Read Don't Read in the Closet: Volume Four Online
Authors: Various Authors
Tags: #Don't Read in the Closet, #mm romance, #gay
Don’t Read in the Closet – volume four 112
Illustrations provided courtesy of Charles Edward
Don’t Read in the Closet – volume four 113
R L Ferguson – RIDING FOR A FALL (Cowboys/Friends-to-Lovers)
Genre:
contemporary
Tags:
cowboys, friends-to-lovers, reunited,
first-love, HFN, short-story-under-15K-words,
I love cowboys. Hot days
anthology, free read
and sultry, sexy nights. So,
Warnings:
implied homophobia (as a regional
who’s this guy got in his
issue)
barn?
Words:
10,167
[PHOTO: In the dark
doorway of a barn stands a
RIDING FOR A FALL
burly, muscular man,
wearing only a white stetson
by R L Ferguson
and buckskin pants. His
hands pull the pants open
and low on his hips,
There is an art to constructing a good
exposing his hairy torso
down to the curls at his
omelet, and Jake Bryant prided himself on
groin. A straw juts from his
making one of the best. He methodically diced
mouth, and his eyes are
strips of red, green, yellow, and orange sweet
intent under the brim of his
pepper, and Vidalia onion, tossing them into the
hat.]
hot sauté pan and swishing them in the butter
Sincerely,
with the spatula. He sliced fresh button-
Celia K
mushrooms, as the mixture in the pan cooked,
filling his small but well-arranged kitchen with
their aroma. Adding cubes of ham to the pan, he
once again stirred the mixture softening the
vegetables, slightly, and warming the ham
through. Adding the mushroom slices and
tossing them in the butter, allowing the flavors
to intermingle, he salted the vegetables lightly,
added a pinch of red-pepper flakes, then
transferred the mixture to a small bowl and set
it aside on the dark gray counter.
For some cooking was a chore, for others it
was habit. For Jake it was more like meditation:
the precise steps involved taking him to a whole
other level of consciousness, allowing him to
Don’t Read in the Closet – volume four 114
focus inward, take inventory, solve problems, or, like today, to center
himself. He’d felt a little off-kilter since the phone call from Dylan,
three days ago. But then it was a usual thing when his friend called, if
he were to be completely honest with himself. It was never anything
Dylan said or did, just an old feeling rearing its head.
Jake mentally chided himself, as he set his omelet pan on the
burner, and dropped a chunk of butter in. He had to get a rein on this,
because Dylan was going to be arriving in less than 8 hours. What had
he been thinking, agreeing to the visit? Dylan, or rather his attraction
to Dylan, was the reason he’d left home to begin with.
Moulton, Texas, is a small, beautiful town, filled with stucco-
covered buildings, low, ranch-style houses, landscaped with palmettos
and cactus, and holding a particularly dim view of his ‘kind’. He’d
hidden far too long in that particular closet, and then ten years ago—
when he’d taken all he could—he’d packed his gear and his horse, and
left. There were few who knew exactly where he’d gone. Even fewer
who knew why. Dylan may have thought he knew the whole story, but
that was far from the case.
Jake had finally settled in Missouri, rode in a few rodeos, mostly
worked as a farm-hand, until he had saved enough money to buy his
own small acreage with his own small herd of cattle, and used the
income from the calves to buy horses. He’d earned every bit of his
reputation as one of the best horsemen in northeast Missouri. His
horses routinely topped the market at auction, and he was
comfortable, at least in that area of his life. He’d been accused of
being lonely, but ‘selectively secluded’ was the phrase he’d use to
describe himself. Dylan kept telling him he needed someone to share
his life with, and Jake was pretty sure he had permanent teeth marks
in his tongue, where he’d bitten it, to keep from asking if Dylan was
offering.
Dylan had informed him that he’d be bringing a cute blonde
named ‘Betsy’ with him. Jake wasn’t looking forward to the
introduction. He sighed heavily, as he whisked three eggs, together,
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and poured them into the bubbling hot butter of his omelet pan.
There’d been times, back when they were teenagers, small things, that
he’d thought about over the years—touches, a couple of games of
chicken, that one time at Misty Hannigan’s party, where they’d got
roped into kissing each other, playing truth or dare—but, in the end,
he’d always known Dylan would find someone. Someone that
wasn’t
his male best friend. And he’d make every effort not to hate this
woman, because Dylan had assured him that Betsy would love him on
sight. The name brought to mind the cute, bouncy cheerleaders his
friend used to date in high school. Jake made up his mind to handle it
the same way he’d handled it back then, with practiced indifference.
Nodding to himself, he picked up the omelet pan, shook the eggs
loose and flipped them expertly, placing thin slices of sharp cheddar
cheese atop the lightly browned mass. Dylan was in for a shock. The
last time they’d spent any time together, the best Jake could cook was
hot dogs and macaroni and cheese. A lot of things had changed since
high school. He spooned the ham and vegetables he’d sautéed earlier
on top of the cheese, flipped the other half of the eggs over them, and
slid the whole thing off onto the warmed plate he had waiting. Taking
the first bite, Jake moaned his appreciation. The cooking classes at the
local community college had definitely paid for themselves.
****
animals, old wood, and oiled leather, along with the sweeter aromas of
feed, hay, and straw, hung heavy in the air, as he mucked out the
empty stall, getting it ready for the sorrel colt that was ready to be
weaned. He’d worked with the 9 month old stud nearly from the
moment he’d dropped. Now, it was a matter of waiting until the pretty
reddish-brown horse, with the flaxen mane and tail, was big and
strong enough to ride. The ground work was done. He was not only
broke to lead, but he followed Jake around like a large dog, in the
paddock. Vato would be a pretty gelding, as a two-year-old, half
Morgan and half Quarter-horse, he’d make a good steady cutting
horse, for someone. Jake had half a mind to keep him for his own.
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Wiping the sweat from his forehead, he’d just placed the scoop
shovel back on its nail on the wall in the hallway of the barn, and
uncoiled the hose, turning on the tap to wash down the remaining
muck, when he heard the unmistakable crunch of tires on the gravel of
his driveway. Walking to the large double-doors of the hallway, he
stood, framed by the grayed wood, sunlight glistening off the muscles
of his shoulders and naked torso, well-tanned from the hours he spent
working, shirtless, in the summer sun. White straw hat pulled low
over his eyes, he felt a wry smile creep across his full lips. The royal
blue F-350 gleamed in the sun, as a tall, lanky form that could only
belong to Dylan McCoy stepped around the driver’s side fender,
accompanied by a large, golden Labrador retriever.
He watched, from the shadows of the barn, as Dylan looked
around, taking in the unfamiliar surroundings, the low ranch-style
house, with the deck off the side, done up in a southwestern coral
stucco, and the out-buildings, in a soft cream and deep saddle-brown
tin, except the barn. Jake had left that alone, preferring the look of the
century-old weathered wood. All very pretty, Jake thought. He gave
his friend a minute to take it all in, and maybe spot him, but Dylan
had never had an eye for details. The dog, however, was a different
story. The large animal spied him, leaning in the doorway, and
woofed happily, before making a beeline for the wooden fence, and
wiggling under it quickly, Dylan in hot pursuit, sleeveless shirt
unbuttoned, and flying out behind him as he ran. For just a moment,
Jake had a flashback of the two of them, racing toward his daddy’s
pond for a swim, shedding clothing along the way, and felt a familiar
pang of lust, as he pictured
this
Dylan, in a similar state.
The dog reached him long before its master, and woofed happily,
sitting at his feet, and looking expectantly at him. He had just reached
out to pat the beast on the head when Dylan reached them, and smiled,
a little unsure of himself. “Jake? Damn, son. You’ve filled out a little.
You look good.” He extended his hand, and Jake gripped it firmly,
pulling the taller man into a ‘man hug’.
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“You look good too, D. Been a while.” If the truth was known, he
enjoyed the press of the other man’s skin against his, maybe a little
more than he should, but what the hell? Who would be the wiser?