Read The Boy Who Came in From the Cold Online
Authors: B. G. Thomas
He pulled a fork from a drawer. “It is,” he said. He sat down and took a bite. Damn. Even microwaved it was delicious, he thought, and made approving noises.
From anyone else, the request might have been rude. But this was Tracy. They did things like that all the time. Gabe made her a forkful, being sure to include both chicken and Todd’s stuffing. He held it out to her, and she leaned over and took the offered food.
“Oh…. Ohmygawd,” she said and Gabe almost laughed. Tracy had kind of said “God.” She never did that. She considered using God’s name in any way profane. “Oh, oh! That’s
amazing
. And Todd did this?”
“Well, girl!” Tracy laughed. “I take it back. I take it all back. When am I invited for din-din?”
This time Gabe did laugh. “You’re too much, Tracy.”
“Ah, Tracy. Don’t worry about me, okay? Really. I’ll be fine. I am an adult.”
She shook her head again. “So you say. I still don’t know what you’d do without me.” She kissed his forehead and then turned on her high heels and strode from the room as if walking off a stage.
Gabe slumped back in his chair and sighed.
Oh, Tracy
, he thought. She couldn’t help but get in his business. Reminded him of a Jewish mother. But Jewish she wasn’t, and neither was she his mother.
Tracy would just have to accept what he was doing. He needed to help Todd. He had to. Couldn’t just let the kid go out onto the street. But more than that, he had to figure out a way for the kid to help himself.
Suddenly the name of Todd’s apartment building sprang to his mind. The Dove. A quick Google search showed Gabe where it was. He passed it all the time. Right next door to the glaringly ugly Red Garter gentlemen’s club, just like Todd said. He snorted.
Gentlemen indeed.
Sleep—when it did come—was fitful and restless.
At one point in the middle of the night, he’d gotten up and made Gabe lunch and written a note. A gesture of some kind. Then he worried it might be stalkerish or like he was trying to be Gabe’s wife or something even worse. So he got up and tore up the note. Crazy. Only to then get up and write a second note.
Todd finally got some deep sleep after Gabe left, but he was woken up after only a couple of hours by a knocking at the door. He panicked for a moment, afraid it was his landlord demanding the rent “Right now!”, and then he calmed down when he realized how ridiculous that was.
Dreaming. I was just dreaming.
There was another knock, louder this time.
“Hold on,” he called.
It’s that little girl
, he thought.
She’s going to ask me if I’m bisexual
. But when he peeked through the peephole, he saw it was only Cody, half of Cody and Harry, the guys from the laundry room. Hmmmm…. He opened the door and leaned around it since he hadn’t bothered to put on any pants.
“Yup. He said to pick up some food. He said to check
The Wizard of Oz
first.”
“
The Wizard of Oz
?”
Now what the hell could that mean?
“I don’t get it.”
Todd started to open the door and then remember he was wearing only his—well, Gabe’s—underwear. “Ah, hold on a minute, okay?”
Cody gave a curious, one-shoulder shrug and Todd closed the door and scrambled into his jeans.
The Wizard of Oz
? Could he mean one of his DVDs? Todd wondered, starting for the door. The though made him detour to the armoire, and upon opening it, he found the movie, right where it should be, alphabetical with the
W
’s. He looked it over, front and back, then popped it open. And there were six fiftydollar bills.
Holy shit
. It made him think of his rolled-up sock in the back of the drawer of his dresser.
He quickly stuffed the money in his pocket and then dashed to the door. “Come in,” he said.
“You gonna check what he asked you to?” Cody asked. “Already did. He wants you to take me to get groceries?” “Yup,” Cody nodded. “A week or two’s worth, he said.”
A week or two’s worth? For both of them? he wondered. Or just Gabe? “Well, okay,” he replied and then slipped into his Converses. “You want some coffee before we leave?” he asked Cody.
“Nah, I already had some. Let’s get going. I still have to go into work today.”
“What do you do?” Todd asked, slipping on his jacket.
Todd tried not to react.
Hairstylist? Was there anything gayer?
“I’m assuming we’re going to Nature’s Corner?”
Todd shrugged.
“Did Gabe not talk to you about this at all?” Cody asked.
“Okay,” Todd said. Nature’s Corner was a little grocery store he’d stumbled on one day and then been shocked at their high prices. Everything was natural, or so they said. Everything organic. Maybe that’s where Gabe got his Carlisle Free Range Chickens.
Cody turned out to have an old Country Squire station wagon— green, with fake wood paneling down the side. “Wow,” Todd said.“My grandparents had one of these.”
They got in and a moment later were heading south on Gilham. “Any idea what you want to get?” Cody asked.
Todd thought about it a moment. He had three hundred dollars to buy a “week or two’s worth of groceries.” At lease he assumed he was supposed to spend it all. Was it emergency money? What did he buy? “Just some staples,” he said. “Some ground beef, I suppose. Some turkey. Hey!” He got an idea. “Maybe some lamb chops. I want to really impress him. The chicken I made was nothing.”
“I suppose,” Todd said. “I cooked it once. I thought it was pretty good, but my mom and stepdad didn’t care for it. But then they’re bologna-and-gravy-over-instant-biscuits kind of people.”
Cody gave another of those one-shouldered shrugs. “Sure.” They stopped at a light and Cody turned to him. “And weird is a matter of experience, trust me. I’ve
seen
weird. A weird you wouldn’t believe.”
Todd took a deep breath.
Do it. Now or never.
“How can I tell if I’m bisexual?” he asked in a rush.
Cody’s eyes went wide for a second then quickly relaxed. “Shit. Does Gabe know about this?”
Todd jerked up in his seat. “No! Well, I mean, yes. I mean…. Shit, I don’t know what I mean.”
The light changed and Cody stepped on the gas. “You must if your boyfriend is Superman and you’re thinking about women.”
“I’m not,” Todd cried.
“You just said you were,” Cody said.
“No. No, it’s just… I’m… I’m wondering….” He dropped his head back again, closed his eyes, and let out a long sigh. Shit. Could he actually say it out loud? And to a virtual stranger? He lifted his head and stared out the window. “I’m wondering if I like
guys
.” God! He’d done it. He’d said it.
Todd spared Cody a look with his peripheral vision.
Cody’s eyes were wide but staring forward. “But I… I thought…. You aren’t… you don’t? But….” Cody scratched at his throat. “I though you said you and Gabe….”
“I never actually said that. I just let you think it.”
“But
why?
” Cody was looking at him, obviously confused.
“It was easier than explaining the whole story.”
Cody cleared his throat. “I’ve got time,” Cody said. “In case you didn’t notice, I’ve turned around. I don’t know if Nature’s Corner has lamb. We’re going downtown. If we need to, we’ll get that coffee too.”
Todd sighed. “Okay.” So he did it. He told Cody the whole story.
… and how badly he’d wanted to learn to cook from Izar Goya. How he’d lost his job at McDonald’s and how surprisingly hard it was for a guy from a small town to find a new one with nothing but jobs with Pizza Hut and a yearbook company under his belt. And finally how he’d been thrown out of his apartment and into a snowstorm, and how Gabe had helped him by letting him stay the last few nights with him.
“Gosh. That totally sucks. But you were lucky in the end. Gabe is the nicest man in the world.” They pulled into a parking lot and got out of the car. “And now you’re wondering if you’re bisexual?”
“So what?” Cody shrugged. “No one cares, Todd.”
“I care! I’ve never said anything like this to anyone.” Cody’s brown eyes softened. “No one?”
Todd shook his head. “Not until you.”
He led Todd into the grocery store—it was huge!—and toward the back into a small coffee shop. “Sit down,” he said, indicating a table off to the side by a large window. “I’ll get us some coffee after all.”
Todd sat while Cody got the coffees and then settled in the chair beside him. Cody gave Todd a large paper cup and placed some creamer packets—as well as sugar and sweetener—onthe table. “I didn’t know how you liked it.”
“Thanks.” Todd started to add some creamer and then stopped.
Taste it. Wouldn’t that make Gabe happy? Hell. Shouldn’t you know better? You want to be a chef.
Wasn’t there a story about how Henry Ford used to take people out for dinner before he hired them for any key positions? And how if they salted or peppered their food before tasting it, they didn’t get the job? Something about how Ford didn’t trust anyone who made a decision before getting all the facts?
Flavors flowed over his tongue. First earth, then berries, and sweetness. Sweetness even though there wasn’t any sugar. “Wow,” he said. It wasn’t Folger’s, that was for sure.