Message-ID: <47435asstr$1081822202@assm.asstr-mirror.org> X-Mail-Format-Warning: No previous line for continuation: Wed Aug 14 16:30:23 2002Return-Path: X-Original-To: ckought69@hotmail.com Delivered-To: ckought69@hotmail.com X-Originating-Email: [gmwylie98260@hotmail.com] From: "Gina Marie Wylie" X-Original-Message-ID: X-OriginalArrivalTime: 12 Apr 2004 15:04:47.0386 (UTC) FILETIME=[7EE237A0:01C4209F] X-ASSTR-Original-Date: Mon, 12 Apr 2004 08:04:47 -0700 Subject: {ASSM} Tom's Diary 4-12-02 {Gina Marie Wylie} (teen, cons) Lines: 1498 Date: Mon, 12 Apr 2004 22:10:02 -0400 Path: assm.asstr-mirror.org!not-for-mail Approved: Newsgroups: alt.sex.stories.moderated,alt.sex.stories Followup-To: alt.sex.stories.d X-Archived-At: X-Moderator-Contact: ASSTR ASSM moderation X-Story-Submission: X-Moderator-ID: dennyw, hecate _________________________________________________________________ Free up your inbox with MSN Hotmail Extra Storage! Multiple plans available. http://join.msn.com/?pgmarket=en-us&page=hotmail/es2&ST=1/go/onm00200362ave/direct/01/ <1st attachment, "Tom's_Diary_4-12-02.doc" begin> ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ The following is fiction of an adult nature. If I believed in setting age limits for things, you'd have to be eighteen to read this and I'd never have bothered to write it. IMHO, if you can read and enjoy, then you're old enough to read and enjoy. ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ All persons here depicted are figments of my imagination and any resemblance to persons living or dead is strictly a blunder on my part. ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Official stuff: Story codes: teen, con. If stories like this offend you, you will offend ME if you read further and complain. Copyright 2003, by Gina Marie Wylie. ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ I can be reached at gmwylie98260@hothothotmail.com, at least if you remove some of the hots. All comments and reasoned discussion welcome. Below is my site on ASSTR: http://www.asstr-mirror.org/files/Authors/Gina_Marie_Wylie/www/ My stories are also posted on StoriesOnline: http://Storiesonline.net/ And on Electronic Wilderness Publishing: http:// www.ewpub.org/ ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ Tom's Diary Friday, April 12, 2002 It's easy to get spoiled; I'd learned that a while ago. Even spending one night alone made me long to have someone else in bed with me. Having someone beside made me feel complete in a way I didn't really understand. JR complained I needed a bigger bed, but I wasn't sure. It was nice to feel the warmth of someone beside me. If I had a big bed, they could wander away... What would be the point of sleeping together then? I heard a soft sound in my dream; I thought it was someone talking behind me. I tried to turn in my dream, but I was stiff, and I couldn't manage it. Frustrated, I tried harder, like I'd done in the upside down car. I still couldn't turn in the dream, but I woke up. I heard JR say in a quiet voice, "Thanks, Jenny." "Sister Joanna, you never have to say that to me." JR giggled. "I don't think sisters are supposed to do what I want you to do to me. And vice versa." I felt JR sit down on the bed, then move to lie down. "We'll wake up Tom," Jenny whispered. "He can watch if he likes. But it was you I missed more than Tom." "Joanna, I love Katrina." There was silence for a second; they were kissing. "And I'm not sure who I have the hots for. Shannon is so confused, so desperate to have some guy to cling to for all time. She likes our love making, but it's not the same thing to her. Penny and I... we just plain like to do it. God, sex is good! Sue Ellen... that was a surprise! I was in the mood, but I never figured her to be. Wham! Bam! It was everything I've ever done with Penny, it sure wasn't her first time!" Jenny's voice sounded nervous. "It makes me uncomfortable when you talk about other people." JR put her arm around Jenny, and there was another moment of silence. "It upsets Tom, too. I don't understand why I do it. Once Mom and Kim found out about Penny and me, they had all this history they told us about. And when I wanted to do it with Tom, there was more history. They didn't mind talking about it, so neither did Penny or I. It was a really easy bad habit to pick up." Jenny giggled, and I felt the two squirming around. Jenny giggled again. "How come such a small girl is so good at tickling?" I mentally answered that. Because growing up our parents had tickled us; we'd tickled each other. For years, if either of us were slow getting up in the morning, the 'tickle bugs' would come for us. It took the sting out of being admonished for not getting up on your own, and provided a motivation down the line to take care of it yourself. They were still kissing when the alarm went off, and I reached over and pushed it, without looking behind me. "You got that awful fast, Tom," JR told me. "Were you awake?" "Yes," I said economically. "Would you mind taking the first shower?" JR asked. "No, of course not." I got up, got my things and headed out the door. Behind me, JR said in a frustrated voice, "You could have at least looked!" I stood at the door, still looking the other way. "Oh, think of this as a more adult version of tickle bugs." She started giggling, and I made the short trip down the hall. When I went back to my room to dress, JR was resting in Jenny's arms. "Morning, sleepy heads," I told them. "Someone else's turn to get wet." "Tom, are you really cool with this?" JR asked, wrapping an arm around Jenny, and kissing Jenny on her cheek. "Very cool with it, JR. I love the two of you. In different ways for each of you, but I love you. Maybe it's my male ego talking, but I think you love me. JR, I understand about wanting to be safe. Oh my gosh! Do I understand that! I understand waking up in the morning wanting to make love. "I am not," I said emphatically, "going to be the one and only in either of your lives. I'm going to be there, now and then. I can deal with it. And you know why? Because if I can't make love to you right now, there's later." I stopped, realizing something. I walked over to my desk and sat down, then put my head down. "Tom?" Jenny asked, now sitting up on the bed. "You know, I keep thinking I'm getting a handle on life. On being grown up. I said that about there's later. I don't know there's really going to be a later. Hope that there will be, faith that there will be; that's what sustains my belief. But it's not just faith in who I'll wake up next to, tomorrow, but in all sorts of things. "You, Jenny. You knew a lot more despair than hope and faith. I thought I understood what drove you to Kim's, then here. But I think I have it backwards. I thought you had faith the adults could protect you; but it wasn't that, was it? It was just hope." "You taught me faith," Jenny told me. "You laid between me and the door. I knew that if Sam wanted me, you'd be there. I knew that you'd stand up to him and win. With Kim, with your mom, that was hope that they'd keep me safe. You taught me faith. The promise of protection, not the hope of it. Am I making sense?" "Oh yeah!" "Too deep for me!" JR said. I met Jenny's eyes. I willed her to understand that I never wanted JR to find out what the distinction was because in order to understand, she'd have to pay the price. I'd gotten off lucky; Jenny hadn't. Mary and her daughters hadn't been lucky. Or Gloria, or Janey. Even Sue Ellen and Tony had paid to learn about faith and hope. What else is it, I thought, when you can look a friend in the eye, and say, "Tomorrow we'll be back together again?" And of course, prognosticating about the future brought me back to Elizabeth. It would be impossible to believe in the future, I thought, without faith and hope. I was still quiet at breakfast; but Mom had questions. "You haven't really said what you are doing tonight. 'Going out.' Okay, that's fine. When might we expect you back? What are you going to be doing and where?" It would be, I thought, easy to get on my 16-year-old high horse and say it was none of her business. Maybe I could have done that before I'd made love to my mom; I wasn't going to do it now. "I don't know for sure when I'll be back, and I'm not sure exactly where I'm going to be. I'm going out with a fellow who does outreach for teens in trouble. Late, almost certainly. And wherever it is he takes me." "And just what is it exactly, that you're going to be doing?" Mom asked. "That I don't know. I went to an orientation Tuesday, but that didn't work out as well as I expected. Now, I'm going to be more humble, and more interested in learning what I need to know." I paused, and smiled at her. "If I'm going to be past two, I'll call." Dad chimed in. "Thanks, but no thanks. Calls at that time of the night are too scary. Just call if you need help, okay?" "Okay," I told him. I could see Mom was troubled, but I knew I had to shake it off. Finally, it was van pool time. We picked up Penny, and then went to get Elizabeth and Shannon. I was mildly disappointed to still see Mr. Miller in homeroom, but I didn't say anything. I just sat down. First on the morning announcements was the message that Dr. Stone had retired 'for reasons of health' and that there was a search in progress for a new principal; in the meantime Mr. Jones had the job. Later in the day Uncle Craig called and told me that the school district had capitulated entirely. April and May, I thought. It really was too much to hope that they'd find someone I liked and put them in the job for such a short time. That, and I wasn't exactly in charge; they, whoever 'they' were, had a job to do, and no doubt they'd do it. I hoped they found someone better than Dr. Stone. At lunch, I talked to Tony, Sue Ellen, Elizabeth, Shannon and Gloria about starting a college search group. Tony just shrugged. "Man, next year the scouts come, Tom. I may or may not get offers, depending on how good a year I have. If I get offers, I can pick and choose. If I don't get any offers, or don't get any I like, then I have to decide if I really want to play. Because what I'll have to do is show up at a college, and tryout as a walk-on. That's really, really hard." "I'm going to Cal Tech," Elizabeth said emphatically. "Are you?" I asked. "Have you looked at their catalog? How likely are you to meet their requirements?" Elizabeth met my eyes; her expression was a little smug. "I don't want to sound like I'm speaking out of turn," I told her, "but I think I'd want to make sure my 'i's' are dotted and 't's' are crossed before I made my own predictions." I saw a sudden wilderness in Elizabeth's eyes. I felt insignificant; a tiny pimple on the ass end of human existence. I'd popped the bubble of my true love's fantasies, and I'd thought it was a joke; something she would have been sure to take care of. Elizabeth drew herself up, a fraction from tears. "I'm only a freshman, but I think you're right. It's going to be a lot of work; I should get started now on getting the job done." "I think," Sue Ellen interjected, "that was a yes. As for me, I'm eager to join in. Tom's right, if we go at this together, it will be a lot easier than everyone for themselves." She flashed me a grin. "Not to mention, more fun." Everyone smiled, and I saw Elizabeth throw Sue Ellen a glance. The expression on her face said it all; Elizabeth had written Sue Ellen off as the brainless girlfriend of a jock, a cheerleader wannabe with big breasts. I smiled inwardly. You rely too much on what you think you know; I could tell you a lot about how wrong that is. But there are times to let even someone you love, find it out for themselves. But not about going to Cal Tech. "Freshman and juniors, and everywhere in between." Steve Jones was sitting at the table again, and he laughed. "And what about us seniors?" "It's April," I said with a straight face. "If you haven't gotten something lined up, you are pretty much beyond hope. There's always a community college or Arizona State." Everyone smiled at that, but I knew it was true. And if I'd kept on like I'd have been, come next April I'd be sitting at a cafeteria, wondering what the hell I could do to fix the mess I'd made. Better, I thought, to take care of messes when they are little. All too soon, lunch was over. Elizabeth gave me a warm hug, albeit brief. I grinned at her, telling her I loved her in all ways. The afternoon seemed to drag on interminably. The high point in the afternoon came when Tony stopped me on the way to our last class of the day. "You know what Mrs. Walcott did in study hall?" I shook my head. What did you do in study hall? Pretty much what you pleased, so long as it didn't include talking, getting up or disturbing others. "She announced a snap quiz." I looked at Tony as if he just had to be pulling my leg. A snap quiz? In study hall? Talk about improbable! "She told everyone that the class was pass/fail, and if we didn't pass the quiz, we failed study hall. So, when she handed out the test, I went to the last page, looking for the 'Write your name on the first page and don't do anything else," directions. Except she hadn't told us to read the directions, there weren't any, really. Just two hundred questions about virtually everything. "About half the class was still working on it, when the bell rang." "That's bizarre," I told him. "I think Phil is right," Tony said. I remembered Phil from the orgy. "She's really a pod person, come to snatch bodies. Anyway, I didn't think it was a very hard test; I had lots of time." I nodded, and he headed off for class, while I was left to wonder what else could possibly happen in high school this year. The last bell rang, and I gathered up my friends, dropping them off at home. JR, Jenny and Penny went to our house; there was going to be a big dinner again. Shannon and Elizabeth to Shannon's music teacher's house, for Shannon's lesson. I hugged Elizabeth, and she clung for a second, communicating love silently. I went inside when I was dropping off my sister and the others at home, and changed. I put on an old pair of jeans, not that they looked that old. I contemplated a t-shirt, and decided on my own that I wasn't going to do that. Instead, I had a long-sleeved tan turtleneck with North High on the back; I put that on. I arrived at Marcus' office well ahead of when I was supposed to be there. He was sitting at his desk, talking on the phone. He waved me to a seat, and I sat down. After a bit, he hung up. "A little early." "I'm not supposed to be judgmental. Okay, I'll try to keep that in mind. I can't believe that's the only thing I need to concern myself about." "I kept waiting to hear from Eleanor; you jumping up and down about how I was racist bigot. "You sounded like one," I told him. "I have a friend who told me about what it's like for her being black. I decided I didn't know what a bigot was, so I kept my mouth shut."" "African-American," he interjected. "She's black," I told him, "but I think she just thinks of herself as a human being first, and lets the rest of it go." "Well, have you ever put on a pair of rubber gloves?" My eyes widened. Huh? He reached into his desk, pulled out a box, and tossed me a pair. "Practice. On and off, on and off. See how quickly you can do it." It was awkward the first time, and I didn't do it very well. It didn't stop Marcus from talking. "On the street, you want to avoid fluids. You're not macho; if someone spits at you, treat it like she fired a bullet at you. Try to get out of the way. A lot of the girls spit. Everyone does, now and then, though. You'll want to think long and hard about touching someone who's bleeding." "AIDS," I said, nodding. He snickered. "AIDS, Hepatitis, mono, valley fever; there's a dozen things you can catch. Better not to." I looked at him thinking it wasn't that important. Instead, he thumped his stomach. "I look pretty good, hey? Right?" I shrugged. Six foot six black men didn't do much for me. "I'm HIV positive, I have Hep A and C. You think I look like this because I work out? My idea of heaven, boy, was ribs, grits, fries; a baked potato slathered in butter and sour cream. A huge stack of pancakes, drowned in maple syrup and dripping more butter. Lobster? Love them! More butter. Crab legs and butter! Biscuits and butter! Butter and just about anything you name." I swallowed. "Still eager to go out tonight?" "I was never eager," I told him honestly, "just curious. I have no idea what to expect. None. Gosh, I don't know what to say..." Just what do you say to a dead man walking? Marcus laughed. "The retrovirals have the AIDS in check, I beat hepatitis, I beat mono and valley fever. The only way I check out is screaming and shouting, fighting all the way." He waved around us, "Out there, what I care about are the kids. Kids who are lost, afraid. Fucked up by themselves, their parents, society and school. Doesn't matter; they are out there. "You can talk to kids like that from now to forever; they've heard it all before. They wouldn't be out there on the streets, if they were willing to listen, if they understood. Nope, every last one is sure, no matter how screwed up their life is, that they are one of the ones that are going to beat the odds. "And when it goes bad, I get them to the hospital. Twice now, twice in the last three years, someone lying in a hospital bed held my hand and told me that they were giving it up. They were fucked up, and wanted out. One of them actually did make it." "I take it optimism isn't much more use than a whoopee cushion," I said, my voice bitter. "You might get a laugh from one of those. When someone on the streets laughs, it usually means someone is about to get dead or already is." "So what do you do?" I asked him. "I'm there. They all know who I am; they all know I have little tickets in my pocket to a shelter, to the kitchens. I can get them a safe place to sleep, a couple of free meals. If they pick the right time of year, they can get clothes and other things. Seasonal, you know. Thanksgiving, Christmas, like that." I nodded. Christmas wasn't a big deal at our house, Thanksgiving was the big holiday. Maybe more people should give thanks. "I can refer them to treatment centers for drugs and alcohol; I can see that they get medical care for whatever ails them, and that can be a mind-blowing list. I routinely send kids to the hospital with nutritional diseases like scurvy and beriberi. Abscessed teeth, you name it. What can go wrong, does. Usually," he told me, "I find them before they die. Not always. It's a risk you'll face out there. This time of year, it's not too bad. A cold snap in the winter... a week later and there's a lot of kids in bad, bad trouble." It would be easy, I thought, to believe he was making this all up. But I remembered Anna Jackson's comments. "So, you will be careful out there," Marcus went on. "Try not to talk; if you do talk, be careful of what you say. They can detect phonies, do-gooders, cops, lies; you name it; all just by looking at you. They like to push until something breaks; that's what a lot of their home lives were like. If someone starts ragging on you, pushing at you... back off. Go sit in the van and ignore them. I'll deal with it. "If someone has a weapon, back to the van. I'll call the cops. I don't want you to think with your usual white liberal goody-goody mindset; you see an African-American on the street, headed towards you, you back away. Let me know. The kids in trouble are mainly white, occasionally yellow. Rarely brown, virtually never black. Blacks, browns, and now Orientals, they're problems. You want to be careful of them." "You only help white kids?" The thought was literally mind-boggling. "Tom, African-Americans are the pimps, the drug dealers, the wheeler dealers. Hispanics are into drugs, not as many pimps. Asians are the coldest, least emotional people on the street. They do it all, and with no heart at all. You don't want to mess with any of them; hell, I don't want to mess with them. They tolerate me, because dead kids bring cops; I clean up the streets." I sat silently, contemplating it. "I'm sorry about Tuesday." He shook his head. "I pushed, boy. You didn't push back, but that's something that takes experience. You came today; that takes commitment. Eleanor said you had that. I just like to be sure." I shook my head. "I'm not sure of anything." He shrugged. "Some nights, it's a piece of cake. Nice weather, no one's screwed up. We have a few conversations, and come back. Nothing to it. Other nights; well, it can be hell. It seems to run in cycles, even after nearly ten years out there, I can't tell what it's going to be like on any particular night." "And the bad nights?" I asked. "People die," he said bluntly. "People get really badly messed up. Usually, kids start on the edges, slowly getting in deeper. It's like quicksand, pulling them in. Once they get trapped, the suction pulling them down gets immense. Not many can pull free. Almost no one can." I contemplated that. "The solution would be not to let kids get out on the street." Even as I said that, I saw his eyes flash and his head shake. "There is no solution. 'Let'?" Marcus asked rhetorically. "We don't 'let' kids get on the street, they go there of their own free will. And that's why they stay. Granted, drugs and booze cloud that, but that's what they think is true; you will never, ever, argue a kid off the street. Not unless it's their first day. "Scared straight? Are you kidding? They live on the street. Every day in every way, life on the street is worse than any jail or boot camp. The bottom line is that they are out there by their own choice. Arguing just gets their backs up. They turn you off; start to mess with you." "I want to learn what it's like," I told him. "I suppose that sounds stupid." He shook his head. "Thinking you can stop it; that's stupid. Thinking you can save them all; that's stupid. Learning what it's like; that's not stupid. Wanting to help them isn't stupid. The problem is, they are basically stupid. The best thing that can happen for most of them would be their parents doing whatever they have to, to keep their kids safe at home." A little after that we left in his van. It was an interesting evening; I very carefully made as few assumptions as I could before it started. I tried very hard not to be judgmental, or least not to voice or show it. I asked Marcus at one point if he'd varied his route because I was with him. "I go where the kids are," is what he said. That's not really an answer. Our first destination was a camp near 35th Avenue and Buckeye Road. It was simply a cluster of various forms of shelters ranging from a few tents to plastics sheets to, literally, cardboard boxes. "You can't put up anything substantial at a camp like this," Marcus told me. "Every now and then the City or the police or whoever decide to make them move. Then they have to pack up. There's some sort of coordination between the campers and the authorities, because almost always the campers show up the next day at a new site." There were about fifty people in the camp, ranging in ages from infants to a number of older men, and one older woman. Age wasn't a factor in determining who was in charge, though. The leader was a large black man in his early thirties, named simply 'Mohammad'. He was a physical presence when you were close to him; instinctively you felt a strong urge not to mess with him. He had a number of assistants, all young, large and appearing tough; most of his assistants were black, but a couple were white as well. I didn't see any Hispanics or other races at the camp. Marcus told me he was going to look around, but that I should ask Mohammad about life in the camp. That turned out to be a plan because Mohammad just plain liked to talk. He was glib, he didn't speak with any street accent; if he'd been dressed neatly he could have read the evening news and there wouldn't have been any raised eyebrows. "We look out for each other," he said simply. "We don't allow anyone to beat someone else up. We don't let people steal; we catch a thief, we kick them out. "We don't like drugs, much. Can't do a lot about that, but if someone gets wasted and starts bad-mouthing people, getting into hassles with other people, we kick them out. We just want to get along, you know?" I nodded like I understood. I contemplated asking questions, but I couldn't think of a way not to make them sound judgmental. He laughed at my expression. "You're asking yourself, why we choose to live like this." "I guess," I said, trying to be noncommittal and nonjudgmental. "Marcus, he's a good man; he used to live in a place like this, so he understands. Sometimes life is a bitch, you wake up one day with everything gone. You piss away your life; that or suck it up your nose, or shoot it in your arm, or drink it out of a bottle. We had one guy once who had been an executive in a computer company; he lost a fortune, and came here to try to forget, to drown in a bottle. "Only way to really forget is to die; otherwise, you wake up mornings, sober or getting there, and the world is still there, what you did, what happened, it's still there too. Worse, you feel like shit. "One day he looked around and laughed. That's all, he just laughed. 'Made a fortune once, it's not like I'm dead. Just go make me another.' I don't know if that was talk or what, but he walked away and I haven't seen him since. I like to think he's back living like he used to." "Is that a good thing?" I asked. Mohammad looked at me. "Sometimes. Sometimes, going back to what used to be is like being eaten by tigers and lions. No fun at all. Everyone here is different, everyone has an excuse for why they are here." Eventually, Marcus returned and we moved on. "The seem well organized," I told him. Marcus laughed. "A couple years ago, up in Oregon, Mohammad nearly got the City of Portland to give them 45 acres for a homeless camp. I think he still has dreams of doing that. Then I expect he'll promptly sell it, and live off the money for a couple of years." That was, I thought, hard to square with a man who was such an obvious force. Marcus shook his head. "Tom, the people who live like that are like everyone else on the street. They are there by their own choice. For every person in a camp you just saw, we have ten or fifteen in local shelters. Everyone in that camp knows that if they want a roof over their head, a lock on the door and hot meals, all they have to do is hold out their hand to me, or someone like me, and we'll give it to them." I thought about that. "For some people, being in that position must really hurt. Maybe enough not to be able to ask." I was thinking about Mary, right then. He shrugged. "Usually after you get beaten or robbed, raped or whatever, you decide that pride is a luxury for better times." The next place was even further away from the city; it was a migrant camp. That is, mainly Hispanic farm workers. There were a large number of unattached males, a lot of women and a lot of kids. "Here, you just keep your mouth shut, try not to meet a woman's eyes. This camp is run by a local farmer; he's not the greatest human being in the world, but at least these people have a built outhouse, and a couple of water faucets with safe drinking water." Obviously, even if I hadn't thought about it, the first camp had lacked those amenities. We weren't there long; Marcus walked around, with me at his side. I don't think I heard a single word of English the entire time we were there. Then we went to another field, north of Tolleson. Instead of a rag-tag camp like the first one we visited, this one consisted of a dozen vehicles, all of which, Marcus assured me, could run. Not often, not far, but as needed. These were almost all families, mostly white. Several of them had what I'd call 'Southern' accents. It turned out the Marcus also had some bus passes, and maps to the county hospital. A number of the kids had health problems; at the first two camps I hadn't really noticed, but at the third camp I did notice. He talked to a few mothers, who listened to him explain that the County Hospital was a little slow if you were a walk-in, but if you got there early, they would see you before the day was done. Then we were back downtown. He parked his van, a van much older and a lot more run down than mine, and we started walking. The kids we saw were white, more or less my age, more boys than girls. They were in small groups; some just two or three, some as many as seven or eight. Marcus would say hello, and ask if anyone wanted to spend the night in a shelter. Mostly the replies were obscene, but good-natured for all of that. Again, Marcus was well known to them, and it was more like a game. A game that no one wanted to play, though. We spent several hours walking the streets of downtown. Odd, I lived not that many miles away from downtown, less than five miles. I'd been downtown often in the last few weeks, and had been there now and again before then. I'd never noticed these groups of kids. Of course, this was the first time I was there after dark. It was after ten, Marcus and I were back to his van. "This next part is where life gets interesting," he told me. "I have a favor to ask." "Sure," I told him. "We're going to cruise down Van Buren, Washington and all that for the next little while. We're going to stop and chat with the working kids. They are going to walk up to your side of the van and ask if you want to party. "What I want you to say is that you're with me, that you have shelter tickets if they are interested. I'll give you a couple; sometimes the girls come in pairs. The guys are usually singletons. If they nod, just hand them the ticket; try to do it carefully, because if their pimp sees it, they'll get beaten up. With a new face, we'll fool some of the pimps, at least for a while. Then they'll get on their cell phones and spread the word. We'll know that's happened because when we pull up next to them, the kids will walk away. "Don't get out of the van, don't engage them in any conversation at all. Not all of them are kids, some are cops. In theory, the cops know me and leave me alone. In practice, if they feel like hassling us, they will. Say anything about a party, anything at all, and that gives them no legal reason to go after us, but they'll try to use it anyway. "Just say you're with me, and ask them if they want the ticket. If they nod or hold out their hand, slip them the tickets. Okay?" "Sure," I told him. "Can I ask another question?" I went on. "Keep it simple," he laughed when he said that. "Go ahead, sorry." "I've noticed there are good cops and bad cops. Yet a lot of people I've met seem only to have met the bad ones." He simply looked at me, and then made a face. "A good cop; I suppose they exist. I'm African-American. Which means I get rousted a lot. Stopped and questioned. How many times have you been stopped on the street and asked questions by the cops?" "Once," I told him. "It was late at night, when I was walking, trying to think." He laughed, "Well, there goes that illusion! I get stopped a couple of times a week, Tom. I'm hauled off to jail, on average, once a month or so." "What for?" "Being black. For having been in trouble before, for everything else that I am. No reason that I understand. I've changed; it happens, whether cops believe it or not. Not often, but sometimes you reach the pits of the Abyss. You look around and you get really, really scared. Then you do whatever it is you have to, to get as far away from that place as you can get. "For me, it was waking up stoned in a jail cell, some guy's cock in my ass. When I told him that wasn't my thing, he beat the shit out of me. He told me of course it wasn't my thing, it was his, and I should get used to it. He made his point rather emphatically." I made a mental note. Do not sleep in jail. Try to pick your cellmate. I had to laugh. And just what do you get to pick, when you're in jail? Nothing. Nothing at all. So, we pulled up at places where girls were lounging around. Either talking to another girl, or simply standing a ways back from the street. I asked the question; it had seemed like a simple, harmless thing. The fear that I saw when I said I was with Marcus was palpable. They'd glance at Marcus; most stepped back away from the curb. Some almost ran away. The terror in their eyes made me want to cry. They were mostly girls, as I said, my age, fifteen to seventeen. There were older women, but Marcus passed them by. They wore too much makeup, clothes that barely covered them, and the ones who came up to the window of the van made it a point to expose even more skin when they did. We went as far as north of the airport on Van Buren, turned around and went on the other side of the street. Another trip to just north of the airport, this time on Washington. Long before we got back to Central, no one would get near the van. "Well, let's call it a night," Marcus said. I looked at him. It was close to midnight, a little early, I thought, to quit. I contemplating asking him if he really was going to quit for the night, but I decided not to. The last two hours had been hard on me; much harder than I'd thought it would be. The camps, the wandering kids downtown, had looked dirty, but normal. The prostitutes, though, lived in abject fear. At a distance they looked normal, but mention who I was with, what I had, and they reacted. A lot to think about, I thought. A lot. "Do you suppose we could do this again?" I asked, as he turned south, back to my van. "Tell me this isn't a class project," he stated emphatically. "It's not school related at all. In fact, I nearly got expelled this week." "Hey, maybe you have unexpected talents!" "Please," I told him, "I do want to help. I don't care about anything else. Those kids... the fear in their eyes..." "You're being judgmental, Tom," he told me. "Fear is always with us, Tom. We could be in a car wreck; someone could blitz a light and cream us with no warning." I swallowed. "Been there, done that. The t-shirt is coming next week." He looked at me oddly. "We judge risks every minute of every day. Those kids on the street; they can take that ticket. I have had girls literally beg me to take them right then. And I have. I've been shot at, doing that, too." "Been there, done that, too," I said sadly. "No t-shirts that day. But she's safe and her brother will never hurt her again. Not ever." I was a little shocked at the pleasure I took in knowing Jenny was safe from her brother, and how warm the pride that I'd done my share to make it come about, felt. Marcus give me another odd look, then he went back to driving. "That's happened just a couple of times, though. Mostly, they turn and walk or run away. Because, they perceive the risks of coming away are higher than staying." He barked a bitter laugh. "Average lifespan of a girl on the street: maybe a year. Maybe. A guy, maybe a little more." "Is that why you stayed away from the older women?" I asked. He shook his head. "They didn't start on the streets, they end up there on their slide downhill. They have street smarts, and can exist for a long time. Exist, not live. "No, a kid leaves home because they can't bear it or they get kicked out; they have no defenses. No street smarts at all; even the ones who are sure they do. The kids downtown, they are there for just a month, sometimes two. Then it becomes a choice: eat or starve. To eat, you have to earn money. You can beg, but that's hard to do when you're a clean-cut, healthy looking teenager. So, there's sex. Sex means pimps, drugs, and nothing else. Violence, in some form, every day for the rest of your life. And you don't live long when you're in that world." "Yet, they keep choosing it." "It's like the old story about the frogs in the pot. Start the pot out cold, turn the heat up gradually, and you end up with cooked frog. Toss them in warm water and crank up the fire, and the frog jumps for it. These kids adapt to the street like the frog in the cold water; just slow enough so they don't notice how steep the slope is. Or how slippery the slope is. Then, they're toast." On that less than cheery note we arrived back at his office. I got in my van, started it up and left the small parking lot at the strip mall. The clock on the dashboard now showed it a bit before midnight. I made a note to myself, to talk to Elizabeth about fate, karma, luck, seeing the future; whatever you want to call it. It was with me again, then. I was about three hundred feet from the traffic light. To go home I should have crossed the traffic lanes on Buckeye and got in the left turn lane when I got to Central. But the light changed yellow as I pulled out; on a whim I went right at the light, instead of left. We liked to go to South Mountain Park on the Fourth of July. There weren't any nearby fireworks displays, but you had a clear view of the entire valley; there were times when we'd watched a dozen shows, all at once. I was close, so that's where I went. The toll collector at the booth explained to me that the park closed in an hour. I nodded and drove the five minutes up to the top, where there are picnic ramadas, places to barbeque and lots of tables. The parking lot is well lighted and well patrolled, but couples park there anyway. I'd never been to South Mountain Park for that, but a couple of times I'd gotten out of the car and gone and sat down, looking at the lights of the city. There are millions of lights visible; homes and business, churches and dens of iniquity. Planes, trains and automobiles. Streetlights and security lights, even a few searchlights. I'd had such thoughts before, but I'd never felt so alone before. The thoughts? Each light was a story; none of the stories were simple. Just a simple street light, if you stop and think about it. People, more than one person, makes the pole. More people make the bulbs; others make the wiring, the light sensors and switches to turn it on and off. Then a crew of men put up the pole, another crew does the wiring, others make sure the controls work. How many people have a hand in getting that solitary light up and working? Dozens, maybe hundreds. Each of those people has a family. Parents, brothers and sisters, aunts and uncles. Spouses and in-laws. Friends and enemies. They blinked the parking lot lights; I got back in the van and started the engine again. People were in no great hurry to leave, but a police car or two would be around shortly and then you had to move or get a ticket. I just got going, and this time headed for home. Choices, fate, karma. Luck, good and bad. I'd had some good luck of late. Sex, as much as anyone could ever want, I thought. But while I didn't regret it, I didn't want to do it again. Helping Jenny, helping Mary; I loved helping people. Helping Elizabeth when her heart stopped; helping Shannon in a way, when Roger Parker was bothering her. Helping Gloria, I'd even helped Tony's cousin, JR and Anna's sister Sally with a certain kind of experience. I was so lost in thought, I missed turning on Osborn to get on home; going up to Indian School instead. I decided to come back on Third Street; I wasn't going very fast, I was still thinking. It was a shape I saw out of the corner of my eye, as I passed an alley. Just the shortest, briefest, momentary glance at a pattern of shadow and light. I slowed and stopped. There was parking along the side of the street there, for the shops back on Indian School. I got out and walked back towards the alley. The alley was dark; there was a fair amount of traffic on Indian School, but not much on Third Street. I stopped at the entrance to the alley, looking to see if I'd been imagining things, or if I'd really seen a foot in the alley. Just that, what looked like a short bit of leg in a white sock, lying next to the buildings. I couldn't see anything; it was quiet except for the traffic noise a hundred feet away. I took a tentative step down the alley; I still couldn't see anything. I stood listening again, then moved another few paces forward. In retrospect, I'd have understood better if I stopped and thought. Which would have done the same thing for me as going slowly did. My eyes had been used to headlights and streetlights. The alley was dark. By going slowly, I let my eyes adjust, and when they did, I could see someone sitting sideways in a doorframe ahead of me in the alley. It was really dark in that doorway, so I moved a little further along, but angling away, which I thought would be reassuring, even as it let a little more light past me. It was a girl, I saw. She looked up at me, her eyes wide and staring. "Go away," she said, "I have a gun!" She moved, and I could see it. Yes, she did. It didn't much look like the gun Sam had used, it was more like the guns you see police detectives have on TV. She was holding it nestled between her breasts, the barrel against her chest, and pointing up. She didn't say anything else, but I didn't need to hear the words. It wasn't me she was threatening to shoot. Oh, it's so easy to be brave, when you're trapped and have no place to go! It's easy to be brave, when there's no one else but yourself, and a friend is on the street, dying. It's easy to be brave when someone puts a gun to your forehead and makes demands of you, threatening someone you love. I could be wrong, I thought, about who was at risk. She wouldn't have to move the gun much, and it would be me in the line of fire, instead of herself. But someone had to be in the line of fire. A year, that's what Marcus had said, that was the lifespan of a girl living on the streets. Just a year. Some didn't even live that long; and if they survived? You broke and ran, or you broke and stayed. It didn't seem like either one was much good to you. "Could I sit down a ways away, and we can talk?" I asked. She snorted. "I'm not going to give you a blow job, no matter how long you talk." "Well, that's good," I said, being judgmental. "God only knows how many other dicks would have been there before me. Thanks, but I'll pass." I waved at the asphalt of the alley. I was about ten feet away from her now, no longer blocking what little light there was. She didn't say anything, so I just sat down, Indian fashion, my legs crossed. I reached into my jeans and pulled out some of Marcus's shelter tickets. I leaned forward and put them on the ground three or four feet away from me. "Those are tickets to a shelter. I'd offer you a ride, but you'd misunderstand. So what I'll do is call a cab, pay the cabbie to take you there." "I'm fine here. I got lost, trying to find Encanto Park." I sighed. "Well, this is your lucky day! If you'd have found the park, you'd need the gun to stay alive." "A girl gave me a map to a clump of bushes. She says no one knows about them." I lived just a few miles from Encanto Park. I'd been there a hundred times during the day. They had a nice pool, good tennis courts, a golf course... and acres and acres of lagoons, winding walkways and clusters of bushes. I'd been warned since I was five or six, to stay away from the bushes, because people lurked in the heart of those bushes, people who would hurt little boys and girls. So, I'd kept away myself, and kept JR safe as well. Which wasn't hard, because our parents never let us get very far away from them. "Trust me," I told her. "Take the shelter. Stay here, if you absolutely must. Avoid the park, particularly at night. But the bushes aren't a good idea, even in the daytime." "I've been to a shelter; it's worse than living at home. You have to pick everything up, they lecture you at meal times..." her voice ran down. "I don't want to go to a shelter, I'm fine." Two things happened then. She moved slightly, turned her face just a bit, so I could see her face. It was the girl from my dreams! I felt my jaw scrape the pavement, and I felt tremors running up and down my back. And, for a second, I could see a dark, rectangular shape behind her. It took me a second to realize what it was; it was a folio case, like art students carried around. What runaway took her art with her? "I'm fine, thanks," she told me again. "Please leave." "I just want to talk." "And I don't," she responded. "Please leave." For a second, I was listening to Shannon tell Roger to stop, to please leave, a long time ago at school. Roger hadn't gotten the message, and I'd smugly told myself afterwards that if a girl ever told me to leave, why I'd do just that. Yet, it was going to take more than her asking just now to get me moving. I waved at the folio. "Are you an artist?" "No!" she said emphatically. "I'm not an artist. I doodle things." I wondered about that; but I was more concerned about finding a safe topic that she was willing to talk about. Then I remembered the dream content. "Do you doodle houses and floor plans?" I asked. She snorted. "No." Back to finding a safe topic. "I was born and raised here in Phoenix," I told her. "Where are you from?" "Santa Maria. That's a little town in California, north of Santa Barbara." I knew almost nothing of California geography. Los Angeles was west of Phoenix, San Francisco was north of LA and San Diego was south of LA. I had lots of t-shirts from LA and none from anywhere else in California. "There are times I think it would be nice to live in a small town," I said, crossing my fingers. She snorted again. "Sure. Of course. A high school that a few kids get grades that will get them into one of the lower tier of the UC system. Maybe you can get into a top tier school if you are in the top two or three. For most of us, it's the community college to prepare for our life of burger flipping, working at Wal-Mart or picking vegetables." "Until yesterday," I said, hoping that she was warming to the topic, "I didn't think much about college, even though I'm a junior. A girl I know, she's a lot like you; she has plans, things she wants to do. She's really worried how she's going to be able to do it; so we're going to get together a little group, a support group, and work on getting us all in places where we can chase our dreams." "I don't have dreams or plans; I gave them up for Lent." "I'm not Catholic, but I have a friend who's a nun." She snorted again. "I gave up on nuns in fourth grade." She was still holding the gun where she'd been holding it before. I didn't think, though, that she had her finger on the trigger any more; but it was too dark to be sure. I contemplated asking if there was anything she hadn't given up on; decided that was such a stupid question that I should spend more time thinking. The silence lengthened, then she asked me to leave again. "I was curious about why you left home. Everyone says it's not something you're supposed to ask; let the person tell you if that's what they want. Please, I'm curious. I have a Mom and Dad that I love, a sister I love loads and loads; a new sort-of sister, a girl we're going to adopt. We're happy; oh, we have issues, but we work through them." She looked down, staring at the pistol I thought. I wanted to crawl to her on my hands and knees and tell her I was sorry, I just wanted her safe, that was all. Whatever she wanted, I was willing to do. She looked back up. "So, you're one of the lucky ones. My father drank himself to death when I was eight. Mom works as a waitress in a cafe, making minimum wage and tips in a place that caters to people too poor to have their own kitchens. They almost never tip. We live in a ratty one-room apartment, and ever since I can remember Mom has been on my case about studying, getting good grades so I can get a scholarship and get the hell out of there. "She hates my doodles; she hates it when I don't get good grades in school. I like math, I do okay there. History? Who needs it? English? Like, what, I'm speaking French? Biology? Every kid in California knows all about reproductive biology. All the rest? Like I care if I can play a stinking flute?" "What do your doodles look like?" I asked. "Buildings, mostly. I like to draw buildings. It's not art. It sure as hell isn't floor plans. I think it would be cool to be an architect; but unless I go to a top tier school, that's never going to happen." Dad had gotten a series of books once by David Macaulay. The one I'd like best was Cathedral, but Castle was good too. Actually, they were all superb. "I read a book once on how to build a cathedral. You needed some history to understand the basics of it; you sure needed to know history to know why they did a lot of things they did." I was being judgmental again; I knew it. Just how in name of reason can you hold an intelligent conversation about anything without employing judgment? Even mundane conversations about what's for dinner, what should I wear, is it hot out? "I read that too. But I don't want to build a cathedral. Office buildings, I guess. Maybe a hotel. There are some cool hotels in Las Vegas, I saw some pictures of them once on TV." Once again the conversation lagged. How was I supposed to talk to someone about a topic I had zero interest in? I had a little knowledge, but that hadn't gotten me very far. She might actually be okay here, tonight. And maybe tomorrow or the day after. But she knew, I thought. That's why she told up front about a blowjob; she's not there yet. Which had to mean she was new to Phoenix, new to the streets. It's simple, I thought. I'll get her to go to Mary's. "How about I call a cab, and have him take you to a woman I know. She has two daughters, one about your age, one my age. She'll put you up for the night. No questions, no hassles, no nothing." I decided 'no breakfast, either' was one 'no' too many. "Sure, like everyone just lines up to take in a stranger late on a Friday night." "They're friends," I said quietly. "They won't mind." I could see her looking at me, so I decided I had to push, just a little. "Let me call them, and tell them you're coming. Please." She shrugged, and I picked my phone off my belt and dialed the number. A voice said politely that the number had been disconnected. I stared at the phone, checked the number. It was the right one. I dialed in manually; it was still disconnected. Evidently, the phone company had a low tolerance for people not paying their bills for a couple of months. Mary was supposed to have gotten some money during the day; obviously not in time. Kim had my aunt and uncle as houseguests. Our house was full up; I'd offer up my bed in a second, but I was certain that the offer would be misconstrued and put me back where I started, but with the girl prejudiced against me. Tony? He'd do it if I asked; but his parents had been having problems. A runaway girl would be like pouring gasoline on the fire, I was afraid. Sue Ellen? She was a friend, that she was. But this kind of a friend? I grimaced; there was only going to be one way to find out. After a few rings, I got the answering machine. Everyone was, I thought, out. Or at least not answering the phone. I could, I thought, simply take her to a hotel and put her up; I had a credit card that would work for that. Again, it would look bad. I racked my brain, wondering what I could do. "No room in the inn, eh?" the girl laughed bitterly. "No one answering the phone this late at night," I told her. Well, there was one person I could think of. One person who owed me a favor, and the favor I wanted was the one I'd done for her. Of course, there was also Gloria's father to contend with. The worst that would happen couldn't be worse, I thought, than our first meeting. Or our second. I pushed the speed dial button and waited for events to unfold. The second ring, a familiar voice answered, "Si?" "Sir, this is Tom Ferguson, Gloria's friend. I was going to ask her for a favor, but since I have you, I might as well start with you." "It's after one in them morning." "Yes, sir. I learned how to read the big and small hands in first grade. Look, I have a friend, a girl, in high school, she's from California. It's Spring Break, there. Anyway, she needs a place to crash for tonight." "What's wrong with your bed?" he growled. "Sir, I don't think her mother would approve; I doubt if I could explain it to my mom, either. So, could she crash at your place tonight? I'm sure I can find her a place elsewhere before tomorrow night." "You must think I'm crazy," he said, his voice angry. "I think, sir, you'd be doing me a favor. I think you might want to ask Gloria about if she'd be willing to do all of the work. I'd hate to put you out the least, tiny bit." "Are you on drugs?" he asked. "No, sir. I just have a problem that I need some help with. I'd be obliged, sir, if you'd help. If not, sir, something else is always possible." I could just take her to Mary's, stand outside and knock. It wasn't much worse than calling them up this late at night. "Sir, could you wake up Gloria and ask her for her opinion?" "You are on drugs!" he said, his voice bitter. Okay, Mary's it was, then. "I'm sorry to have disturbed you, sir. I really am serious, and I appreciate the time of night. Thanks, anyway." Someone had said something on the other end, and for a second there was the lack of sound as the speaker was covered up. "Hello, young man," the new voice was Gloria's grandmother. "I'm sorry to wake you up, ma'am," I apologized. She sniffed. "At my age, I don't get but an hour or two at a time. I was listening to the radio. What is it?" "Ma'am," I said, then repeated the story to her. "Bring her by. She can use my bed, I won't need it until the afternoon." I think she was trying to chuckle, but it sounded like a cackle. "Thank you, thanks a lot." I hung up, and turned to the girl. "Okay, I have a place that's not a shelter. Trust me, my friend's father is a bit brusque, you don't want to shake hands with him, but her grandmother is really cool. My friend Gloria is nice; she's a cheerleader at my high school." I sat still for a second. Two things left; one I was willing to compromise about, the other was non negotiable. "I wish you'd trust me, get in my car and let me drive you there. It's about six or seven minutes; if I call a cab it could take an hour. It wouldn't be fair to those people, to wait an hour." "And I should trust you?" she asked. "Yes," I told her, "you should. But that isn't the hardest thing I want you to do. I want you to leave the gun there, sitting in the doorway." She sniffed. "Afraid I'm going to shoot you?" "No, but it's peace of mind I'd like to have tonight, with you staying with my friend and her family." "You think I might be some whacked killer? I'll do them all in the night?" She was, I thought, a little pale. "I don't think so, but like I said, it would help my peace of mind." "And why should I give a good God damn about your peace of mind? What about mine?" "Trust me," I told her. "Either everything I've said to you is a lie, or it's the truth. Black or white, girl. Trust me or not. Doesn't matter if it's a little or lot, does it?" "I suppose." She was silent for a long time, three or four minutes. "I guess it's something I have to do," she told me. "I think you're wrong, though. I have no where to go. No where. I don't have a place to go tonight; I won't have one tomorrow or the day after that. I don't think about next week or next month; but I don't have a place to go then, either. I am not going home; no one can make me go back." "No matter what you think about my gender or age, all I want is for you to be safe. Then we can worry about the rest. One thing at a time." "It was awful at home," she was talking rapidly, a defensive tone in her voice. "I like my doodles; I do them and I feel better. Mom would get on my case about school, and how I shouldn't waste my time. She'd shout and make me upset; at school they made me upset, too. The school shrink gave me some pills to help me with the stress. But I felt so weird. Depressed. I..." She started crying softly. "I don't know what's happening. It was just one thing after another. I can't go back!" Again, I realized that things weren't maybe as simple as Marcus had presented them. Then I realized Marcus really hadn't said much about why kids left home; it was easy for me, a teen-ager to blame it on clueless parents. But in this case, I think it was team effort. This girl had pride; she knew she'd done something stupid, but because of that pride, she wasn't going to admit being stupid, even to herself. Another ten thousand things that made it more difficult to stop and admit to yourself that you need to rethink. "You don't have to go back," I told her. "I promise, I will find someone who will take you in. They will not, I promise, make an issue with your doodles. If they do, we'll do something else. I just want to help. Please." She let out a big breath. "I guess. I'm so fucked, does it really matter?" She moved a bit, and I saw she was easing the hammer down on the pistol. I swallowed. I didn't know a whole lot about guns, but I do know it's a lot easier to shoot with the hammer back. All of this time, she'd been a hairbreadth away from death. All it would have taken would have been one wrong choice on my part, and I could have driven her to the ultimate wrong choice. I watched her put the gun down, stand up and take up her backpack and the folio. "I feel bad about leaving it here." I unfolded, standing. I wasn't very graceful. "After I see you safe with my friend, I'll call the police and report it. I won't say anything beyond where it's at." We walked out to my van; I opened the door on the passenger side and she got in. I went around and got in, and drove the short distance to Gloria's. Gloria and her grandmother were both waiting for us. The girl waited for me to come around to open her door; I reached out and lightly touched her arm, just for the merest fraction of a second. "It would be better if I knew your name," I asked. "Please. Like I said, I'm Tom." "Helen," she said, and then went past me. I walked a step behind, and stopped next to her by the door. "Any friend of Tom's is always welcome," Gloria said. "I never saw him before tonight," the girl said. Gloria giggled. "Oh, well, I know how fast Tom can make friends! I hardly knew him at all, and I showed up at his house one night, drunk as a skunk, after my boyfriend tried to rape me. He let me sleep in his bed, while he slept on a couch downstairs. Tom's cool." I was a little surprised to hear Gloria tell the story here, but I guessed her father had gone back to bed. I wasn't clear why she didn't mind her grandmother knowing, though. Helen looked at Gloria, then at her grandmother and said something in Spanish. The three of them spoke for some time in Spanish, while I just stood patiently. Gloria's grandmother stopped talking, walked over, stood on tiptoe and kissed me on my cheek. "In Spain, the word 'hidalgo' is supposed to mean a minor nobleman. But Don Quixote was hidalgo; it really means something like chivalrous, noble. Like Don Quixote. You, young man, you are hidalgo." She said something to Gloria and Helen, and the two girls went inside the house, Gloria leading. Gloria's grandmother smiled at me, "Go with God, young man. Come back later." I turned and went to the van. It was getting close to two in the morning, and I didn't want to be much later getting home. I stopped at a 7-11 and used the pay phone to make a 911 call about the gun; I hoped that the police wouldn't blow it off. I pulled up and got out, walked up to the door. Mom and Mary greeted me, both of them wearing nighties. I didn't say anything; I just hugged my mom as tight as I could, an ounce from tears. She kissed me on my forehead, turned and headed upstairs. I hugged Mary, but this time it was sexual. We kissed too, and then I was as hard as I've ever been. I took her hand and led her upstairs, to my bed. Like so many others, she looked at it and said, "You need something bigger." I undressed, and then peeled her nightie over her head. I took her hand and led it to my erection. "I have this; so far you ladies have been willing to make do." I felt a fraction of an inch thick; that I was on the edge of falling apart. That had been a stupid sixteen year old guy talking, not me. Mary didn't laugh, instead her gripped firmed. I kissed her hard, using my tongue. Her tongue pushed mine aside, easily winning the duel. It felt like she was trying to wrap her tongue around mine. I ran my hands over her back, down over her bottom. The kiss went on and on, and once again I gloried at the touch of her warm body against mine, my heart soared when I saw her green eyes giggling and laughing, looking at me. I drowned in them, cherished them. I made love to her; she made love to me. For a long time, after we were complete, I lay with my head on her breast, listening to her heartbeat. A warm lassitude crept over my body; days and days and days of events passed my eyes. Four weeks ago, I thought, I went to a basketball game with Tony, Sue Ellen and Tony's cousin Marsha. What a difference a few weeks make in your life! It wasn't so much that I'd grown up; I doubted if I'd grown physically at all. Inside, again, it wasn't so much that I'd grown up, as I'd expanded. Maybe, I thought, the metaphor is all screwed up. You don't grow up; you just expand to fill the space around you. Until you can push back against your environment as hard as it pushes against you. I saw Mary's very large nipple come erect. Speaking of pushing against your environment... I leaned close and used my tongue to circle it. It didn't take much of that before Mary pulled me to her, hastily fumbling, guiding me into her. She reached up to stroke my face. "There are times, Tom, I feel sinful, making love to someone your age. Then I wish I was your age again, so we could just do it, without my hang-ups. Except I'm not your age, I know that. But if there's anything better than being sixteen again, it's being with someone who's sixteen. I love you, Tom." "I love you, Mary." And I showed her the depth of my love twice more, before I slept. The End <1st attachment end> ----- ASSM Moderation System Notice------ Notice: This post has been modified from its original format. The post was sent as an email attachment and has been converted by ASSTR ASSM moderation software. ----- ASSM Moderation System Notice------ -- Pursuant to the Berne Convention, this work is copyright with all rights reserved by its author unless explicitly indicated. +---------------------------------------------------------------------------+ | alt.sex.stories.moderated ------ send stories to: | | FAQ: Moderators: | +---------------------------------------------------------------------------+ |ASSM Archive at Hosted by | |Discuss this story and others in alt.sex.stories.d; look for subject {ASSD}| +---------------------------------------------------------------------------+