Read Don't Read in the Closet: Volume Four Online
Authors: Various Authors
Tags: #Don't Read in the Closet, #mm romance, #gay
restaurant.
Right after lunch, he was fired.
He had been aware of Mr. Moreau’s heavy-lidded eyes fixed on
him all through the service of the meal. The moment the last guests
had left their table Moreau said, “You were late.”
“Only ten minutes,” said Takumi. “I had everything covered
before the first guests came in.”
The other staff were still clearing tables, looking for excuses to
come close enough to hear what was happening. Moreau raised his
voice as if he wanted them to hear. “You were late. And what were
you doing? You were on the beach fraternizing with a guest. I saw
you!”
“I wasn’t on the beach.”
“Then you were blatantly trying to get around the rules by
standing right next to it. Anyone could see you.”
“We were just talking,” Takumi said. “He asked to speak to me.
He knew my father. Are we supposed to refuse to even speak to a
guest? I didn’t go to the bar or to his room – where else could I go?”
“To his room! I should hope not.” Moreau, who was shorter than
Takumi, raised his chin aggressively and hissed, “I have worked in
hotels a long time, Mr. Sato. I know what goes on. Whether or not he
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knew your father, I could see what type of guest that was and what
type of young man you are.”
“You think I –”
“What I think doesn’t matter. What the other guests think is what
matters. What they’ll think is that you were negotiating to rent out
your ass. First this morning at breakfast, then on the beach, for every
guest to see. You’re not allowed on the sand so you meet men on the
rocks. Don’t you have any idea what you could do to the reputation of
this hotel?”
“I’m sorry,” Takumi said. “I guess it was a mistake, but it was not
what you’re suggesting, and it won’t happen again.”
“It sure won’t. We don’t need your kind here. I don’t want to see
you in this restaurant any more. You will be paid your notice and I
want you out of the hotel within twenty-four hours. Is that
understood?”
Takumi was devastated. He went to the men’s room and just stood
there shaking. What did Moreau mean by “your kind”? Moreau was
gay himself, so it wasn’t that. Did he really think that Takumi was
turning tricks for cash? Takumi had never imagined somebody might
accuse him of that.
His future, which just this morning seemed to glitter with
possibility, crumpled like a used ticket. He wouldn’t easily find
another job in this resort with Moreau against him. Competitors they
might be, but the hotel and restaurant managers were like best buddies
when it came to hiring and firing staff. Never to swim from those
rocks again. Not to be here as he’d promised when Asai and Riku
returned.
He guessed he should tell Asai. He didn’t want to admit that he’d
been fired, but he didn’t want to just disappear, either. Maybe they
could still meet for a swim whenever Asai returned to this coast. So
after a few days, when he had found a worse-paid job at a hotel in
another resort, five miles from the nearest beach, Takumi sent a brief
Don’t Read in the Closet – volume four 48
message to the email address on the business card giving his contact
details, including his new address.
The reply came after three days.
Dear Takumi,
Looking at their websites, it seems to me that your new workplace
is considerably less attractive than the old. If the change is not your
choice, I can offer you work for as long or as short a time as you
would like it, as a companion to Riku. He does not live here in
Honolulu but on a small northern island with good access to the sea. I
visit as often as I can but if he is to learn safe behavior in the ocean,
he needs to swim more frequently. He should also be taught to swim
in the pool, which is fresh water in which he could easily drown. The
maid takes care of his other needs. It is an isolated location but
perhaps you would not mind that. You would have time for study or
other interests. Of course I would expect to pay what you were
earning at the hotel including tips. You could visit before you decide,
if you wish. Will you let me know?
Sincerely, K. Asai
Takumi read it three times to make sure that he hadn’t
misunderstood. A week later he had left his new job and was on
Asai’s private island.
He’d heard about Hawaii’s private islands, of course, but he had
never imagined living on one. It certainly was isolated: the nearest
town was on a bigger island a twenty-minute boat ride away, and the
only other people on this islet were Riku, the maid Victoria and her
husband Kenny who took care of the garden and the house. Victoria
was the woman who’d been feeding Riku breakfast at the hotel. She
took care of him along with cleaning and cooking.
The house was gorgeous. The living space and two guest
bedrooms were at ground level with a shady lanai running along two
sides. The master bedroom was upstairs. Takumi peeked in. It was
minimally but beautifully furnished in charcoal and pale cream, the
Don’t Read in the Closet – volume four 49
colors of the Pacific dolphin. There were two other bedrooms upstairs,
one of which had been prepared for Takumi. The color scheme here
was marine, with turquoise, jade and touches of coral. It was almost as
big as the master bedroom, with a view over the garden through
coconut trees to the sea.
There was a locked door on one side of his room. When he asked
Victoria why, she told him that originally there were two adjoining
walk-in closets, one for this room and one for the master bedroom.
Asai had combined the two and had the fittings stripped out to convert
the space into a gym.
“A gym on the second floor?” Takumi asked.
Victoria shrugged. “Because it’s near his bathroom, I guess. Easy
to shower afterward. I don’t have the key, but if you want to work out,
my husband has a bench press and stuff at our place.”
Victoria and Kenny had a separate house, fifty yards down the
path through palm trees. Riku lived with them. Takumi ate dinner at
their place when Asai was away, fixing his own breakfast and lunch in
the big kitchen of the main house.
He took Riku swimming in the sea in dolphin form most days.
The child loved it. All dolphins like to play, but young dolphins like
to play all of the time. It was hard for Takumi to obey Asai’s
instruction not to keep him out too long.
He also started teaching Riku to swim in human form in fresh
water where he couldn’t shape-shift. There was a mom-and-baby
swimming class at a pool in town, so he hired a boat to take them
there once a week and they practiced in their own pool on other days.
He had a hard time keeping Riku in the boat. The baby fretted and
wriggled all the way across the bay, trying to flop over the side into
the sea. But they couldn’t risk swimming across: too many questions.
Riku had a lot of trouble with human swimming. In some ways it
was harder for him than for the other babies. Kicking with his legs
came naturally – it was just like using his fluke – but any chance he
Don’t Read in the Closet – volume four 50
got, he would drop down deep underwater and not be able to get back
to the surface in time to breathe. As a dolphin, he was used to going a
long time between breaths. In human form, that wasn’t physically
possible.
Several times Riku came close to drowning. He had to be pulled
out and held with his head down to cough up the water. The instructor
said she had never seen such a fearless baby and the moms called him
‘the kamikaze kid’. They practiced in the pool back at the house and
slowly Riku learned not to dive underwater. Still, Kenny built a three-
foot fence all around the pool to stop him ever getting in there on his
own.
It was clear by now that Takumi was Riku’s favorite person. The
baby would just beam any time Takumi walked into a room. He was a
little embarrassed for Victoria, but she didn’t seem to mind. She and
her husband figured that Takumi had really been hired to teach Riku
to speak Japanese – it was just too weird to think of a baby under one
year old having a full-time swim coach – and she had no problem with
Riku appreciating someone whose culture he shared.
They all got along fine, but Takumi felt Asai’s absence
everywhere, in the house, on the island, in the sea.
Then Asai would fly up for the weekend and everything moved up
a gear. On those weeks, as soon as Friday afternoon came around
Takumi and Victoria would both start listening for the sound of the
helicopter. Victoria would be cooking a special dinner in the main
kitchen, not in her own house; later, Kenny would come to eat with
her in back. Takumi would be dressing as if for a date, because he got
to eat dinner with Asai at a candlelit table overlooking the sea.
The first time Asai came home, Takumi had been there about ten
days. He was dressed and ready an hour before Asai arrived. When he
heard the rotors, he went into the guest room to watch the helicopter
settle down on the landing pad a quarter mile behind the house. He
saw Asai scoot down and head for the path with his weekend bag as
the pilot took off again and turned south. His heart started beating
Don’t Read in the Closet – volume four 51
faster and he stood back from the window, listening for the sounds of
Asai entering the house. When Takumi finally walked down the stairs,
looking the best that he could, his heart was thumping so hard that he
thought Asai must be able to hear it.
Asai stood in the entrance to the den watching Takumi walk down
the last few steps. Their eyes met. Asai looked Takumi up and down
and nodded. Just that nod of approval gave Takumi a rush of delight
and longing. Everything seemed to depend on pleasing Asai. Was
Takumi falling in love?
Over dinner, they began by talking about Riku but pretty soon
moved on to other things. Neither one mentioned the word ‘gay’ but
they didn’t need to. Half way through the meal Takumi was sure that
they would spend the night together; but an hour later, when they
were drinking green tea, looking out over the ocean, he knew that they
would not. The door had subtly closed.
He knew Asai was aware of every move he made and yet the more
Takumi tried to connect, the more disconnected he felt. It was as if
Asai was holding something back, as if he had a question that couldn’t
be put into words, a question that Takumi had no idea how to answer.
It wasn’t that he had failed some test: it was more as if he had missed
a cue somewhere and hadn’t found the test that he needed to take.
Six weeks and three visits later, they were still no more than
employer and employee.
They swam together, of course, sometimes with Riku, sometimes
just the two of them. In the water everything was simple. As dolphins
they rejoiced in each other’s company, Asai powerful and dominant,
Takumi reveling in his attention. But as soon as they came out of the
water, something was missing. Something was stopping them getting
together, and Takumi didn’t know what it was.
Asai had created a landing area that was screened from everything
else on the shore by a close board fence so that they could shift in and
out of human form without being seen. But inside, there were no
screens: they had no privacy from each other there. Like Adam or
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Eve, as soon as he was human Takumi would become aware of his
nakedness and feel ashamed. So he would try to surface first,
complete the change and grab his shorts while Asai was still shifting.
If he was delayed, chasing after Riku, he would nudge Riku out and
then stay in the water until Asai left for the house. To be fair, he was
careful to look away when Asai was shifting and never saw him naked