouquet. "They're all right."
"I like 'em. Like a big spider mating with a barn." Daniel shifts away,
stretching his arms over his head, then drops his hand back to Giles's
shoulder.
"Yes, rather."
/
The flea market is just like Oz remembers it, the parking in an old
overgrown field, and down behind the hill all the tents spread out in
meandering aisles, looking from up here like a crossword puzzle drawn by
a drunk. He's itching to get down there, lose his way and stumble across
the bizarre remnants that shouldn't have been for sale when they were
new. Giles seems to sense his impatience, and lets him lead the way. Oz
thunders down the hill, not steep enough to get up much steam, but he's
still breathless and flushed when he hits the flats.
Giles steps carefully through the long, matted grass, and when he
reaches the bottom, he stops. Oz feels him looking at him, and that's
much itchier than the urge to browse, so he curls his toes inside his
sneakers and tries not to fidget. Giles looks a little stern and a lot
intent. The sun's beating down and the air smells like souvlaki and
grease, and everything's gone kind of bleached-out, but Giles's eyes are
dark and gleaming, and it hits Oz, sideways and hard, that he blew this
guy a couple hours ago.
He takes a step back before he realizes what he's doing; then he stops.
There's a rushing in his ears, and he's instantly hard but also really
embarrassed. There's just the two of them here, just him and Giles, but
everything feels doubled and superimposed and out of focus.
Oz swallows but he can't look away.
"Ready?" Giles steps past him, patting his back as he passes. "Where to
first?"
/
He has never been anywhere quite like this. Giles is jostled and set
adrift in a crowd of obese, mouth-breathing Americans, shining with
sweat, yanking their dirty-faced toddlers along hard enough to dislocate
a shoulder, crowding at booths displaying earrings made from crow
feathers, discount shampoos, miracle fungus creams, dilapidated
furniture with creaking joints and peeling varnish, military
memorabilia, dusty insignia and rusted swords, Confederate flags and POW
bumperstickers, squat porcelain animals with dead, glittering eyes and
trays heaped with plastic costume jewelry.
He loses Daniel around corner after corner, and they meet up again,
exchange commiserations, and part, and meet again. When the initial
shock and near-revulsion has faded away to a manageable level of
irritation, Giles finds he can linger in the less crowded corners and
start to see the range of oddities for sale.
The woman behind the table in this particular tent is rail-thin and so
deeply tanned she resembles the scuffed suede on the club chairs in the
anteroom to Travers's office. She barely looks at him while he politely
browses the card tables of junk, waiting for the family at the entrance
to move on and allow him to escape. On the top of one pile towards the
back, he finds a charm bracelet. It looks like the kind girls wore to
the matinees of his youth, and he brings it to the proprietress.
"Seven," she rasps, then looks up, taking him in. "Sorry. Ten."
He has no wish to argue, so he hands her the bill and puts the bracelet
in his pocket.
He wanders down to the next corner and turns, spotting Daniel three
booths away, tucking a paper bag under his arm. The boy starts when
Giles touches his shoulder, steps back, then forward again, smiling
shyly.
"Hey. Got you something." Head dropped against his shoulder, Daniel
watches as he unfolds the bag, fingers brushing the soft cotton inside.
Giles shakes it out: a white undershirt, stencilled across the front
with the words Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Long-Haired Men.
"Thank you."
"You get it, right?"
Giles nods. "Bowie?"
Daniel hunches his shoulders, then relaxes them, slipping his hands into
the back pockets of his pants. "Bowie, yeah. They looked at me weird
when I told them what I wanted."
"And for you," Giles says, holding out his fist with the bracelet
inside. Daniel taps the back of his hand, and he turns his wrist,
opening his fingers.
"Hey, cool."
The charms are odd and jumbled, whatever meaning they had long ago lost:
a poodle, a rooster, a crucifix, a tinsel Christmas-tree ball, and a
tiny vial of red-orange liquid. Daniel holds the vial up to the sun,
squinting through it, turning it to catch the light.
"Awesome." He hands it to Giles. "Check it out."
Giles tilts it, watching the stuff slip sluggishly back and forth. "A
liquid prisoner pent in walls of glass," he says, handing it back to
Daniel. "Sonnet five, Shakespeare."
Daniel shakes his head, lips twitching upward. "Noma Bubble Light."
Giles wants to ask, then decides not to as Daniel goes down on one knee
to fasten the bracelet around his ankle. His shirt hitches up as he
bends over, and Giles remembers touching the skin there, feeling the
invisible fur and the heat.
He is never entirely certain how much Daniel hears, how much is lost to
the boy's serene inattention and in the jumble of topics and references
and quotations that comprise the bulk of his conversation.
Yet Daniel does listen; words and concepts go through him in some
indefinable process of filtration. Around the next corner, in a dim red
tent with a labyrinth of cheap white metal racks, such as hold postcards
and non-prescription spectacles at the supermarket, Daniel peers across
row after row of ancient paperbacks. When he makes his selection at
last, he shows the books to Giles with something resembling pride: a
back issue of _Life_ from 1951; a Moorcock omnibus; a tale of
computer-generated dystopia; and, yes, a fat student's compendium of the
complete Shakespeare.
"Couldn't find anything?" Daniel asks.
Giles would like to tell him how much he loathes paperbacks of any kind,
how dangerous a single case of mildew or spine-rot can be to a
collection, but he cannot. Instead, he watches Daniel stow the stack
carefully into his knapsack, patting the top book before zipping the bag
shut. He holds and cares for his books as dearly and affectionately as
Giles does his own, and no matter that Daniel's books have lurid covers
and piss-yellow pages. "You poached the Moorcock," Giles says. "So I'm
empty-handed."
"'Sokay," Daniel says, leading them out through the crowd again. "Borrow
it any time."
/
The mosquitoes and chiggers are starting to get a little crazy,
especially around the food tables, and while it's not getting dark, it
is getting duskier, so Oz tries to finish eating so they can get going.
But he's distracted by the ads in his new old copy of _Life_, especially
this one for viyella robes with a happy husband bearing an overloaded
tray for breakfast in bed. He's the conquering hero approaching his
deserving bride, and, even better, viyella rhymes with hi-fella, which
is just so cool.
"What are you laughing at?" Giles asks, dropping his fork. At least he's
stopped pushing his fries around suspiciously.
"He's hot, huh?" Oz says, handing over the magazine. "Goony, but try to
get past that."
Giles looks it over, taking enough time to read the copy, and he does
smile. Oz hopes it's at the hi-fella. Or the goony hot guy; whichever's
good. "Like a young James Mason. Leaner through the cheeks, and I've
never seen Mason grin, but--. Yes."
Oz closes his eyes, knowing he knows who James Mason is, he just needs
to review without distraction. Not no wine before it's time or making
money the old-fashioned way: earning it, but a little later than those
guys. Same sort of deep gravel sex voice, though. "North by Northwest,
right?"
"Among others." When he opens his eyes, Giles is folding up his paper
napkin. "Shall we think about getting going?"
Oz nods and looks down at the picture again. Guys just don't look like
that any more, and it's a shame, and kind of confusing, too, because
beyond hair-style and clothes, how is it that someone's face can go
extinct?
/
Daniel drives them back to Sunnydale far more quickly and casually than
Giles could ever dream of doing. So casually that they pass the exit and
Daniel does not even flinch.
"Erm--?"
"You'll see." Daniel's lip twists into what Giles is coming to consider
his secretive smile.
Giles does not inquire why they take the next exit, nor several lefts,
then a right, but when the van rattles and shivers its way up a dirt
road choked with ruts and overhung with untrimmed shrubbery, he does
turn to Daniel. He is hunched over the steering wheel, brows drawn
tight, as he threads around the holes and bumps. And, just as suddenly
as they ascended onto the trail, it ends, opening into a wide clearing.
Daniel switches off the ignition, swiping his hand over his brow, and
grins. "Breaker's Woods," he tells Giles. "Ever been?"
"No."
"Didn't think so." Daniel twists in his seat and rises, slipping into
the back of the van. "Coming?"
"Yes?" Giles unlatches the seat belt and takes another look out the
window. Short, wiry grass, spiked with shadows, and a ring of smooth
rocks. He cannot make out the trees circling the clearing, except for
the way their volume disperses lacily against the sky. "Yes."
He cannot navigate the passage between the seats nearly as well as
Daniel, and slips, barking his knee on the parking brake, grasping at
Daniel's hand, pulling him forward until he spills out into the open.
"Okay?" Daniel asks, propping his back against the wall, one foot up on
the opposite thigh. Giles rubs his knee and smiles, he thinks, ruefully.
He doesn't quite know where to settle down: against the back of a seat?
the opposite wall? stretched out on his back? Daniel's head is cocked
slightly, watching him, and Giles focuses on the boy's hands, laid out
over his thighs, fingers loosely spread and almost glowing in the
near-dark.
"Yes, of course." Giles kneels on his uninjured knee, gripping the side
of the passenger seat for balance, studying the interior of the van as
well as he can. He cannot make out very much at all beyond the shag
carpet beneath him, the various sacks and a rolled sleeping bag beside
him, and the wan light coming from the windows on the back doors.
"C'mere," Daniel says, pushing off from the wall, dragging a plastic
sack behind him as he moves towards Giles. At the touch of his warm,
pale hand, Giles sinks down and leans in. Daniel rubs his thumb over his
eyelids and against the nap of his eyebrows, around his temple and down
his neck. "Better?"
Giles nods as he opens his eyes. His body is unwinding, going slack and
warm at Daniel's touch, and he struggles to focus, and not to drown.
Daniel kisses him softly, almost shyly, ignoring the tilt of Giles's
head, the insistence of his lips, and squeezes his neck as he pulls
back.
"Good. So--" Daniel raises the plastic sack and upends it. "It's like
Halloween. Check the loot."
Boxes and ribbons of condoms and several containers of lubricant spill
over the floor between them.
"Good Lord." Giles picks through the pile, examining one tube of
medicinal jelly, hefting a large bottle of Astroglide, shaking a box of
condoms. "It's a veritable smorgasbord. Host a variety of tastes back
here, do you?"
"Wasn't sure what you liked, actually." Daniel twists away, and Giles
imagines his face falling, mouth tightening and eyes hooding
defensively. His voice is quiet, illegible, but it might very well be
pained.
"I didn't mean--" Of course the paraphernalia is new; the caps on the
lubricants are wrapped in plastic, and the receipt is trapped under one
box. The boy had only called himself a slut in jest, hadn't he? "Really,
I--"
"Forget it." Daniel shrugs, and, no, he has not turned away in anger or
pain. He is simply tugging off his shirt and leaning to untie his shoes.
Giles reaches over, throat thickening with shame, and strokes the rise
of vertebrae on his lower back, prominent and hard as rocks. Emboldened
when Daniel sighs deeply at the touch, he leans further and mouths the
pebble-like rise of spine at the boy's neck.
"It's okay," Daniel whispers as Giles's hands shake over his skin. He
covers one with his own and presses it firmly down. "Just do it, okay?"
Daniel tilts his head back against Giles's shoulder as Giles wraps his
arms around his waist, pressing flat palms against his warm, nearly
hairless skin, suckling on the nape of his neck, pulling him back
against him.
It is as if the boy has loosened fully, gone completely liquid in his
arms. Giles brushes his knuckles along the length of Daniel's erection,
trapped in his shorts, and gets a slow roll of the hips in response.
Daniel attempts to undo the fastener and groans when he cannot. Giles
holds him more tightly, working his thumb into the gap at the top of the
zipper, kissing the stretch of freckles slung between the knobs of his
shoulders. He tastes like rain, cool-silver-glow, and sweat,
salt-flesh-sun, and trembles under Giles's hands. A sweet low growl
builds deep in his throat as Giles strokes upward over his sternum,
pressing down, Daniel's heart beating against his palm, his breath
hitching then releasing in a fluid sigh as he brushes his thumb over the
nipples, flicking at them with his nails as they harden.
Flashing eyes, mouth a rough dark gash, as Daniel twists back to look at
him, fingers fluttering down to touch his wrist. Giles goes still. "I
can stop."
Daniel's head shakes violently and he presses back against Giles as he
pushes his wrist down and further inside. He drops his head and his
breath starts coming out shallow and brief.
Untouched, no one ever, never before: keening, disembodied chant in his
ears, counterpoint to Daniel's breathing as Giles reaches inside the
shorts. He strokes up and down the tensile heat of Daniel's cock,
gripping it loosely, worrying the knuckle of his index finger around the
head, and Daniel twitches several times in his embrace, leaning back,
head lolling as Giles strokes across the rapidly tightening testicles.
He gazes down at the body stretched out in his arms, watching hips lift
and wiggle free of shorts as he closes his mouth over the boy's
shoulder, nibbling with his lips and teeth as he slides knuckles down
the underside of cock, around the balls, and Daniel brings one knee up
and out so the touch continues down into the cleft of his ass, so narrow
and tight Giles can manage only two fingers stroking the impossibly soft
skin swirling into the pucker.
Daniel's head turns and his mouth finds Giles's as the hand slips back
higher and circles the base of his cock, tongue sweeping lazily inside,
across Giles's teeth and then burrowing into the pocket of his cheek as
Giles tightens his hold and Daniel starts to thrust against the palm,
his low moans felt more as vibrations across and into skin than sound.
Giles's own hips rock with the motion, working his trapped hard-on
against Daniel's ass as he twists the nipple in his fingers and tugs at
the boy's cock. Daniel's eyes widen, showing the whites all around his
irises, as his back arches in Giles's grasp, air whinnying out his nose
and teeth scraping teeth as he corkscrews around beneath Giles's fist,
hips jerking as he shoots. Giles lets him rise, then drop, as he kisses
back deeply, pistoning his tongue into Daniel's mouth, squeezing out the
last small jet.
Dipping Daniel bonelessly back, Giles brings his hand up, grazing
Daniel's lips with his own as he pulls away and snakes his hand between
them. Daniel watches, lips open, as Giles laps the tip of his tongue in
the cum, then lifts his mouth to lick the other side of the palm. The
feel of Daniel's tongue on his skin, hesitancy evaporating before
eagerness, dries out Giles's mouth and rocks his hips against the boy's
bare legs. Daniel sucks his pinky down to the root, and Giles's tongue
sweeps across his palm to press at the corner of the Daniel's mouth and
work its way inside.
His finger slides out with a soft smack and he cradles Daniel's cheek in
his palm as they kiss. Daniel is breathing more normally now, grasping
at the fabric of his shirt, hauling himself up to his knees. His other
arm goes around Giles's waist as his hand runs down Giles's arm, then
back up, down his chest, and around his stomach. He loosens the
shirttails from the waist and touches the exposed skin lightly, using
just the tips of his fingers, tracing the hairs. His tongue pulses
slowly against Giles's own, and Giles feels a moan trembling up his
chest at the touch as Daniel traces a slow dizzy dance of sensation over
his stomach and down into the crease of his thigh.
Giles breaks the kiss as Daniel starts to unbutton his shirt from the
bottom up. The two halves of the shirt fall open as Giles spreads his
shoulders, and Daniel brings both hands up to his chest, covering the
nipples with the shallow hollow of his palms, pressing lightly. As he
leans in, one hand drops back to Giles's crotch and the other twists the
nipple, and his tongue flickers agonizingly slowly and lightly over the
other nipple.
Shards of sensation skitter across the surface of Giles, noise and song
concatenated at the end of the radio dial into harmonious static, and he
bites down hard on his lip to keep from moaning when Daniel presses the
flat of his tongue against his nipple and squeezes his cock. But then he
is moaning, and Daniel is moving away, retreating into the dark, his
mouth working.
More static, Daniel's voice, slowly resolving itself to sense, sounding
flat, nearly bored. "Gonna fuck me now?"
Shaking, his tongue gone thick and useless in his mouth, Giles nods, and
Daniel is looming over him, grabbing at the sleeping bag, shaking it
out, and Giles goes up on one knee to make room. Daniel is very naked,
and distantly Giles knows that saying such a thing is incorrect, like
deeming a woman very pregnant, or a collectible very unique. Yet he is
very naked, appallingly so, white and skinny against the dark tartan of
the sleeping bag, one long arm reaching out, handing Giles a box and
lube.
"Don't forget them this time." Flat, fuzzing out at the edges into noise
that mixes with the roar in Giles's ears.
Giles nods and fumbles with the preparations.
His pants down around his thighs, cock jutting out, angry red at the
base gone waxy-purple under the latex, he shuffles forward on his knees,
stroking Daniel's white thigh with sticky fingers. The boy's smile is
crooked as he pecks Giles's cheek and rolls over onto his stomach. He
lets Giles slip an arm under his waist and haul him back onto his hands
and knees, and their breathing is thick and pained in the silence. Giles
strokes one finger down Daniel's spine and into his cleft, eliciting a
sigh and push back. He spreads his thighs, angling his head down, and
starts kissing the hollow of the back until he feels the wiggle against
his chest, and licks down to the cleft, tasting tears and sun and the
camphor-sting of mothballs. Daniel jumps in his embrace when he kisses
the pucker, and starts moaning as if in pain.
Giles's head jerks up and Daniel is looking over his shoulder. "Don't
stop. Just--"
Just do it: Giles completes the phrase silently, and obeys, fingertips
digging into the boy's waist as he screws his tongue into the hole and
pushes until he's breathless and Daniel is gasping, collapsed onto
useless arms, hips rolling back against Giles's mouth.
His free hand scrabbles for the bottle of lube, lost in the folds of
sleeping bag and clothes, and finally locates it behind his foot. Daniel
cries out again when Giles's mouth lifts, and he hears himself soothing
him, murmuring nonsense, soft rhyming sounds, as he coats his hand.
Daniel quiets, and reaches around, grasping one cheek and tugging it
open for the soaked fingers stroking the back of his balls.
"Good boy," Giles hears himself say, and some kernel, tiny and useless
at the front of his brain screams at that in pain and outrage, screams
itself hoarse and dead as he starts painting long strokes up and down
and across the hole. Daniel's moans sound vaguely like weeping, the way
they catch on his breath and sweep up the scale, and they go higher and
faster as Giles works his finger in. "Sweet Christ, oh--"
The sound and heat of the slick thin skin crash over Giles, sweep him
out inside a dull roar and over currents of sensation. When three
fingers have corkscrewed their way inside, and he's noted dully that
Daniel knows to push back and jut his hips just so, he removes his arm
from Daniel's waist and lines up his cock against the hole.
The last thing that happens breaks the roar and shakes him back to
himself. Daniel goes still and looks over his shoulder again. Their eyes
meet, and there is a hulking form mirrored and doubled in Daniel's
pupils. Then he blinks, and erases the sight. "Not going to make love to
me, are you?" he asks, smiling twistily, licking his lips, voice hoarse
and full of need.
"Wouldn't dream of it." And then he's sunk inside, and the moment has
become the past as Daniel rocks forward, dragging him deeper, pulsing
around his cock, fucking himself hard and fast on it.
They pant together as Giles drives in, twitches his hips, and pulls the
boy back, moans and epithets drowning out the slap of skin on skin, wet
senseless noise, and Giles lifts Daniel up off his arms, yanking his
head to the side, crushing their mouths together.
He lost a while ago any sense of discrimination, any ability to
distinguish his need from Daniel's, and as he stops fucking and settles
instead for pushing ever more deeply, something there in the van knows
with a sharp and still clarity that such an ability is going to be very
difficult indeed to recover.
Giles, however, understands later, never now, only that some horrible
succession of folly and desire brought him here, set him rutting, and
will not release him.
/
Oz wakes up for the third time that day in a soggy heap on top of Giles.
His ass is burning and throbbing in that perfect-awful way, and his legs
are still trembling, like when he used to run track. Before he figured
out he just wasn't going to grow any more.
An owl screams outside, the noise frightening and primeval, and he
rouses himself, rolling as gently off Giles as possible. He stirs
anyway, stroking the side of his hand down Oz's ribs and swallowing a
couple times before he clears his throat.
"Should get going," Oz says. "You drive."
7. Something That Means Something
=================================
Oz has questions. He is full to brimming and overflowing with questions.
Giles says so, too. Just now, in fact: "You're full of questions, aren't
you?"
Beyond the usual polite and/or amused inquiry like that, Giles doesn't
seem to have many questions. He knows too much to have to ask anything.
But not Oz. He wants to know what Giles is thinking about, wants to know
why kaleidoscopes work, how a single guy can survive for decades on his
own without knowing how to cook anything other than a "fairly passable
curry", whether Rope was filmed in real-time, too, or if they just made
it look like that. If Leopold and Loeb could have sued Hitchcock for
libel even though they were child-killers.
Also, what's going on behind Giles's face? What does Oz look like to
another set of eyes?
"Huh? Full of questions? Yeah." He takes Giles's plate and his own to
the sink and returns to fetch the wine glasses. "You done?"
"Am I finished? Yes. A roast is done, a person is--"
"Finished. Got it." And there's another question right there. Who made
up grammar? Did someone sit down and say, all right, this word goes here
and only applies to people, otherwise it's wrong, but this other word
can go there, and apply to meat and other inanimate things. Of course,
meat *used* to be animate, so that might not be the best example. Still,
though. Who decided?
Giles smoothes his napkin after putting it on the table in front of him
and sighs. "I am sorry. I seem to channel my father more and more these
days."
"It's okay," Oz says from the kitchen, scraping plates into the compost
bin. "Learn something new every day, right?"
Giles meets him halfway between the fridge and the dining room,
relieving him of the scummy plates, setting them aside without taking
his eyes from Oz's. He's wearing the Bowie shirt and old khakis gone
fuzzy at the stitching, and it's pretty cool how he can go casual and
still look this intense all the time.
Oz wonders all over again what he's thinking. He doesn't ask, because
there seems to be a limit to how many questions are socially acceptable
within a certain time period, and any more than that? Weird and rude.
"You look tired," Giles says.
"Really? I feel okay." Oz sidles into him just so, hip leading shoulder,
and gets what he was looking for: loose arm around his waist, fingers
barely tucked into his waistband. Long cool fingers that send shudders
right through him like he's tissue paper.
"Thank you," Giles says, tightening the hold and bending a little so his
torso moves back but his chin comes to rest on Oz's head. "For dinner.
For--"
Oz shifts his stance, parting his legs, bending at the knee a little,
the way you do when taking a sharp curve while skating, bringing himself
back up alongside Giles. "Welcome. It was just moussaka. Well, TVP
moussaka."
"A miracle in and of itself, yes."
"What, TVP? It's good. Once you get used to it." Oz slips both hands
under Giles's shirt, spreading his fingers and just kind of hanging on,
feeling muscles move, stomach do its thing, heart beat.
"What are you doing?"
Hah. Got a question out of him. Oz tilts back his head and considers,
sliding his palms upward as he leans back against Giles's arm. "Ogling,"
he says. "But with my hands. Tactile ogling."
The chuckle starts deep in Giles's chest and rises up against Oz's skin
at the same time it goes up Giles's throat and out his mouth. It's this
heady mix of touch and sound, and Oz leans closer. "Do that again."
"What?" Giles asks.
"Laugh." He pushes the shirt further up, remembering all of a sudden
that he's never seen Giles totally naked. Giles just looks down at him,
smile kind of vague on his lips as Oz moves in. When he rakes a
fingertip over the left nipple, Giles sighs and bites his lip. The
nipple's shaped different from the right one, kind of splayed out in the
middle, wider. "Pierced?"
"At one time, yes."
"Hmm." Oz runs his finger back over it, getting another little sigh.
"Your misspent youth?"
Giles laughs again, and it's harder to feel this time, but the rumble's
there all the same. "My misspent youth?"
"Your words, not mine." Giles had said that at some point, he's sure of
it. It's just not something Oz could have come up with on his own. Oz
circles the pad of his thumb over the right nipple, not wanting it to
feel left out. "Left one means top, right?"
"Usually it does." Giles's voice is a little higher, which means he's
nervous or turned on, or maybe both. Oz is getting pretty good at
figuring stuff out from tone. It's like music, where the words in the
lyrics don't matter nearly as much how they sound. He's still got a long
way to go, but he's learning.
He wonders how that answer would go over in a leather bar. Not the joke
kind, not The Blue Oyster, but a real one. Probably not so well. From
what Oz can tell, the rules are pretty rigid out there. He remembers
he's gone quiet again, so he nods a little. "Mm-hmm. Misspent youth."
Back to words again, he thinks. Youth means a kid, like him, but also a
period of time that's not really very well-defined since it depends on
time passing. Like "the youth of America" is a group of kids, but
"America's youth" could be the Revolution. For Giles, his youth probably
went all the way near thirty, and Oz thinks that just because you don't
usually get your tits pierced when you're a teenager. Maybe you do, but
that would be unusual. Even for Giles.
Oz skims the scarred nipple with his tongue. "Feel that?"
"Mmmm."
He loves it when even Giles can't figure out what to say. "Cool."
Giles's fingers stroke the back of his hair and down the nape of his
neck. Getting touched there always sends jagged, buzzing little shivers
into the center of his skull, and down, forking into his legs before
doubling back up. Sweet.
/
"Got another question for you," Daniel murmurs.
Giles knows he stiffens at that, but he cannot help it. All he can do is
close his hand around the back of the boy's neck and squeeze, hoping
Daniel will not notice. He has felt himself dropping out like this
increasingly over the past week, finding himself absent and stiff. It
takes more effort to return to the moment each time.
"Hmm?" Giles says, his hand dropping to the small of Daniel's back,
bunching the fabric of his shirt. Vague polite noises seem to have
become his stock in trade.
Daniel leans back, bracing himself against Giles's arm, wide and
shadowed eyes gazing up. "How come we never manage to get all your
clothes off?"
Slow, serpentine smile on Daniel's face while Giles considers this.
Daniel's hands have slipped around his sides, kneading slightly.
"We've screwed around twelve, thirteen, times," Daniel says, fingers
slipping into the waistband and sweeping slowly back and forth. Giles
rocks against him, and then they are rocking together, onto their toes
then back to the heels. "But I still haven't seen like all of you."
"You've kept count?" Giles is surprised, to put it mildly. Rather like
when Daniel inquired about his youth just now. Numbers and time
generally seem to slip past Daniel, quietly, without notice.
There must be some term for this sort of--Giles is hesitant to think of
it as a learning disability, since the phrase smacks so much the
American demonization of difference and the tendency to medicalize
everything under the sun--this sort of cognitive capacity. Daniel is far
more carefully attuned to the presence of, the sound and weight of,
words and things. Whatever is discrete and individual, that is what
snags his attention. He likes to sound words out, poke apart their
constituent phonics, inquire after their various meanings and their
derivation.
He does not count, nor does he pass the time.
Daniel nudges his groin against Giles's leg and speeds up their rocking,
sending the red wine straight to Giles's head in flushed haze.
Unsteadily, he steps back. Daniel follows bonelessly, and thrusts
slowly, liquidly against him. "Sure. I'm counting the couch that time
the phone rang, just so you know. Hey, duck."
Giles obeys as the boy sweeps his shirt up and over his head, trailing
and catenating deep electric shivers down Giles's back. Daniel ducks his
own head under the fabric, and it slides down Giles's arm. He releases
the boy briefly and they step backward into the dining room as Daniel
presses his lips to Giles's chest. He taps Giles back up against the
dining table with a press of his forehead and thrust of his hips.
"Daniel--" and he breaks off, feeling a humming noise tremor run up his
throat as Daniel runs lips and tongue over his navel, small pale hands
undoing his fly. Giles lifts his hips as much against Daniel's mouth as
to free his trousers to be tugged off.
Daniel glances up sharply when Giles's cock bounces up. "Hanging loose,
Giles?" he asks, grinning widely. He braces his arms against the edge of
the table and leans over Giles. Giles has gone back on his elbows
without quite being aware of it. He hums again as the boy's corduroys
rasp over his bare skin.
Giles feels he could bear this strange scrutiny that Daniel subjects him
to for as long as necessary. He would willingly lie back on his elbows,
skin aching for the touches that fall lightly and randomly, nearly as
light as the spread of the boy's breath, moving over his nipples and
under his arms, for years. If that is what it takes, he thinks
nonsensically, so be it. He had dimmed the lights to eat by, so Daniel's
head hovers very dark over his own dully glowing skin. He is a strange
albino bird in sunny California, but Daniel matches him for paleness,
and sometimes, as Giles drifts under him, the only way to distinguish
between Daniel's hand and Giles's skin is a watery silver shadow. They
certainly cannot be distinguished in Giles's mind via touch. He is too
far gone to do that.
He does not know how long he lies there, thighs parted, thoroughly
naked, open for inspection. He does know that there have been other
times in his life when he lay like this, but they never felt like this.
The way Daniel looks at him is gentle and curious; generally in such
situations there is a sharp gleam in the other's eye, slightly feral and
certainly possessive.
Daniel moves over him slowly and with care, never giving any of the
strong hints of potential and future cruelty and violence that Giles's
nerves, crackling with tension, have been trained to expect.
Daniel is certainly strong; Giles watches the narrow muscles shift and
contract in the boy's arms for minutes on end. Yet while he is strong,
there is no aggression in his touch.
Giles feels all this. His thoughts do not move in such clean, complex
and well-ordered phrases, however, especially as Daniel takes hold of
his hips and pushes him farther up the table. He hears the protesting
squeak of skin on varnish as the boy pulls himself up, straddling one
thigh, drawing his thumbs down Giles's ribs till they brush the table,
and move back up.
Not aggressive but neither is Daniel passive. He simply is *there*,
touching and lulling Giles into this trembling equilibrium that swings
back and forth as his face comes in closer, kissing Giles deeply and
languidly. In a slow seep of thought, under this touch and inside this
kiss, Giles learns that there exist touches other than those of the
seductive and the seduced.
Daniel rocks his thigh against the bottom of Giles's cock, his pants
left behind on the floor, so that warm taut skin touches his own. Giles
is very hard, and the slow friction welcome, but there is no urgency in
his reactions, lulled as he is by this careful, endless scrutiny.
His arms give out and he comes to rest on the table when Daniel pulls
away and slides off, out of sight. Staring up, Giles blinks rapidly
enough for the candelabra's light to seem to quiver in tune with the
blood pounding through his dick and up the back of his skull. He loses
track--of time, of sensation--in the slow, insistent regularity of the
rhythm, until his head jerks up at the sudden grip on the base of his
cock and the pinch of the condom as it is unrolled. Daniel smiles
absently at him and scrapes over a chair to brace Giles's foot. He
swings himself back up and over Giles's chest, looking for all the world
like the men in the extreme skateboarding videos he watches over
breakfast. Giles almost expects him to grab his ankle with a flourish.
He arches under Daniel's grip, visuals forgotten, receding rapidly, as
Daniel captures his wrist and brings it up to his chest between them.
Cold lube poured into the cup of his palm, and Daniel is sliding over
him, lowering his mouth to Giles's, fists in Giles's hair, his thighs
opening wider to Giles's touch.
/
Oz figures he's nearly humping Giles at this point, messy tongue against
Giles's tonsils, ass trembling under the pressure of Giles's fingers.
Not that he can bring himself to complain, or even feel that
embarrassed. He moans into Giles when two fingertips breach him, and he
tenses for a second to keep from shaking like a leaf and flying apart.
In the past week, he's had to revise upwards his estimation of Giles's
inherent strength several times. He's up to cathedral-strong, centuries
built, peasants humbled and awed, buttresses flying, as the burn
subsides to a blush, then starts up as sharp, jazzy tingle and he rocks
backward and squeezes down on the fingers halfway in. Giles chuckles
under him and Oz nips at his tongue to get at the sound. He's doing
these little rocks forward, a couple per heartbeat, when he hears the
slap of hand on cock and feels Giles pulling his hips back.
Oz's thighs tighten for an instant, and he exhales down Giles's cheek as
he relaxes. There's no way to figure out what this feels like, opening
barely enough, taking in something hard and pulsing, but it's a burn
with sweet expectation, he knows that much, and he forgets to breathe as
he bobs in place and feels Giles work himself inside, somehow more solid
and firm than Oz has ever felt himself to be or will ever feel again.
Like he's running in place, one of those mall waterfalls that suck the
water back up and send it down again, his mouth going dry even as the
flush shuddering from his ass outward gets stronger and stronger and
Giles starts squeezing his hips so Oz struggles to rise a fraction,
barely anything, and sink back again. Giles's face is so close, gone
indistinct and broken up into these Cubic fragments, except where his
skin scrapes on Oz's mouth. He feels smaller than ever, hardly more than
bone and ass, light as a bird in Giles's grasp except for that one
thick, burning tension aching and rumbling up inside him like stormy
red-velvet sunset sky.
Oz rides like this for longer than he thought he could ever hold up,
motion deep and regular as the metronome on his guitar teacher's mantle.
Metronomes just gradually slow down, but instead he's smoothly picking
up speed, slobbering against Giles's mouth so much that the spit is cold
on his chin, burning cold like Giles's fingers dug into his hips, and
suddenly out of the clear blue sky barrels in that overwhelming need to
push and buck, and Giles is urging him on, thundering breeze rising up
the scale in his ear, and Oz grabs both hands onto the edge of the table
and jerks backward, pulling Giles's cock deeper into him, twisting his
hips around like a desperate virgin, and Giles is yanking him back down,
grinding up, the flame and pulse of his coming burning hot-then-cold as
Oz grinds down, white noise building in an avalanche in his ass and
behind his balls, and he collapses before the shooting's over, feels
spurts against his chest as Giles clutches him.
Giles is grasping at his cheeks, maneuvering him until Oz is kissing him
back, shallow little pecks, his lips are so dry he's worried they'll
crack open. Leftover bleeps and zigzags of sensation skitter around
under his skin, and he feels a bone-deep shudder start in his legs,
wonders where that came from. "God," he breathes into Giles's mouth,
hands sliding squeakily from the edge of the table to pillow under
Giles's head. "Mmmm."
Inarticulate, but that's to be expected.
/
Daniel looks worried, frowning, brows beetling over narrow eyes, when
Giles answers the door a few afternoons later. Before he can ask what's
wrong, however, Daniel hands him a sandwich wrapped in white butcher
paper and another sack of garden vegetables. The boy will brook no
protests when it comes to the vegetables, so Giles stows them in the
crisper without comment.
"How was practice?" Giles asks when he returns to the living room.
Daniel squats in front of the television, fiddling with the wires in
back, glancing anxiously at the snow that persists on the screen.
"Usual crap," Daniel says, giving up on coaxing better reception out of
the relic. He turns and sits cross-legged, facing Giles on the couch.
Giles does not know whether to rest his ultimate interpretation of that
comment on Daniel's previous scowl and the words themselves, or on the
contrasting lightness of his tone and the sudden jump of a smile. "You
remembered?"
Giles nods as he unwraps his sandwich. He cannot tell the boy just how
precisely, with a bookkeeper's concern for the neatness of the ledger,
he has remembered that he had band rehearsal that morning. Nor how for
the same past few days, blessedly Devon-free days during which Daniel
lounged with him from breakfast until moonset, he has also tried to push
away all thoughts of the impending rehearsal with something that edges
close to hysteria.
He knows just how easily, with little if any effort, slip into this
hysteria that is threatening. He could start recording the minutes spent
in silence with Daniel, the hours in bed, chart with delirious care the
rapidly dwindling time that fades in inverse proportion to this
blossoming, jealous panic. He has so far resisted slipping, for the most
part. Last night when the bed dipped sharply, he opened his eyes to the
slice of pale back turned to him, shimmying shorts up its hips, head
bent into the dark.
"You're not staying?" he had heard himself whisper like some tiresome
mistress, wheedling yet resigned. Shoulders shrugged, then Daniel pulled
his shirt over his head. "Can't," he had said simply, and Giles had
swallowed back hard on the sorrow creeping up his throat.
He could have slipped then; he could still slip now.
Daniel flicks his thumb absently at the charms on the bracelet around
his ankle, and Giles realizes how foolish he must look, smiling like
this into the empty middle distance.
"Don't get mad," Daniel says as he strokes the red vial charm. "But can
I ask you something?"
Giles digs nails into his palm and lets his smile slide away. "Of
course." There's that odd wheedling note in his voice again; he can't
seem to help it. He clears his throat. "Please."
Daniel's lips twitch as he fondles his bracelet. Giles wants very much
to run his hand through the spikey hair, feel it prickle his palm before
he finds the heat of the boy's skull. "Did you get fired?"
"What?"
Daniel ducks his head again, chin brushing the hem of his shirt.
"Daniel," Giles says, relieved to hear himself sounding somewhat normal.
"Why would you ask me that?"
"Well," Daniel says, rising to his knees and shuffling across the rug.
His instinct for closeness is not only triggered by stress, Giles has
learned, but it is at its strongest then. "Got to wondering, see--"
Giles laughs and grasps his elbow, hauling the boy up to the couch
beside him, remembering the first time they sat like this. Already the
memory of Daniel sleeping that first night has become strong and
familiar, its details rubbed away through frequent reflection, until all
that remains is the simultaneous sense of miraculous wonder and
stomach-twisting doubt that the sight brought. "That kind of thing can
be dangerous, you understand. Wondering and such."
Daniel laughs until he starts to cough into his fist and squints,
wrinkles closing off his eyes. "Good point."
"Dear boy." Daniel nuzzles a bit, hearing that, and Giles lowers his
mouth to Daniel's ear. "Are you busy this afternoon?" Giles asks,
stroking the cool small hollow of Daniel's neck. "I thought we might do
something."
Daniel sinks against him with a sigh. "That's what I'm talking about."
"Which is what?" Giles thinks that by now, he should be able to ask for
clarification without feeling surprised at the need. Daniel's statements
are scattershot at best, and make Giles wonder at the logic that should
connect them. There should be some current amongst these disparate
thoughts, else Daniel would be mad, but it is perceptible only
infrequently.
"Are you ever going back to work?"
Daniel stares at him so directly and plainly, with such clarity gracing
his features, that it is hard to believe Giles could ever doubt his
logic.
"It's summer," Giles says, swallowing. "Summer holiday."
"Met you at the library," Daniel reminds him gently.
Giles nods, swallowing again. No argument there. The longer he remains
silent, the closer the panic hovers, drawn nearer than ever. He tries to
clear his throat but Daniel stares at him again. Giles meets his gaze.
Lowering his eyes, Daniel murmurs, "I worried you got fired and didn't
want to tell me."
"I still fail to see the reason," Giles says. He tries to pull Daniel
closer, but for once the boy resists and remains where he is. Giles
cannot trace the source of his sudden anger. It flares up, he thinks
brokenly that he hates this, and then it vanishes. What is he angry at?
What could he possibly hate? Impertinence, or finding that he is the
object of worry? Perhaps those are the same thing.
"Just--" Daniel spreads out the fingers on both hands and cocks his
head, considering, it appears, the amount of chipping in his nail
polish. "Not mad?"
"Bewildered, perhaps. Not mad."
Daniel sighs and starts to pick at the polish on his thumb. "You've got
so much free time. Made me worry."
That was unexpected. Giles tilts against the boy strongly enough for
Daniel to catch him and tuck his head against Giles's forehead. "I
certainly didn't mean to worry you," he says, drinking in the sharp tang
of smoke, tobacco and marijuana, on the boy. "I had actually cleared my
schedule for the foreseeable future. I thought you knew that."
Daniel kisses his ear gently and slides down into a slump. "Sorry."
"Don't apologize," Giles says, automatically. He clears his throat
again. "I should have been clearer."
Daniel is quiet for several long moments, barely stirring with breath
against Giles. His neck smells like salt and the varieties of smoke, and
he sighs when Giles kisses him there. "You sound weird lately, you
know."
Giles looks up. "How do you mean?"
"Weird?" Daniel's eyes squeeze shut. When he does this, searching for
the best word, he resembles a small child caught in the spotlight of a
spelling bee. "Off? Like an old Chevy engine. Shutting down."
/
Okay, pretend he doesn't hear Giles shutting down. He can do that. But:
How do you clear a schedule? Like clearing a desk, one sweep of the arm
into the circular file? He wants to know what that means.
Instead, Giles reassures him in the best possible way, several times
over, with firm hands and straining hard cock and that kiss that burns
out his last neuron, leaving Oz all stupid and dizzy and desperate. He
lets himself get lost.
Someone really should try to market this particular sexcapade for
overworked executives. They'd make a killing, Oz is sure of that, and it
feels so good he can laugh at the weird porno-infomercial trend of his
thoughts and Giles won't ask what's so funny. Because it's normal to
crack up like this when it's a couple hours later and he's pressed up
against the slick wall of the shower, tiles imprinting his back,
tickling fingers running up his thighs as Giles sucks him off.
/
He should probably inquire after Daniel's vague, hesitant
solicitousness. He is always so careful to reassure himself that Giles
is not cross with him. As if Giles were violent and unpredictable,
prepared to lash out at the least infraction. It may be something in his
background, poor educational system and absent parents, but, upon
reflection, he is simply overreacting. The sensitivity seminars the
school board requires of all its new employees seem to have affected
Giles more than he knew. He does not need to be this aware of "warning
signs" and hints of trouble, not when it comes to Daniel.
It never would have occurred to him that Daniel was capable of worry,
especially over him. The boy is normally so placid and yet so attuned to
his surroundings, attuned to an almost psychic degree, that Giles had
assumed all thoughts concerning him evaporated as soon as Daniel steps
out his door. Place Daniel somewhere new, and he will adjust
instantaneously, take on the shape and hue of wherever he finds himself.
He has his friends, after all, that shifting, motley crew, and random
appointments to meet them for inexplicable reasons. Lack of any reason,
actually, is usually behind those appointments as far as Giles can tell.
Hanging in the park, hanging at the Bronze, hanging in someone's
basement. The term makes them sound like monkeys chattering the forest,
dangling betwixt the branches, de-licing each other's fur, and although
he has trouble picturing Daniel, so quiet and serene, as any kind of
monkey, the overall impression persists. He has his friends, and
hanging, and band rehearsal; Daniel moves among various situations with
such gentle leisure that Giles cannot understand how he might summon
enough energy to worry, nor when.
When Daniel is absent, away at these empty appointments, Giles works
desultorily on translations and updates to both his official and
unofficial journals. He puts in enough time that the Council should not
notice anything awry, but no more. He stays home for this work, loathe
to return to the library until he absolutely must. Daniel has mentioned
this once or twice, and Giles assumes he is merely being polite. It is,
again, inconceivable that the boy would rather be there than here. More
inconceivable, in fact, than the regularity with which the boy turns up
on his doorstep, or lets himself in, makes himself at home, all of which
are impossible despite the fact that they continue to happen.
Giles accomplishes little when he is working, and often, picking up his
pen after an hour-long break, the American expression "goldbricking"
comes to mind. He cannot feel very guilty, however. August is already
underway. Once term starts, he will have more than enough time to make
up for his wandering attention.
/
"Don't know what you see in him, man." Devon shifts Nonie off his lap
and slaps her ass, propelling her toward Oz. They're in the storage
space she got her father to rent them at the employee discount for
rehearsals. He promised to play nice, but she's already starting to wear
on him.
Devon straddles an amp, shaking his head at Oz, who's leaning against
the wall. "Seriously, you going to cruise Sunset Towers next?"
"You know it," Oz says. Nonie crouches in front of the cooler at his
feet, and hands up cans to him. He balances them in his palm, he's
getting good at this. Last time he made six balance before the stack
started to sway menacingly. He gives up at three this time. "Blue hair
and support hose get me every time."
"Exactly, man!" Devon guzzles the soda as Nonie slides back onto his
thigh. They've been together, what, a couple weeks? And she's already
got the hanging girlfriend-slash-groupie posture down perfect. Still
nodding vigorously, Devon pauses to kiss her, sliding his hand up under
her shirt. "I keep telling you you've got the pick of the litter and
what do you do? Go for the mangy old tom who lives behind the dumpsters
at Shanghai Garden."
"I think he's hot." Nonie smiles at Oz with such deliberate kindness he
feels kind of sick. Devon snorts. "I *do*. All kinda, I don't know,
*British*. And grizzled."
"Ben Cartwright's grizzled," Oz says. "Willie Nelson. Not sure about
Giles."
"You going to fuck Willie next?" And because Devon's never heard about
understatement, because he likes his exclamation points and italics in
bulk economy packs, he thrusts a couple times and retches for emphasis.
"Huh? Pound away at that geriatric ass?"
Oz sips his Hawaiian Punch and glances away. Then he studies the mutant
tropical guy on the can very carefully.
"Oh, fuck *me*." Devon's practically spitting.
Nonie looks back and forth between Devon and Oz, forehead wrinkling
pretty deep for a kid her age. "What?" she asks Devon. "What's wrong?"
"That's just-- Shit." Devon stands, holding Nonie around the waist so
she doesn't fall. "That's so fucking wrong, Oz. Just so-- *Fuck*."
Oz sticks out his tongue, crossing his eyes so he can check how stained
red it is. Berry, berry red.
Nonie trails after Dev, throwing pissed-off glances back at Oz. Yay. Now
he's in trouble with some chick he barely knows for annoying the great
and powerful Devon.
"So fucking *obvious*!" Devon's apparently found that perfect word he
was sputtering after, and shouts it again as he wheels around.
"Obvious!"
If their positions were reversed, Oz-now-Devon would tell him that Giles
fucks him way better than the original Dev ever did. Or will, whatever.
That would require some kind of personality graft, though, where Oz
keeps his memories but gains Devon's mega-frankness. His head throbs
when he tries to work through how that would work, since Devon-now-Oz
would never go for Giles in the first place. Basically, he just doesn't
have anything to say, although anyone else would be able to come up with
some type of retort, so he distracts himself with impossible sci-fi
scenarios.
"I don't get it," Nonie pleads, and any minute now, she's probably going
to start tugging at Devon's sleeve.
Devon tears away from her grip and in no time at all he's looming over
Oz, grabbing him by the neck. He kisses Oz roughly, nearly missing his
mouth, harsh suction and angry tongue. He swipes his hand across his
lips as he pulls back and Nonie squeals.
"Like that?" Devon whispers harshly, and Oz can't back up any farther
since he's already against the wall. And he's shaking too hard to think
about moving anyway. Devon smiles slowly, and the only thing Oz can
think of is a cat, some kind of lazy predator who has all the time in
the world to play with his food. Arrogant fuck.
Best just to go along. "Yeah. Like that."
Dev grabs his ass a little too hard. Oz is nearly always slightly sore
these days, since Giles fucks like it's going out of style. The hand
wrenching his cheeks apart is sharp and mean, but he wiggles against it
anyway.
"'Kay, now that's just *gross*," Nonie says. Oz can't see her, but she's
probably backing away, shaking her head. Wrinkling her nose like the
sight smells bad. He slides his hands up to Devon's neck and pulls him
back down for more kissing, trapping one thigh between his own, grinding
back against the hand on his ass. Dev's kissing like a drowning man,
gripping his shoulder hard enough to bruise really deep.
Devon moans into the kiss when Oz scrapes his teeth over the root of his
tongue, and starts thrusting, bracing one hand on the ringing metal wall
as he rubs his cock roughly over Oz's shorts.
"Dev?" Nonie asks, softly, uncertainly. "Devon?"
Devon rips his mouth away, a little trickle of blood worming over his
lower lip from Oz's teeth, but doesn't slow his thrusting. "Yeah?"
"I don't--" Nonie says. She's persistent; Oz has to give her that.
Nothing more though, because his dick is hurting, and Dev's pressed too
hard against him for Oz to do more than wiggle and bite back his breath
at the friction. And she's an unnecessary distraction at this point.
"Devon? What are you doing?"
"The fuck does it *look* like he's doing?" Oz nearly growls, and Devon
rakes his fingers up the split of his ass. His eyes go electric at that,
exploding with white sparks, and he twists just right so he's almost
riding Devon's pelvis.
Nonie shakes her head, and now she's backing up, getting close to the
door. "You said he liked to watch." Talking to Devon, shading her eyes,
voice going thin as a wire. "Not--. Join in."
"That what you said?" Oz asks, catching the tendon in Devon's neck
between his front teeth and sucking. He grinds awkwardly forward, shoves
his hand down Devon's ass, scrapes his nails the whole way until Devon
can't not moan. "Did you lie to the nice girl?"
Devon kind of sags against him, dragging his cock against Oz's, groaning
like a Neanderthal. "What got into you, man?" he manages before Oz hooks
his fingers deep into the crease between ass and thigh.
"He lies a lot," Oz says. Something like pity in his voice. Nonie's even
further away now, out the door. "Kind of an asshole that way, huh, Dev?"
/
Giles will not allow himself to panic. It is unseemly, not to mention a
waste of energy.
He is more than aware that Daniel's mind wanders as easily as his body
seems to do: One small twig in a stream swollen with the spring melt,
rushing, bobbing past, no will to speak of. Despite himself, he can
nearly forgive the boy's restless attention and this unexpected absence.
Hadn't it been only a day or so ago that he tried to convince himself
that Daniel's regular presence was the impossibility?
Moreover, he reminds himself, he has no claim on Daniel, nothing that
says anything about rights and privileges to his company. He also knows,
because he is young enough to have studied with a pupil of Thompson's,
that time-as-commodity is a modern invention. That the new urban
bourgeoisie's attempt to control and parcel it out was deeply offensive
and inscrutable to the traditional rural laborer. He frequently calms
himself these days by reviewing the extraneous trivia he has picked up
along the way. It distracts him long enough from whatever immediate
stimulus of anxiety has pricked him this time. Tiny thorns of anxiety
have the power to set him off into quick slide into worry and hurt. When
this happens, he retrieves the odd fact and turns it around, scrutinizes
it, until he feels better. Calmer.
Prompted, it seemed, by yet another useless fact Giles offered him,
Daniel told him the other day that he has a Velcro mind. Giles would
prefer a hook-and-eye mind, or a waistcoat mind, but Daniel insisted.
He's thinking now about Daniel, and when this happens, it is difficult,
nearly impossible, to return to the meditative fugue he had been trying
to foster. Time need not be commodified, but Giles knows, despite the
tweed and his general ignorance of computers and other contraptions,
that he is a resolutely modern creature. He cannot help himself from
thinking like this. From worrying and feeling the seconds slide past
him, unused, gone to rot.
So time is wasting. He is nervous, close to a shuddering panic, and he
is jealous.
/
"Why--why--why--why?"
Oz can't get away. That's not really the kind of thing you can answer.
"Why?" Giles asks him over and over, panting, and Oz can't figure out
what the hell he's talking about.
He stayed over at Devon's after rehearsal, but couldn't sleep, and let
himself into Giles's place just after sunrise. So, granted, the poor guy
just got roused out sleep. He probably can't be expected to make sense.
Just not fair to think he'd be his usual self, all clear and smart, when
he just woke up. But usually when people talk as they wake they mutter
about muffins on fire or warning the seagulls. Nonsense that's cute and
surreal, that they'll deny ever having said. That's what sleepers do.
They don't clutch your shoulders like this, shake you with every
syllable.
Giles pulls him onto his lap, combing his hair back with rough fingers,
and he can't stop babbling that one word. His other hand closes around
the lump in Oz's pants. That lump that he carried over here, the
just-about- permanent, aching one.
Oz tries to quiet him. He tries shushing and soothing and murmuring and,
finally, kissing. Giles's tongue works against his, lips closing around
Oz's, still talking for a bit. He keeps squeezing and releasing Oz's
dick and shifting him around until Oz is sitting sideways between his
legs, Giles's cock digging into the top of his hip, and he can't really
breathe that well anymore, smashed up against Giles like this.
Giles pulls away, blinking at him for a second like he has no clue who
he just dragged between his legs. "Daniel," he says at last, and starts
to work open his fly.
"That's me," Oz says. Giles nods and grabs his dick.
Giles's skin is hot from sleep, and when Oz brushes his fingertips
across his chest, a little sweat, more humid than actually wet, comes
off. He pinches the long-healed but still lumpy nipple as he nuzzles the
sweat caught between Giles's neck and shoulder. Giles shakes against
him, still panting, almost bending Oz's dick between his knuckles in his
hurry.
"Tell me what you were doing," Giles pleads, burying his face in Oz's
shoulder when Oz snakes his hand in between them and shifts so he can
hold on to his cock. He can't quite remember when Giles started going
commando, but it's cool at the same time that it's totally confusing.
"Tonight. What were you doing with your degenerate friends?"
His dick jumps in Oz's grasp when Giles breathes out that last question,
and Oz knows that this is one he can answer, since it seems like an
answer is more than welcome. Degenerate friends? That's new.
"Fucking around," Oz tells him, rocking his hand up and down as Giles's
panting twists off into a moan. "Me and Dev freaked out his
girlfriend--"
He doesn't know why he's telling Giles this, but he seems to be the only
one unsure here since Giles's arm goes around his back and his mouth
drags its way slowly down Oz's throat, little moans left behind that
shiver, maybe shimmer?, on his skin. He thrusts hard into Oz's hand and
starts up that long chain of "Why" again.
Oz tries to kiss him and Giles's head lurches back. "Tell me," he says,
voice all rough and tight. "Tell what you did. Touch me."
Oz shakes his head but doesn't let go. "Can't--" He can't, or he won't,
or something, but that's something Giles wouldn't like, he does know
that, remembering Nonie's something's-smelly-face, and Devon would kick
his ass if he ever found out.
"Why?" Strung out like beads, long and separate sounds.
"Why what?" Oz repeats, tightening his grip as Giles slackens his own,
letting his dick slap up against his belly. "Why can't I tell you? Or
why did we fuck around? Or why'd we freak her out?"
Giles shakes his head, eyes closing. There are little sparkles of sweat
or tears on his lashes as his mouth twists open. The next why gets lost
in a groan when Oz pushes him back against the pillows and slides the
trembling, weeping head of Giles's cock into his mouth. He laps up the
precum and reaches up to cup the balls with three fingers, hooking them
around the sac just like Giles likes it.
/
Why do I want you?
Why does he desire Daniel? Why does he get to have him?
He will never be able to speak those sentences, never, not even in the
hushed, shades-drawn privacy of his own mind.
But now, writhing and desperate, he can groan them out in fragments,
broken beyond sense, let broken, jumbled noises loose past his lips just
as he begins to shoot, deep into that terribly expert mouth.
/
Round and round we go, where we stop, nobody knows: Wheel of Fortune of
the Damned, the way Oz's brain keeps spinning back to the same topics
again and again. You'd think he'd have more to think about than the same
old questions. You'd be sorely mistaken.
Oz knows he asks too many questions. It's just one of those things he
never got a handle on controlling. He's like a toddler with the constant
who, what, why, where, how, and again with the why, and he's surprised
no one slaps him when he gets going.
Not that he gets going a lot, but when he does, it's like once he admits
not understanding one thing, everything else gets doubted, every stupid
little thing becomes somehow hideously suspicious, and the questions
just come. It's like looking at a little gap in someone's wallpaper.
Once you admit it's there, that there's one thing that he doesn't get,
that one tiny gap in meaning, he can't look away. Like those guys with
OCD, he starts digging at the gap until it widens and comes off under
his nail, and he just keeps clawing. Keeps asking. Keeps trying to fill
in meaning as it keeps sliding away, peeling off into the dark.
The questions never seem to be quite the right ones, either. Always
off-topic or mixed-up in some glaringly obvious way only he misses.
Teacher after teacher drilled that fact into him until he learned to
shut up in class. Until he taught himself to daydream.
It's not like the questions ever went away. They just went underground,
like Harriet Tubman. Or the French Resistance. Except not as important
or brave. Just running scared.
Brave would be asking and damn the torpedoes. Brave would be admitting
he just doesn't know what to say most of the time, that he can't
understand, that he needs help with figuring shit out.
He'd like to know some things, like how he can miss Giles when he's
lying right here in the man's bed with a sore jaw and bleary eyes. When
the guy himself is right there, back to him, knees drawn up like a
scared baby, breathing long shuddering sighs as he sleeps.
How come if this feels so fucking sweet in all its many and confusing
ways, how come sometimes he also wants to go back to the library? Just
read his books and check out Giles from under the safe dark blur of his
lashes?
How come he misses his pathetic fumbling shyness when he's buck naked,
exhausted, and ribboned with cum?
'Cause he does, sometimes.
At least until Giles wakes up.
8. Slouching Towards Labor Day
==============================
As he wakes, Giles knows immediately that he is alone in bed, indeed,
alone in the bedroom. The air feels off, far too still and close, for
Daniel to be here. He never doubts his sensory knowledge, whether it is
tingles up the nape of his neck, an ache in his knees, or this immobile
atmosphere. He does not doubt that he is correct, but he is still
intrigued by how quickly his senses appear to have adapted to the boy's
presence.
As well as his absence.
The scratches across his torso and the incongruously gentle twinges
running through his cock remind him, as if he could forget, precisely
why he is alone. He would prefer to forget the previous night entirely,
but knows, again with the full weight of experience and atmosphere, that
he cannot.
Rather, the problem is what to do in the next moment: How to rise. And
then in the next: How to start making his way through the rest of the
summer. How to do all of this alone, and deservedly so.
Routine can forestall panic, but never guilt. As he washes away the
worst of sleep's detritus, Giles avoids his own eyes in the mirror. He
actually finds himself perching on the edge of the tub while brushing
his teeth to duck any accidental glance at himself. It is yet another
ridiculous stunt, the latest in god knows how many he has pulled since
meeting Daniel. He would snort with laughter at himself if he saw this
from the outside, in a film or onstage.
But that is precisely the problem here, isn't it? He is very much
inside, and appears to have lost the ability to find the exit. He is
inside his skin and responsible to it, for what it has done, for what it
longs and aches to do again. Raked with fingernails and throbbing
sorely, his skin persists in this longing; it is rather like Daniel in
that sense, entirely innocent of any larger, more abstract consequences.
And like Daniel, his skin knows fear and knows when to flee, far better
than Giles himself.
Washed and dressed, as presentable as ever, Giles descends the stairs
slowly. He is reluctant, nearly afraid, to leave the ominous pressure in
the bedroom. He belongs there, alone on his back, breathing in the
staleness of his guilt. He does not belong here. Not here in the bright,
clean light of morning that wavers liquidly in the breeze through the
French doors.
The doors should not be open. He realizes this as slowly as is humanly
possible, before reasoning backwards, checking his logic. This should
not be.
When he reaches the last step, Giles sees why.
Daniel sits in the doorway to the garden, leaning against the sill,
shirtless. A smoldering joint dangles from his finger.
He ought to be the one marked with bruises and scratches; he is the one
hurt and broken last night. Yet there is no trace of how terribly Giles
treated him. His skin is alive in the sunlight, nearly glowing. His
hair, raked through and unruly, glows as well, shades of tangerine and
pumpkin battling for preeminence. He is present, and in this moment far
more beautiful than Giles remembers.
Giles grips the railing at the sight before him. He memorizes the way
frayed cuffs spill over Daniel's feet, the tendons flexing as he wiggles
his toes; the spray of fine hairs, caught nearly scarlet in the light,
along his forearm; the blue stream of smoke rising from his broad,
strong hand, dissipating into the thin gray fog hovering over his head;
the sharp horizontal cord of his clavicle and the long vertical dip of
his nose.
"Hey." Daniel keeps his head turned out the door as he speaks. How long
has he known he was being watched? Anyone else would have let slip some
gesture, some stiffening of the spine, some sigh. Anyone else would be
too self-conscious to remain so still.
Tugged by the sound of Daniel's voice, managing to ignore for the moment
every other impulse, Giles moves quickly across the room. He stops short
just inside the doorway, suddenly conscious of himself towering over the
boy, looming, unable to join him in his ease on the floor.
Daniel looks up at him, nose wrinkling, and inhales sharply on the
joint. The wheeze is wet and harsh. Giles swallows rapidly. He must
instruct himself to meet the boy's gaze. He cannot look at himself; how
he can he do this? He has no right to look at him, take in dark nap
along his hair line and the wiggly line of his upper lip. Daniel's mouth
opens and the smoke seeps out.
"Is that what I think it is?" Giles asks.
"Come on," Daniel says. With his free hand he tugs at the knee of
Giles's trousers, urging him down. Giles lowers himself slowly to the
floor, expecting to hear the creaks and protests of every joint. "Don't
tell me you've never done a wake and bake."
He hears something in Daniel's voice, an amused and perhaps hopeful
note, before he forces himself to stop the process of interpretation he
invariably engages in during awkward moments like this. Giles leans
forward and, finally, much too late, meets Daniel's eyes. They are
hooded: against the smoke, the light, Giles himself.
"Is that what we call it now?" he asks.
Daniel smiles narrowly at that and hands the scrap of the joint to
Giles. He inhales deeply, grateful for the distraction from the warm
weight of Daniel's hand, still resting on his arm.
"What did I do?"
Surprised by Daniel's quiet, toneless question, Giles tips his head back
to exhale, much more quickly than he had intended. "Pardon?" He chokes
and coughs once as Daniel thumps him on the back. "What did *you* do?"
Daniel takes back the joint and considers it, pinched between thumb and
forefinger, before he speaks. "Yeah."
Having apparently made up his mind, he hands the joint back to Giles.
His hand comes to rest back on Giles's arm.
"Nothing," Giles says, wincing at the heat on his lips as he sucks in
the last of the smoke. He raises the roach, offering it, but Daniel
shrugs.
"I'm good."
"Nothing," Giles says again when the smoke starts to leak out through
his nostrils. He thinks of dragons. He wishes this were the kind of
moment in which he could grin and tell Daniel that. He lost that chance,
relegated it to the status of vain wish, last night. Instead, he buries
the roach into the dirt at the edge of the flower bed and claps the dust
off his hands. "You've done absolutely nothing."
Daniel lets loose a sound too soft to qualify as a snort and rolls his
head around, gazing back out over the grass. Giles feels his heartbeat
pause and hang for a moment. He blinks against the light that is
suddenly too bright to bear.
"I can't see why you would think you had done anything," Giles says.
"Truly. I am the one who--." He hears his own voice, thick and so bloody
stuffy he would like to wince, and stops. Daniel's palm travels up his
back and rubs lightly while he continues to peer away. "I don't think I
can--"
"It's okay," Daniel says. For all he lets on, they could be discussing
the possibility of ordering in for dinner. Perhaps that is all they are
doing, and Giles is teetering on hysteria again. "Forget it."
"Well, that I can't do," Giles says. The strangest feeling of laughter
twines up through his chest, trembling as it branches and forks and
rises. "Much as I'd like to, this is one of those things you carry to
your grave."
"One of what things?"
Giles is certain that he is not interpreting too much when he thinks
that he hears Daniel's familiar relaxed curiosity in the question. He
can't be, because Daniel is rolling his head back, gaze sweeping over
Giles as his hand comes to rest on the nape of Giles's neck and
squeezes. He is partially smiling.
"I-I simply meant," Giles says, watching the ruddy lashes descend in a
near parody of a blink, "that--that experience, what I did to you last
night, is unforgettable in the worst sense of the word. In the sense of
guilt, and regret."
"The grave?" Daniel asks. He shifts back so his spine meets most of the
door jamb. "Wait. What did you do to *me*?"
Tendrils of laughter grip Giles harshly, latching in with their suckers.
He has to sniff air in through his nose to manage a semblance of calm.
"You're not serious."
"Perfectly serious," Daniel says. And he does sound serious, although
with Daniel, the tones of serious and utterly uninterested tend to verge
on each other.
Giles forgets momentarily everything else he has deemed inconceivable
over the past few months, because the sobriety in Daniel's expression,
the perfect innocence of his question are, when compared to the
grotesqueries he has been put through, truly, remarkably, inconceivable.
He starts to shake slightly under Daniel's hand and manages to draw
himself up straighter.
"I mean," Daniel says, "wasn't I the one fucking around?" He has stopped
apologizing for the occasional curses, yet Giles still feels the impulse
to cringe when he hears Daniel swear. There is something slightly too
fine and austere about the boy for those words not to sound odd.
"As if I had any claim on you." Giles rolls his shoulders, suddenly
aware of the tension gathering there at the base of his neck, as if
Daniel's statement had lodged right there. He hears himself slip into
what he has come to think of as the voice of a lecturer at a second-rate
university in the Midlands, eager to prove how much better he is than
his student audience. "No, Daniel. You are your own person. Responsible
for your own actions."
"Never said I wasn't." Daniel's mouth twitches up at one side and he
tilts his head slightly, as if Giles had just suggested that he was
purple.
"Let me finish, please?" Giles knows he has too little time to explain
this, and he resents having to explain it at all. It would have been so
much easier for both of them if Daniel *had* slipped away in the night.
He squeezes his eyes shut against that thought, regretting it as soon as
it forms, wishing physical gesture was capable of clearing his mind. Of
course he does not wish Daniel had disappeared; he wants him here, wants
him for as long as he can have him.
"Sorry."
"Don't apologize," Giles says. Weariness starts to creep along the
spaces left behind the vanished laughter. "Please, whatever you do, just
don't--"
Daniel grips Giles by the neck and wrenches his head over until their
faces are nearly touching. His eyes are narrow, his cheeks flushed pink.
"What if I am sorry? What then?"
Giles licks his lips and feels his face tighten into a mask far too
small for him. "B-but--"
"Seriously?" Daniel says harshly and drops his hand. "I don't know what
happened. Last night, whenever. Nothing new there. But then you start
talking about regrets and graves and shit, and what am I supposed to
do?"
He wonders for a flash, less than a moment, if this is how those crisis
negotiators feel just before the suicide falls or the hostage is shot.
His body is tingling sharply, painfully, bathed in pure alcohol and
dipped in dry ice. Giles fumbles for Daniel's arm, any part of him,
overcome with the urge to find contact and hang on.
"Do you know?" Daniel demands. "Because I don't. I don't know shit."
"Daniel--" Giles manages before finding a hold on his bare shoulder and
pulling him against him. "No."
The boy shakes in his arms as Giles finds himself trying to comfort him.
He does not know what to do. He does not know what he is trying to do,
what broke inside Daniel and made him seek this comfort. He questions
the length and pressure of every touch, evaluating their usefulness and
judging their efficacy. Confronted by collapse, he suddenly doubts his
own ability to feel. Everything, all sensation and emotion, seems to
have flooded away from him, leaving him empty and brittle as
worm-burrowed driftwood. Daniel trembles beneath his touch but is
silent.
"What did I do?" Giles whispers, stroking the sun-warmed skin on
Daniel's back, fingers skidding through the damp sheen of sweat. The
question is just another ridiculous stunt, it occurs to him, just as bad
as the literal inability to look into his own eyes. He doesn't want an
answer, he simply wants to have said it and have it done with. If he
wanted an answer, he would have spoken so Daniel could hear.
One of Daniel's arms creeps around Giles's waist and he feels the
fingers latch into the muscle in the small of his back. Giles's palm
slips around Daniel's rib cage; the bones and muscle there are delicate
and fine. If he squeezes too tightly, he can imagine Daniel shattering
like porcelain.
"You--" Giles tries again, and swallows whatever he meant to say. "I'm
sorry."
"Nothing," Daniel whispers, the breath of it spreading hotly over
Giles's chest. "Not sorry. Don't be sorry."
Giles feels certain of something at last. "I am sorry."
Daniel tightens his hold and rubs his forehead against the buttons of
Giles's shirt before tipping back his head and looking up. His
expression is twisted, beseeching. "Don't, okay? Sex is just--. It goes
weird sometimes."
In an instant, weak, nonsensical laughter blooms again within Giles,
just under the pressure of Daniel's chin, spreading fast and feverish
through his chest, up his throat. This time he fails to stiffen against
it.
"Weird?" he manages to get out before the laughter flutters into full
hysteria. This is the extent of his boy's wisdom and accumulated
experience? The full content of his knowledge of human relationships is
that sex gets weird.
Daniel's grip on him slackens as his eyes close. Giles knows he should
not be laughing, and he does not intend to be cruel, but the sheer
absurdity of it keeps striking him again and again. Weird, eh?
Weird.
"Yeah, weird," Daniel says. "What I said. Mr. Fucking Eloquent."
The laughter wracking his chest and throat slows for a moment and Giles
takes the chance to hug Daniel against him again. "Please," he chokes
out, "I'm sorry. Can't help laughing. Not at you--"
Daniel's head swivels and he nods shortly. "Don't see anyone else."
"I'm sorry," Giles says, hearing himself wheedling again. "Truly. I'm
*not* laughing at you. I know how much that hurts. I--" His throat
tightens, his voice going higher than it has since he had to leave the
choir's alto section. He blinks rapidly as he tries to breathe. Whatever
hysteria and weariness had colonized his chest like kudzu, they have
died and withered, and he simply feels tight and panicked.
"It's okay," Daniel says. "Just overreacted. Sorry." Before Giles can
say a word, Daniel shakes his head and shuts his eyes briefly. "And I'm
sorry I said sorry. You know." He pats Giles on the back softly and
presses dry lips against his throat.
The conversation is not over, Giles can at least be sure of that. All
the same it feels as if a moment has passed, become irrevocably lost. He
simply does not know whether to mourn its passing or to feel relieved.
/
Oz doesn't know what he expected the morning after he came to Giles
straight from Devon's. It's been a week now, and he still can't figure
it out.
Maybe he figured they'd just wake up and hang out like always, and it
wouldn't be a big deal. Maybe that's all he expected, and it's not like
that was too much to imagine.
He definitely wasn't expecting Giles freaking out and laughing at him,
then crying. And the freakiness only grew afterward, after they both
calmed down. The mood turned into this kind of tortured gentleness with
each other. Like they are twin bruises, barely swollen but dark as night
and incredibly tender. And they don't really seem to be healing.
Giles is the grown-up, though, and Oz guesses that he expected something
more typical. Less weepy-hysterical, painfully awkward, and overly
apologetic. More of a talking to. A 'where the hell were you' speech,
with maybe a tangent on 'what the fuck were you thinking' thrown in for
good measure. Except he doesn't want that, not from his stepdad, and
definitely not from Giles. He never would have liked Giles in the first
place if he was any good at aping that grown-up shit.
He likes Giles, among many other reasons that don't really have names
yet, because his record collection kicks some serious ass. He can lie
down here on the floor and listen for the rest of his natural life.
He has his arms crossed in front of him, his head resting on them,
turned towards Giles, watching him read. The man reads like-- well,
nothing he can come up with sounds right. It's like he's doing chemistry
experiments, giving head, playing the piano, and a couple other things
all at once, things that require passion and seriousness and a hell of a
lot more concentration than most people can summon up. And he manages to
do it while remaining totally still.
It'd be nice to hear his voice, though. And feel Giles looking at him;
sometimes Oz gets the feeling that he's not really here unless Giles is
looking at him. He doesn't know if that's anyone's fault, and it's not
like he can ask. Probably he's just insecure, because when Giles *is*
looking at him? Spotlights. Bat-signal strong spotlights.
"It's true, though. About villains blinking," Oz says, pushing himself
up and sitting back on his haunches. The skin on his arm's gone all
pebbly and weird from being pressed into the rug.
"Hmm?" Giles blinks but doesn't look up.
Oz shakes out the pins and needles in one hand, which just makes the
tingling worse. He holds the dead weight in his other hand and squeezes
more gently. "Sorry. Lyrics."
Giles smiles kind of vaguely as his eyes flicker up and he sees Oz. "Ah,
yes."
"Don't worry," Oz says. He's embarrassed suddenly, nervous he might have
flubbed this chance to get Giles talking. He thinks of the way kids
think the TV's talking to them, or those girls who thought John and Paul
were singing just to them, only to them. "I'm not finding the meaning of
life or earth-shattering significance in the lines to a song."
"Not worried," Giles murmurs. He looks up again and the smile is a
little stronger this time.
Oz wants to know what Giles sees when he smiles like that. It's almost
sad at the edges, but mostly just affectionate. Maybe a little
indulgent.
"Okay. It is true, though." The nerves are gone, thankfully, but now Oz
just feels bad for bothering him.
Giles sets aside his book and rubs his chin.
"Sorry," Oz says as Giles removes his glasses and holds them up to the
light from the window. They can't possibly be dirty, not with all the
rubbings they get.
"Don't apologize," Giles says. He folds the glasses and puts them on top
of the book. Okay, so maybe Oz isn't bothering him. "You feel like
talking?"
"Yeah."
That gets a completely non-sad smile of Giles, and Oz feels all tingly
for a second. Not pins and needles, either; it's the whooshing,
falling-down-the-well tingle he gets when Giles is touching him. Except
he's all the way over on the couch, so this is new.
But once he scoots back against the couch and Giles's leg, Oz doesn't
want to talk. Not with Giles slowly rubbing his scalp like that,
trailing his thumb down his neck, around his ear, back to the crown. He
leans back into the touch, resting his cheek against the side of Giles's
knee, trying to remember whatever bullshit topic he'd come up with this
time. It's hard.
Blinking villains? Just that stereotypes or whatever aren't the same as
what we do. Something like that. Labels versus action, he thinks, before
bracing his hands against the floor and lifting himself up between
Giles's legs and settling in.
/
Giles is on the edge of the bed, lacing up his shoe. The sun has nearly
set, and he has not eaten since lunch. Daniel promised to accompany him
to dinner, but he seems to be taking his time in the shower.
A warm cloud, fragrant with the herbsy shampoo Daniel favors, precedes
the boy into the room.
"I'm on to you, Rupert Giles. If that is your real name." Daniel scrubs
at his wet hair with a towel, smiling, speaking lightly.
"Pardon?" His fingers go still on the laces.
Daniel stands in front of him, hands on his hips. "You're not really a
librarian, are you?"
"Excuse me?" He forces himself to finish tying the knot, to kick out his
leg and adjust the fall of the fabric.
"Nah," Daniel says, stepping forward, forcing Giles to fall back on his
elbow. "You're like this incredibly evolved being, here in disguise,
working your mojo. Superhero."
Giles attempts a smile. It is difficult, to say the least, while
Daniel's words reverberate in his mind and Daniel's body is pressed
against his. "I assure you, nothing could be further from the truth."
Daniel's smile curves slowly over his face.
"I'm serious," Giles says.
"So'm I." With one hand, he pulls Giles up by the shoulder so that he
straddles his lap.
And Giles knows as well as Daniel does the single sure way to change the
subject. He links his hands around Daniel's back, nudging the towel off
his waist, and tugs him closer.
"Like that, don't you?" he whispers, just over Daniel's ear, inhaling
the heat radiating from the boy. "The way you always go for my lap?"
Daniel nods, running his palms up and over Giles's shoulder.
Giles closes his eyes, deciding to join the shivers wracking Daniel's
torso, to ignore the black haze of guilt blooming within him. "Makes me
feel like a dirty old man," he whispers.
"Yeah?" Daniel whispers. The room is quiet, their breathing barely
audible, and darkening steadily. "Cool." His voice is thick and breathy,
and it does not normally sound like this until he is a few moments away
from orgasming.
Giles shifts back and attempts to frown.
"Come on," Daniel says. "Kidding. Well, kind of." He reaches out,
running his fingertips over Giles's face more lightly than a breeze.
Giles turns his head, following the touch until it slips down and behind
his neck. Daniel brings him back up, kissing around, never actually on,
his lips in quick little pecks.
Giles presses forward, running his tongue around Daniel's mouth until
something drops or shifts, and he is inside, pulling himself up higher,
straining, pressing Daniel's head farther back, sucking out every trace
of mint and soap and salt in his mouth.
Daniel breaks away and runs the back of his wrist over his mouth. "Don't
tell me you haven't pictured it," he says. "Library. Lunch period. That
tiny little office. No, wait. The cage."
Giles lifts Daniel at the waist so he can move back into the center of
the bed, legs outflung, Daniel kneeling between them. He trails his
fingers over the lump of Giles's erection. "You do," he whispers.
Giles watches the arc made by Daniel's hand as it sweeps slowly to his
own cock. "I--"
Daniel touches himself lightly. Giles knows how that feels, has been
treated to precisely that teasing, glancing pressure, and it is all he
can do not to grab the boy himself and relieve him. Save him from his
own torture. He fancies himself falling, or floating, somewhere outside
of gravity, eyes locked on the steady, hypnotic motion of Daniel's hand.
He can half-hear what Daniel is saying, long phrases, exquisitely
detailed and utterly crude. "Up against the cage, right...standing up,
quick and fast, pants around my ankles, your fly open just enough to
fuck..." His body certainly hears them as he rocks his hips, desperation
building, yet he cannot seem to move his hands to do anything about it.
Daniel unzips Giles's fly with his free hand and reaches inside, never
faltering in the rhythm of his voice or touch. "...hide in the stacks
and suck me off after gym...like that, don't you?....drive me to school,
Giles? Park at the end of the lot under the lemon trees, push my head
down in your lap and start the day off right?..." Giles gasps as Daniel
squeezes his testicles, tugging them away from his body, the knuckle on
his thumb rasping against the veins in his dick. "Sounds good, huh..."
He is nodding and watching and gasping and almost past coming when
Daniel stops talking. Just stares at Giles, wide-eyed and shocked. His
hand a blur on himself, faster on Giles, and then he's brought them both
to the edge. His hands drop away and he whispers "coming?" just before
they are both spasming and jerking, shooting hard and blind.
Daniel teeters on his knees as Giles lies there frozen, and manages with
a groan to fall on his side, covering his eyes with his forearm.
"Shit," Daniel mutters, much sooner than Giles feels capable of speech.
"Oh, fuck."
Long, aching moments pass. The room is completely dark.
Breaths scrape in and out of Giles's lungs as the blindness lessens,
breaking apart at the edges until he can move and feel again. "Daniel?"
he asks. The boy has not shifted, but grunts in reply.
"Yeah?" he says at last, rolling closer to Giles, wiping his wet hand on
the already-ruined trousers. "Wow."
"How do you do that?" Giles asks the ceiling.
"What, jack off? It's easy."
Despite himself, despite everything, Giles laughs. Given how dry his
mouth and throat are, however, it sounds more like rusty hinges than
amusement. "Talk like that," he says. "So--"
"What?" Daniel props his head up on his elbow. "Dirty? Years of porn, my
friend."
"Honestly," Giles says. "I was going to say honestly. As if there's
nothing stopping you."
"There isn't." Even in the dark, Giles knows Daniel is shrugging; it is
in his tone, in the small shy hitch to his breathing. "Not here,
anyway."
"With the dirty old man?"
"Shut up." Daniel inches closer, aligning himself neatly and firmly
against Giles. "Not *here*. You know. You."
"So you can talk at length about every twisted fantasy, but you can't
tell me why? Or how?" He feels Daniel shiver against him, and manages to
untangle his arm and slip it around his shoulders. Daniel allows himself
to be drawn in, and gradually the shivers slow.
"Yeah, pretty much," he says at length. "Sex? Easy. Most of the time
anyway."
Daniel's skin is cool to the touch, and Giles finds himself content just
to touch, rather than continue talking. Daniel, however, rests his chin
on Giles's chest and exhales noisily.
"Yeah, easy. Easier. The other stuff's not," Daniel says.
"I see," Giles replies. This moment is quiet and cool, and he feels
absolutely no urge to disturb it with words or soil it with analysis. He
smiles into the dark, at the ceiling, content just to be.
His stomach growls, and he realizes he's not going to eat until morning.
/
Oz wishes sometimes he could split Giles into two like Captain Kirk.
That way he could have his Giles, the one whose fingers are stroking
Oz's leg gently as he reads, and then another Giles who could tell him
everything he needs to know. Wants to know, whatever.
But telling's not really Giles's style. He's more an ask lots of leading
questions and then take you through your answers kind of guy. Okay,
then, with Giles II, they could sit down at the big library table and
figure out if Oz is okay. Maybe get one of those portable rolling
chalkboards and use it for notes and flow charts, stuff like that. It
might look as bizarre as geometry does at first, but they'll figure out
a couple theorems and take it from there.
"Hey."
"Mm-hmmmmm?" Giles draws out the sound until he's finished the sentence,
then closes the book. And Oz can't believe his patience; the guy's
practically a saint, considering how much he's bothered and interrupted
all the time. He shifts a bit and blinks tiredly at Oz. "Hello."
"Hi," Oz says. He's scrunched up in the opposite corner of the couch,
legs stuck out, pushing against Giles's thigh. He digs his toes in
against the fabric a couple times before Giles swats him lightly.
"Ticklish," Giles says. "What's on your mind?"
"Got a question for you."
"Fire away."
"How come there's so many rules? Like, laws and stuff. Jaywalking and
shoplifting. Not the big stuff, murder and rape. I get why there are
laws against that. But how come almost everything's defined all the way
down to like what color your shingles can be and can't be?"
As the question goes on and on, Giles kind of slides down a bit until
he's almost lying against Oz's leg, propped up on his elbow. Oz doesn't
want to talk this much, but he wants to be clear. It's a stupid enough
question he's working up to that he doesn't want Giles thinking he's any
stupider than he actually is.
"So you're asking about civilization and social systems of order?" Giles
asks. He rolls a little and brings his free hand up to rest on Oz's
thigh. So, god, now with the touching; Oz is never going to get where he
wants to go with this.
"Not really," Oz says. He tries to pull his legs up to his chest, but
that just lands Giles's hand in his lap. Giles almost smirks at him and
that's a definite improvement from being bruise boy. His eyes go all
crinkly and dark green when he smirks. "Okay, I'll make this fast."
"Take your time," Giles says. "I'm not going anywhere."
No, he doesn't seem to be going much of anywhere. His hand's not even
moving, but Oz can almost feel his pulse ratcheting up through his
shorts.
He coughs, takes a deep breath, and says, "How come there's all those
rules for stupid shit, but there's nothing that tells you how to name
what you're feeling?"
Great, that's out of the way and Giles can think about it later. *Much*
later, because right now Oz is bracing his hand behind him and launching
himself forward into kissing and groping.
/
Giles owes all his gratitude to Daniel for allowing the oppressive
tension to evaporate, simply by studiously ignoring it. He often wonders
if Daniel even notices the emotional states of others, but for the
moment, he is grateful. He owes the boy.
Gratitude or an enormous load of guilt.
He falls a bit behind Daniel as they walk toward the coffee house. He
could be guilty right now, but he cannot be sure. Perhaps he does not
want to embarrass the boy in front of passing acquaintances; perhaps he
does not want to be embarrassed, although he has so few acquaintances
himself that were they to pass, he would see them coming from a mile
away. Something nasty and more than a little crass tells him that he is
simply admiring the view back here. Tiny waist he could span with his
hands with a little effort, and incongruously broad shoulders. A gentle
rocking bounce in Daniel's step that is at odds with his flat and
tattered trainers.
Daniel pauses at the door and holds it open for Giles. "You sit," he
says. "I'll get the java."
Giles would like a secluded table, but the restaurant seems to have been
designed by a professional hostess, one who knows exactly how to get
strangers to mix and make nice with each other. He settles on the booth
farthest from the door.
At the counter, Daniel appears to be deep in conversation with a tall,
sharp-featured redhead. Giles occupies himself with trying to decipher
the menu options scrawled in garish colors on the chalkboards over the
counter. It is slow going, but fascinating; the lettering reveals
influences of both the Arts and Crafts movement, particularly in the
serifs, and Warhol's later Pop pieces, especially in regards to the
squat spread of the lines and the blocky uprights.
Thanks to the squeaking of the wooden banquette, which rivals some of
the worse church pews he has had the misfortune to occupy over the
years, Giles finally registers Daniel's return. He looks down and finds,
much to his relief, a simple mug of coffee in front of him.
Daniel, on the other hand, has set about preparing a huge cup of
something that, beneath the froth and sprinkles and cinnamon sticks, may
once have been coffee.
Daniel tilts his head as he stirs the concoction, his lips tight with
concentration. "What?" he asks without looking up.
"That's quite a--" Giles begins. He does not want to hurt Daniel's
feelings. "Quite a drink."
"Gross, huh? All I wanted was a half double decaffeinated half-caf, with
a twist of lemon, and look what she gave me."
Giles finds himself goggling while Daniel sets down the spoon and smiles
at him.
"Kidding. Not about it being gross, 'cause it is." Yet he leans forward
and sips it gingerly. A white scud adheres to his top lip and Giles
schools himself into stillness. He is at least conscientious enough to
remember where he is and keep his hands in his lap. Daniel licks the
froth away, the tip of his tongue sharp, and peers at Giles. "Good boy."
"Ah?"
"Nothing," Daniel says. "You're really on your best behavior today,
aren't you?"
Giles reaches for the jar of sugar and tips a short stream into his
coffee. When he has stirred it sufficiently, sipped, and set it back in
its saucer, he rests his hands on the table. "Have you received your
class schedule for the fall?"
Daniel slurps at the now muddied froth. "Yeah. Why?" he asks, somewhat
distractedly.
"Just like to be sure that you will be challenged," Giles says.
"Yes, Dad." Daniel pushes away the drink, grimacing, and picks up the
dirty spoon, rapping it on the back of his hand. He nods along to the
rhythm and looks back at Giles, smiling not a little beatifically. "I'll
be challenged. Highly challenged. And I'll never go near the sweet jane
again. And I promise to go to church every Sunday."
"I'm serious, Daniel." Giles wants to snap at him, or cuff him on the
head. It occurs to him to demand that Daniel act his age, except for the
fact that he *is* acting his age. Giles is the one misbehaving.
"So'm I. Completely--totally--crossing my heart, hoping to
die--serious." Daniel sits back, drumming his palms on his stomach. "I
am. Big time."
"You don't care for school, do you?"
Daniel turns his head to look around the nearly empty restaurant. He
keeps up the beat on his belly as he starts to whistle under his breath.
His attempt to avoid the subject rivals Giles's own stunts in its
complete transparency, and Giles feels himself softening. So often these
days he slips from anger and impatience to an almost overwhelming sense
of indulgence and affection.
"Daniel?"
"Yeah, Giles?"
"Ready to go?"
Daniel looks back at him, and the smile with which he graces Giles is
truly beatific. For an instant, that is, before it slides into a rather
grotesque leer. "Got some plans?" Daniel asks hoarsely.
That is precisely the issue: Giles does have plans. But he finds himself
increasingly unable to see them coming to fruition.
/
Oz is pretty flexible. Adaptable. It comes in handy in a town where kids
sometimes just don't come back to school on Monday and stores close in
the dead of night. To hear his mom tell it, though, he's always been
this way. Calm baby, sweet toddler, pretty dreamy kid.
Okay, so the dreaminess probably isn't good when it comes to school, but
that's just a little part of life. In the long run, anyway. In like a
week or so, school's going to be a very big part of life for at least
another year. He's getting the feeling, and this probably shouldn't
surprise him, that Giles is going to be the ultimate hardass about him
doing his homework.
So he's not about to waste any time. He heads for Building 4616 every
chance he gets, skipping rehearsals, ditching Dev, leaving a mess of
notes for his mom. He's gorging himself on this the way bears eat more
salmon than they want and get so blubbery they can hardly move. Storing
up for hibernation.
Sometimes when Giles is busy or asleep, Oz just wanders around the
apartment, checking it out like he's visiting for the first time. He's
not sure what he's looking for. He doesn't find it, anyway. He just
wants to get a good sense of what the place is like, how it feels when
it's cloudy versus sunny, whether things are different at midnight than
they are right before dinner or after breakfast.
Maybe he's not looking for something so much as getting the feel of the
place, storing it up inside his skin and behind his eyes. Giving himself
enough material to use for the times he'll have to be in class before he
can get back here.
There's sharing space, he gets that, but then there's spending time. How
come space can be shared like food, but time is wasted like money?
Makes no damn sense.
/
Daniel is kissing him quite thoroughly. Giles has only been out for less
than two hours, but the boy slipped quickly against him as soon as he
opened the door. Tugging him inside, Daniel reached behind Giles and
shut the door with the flat of his palm before pushing him back against
it.
His shirt is open, and Daniel's, tossed on the floor, as Daniel grips
him, one hand at his waist, the other on his shoulder, humming around
Giles's tongue. He tastes like tomatoes, hot from the sun and almost
unbearably sweet. When Giles captures one hand and brings it between
them to his mouth, he tastes the sticky juice on Daniel's fingers,
undercut with the tang of salt.
"Chopping," Daniel says simply as he nudges his finger between Giles's
lips. "Last of the toma--"
Giles sucks the finger hard into the back of his throat and Daniel
breaks off into a gravelly sigh, sagging alarmingly. Giles holds him up
by the waist. Daniel tightens his arm around Giles, rocking back on his
heels, then forward onto the balls of his feet, bringing his lips up
against Giles's chest. A low, heady thrum builds around Giles's spine as
Daniel presses closer, and he worries at the finger with his teeth until
Daniel nips at his clavicle and pulls away.
"Get that?" Daniel asks.
Giles hears the phone ringing for the first time.
Daniel crosses his arms over his chest. "'Course, I *could*, but maybe
you--"
It is an idle threat, Giles knows this, yet panic spangles his vision
and he races to pick up the receiver.
It is worse than even his guilt-soaked imagination could have predicted.
"Rupert? Travers."
Giles collapses onto the nearest surface; the side table, it turns out,
which creaks ominously beneath him. "Yes, sir, of course--" He realizes
he is trying to tug his shirt closed and smooth his hair as if suddenly
exposed to the glare of police torches.
"I wonder, Rupert, how long you thought you might prolong this charade."
Daniel wanders over to the steps and sits, leaning back on his elbows,
knees knocking open and closed.
"You may be very far away," Travers continues. Giles closes his eyes.
Strange that when the moment comes, he is this calm. Shouldn't his chest
be heaving with something other than the remnants of lust?
"But, really, Rupert. Do you think us utter fools? Falsifying
documentation, defrauding the Council on numerous occasions: These are
serious offenses. Offenses that require severe consequences." Travers is
savoring this, Giles can tell. He lingers on the final syllables of
"consequences" as if testing wine, rolling them on his fat pink tongue.
"I understand that, sir," Giles says. When he opens his eyes, Daniel is
out of sight. He twists around, tracking the boy's movement, finding him
in the kitchen, filling a glass of water.
"And they pale in comparison to the real problem," Travers says with
utter satisfaction. He is nearly breathless with it.
"What is that?" Giles sounds bored to his own ears, and wonders if he
feels it, or if it is for Travers's benefit. Or Daniel's.
"Where is she, Rupert?"
"Who?" Giles stands from the wavering table and moves towards the dining
area. Daniel slips past him and Giles trails his knuckles down the boy's
back.
"Droll. I can see you haven't lost your charm. The girl. Where is she?"
"Buffy?" Giles says. He nearly whispers her name, as if it is a curse or
a charm, laden with power. He clears his throat. "She's currently in Los
Angeles. Due to return any day now."
"How can you be sure of that?"
"I can't, you're right. But I am. Buffy will return shortly. And then--"
He falters as he catches sight of Daniel. The boy wraps an arm around
his narrow waist and twists in the opposite direction, his head lolling.
The movement is entirely innocent; he is, most likely, just working out
a kink in his back. Yet Giles suppresses a gasp at the seductive twist
of muscles, the way the motion lifts Daniel's small, pale nipples and
drops his saggy waistband, revealing for a moment the thatch of hair
below his navel. Daniel shakes out his arms and moves on; Giles squeezes
shut his eyes and licks his lips. "Then all will return to normal, I
assure you."
"Odd, isn't it?" Travers says. "How you can assure me so blithely, as if
your word meant anything."
"Buffy is coming back, sir." Giles opens his eyes to see Daniel's bare
feet disappear up the stairs. "When she does, I will be myself again."
"You're speaking of the boy." Travers exhales raggedly. Giles hears,
beneath the croupy sound, a squeak and sigh of leather, and he knows
that Travers is tipping back in his chair, a smug little grin widening
on his face.
"I-I don't know what you mean."
/
Oz wants to be around Giles. Wants to be touched--although he can get
that anywhere; wants to talk--although his voice works elsewhere; wants
to hang.
He's having trouble finding the space between himself and Giles. He
doesn't think they're the same person or anything. He wouldn't want
that, first of all, and anyway that whole soulmate thing is pretty
creepy. He's not thinking like that. It's more about whether he can find
where he is just Oz, outside of the space he shares with Giles. This
problem of space, what it's like being with Giles--hell, what it's like
when he's alone, *thinking* about Giles. It's all wavery and unfolding,
this sense of constant development without any end.
And he knows how stupid he is, because that's how he pictures time, too.
He probably got it from _A Wrinkle in Time_, this idea that time's a
stretch of fabric or string. He always kind of pictured the tassel that
hung off his grandma's good drapes; it was twisted and braided, the
color of old brass. Anyway, time's this unending undulating cord, and it
can be bunched up, wrinkled, bringing distant events together. So the
picture in his head? Not even his own. He could lie to himself and
pretend he's just recycling the image, that it's some kind of
mental-imaginative conservation thing, good for the soul. But maybe,
more likely, he's just dumb.
So Giles has a girlfriend, name of Buffy. That's something right there
that shows how dumb Oz can be. And she's been away for the summer. But
she's coming back, probably from something for smart people in the city,
like at the Getty, where you learn how to read those inscriptions in
stone that Giles is always poring over in his books. Or maybe she's an
actress, and she's been away on a shoot.
Oz can see that, easy. Bit younger than Giles because, hey, he seems to
like 'em young. Smarter than your average actress. Stage training, not
just commercials and shit; and how does he know the hierarchy of acting
anyway?
He's running to the end of the cord, and wasn't the whole point of it
the fact that there *wasn't* an end? That it could get twisted or
wrinkled or whatever, but it would keep going on and on? Except it seems
Giles has a big old pair of pruning shears, and he's about to snap it
off.
Nice of him to share.
/
*About the boy*, Travers had said. He is not so stupid after all. Or,
perhaps, Giles is not nearly as intelligent as he would like to think.
He truly is as transparent and easily-read as anyone else. He may be
better at inventing circuitous routes of logic, justification, and
self-loathing, but when all is said and done, he is no better than, just
as bad as, everyone else.
He cannot, however, say the same of Daniel. The boy *is* unique. Giles's
first mistake was believing that being able to see that made him
special, too.
He wants very much to look forward to September, past the next several
days, through the last long weekend. Toward the first sight of Buffy's
upturned, laughing face, just after her first joke at his expense.
It is safe to love her: That is his job, and, more than that, his
vocation. In her presence, he may fade to the status of cultural cliche,
but he can, at least, be certain of his permanence. He would never go so
far as to maintain that she is nothing without him; that would be
utterly absurd and foolishly arrogant. But he is something with her.
Perhaps he is simply too old to tolerate willingly the possibility of
impermanence. Perhaps he has grown to the point of knowing with what
level of dependence and responsibility he is comfortable, beyond which
he cannot pass. Perhaps he is simply too scared to try.
"So, grand hurrah," Daniel says, pulling the van up to the curb. "Plans
for Labor Day?"
He has no plans, or he has too many. Even Giles is confused at this
point. He lingers in his seat, hand on the latch, waiting for Daniel to
take the key from the ignition.
"No," Giles says. "What do you normally do?"
"Feel bad for Jerry's kids," Daniel says mysteriously. "Get stoned. Fuck
around like a degenerate."
He has been making comments like that, harsh and bilious, for several
days now. Giles had originally thought he was simply nervous about
school starting, or that there were problems with the band. As they
accumulate, however, like pebbles in Giles's shoes, they become more and
more difficult to ignore.
"Is something on your mind, Daniel?"
Daniel shakes his head and shrugs. "You going in?" He lifts his chin at
the sidewalk.
"I thought you might join me," Giles says.
"Sure you have time?"
Giles does not press the issue. He simply unlatches the door, slides out
to the ground, and leans back in. "I'd like it," he says, "if you joined
me."
Daniel follows. The tilt of his head and shoulders is meek.
It is only after the dinner plates are washed and dried and a second
bottle of wine opened that Giles notices the tremors in Daniel's hands,
the relative quickness to his pace as he wanders the living room, the
rapidity of his breathing.
"Something is on your mind," Giles says, pushing his chair back from his
desk.
Daniel stops in front of the window to the garden. He puffs out a breath
to fog it and draws looping spirals on the glass. "So you staked out the
summer, huh?" he asks quietly, addressing the patterns he has drawn.
"Surveyed with your little tripod and binoculars, got the lay of the
land, and found yourself something to play with?"
Giles's fists clench. Words will not form on his tongue.
"That's great," Daniel continues. "The new conquistador, huh? Laying
claim, moving on when it's exhausted."
"That's just not true," Giles says.
"No?" Daniel turns suddenly and advances on Giles until he reaches the
desk. It is his turn to loom, and he does it well: arms stiff at his
sides, eyes narrowed to points. "What, you think I'm lying?"
"I'll be here, you see. I'm not moving on." Giles does not bother to ask
how Daniel knows any of this, where the clues were dropped, how badly
his lies were taken. It is enough to hold still and make it through this
conversation. "But you are."
"*Oh, Daniel, you have so much to learn, so much to see--*" Daniel
mimics fairly well Giles's own accent, but his quiet, characteristically
vague anger torques it into something sing-songy and effeminate.
Even Daniel, it seems, can find the cruelty everyone harbors somewhere
in their heart. Some twisted paternal part of Giles is proud of him for
that, even as the rest of him winces.
There is knife-sharp cruelty and more than a little deliberation in
their argument. Giles finds that he can argue best with something
resembling complete detachment.
"Got news for you, Giles. It's not just you. Not your summer, either."
"Since when do *you* care about your time?"
"Didn't have any, didn't care about it. Never thought about it."
"I know."
"Shut up, Giles. Never thought about it, 'til you decided to mortgage it
and go for Park Place."
"You've lost me there."
Daniel inhales sharply enough that Giles shakes himself away from the
cool embrace of detachment and checks his face. He is looking away,
hugging his arms around his chest and completely still. "Never had you."
"That's not what I meant." Giles slides back into monitoring mode,
knowing that if he does not, they will find themselves in a conversation
that begins with semantics and slips into honesty. Better to argue now.
"Whatever."
They argue. Then Daniel shoves him upstairs to bed.
/
Oz could give a flying fuck about some chick who's coming back. That's
not the problem, and Giles is smart enough to get that and not offer any
stupid apologies or explanations.
"Hey, here's something," Oz says, stripping off his tee shirt and
throwing it on the bed. Giles is so tense and quiet it's almost funny,
like if he makes too much noise he'll crack. He's got himself backed up
against the headboard, posture just as perfect as it always is, but his
jaw's tight and his eyes are little slits like he's afraid he's going to
start crying. "How come I've never fucked you?"
Giles glares at him but licks his lips all the same. It's kind of hot.
Creepy as hell, but hot. "Well, you see, when a pederast takes a
catamite--"
"Fuck you, Giles."
"No, you're not listening," Giles says sadly. "Such a thing would be
inconceivable."
Oz hasn't felt this hot and flushed, soaked with sharp little feverish
pinpricks, in a hell of a long time. When he climbs up over Giles,
bracing his arms on either side of his head and looking down, Giles's
eyes are glittery and black, his mouth all thin and snaky. "Rules,
right? All those rules in your head."
Maybe this is where he's separate from Giles. Right here, a couple
inches above him, their cocks rasping against each other, so close he
can feel Giles's breath like wind on his face. That would be ironic.
The thing of it is, Oz hates irony. Loathes it. It's probably easy to
make the mistake of thinking he's big on it, what with the wry
monosyllabism and all. Irony is about knowing something someone else
doesn't know, and finding that amusing. He picked that up in English
class somehow, and the whole concept bothers him. Why not just tell the
other person? Laughing at them because you know something is just wrong.
It's also making him really fucking hard. Combined with the little
squeals Giles is making, little moans and whimpering pleas. Jagged
thrusts against Oz's stomach, nails raking his sides as one legs comes
up and wraps around the back of Oz's thigh.
He'd rather not be separate right now, thanks all the same. Oz pushes
away and sits back on the bed.
"Nope," he says when Giles reaches for him. "Sorry, man."
/
Daniel left Giles in bed and slept on the couch that night.
When Giles finds him in the morning, he kisses him chastely and hands
him his orange juice. "Drink up," Daniel says. "Don't want scurvy."
If his first mistake was thinking he was special, Giles had plenty of
time last night to work through the mistakes succeeding that one. Taken
together, they all point to his reluctance to acknowledge the boy's
inherent kindness. He is young, and more prone to anger than Giles
originally thought, but he is more gentle and kind than Giles, monstrous
and greedy as he is, ever deserved.
"Eat," Daniel says and hands him a bowl of Weetabix decorated with peach
slices. "Milk's on the table."
Giles wants to ask why he is being subjected to this, but at the same
time he knows that it is the best possible, most well-deserved torture
anyone could conceive. He carries his bowl to the dining table and sits
like a good boy.
"There's a carnival today," Daniel says when he joins him. He pats
Giles's shoulder. "Eat, would you?"
Giles obeys mechanically. Twigs and slugs would taste better.
"There's rides. Dorky little midway and horse shows or something. Wanna
go?"
He looks up to find Daniel smiling at him, brows raised. Giles swallows
the mess in his mouth and attempts to remember what he should say in
this situation. There are hundreds of words from which to choose, yet he
would like nothing more than to retreat upstairs and hide under his
duvet like the coward he is.
"Not going all repentant again, are you?" Daniel asks. "'Cause, you
know? Already did that."
Giles swallows and keeps his gaze steady on Daniel's face. "Be quiet for
a moment, will you?"
"Sorry," Daniel says. Giles holds up his hand. "Right. Not sorry."
"I've said this before," Giles says. "But be patient with a doddering
old fool, will you?"
Daniel nods. "Not old," he observes. "What? It's true."
Giles cannot speak and see Daniel at the same time, much less have to
endure his kneejerk kindness. He stirs the remnants of cereal and
watches the threads of peach flesh waver in the milk. "The parts we have
to play, roles to be assumed. You recall that? I was wrong--deeply,
terribly wrong."
Daniel pushes away his bowl and places the spoon next to it. "I don't
know, it kind of made sense."
"It's sensible, to be sure," Giles says. He feels words align themselves
in his mind, subdued and obedient as pauper children awaiting gruel.
"That does not make it any less wrong, or pig-headed, or hideously
arrogant."
"Thing is--" Daniel rises from the table and rearranges the bangles on
his wrist. "It's really easy to say that now. Apologizing later? Always
easy."
"You like easy," Giles hears himself say. "Don't you? You have no taste
for the complex."
Daniel is at the door, sweatshirt in his hand, when Giles looks up. "I'm
out of here."
/
Days pass, and Oz sleeps a lot.
He's been keeping bad hours in addition to all his other bad habits this
summer, and he's going to need all the rest in the world when school
starts on Tuesday.
He'd like to pretend that this is the way the end of summer always
feels. Like you woke up from a coma and everyone's gone, everyone you
ever loved and trusted. He pretends pretty well for his mom, even for
Dev, the one time he calls.
But he's never figured out endings. Sure, there's graduation. Funerals.
But they're all made up, you know? They tell you what to do, tell you
how to feel, and when. That's why they're called ceremonies. You don't
even have to be there, and they'd still be held.
He's right here, though. Not going anywhere.
/
Giles knows now that is too easy to believe in the myth of multiple
selves, in his old vision of the wardrobe. As if he could separate
experiences and decisions out into virtual people, shrug on Ripper when
he felt frisky, button up the librarian when circumstances called for
restraint and analysis, exchange any of them at will. It is so easy to
believe that it can't possibly be true. It is a tale cleaned up for
children, tidied to the point of habit and cravenness, and he has to be
better than this.
And it is habitual and craven to blame Ripper for every revolting action
and stupid decision. But it's also easy. He would like to believe that
when he touched Daniel, every single time, that he had entered a fugue
state, had given way to someone stronger and crueler, to Ripper. And
even if that were not true, he wishes to God that it *had* been Ripper
at the breakfast table the last time he saw the boy.
He remembers sitting on the edge of his bed that evening before the
concert, wearing only old chinos and his undershirt, never dreaming that
he had arrived at some sort of fork in the road. He would have thought
he was well past such moments. They belonged to young men, antsy with
possibility and brimming with doubt. Sitting hunched there, however, he
was more naked and unformed than any infant.
He should have listened to the doubt, and poured himself a drink.
Settled onto the chesterfield for a good long read, dozed off, and woken
to the early morning, glasses twisted up his forehead.
He should not have risen, pulled on a shirt, and left the house.
As he does now, holding a scrap of recycled paper on which Daniel had
scrawled the address of the band's new rehearsal pace. There is no
chance in the world that he will find Daniel there, but he goes anyway.
The storage spaces are arrayed in a bewildering maze of outbuildings and
former warehouses, and Giles wanders for nearly an hour before he finds
the right one.
Of course, only Devon is there.
Giles pauses in the entrance and clears his throat. Devon looks up from
the pad in his hand.
"The hell you doing here?" he asks.
Giles raises his hand in a gesture that is part supplication, part
greeting. "Hello, Devon. Have you seen Oz?"
"Lost your boy toy, huh? That's rough." Devon shakes his head, smirking,
and goes back to his notebook. Giles leans against the wall, hands in
his pockets, knowing that he can outlast any of this child's obnoxious
behavior.
"You still here?" Devon says without lifting his eyes from the page. He
has spoken far more quickly than Giles was expecting.
"Yes. I believe I asked you a question."
Devon rakes back his hair and tosses aside the notebook. Bracing his
hands on his knees, he rocks back and forth, still smirking, eyes
narrowing as he takes Giles in. "No, haven't seen him. That all?"
"I suppose so," Giles says, but he makes no move to go.
Devon licks his lips so slowly that Giles knows the gesture is
deliberate. He just cannot tell whether the deliberation is supposed to
be seductive or rude, or some combination thereof. Giles shifts until he
is more comfortable, crossing one ankle over the other.
"You didn't fucking listen," Devon says.
"Pardon?"
"You're really smart," Devon says. "But that's your problem. No one's as
smart as they think they are. Not Oz. Not you."
Giles crosses his arms, pretending to give this due consideration. "I'm
afraid you're going to have to explain. I'm not quite following you."
"So smart, think you don't have to listen," Devon says, standing up and
starting to pace. "That clear enough?"
"Nearly."
"I told you not to fuck with him."
"You have a point," Giles says. "But I don't recall ever being
told--especially by *you*--anything about what and what not to do with
Daniel."
Devon blinks and runs his thumb over his lower lip. "Didn't I?" he asks.
He actually looks a bit concerned and confused. "I must have."
Giles starts to think that his former panic was misplaced, a simple
matter of overreaction. It's going to be all right. He starts to believe
this ridiculous interview is drawing to a close, that Devon is calming
down after his initial, obnoxious jitteriness. That any moment now he
will learn where to find Daniel.
"But I always have that talk," Devon protests. "Whenever Oz hooks up."
"Hooks up?" Giles cannot resist the snideness.
Devon shrugs, and Giles does admire his stubbornness, even if it is
truly exasperating. "Yeah. The talk. Goes a little like this: Don't fuck
with him. Don't hurt him. Have fun. Anyway, it must've slipped my
mind--"
Giles nods and even smiles politely as Devon resumes pacing, shaking his
head, disappointed and contrite.
"I've been smoking a hella lot of weed. Maybe that's it."
Giles continues nodding and smiling as patiently as he can manage.
"Or maybe--" Devon says, turning towards Giles and grinning widely.
"Maybe it's because it never would have occurred to me that a nice smart
old guy like you would, you know, molest my best friend."
Giles is on him instantly, hand on his chest, driving Devon back into
the metal wall. Devon's head bounces back, and the metal thumps and
rings, but he never stops grinning.
"Dude," he says, grasping Giles's wrist. "Personal space, okay?"
Giles pushes him back again, sliding his hand up to the boy's throat.
"Don't you ever say that word again."
"I'm sorry. I'm not on NAMBLA's mailing list. Is there a better term for
molesting someone?"
Two fingers laid against Devon's windpipe; pressed gently, they make the
boy's eyes widen and dim the worst of the grin. "What did I just tell
you?"
Devon's pupils are dilated, his cheeks flushed in his otherwise rapidly
paling face, and his breathing jagged and harsh. For a flash, Giles
remembers with his entire body just how good this feels, having someone
under your hands, wriggling, about to start pleading. The border between
sex and violence cannot be discerned with the body.
He eases the pressure of his fingers slightly. "Do you understand?"
Devon nods, his eyes darting everywhere. Giles shakes his head and
knocks him back again. "I didn't hear you. Do you--"
"Giles. Stop it."
At the sound of Daniel's voice, Giles wheels around, off-balance,
releasing Devon as he turns. He hears him slide down the wall but does
not take his eyes off Daniel. He stands slumped, hands deep in his
pockets, in the entrance. A skinny silhouette against the white glare.
"Dev? You okay?"
Devon coughs and sputters behind Giles, but Giles cannot move.
"Yeah," Devon says. "Wind knocked out, is all."
Daniel nods shortly and turns away. Unmoving, cemented and more shamed
than he ever thought possible, Giles watches him fade into the glare of
the sun.
When he is gone, Giles turns, offering a hand to Devon.
The boy flinches. "Don't fucking touch me, man."
/
Oz waits by Giles's car. It was pretty obvious he was here, since it's
not like anyone else drives anything remotely resembling this thing.
He's been waiting for a while now, starting to wonder.
He doesn't know what he's doing. Definitely doesn't know what he did
that made Giles jump Dev like that. To be fair, though, Dev probably
pushed him into it; he's talented like that.
But mostly Oz is just wondering. He doesn't know what he's doing. Let
alone feeling. *If* he's feeling anything. Days in bed kind of tend to
numb you out like that, so you have to wonder if you're even awake.
Everything's just majorly out of whack. Just all shoved around and out
of order, except he never noticed there was an order to things before.
Now it's different and he's so mixed up it's not even funny.
The worst part? Can't ask Giles about it because he's obviously a hell
of a lot more mixed up than Oz. And isn't that just so beautifully
ironic.
When Giles finally appears, Oz meets him and takes his hand. Feels
grateful that Giles lets him and doesn't even look around first or
anything. They walk past the end of the parking lot into the weeds and
down the hill to the where a stream used to run. It's cemented over now,
thanks to flood warnings and LA's need for water and all that Chinatown
stuff. When he was a kid, he used to lie on top of the hot cement with
his ear pressed up against it. If you could hear the ocean in shells, he
figured, it should be cake to hear the stream under the cement.
This time, though, he takes Giles just to the edge of the streambed and
sits down across from him.
"May I ask you something?" Giles says. So polite it hurts.
"Told you already."
"What?"
Oz pulls one knee up to his chest and puts his chin on it. "Ask me
anything. That's not going to change." Giles looks pale, even with the
sun starting to lower and go all rusty.
"Can you try to tell me what's bothering you?" Giles asks. "I know, you
can't. I just--"
"'Sokay," Oz says. He'd much rather just sit here for a while, but Giles
is fond of the words and the talking, and this is the least he can do
for him. "Um, see, it's weird."
"Weird." Giles is gentle again, but this is different from their
super-bruise days. It's like he's being gentle with himself, like he
broke all his ribs and has to move--speak, whatever--without straining
anything. "All right."
Oz runs his fingers up and down his shin bone for a while, trying to
figure out what to say. "I'm not upset that you thought it had to end,
you know," he says. Giles's eyes go a little wide at that. "That makes
me sad, but it's not what's bothering me."
"No?"
"Yeah," Oz says. "I mean, yeah, you could have told me. That would have
been polite."
Giles nods. "Fair enough. So what is it?"
Oz wants to take this carefully. He's not the sharpest knife in the
drawer, but that doesn't mean he can't try. "I'm starting to see why
people hook up sex to love. Starting to get the point of the whole
tunnel-vision thing. It's not like it's natural or anything. But it's
safer. It's what you do in the dark when you don't know what's going to
happen next. I get that now. Way easier to focus on one body and forget
about the others. If you screw that up, well, fine. Tunnel's already
dug. Just look for another light."
Giles brushes his hand over Oz's and squeezes. "I don't think you
actually believe that."
"Prob'ly not. But it's better in the long run. Maybe I'll luck out.
Stumble across someone magnificent. Maybe not. Probably not. Doesn't
matter."
Giles drops his hand at the same time his head kind of tips forward
until he's looking down into his lap. "You're shutting down."
"Yeah," Oz says. "Learned a lot from you, haven't I?"
"It would appear so."
He can see all the crinkly lines around Giles's eyes, and all of a
sudden Oz gets scared. Really scared, not afraid like when Dev was
dangling against the wall, or when Giles was glaring at him, daring him
to fuck him, not even as scared as he felt the time he invited Giles to
the concert. But really scared. Because, god help him, if Giles cries,
he doesn't know what he's going to do.
He hisses out a breath, trying to stop whatever's about to happen. Which
is really helpful, isn't it? Like whistling in a hurricane or whatever.
"Giles?"
Giles looks back at him, eyes not so crinkly, but his face is all pale
and tight, and that's even worse. "I can understand that, you know."
"I know," Oz says. His heart's skipping around like a gerbil on crack
and he tries to smile, tries to get a smile or little look from Giles,
some tiny thing he can hold onto, just for a second, while he calms
down.
Giles, though, isn't giving anything away. Just gazing steadily over
Oz's shoulder. Voice all quiet and librarian-y. "But you're going to
need to remember a few things. Can you do that?"
Oz wraps his hand around his shin and leans forward. "I can try."
"I mean for me," Giles says. Then he shakes his head like he's made some
horrible mistake. "You don't owe me anything, I know that. But I'm going
to ask anyway. Indulge the old man one more time?"
"Not old," Oz says. "But go ahead." Giles needs to talk because he's
afraid; he gets that, and that's okay. He can talk as much as he wants.
"Don't forget that you're choosing to shut down. That it's a move you
can change later. If, when, you need to."
Oz has to smirk at that. Like moods were like hats or something, and
they can be changed if you just wanted it hard enough. "Sure."
"I'm serious. The worst thing you can do to yourself is forget that."
Oz nods slowly as he runs his palms up and down his forearms, shivering
slightly in the twilight chill. "Okay."
"One more thing," Giles says. "Is that all right?"
"Yeah. Of course." Only one more? He's kind of hoping Giles had some
huge list of demands, all sorts of stuff, big and small, that it would
take weeks to work through.
Giles reaches out and strokes Oz's cheek. It feels really nice, warm and
soft. "The next time you feel like this--"
Oz jerks back. "Not gonna happen."
"Believe me," Giles says. "It will. Just do me this favor, all right?"
"Yeah." He sighs. Sometimes Giles can be almost as dense as Oz. Like
he's ever going to put himself in this kind of place again.
"The next time, call it love. Even if you don't think it is, try to call
it that. At the very least, it will make him or her very happy."
"Fuck, no. Not love."
Giles shakes his head and removes his glasses. "As you wish."
He can't take this much longer. Just-- No. He's shivering and his lips
feel chapped, and the ache in his knuckles is kind of throbbing and
jerking around like he's suddenly come down with arthritis. Oz leans
forward.
"My turn?"
Giles cups his cheek, and maybe this is the last time Oz gets to wonder
what he sees when he looks at him like that, and that sucks more than
anything, because it's getting dark so he can't make out all the green
lights and flecks and little spangles in the eyes.
"It wasn't like Dev said. Like toying with someone," Oz says. "Getting
your rocks off with a warm toy or something." He's embarrassed now,
which he probably should've been earlier; maybe that would have kept him
from opening his mouth. "Fuck buddies, or whatever."
"No," Giles says. "Not that." And that's bizarre, because Oz wasn't
asking anything. He was trying to *tell* Giles something. Giles thinks
he's a slut, and that's okay. But the point of it was that he let Giles
know that's not what was going on. That's all. But here Giles is,
agreeing with Oz like they're trying to answer a problem set and
checking their work against each other's. Like Oz was asking him
something yet again.
Oz takes Giles's hand. It just kind of lies there like something dead. A
fish or a slab of meat. He trails his fingertips over the back of the
hand. He can't look up. "But I could do that, you know," Oz says. If he
has to spell it out, he will, but it's not going to be pretty. "If you
wanted."
Giles chuckles dryly. Not laughing. Just rocks moving around against
each other. "I can, as well. In fact, I will. Whenever you might want
me."
"Huh?" That can't make the sense Oz thinks it does.
"As I said. Whenever you want," Giles says. "But you? You deserve better
than that."
"All or nothing, right?"
Giles nods.
Oz holds his breath, but nothing else happens.
They stop talking.
/
Giles will promise Daniel anything. He will do anything the boy asks of
him.
He is certain that Daniel knows this.
Hence the silence.
/
It's quiet now.
And *now* goes on for a good long time. Lasts longer than Oz ever
thought it could.
The dark seeps around them. Couple of locusts trill. A frog hoots and
burps in the weeds. Chilly, getting chillier, as they walk back to the
parking lot, their fingers, hands, arms entwined.
Against the side of the van: One deep, rapid kiss, totally wanton and
wet that sets them both grinning and moaning, liquifying hands and
limbs, liberating zippers and hems until their hands are twined around
rigid cocks, fingers interlaced, thrusting together in this long fluid
rhythm while they stare at each other, beaming, almost singing as they
come.
Then one dry hard kiss, all stubble and teeth, a swipe of sticky palm on
crappy paint-job, and Oz moves to the van's door. Giles stands there,
smiling back at him.
"Should get going," Oz says. Giles nods as Oz scratches the back of his
head and squints. "Later, huh?"
End
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