Read After School Activities Online
Authors: Dirk Hunter
Tags: #Gay Romance, #Contemporary Romance, #dreamspinner press
gravel, looked like it was meant for a few cars to park on. Without even
bothering to turn off the car, Adam threw open his door, forcefully enough
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After School Activities
to make me jump slightly, got out, and immediately started pacing in front
of the car.
I sat there, not quite knowing what to do. Left and right he went.
Back and forth. I watched him through the windshield. He stepped
quickly, almost violently, hands shoved in his pockets. Even from where I
sat, I could see he was breathing heavily. He didn’t look like he was going
to slow down any time soon, or get back into the car. Maybe this was his
secret place where he went to be alone for a while, do his thinking.
That was an odd thought: an introspective Adam. But it made a
weird sort of sense. And where better to go when you needed to talk to
someone, especially when you didn’t want anyone to know that you were
even with that person?
So I got out of the car, walked around to the front, leaned against the
hood, and waited. Adam kept pacing furiously, but occasionally glanced
my way. Abruptly, he stopped and turned to me, looking like he didn’t
know how to begin. Finally, instead of speaking, he pulled off his shirt.
I think I gasped then. His ribs were covered in fading bruises. “Ima
go out on a limb and say those aren’t from football practice, are they?” I
asked quietly.
“I need you to know he’s a good dad,” Adam replied through
clenched teeth. He opened his mouth like he was about to say more, but
instead spun around, walked off to the center of the clearing, and stood,
staring out at the lake. A second later I followed, stood next to him. For a
minute we were both silent, watching the gentle waves.
“He left, Sunday night. After….” Adam trailed off, gesturing
vaguely at his ribs. I suddenly remembered how he’d sat in Mr. Hayes
office with his arms crossed. At the time I thought he looked sullen;
looking back it seemed like he was protecting himself, cradling his bruised
ribs. “He’s not usually like this,” Adam continued. “It’s been really hard
on him, Mom being in the hospital again. He’s just so angry.” He quivered
with nervous energy. Unshed tears stood in his eyes. He started pacing
again. “I don’t know what to do now. It’s just me and my brother. Pete
dropped out of school, said he’ll figure everything out, but I just don’t
know. I don’t know how we’re supposed to pay the bills.
I don’t know
what I’m supposed to do.
”
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Dirk Hunter
I stopped Adam with a hand on his arm and drew him into a hug. I
didn’t think about it—he just seemed in so much pain. He tensed up at
first. For a second I thought he’d push me away, start yelling at me. But
instead he relaxed and sank to his knees. I sat next to him and held him
while he cried, clinging to me like I was the only thing keeping him from
drowning.
Maybe I was.
“YOU’RE GOING to need to turn right up here,” I said, breaking the
silence of the drive back into Oak Lake. We hadn’t spoken since Adam
had pulled away, wiping his eyes and clearing his throat. Together we had
sat and watched the sun set past the trees.
“I remember,” he said, taking the turn.
“You remember? When have you ever been to my house?”
“Seventh grade, for your birthday party.”
“Oh right,” I laughed, remembering. “I invited you so I could dare
you to spend the night in that old house everyone thought was haunted.”
“And I double dared you to come with me. Then Tony dared Derek,
Derek dared Malachi….”
“And suddenly everyone was going. Yeah, how did I not see that
coming?”
He chuckled. “’Cause you’re an idiot.”
“In my defense, I was convinced you’d be too scared to follow
through.”
“Me? Scared? You were the one with the girly screams every time
the floor creaked, pussy boy.”
“And you, big, strong jock that you are, pissed yourself ’cause you
were having so much fun?” Adam began grumbling excuses under his
breath: someone spilled water on him, it was just a shadow, there wasn’t a
working bathroom in the house anyway. They were all the same ones he’d
given that night. “I planned that whole thing just to humiliate you in front
of everyone,” I continued, “but everyone was having too much fun to
notice. See, this is what I was saying before: our hatred has only ever led
to good things.”
“Except this.” Adam reached across the car and, gently, with the tips
of his fingers, touched my jaw where he had punched me. “I never
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After School Activities
actually said sorry for that.”
Well, this had gotten awkward really quickly. Was I getting my
cheek caressed? Was this seriously a thing that was happening? “Uhhhhh,
yeah. Don’t worry about it… I guess.” Adam suddenly seemed to realize
what he was doing and snatched his hand away. We returned to silence,
only this time, instead of being oddly comfortable, it had gained the level
of awkward I had been expecting this whole trip to have. Like it had taken
that weird, almost intimate, gesture to suddenly remind us both who we
were, and just how weird what we were doing really was. I think we had
forgotten for a moment.
Luckily, we were saved from any further awkwardness. After maybe
two minutes, Adam pulled into my driveway, and I was quick to hop out
of the car.
“Hey, Dylan?” Adam said.
I stopped, half in and half out of the car. “Yeah?”
“You’re not gonna…. I mean, what just happened….” He licked his
lips nervously. “You’re not gonna… tell anyone that I—”
“That you have a stupid face, and I hate it? Sure, I’ll keep mum, but
I think they already know.”
He smiled at me then, one of those rare, pure smiles. I’d never
actually seen him smile at
me
that way before. It made his face seem warm, which was weird, ’cause it was Adam, and made a weird ache
appear in my chest, which was gross,
’cause it was Adam
.
“Thanks,” he said, sounding really sincere. Which sucked, ’cause
that meant I’d be a superdouche if I made some sarcastic comment to hide
this weird feeling I was suddenly having. So instead I shrugged and shut
the door.
Worst of all, he kept smiling.
I found twenty-two texts from Kai on my phone, demanding to know
if I was dead. I decided to ignore them and let him stew a bit. I texted Mel, though. She was less funny when she worried. Like, “they’d find Adam’s
body in the morning” less funny.
I’m home. Not dead.
She responded almost immediately.
You okay?
Yeah. Weird night.
I’ll bet.
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Dirk Hunter
CHAPTER FOUR
KAI’S ROOM was filled with the sound of gunshots. His mom wasn’t
home, so we were there alone and felt no need to turn the volume down.
We lay side by side on his bed, PlayStation controllers in hand, doing our
very best to murder each other with a wide array of virtual guns and
explosives. You know, best friend stuff.
“When’s Mel getting here?” I asked, raising my voice over the
screams of the dying.
“Oh, she’s not coming. I figured it’s been so long since we’ve hung
out, just the two of us, so I didn’t invite her.”
It had been too long since Kai and I had spent much time together
without Mel. Months, in fact. Every time Kai and I made plans over the
summer—even when I dropped some not-so-subtle hints we should have a
bros’ night in—Mel always ended up being invited, and Kai would shoot
me those “I’m innocent, don’t hate me” eyes. I guess you can’t compete
with a girl, you know? Sometimes I wished it weren’t Mel, so I could hate
her for being that bitch who keeps getting between us. But she’s my best
friend too, so I can’t. Ironically, Mel and I have found plenty of time to
hang out without Kai, but then she’s not the one with the massive crush.
So I had a feeling I knew what this sudden desire for a Saturday alone was
all about.
“Sooooo,” Kai said after a moment. “What have you and Adam been
spending all that time talking about?”
I knew it.
It had been a week and a half since Adam picked me up
after school that Wednesday, and since then we’d hung out four more
times. Mel and Kai wanted to know what was going on, of course, and I
told them that Adam just needed to talk about some stuff, and they
couldn’t tell anyone even that much. Which was the truth. Adam had a
lot
he’d needed to talk about. At his clearing overlooking the lake, Adam
started spilling his heart to me, in little fits and starts at first, but it had gotten to the point where we’d have long conversations about family,
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After School Activities
school, life in general. His mom had been diagnosed with breast cancer the
year before—that’s what I’d caught him crying about in the bathroom—
and they thought she’d beaten it. But over the summer, they discovered it
had migrated to other parts of her body, which made it a lot harder to treat.
Right before school started, she had been admitted to the hospital, where
she’d been for almost a month now. That was also when his dad had
started drinking and getting really angry. But he’d never hit Adam, not
until that Sunday, when he beat his son and left.
It was a crazy experience, seeing a softer side of Adam. He talked
about wanting to go to college, which I had no idea he was even thinking
about. I guess I always assumed he was just some dumb jock and didn’t
care about education. Only he didn’t know if he’d be able to now. His
older brother Pete was basically supporting them both, though they had
gotten a check in the mail from their dad. But Adam was worried that
those would stop soon. And I knew he’d do whatever it took to make sure
his mom’s hospital bills got paid. He talked about football too, how he
didn’t want the team to think he was weak. How the coach expected so
much of him, but he was afraid he wasn’t gonna be able to deliver now.
He talked about feeling alone, having no one to talk to. At least before I
came along.
Basically a bunch of really personal stuff. “I can’t really tell you.” I
could
feel
the sulk vibrating off him. “Unless you want to invoke Best Friend Privilege and force me to break my bond of trust.”
“No,” Kai grumbled, “you can have your stupid secrets.” He sighed,
dropped his controller and stood up. “Let’s go swimming,” he said as he
pulled off his shirt and crossed to the other side of the room to his closet.
“Now? It’s kinda cold out.”
“Fine. We can go in the hot tub. Wuss.” He threw his pants at me,
hitting me in the back of the head.
I kept my eyes focused diligently on the TV screen. The last thing I
needed in life was to accidentally fall in lust with my best friend. We
already cared for each other more than a little bit. Kai had never been
sparing with his affection, and he’d been telling me he loved me since
middle school, but he was still straight, so it was important my feelings
didn’t stray too far from the platonic. And once you’d seen someone’s
dick, you could never quite look at them the same way. I learned that the
hard way—
Oh, James P. Hogan, the way that soapy water cascaded down
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Dirk Hunter
your every divine contour in that locker room of destiny. I know you
caught me staring, but you only smiled that perfect smile and….
Dammit, see what I mean? Unfortunately, Kai had always been really comfortable
around me, so I’d always had plenty of temptation. When I came out to
him, I had hoped that might curb his enthusiasm a bit. And it had. For
about a week. Then it was back to showering with the door open and
shedding clothes without a care in the world.
Or pausing to admire himself in the mirror, which I was pretty
certain he was doing now, if the occasional reflection in the TV was
anything to go by.
“Hey, Dylan, I need your opinion on something.”
“What’s that?” I swear to God, if he expects me to help him pick out
the right swimsuit, like our friendship were some episode of
Queer Eye for
the Straight Guy
….
“Look,” he said, so I turned around. Big mistake. “Do you think my
dick’s too small?”
Remember that hotness scale I was discussing before? Well, Kai fal s in
solidly at number three. He’s the textbook definition of tal , dark, and
handsome. And while lots of other guys rely on copious amounts of exercise
to maintain their spots on the scale, Kai’s abs were all genetics. And, it turns out, that wasn’t the only gift his parents had given him. For the first time in our long friendship, I got a pure, unadulterated look at Kai’s junk. It took a nanosecond for my eyes to hone in, and now they were trapped. I couldn’t
look away. His cock wasn’t huge, it was probably even a lit le shy of average, but what it lacked in bulk it made up for in beauty. His package dangled,
perfectly symmetrical, below his neatly trimmed bush. His balls hung
heavily, in ideal proportion to his circumcised shaft. His dick was art—da
Vinci could have used Kai to model the Vitruvian Man.