Authors: K.Z. Snow
clip-on, Daren.”
“Just make sure it’s straight, will you?”
“What’d you do? Sprain your hand while you
were beating off last night? I heard you groaning.
Must’ve been a good one.”
“I couldn’t’ve beat off if I’d been using Brent
Corrigan’s hand.” Dare figured he must’ve been
groaning in dismay or frustration as he flipped
from side to side and thought about Jonah. Carver,
of course, being the coat tree he was, wouldn’t be
able to distinguish one kind of groan from another
if they all crawled up his ass with descriptions of
themselves.
After fixing Dare’s tie, the coat tree futzed
with his bathrobe, looking down at himself as he
smoothed his hands from lapels to sash. Carver did
that sort of thing a lot, as if checking his physique
to make sure his workouts were yielding results.
“What’s wrong?” he asked. “Is it that guy you
started seeing?”
“Yes, if you must know.” Peevishly, Dare
adjusted the waistband of his red pants—a lot less
fun than stroking oneself through a layer of velour.
“It isn’t that I
must
know. Actually, I’d rather
have a cup of coffee than find out.”
“Then go fucking get one,” Dare snapped.
Jesus. Why couldn’t he once, just once, confide in
his brother without encountering indifference or
snide remarks or a condescending lecture?
Instead of proceeding toward the kitchen,
Carver kept studying Dare, then sank into the
nearest chair. “What’s going on between the two of
you? I thought you only got together to exchange
notes about therapy or something.”
He actually seemed interested, but Dare was
still leery of his brother’s motives. “We’ve been
exchanging more than notes. And I
don’t
mean
bodily fluids. But maybe we want to. That’s the
problem. Or rather, I don’t want it to become a
problem.”
Carver gave him a blank stare. “What the hell
are you talking about?”
“I don’t want us to be attracted to each
other!”
The stare gave way to a puzzled blink.
“Why?”
“Because…
you
know!”
“No, I don’t.” Now Carver stared at him as if
he, Dare, were deranged. “Are you talking about
some taboo I’m not aware of? Is there, like, a rule
in the Universal Victims’ Handbook that says if
you’ve ever been groped by a perv, you can’t
touch anyone else who’s ever been groped by a
perv?”
“There is no Universal Victims’ Handbook,
Carver.” Dare didn’t realize what an utterly idiotic
statement that was until it had fallen from his
mouth. He
did
realize he wasn’t too sharp today.
“Then what’s the problem? You’re consenting
adults.”
Sighing, Dare put his hands on his hips. The
ill-fitting red pants slipped an inch. “Fuck if I
know.”
Carver got up. “That’s the most sensible thing
you’ve said all morning.”
THREE bands were playing at the Birches, a
supper club with an attached hall. Maybe Jonah
and GG wouldn’t make it today; maybe this was
farther than they were used to traveling for their
dance outings.
Dare could only hope… even though he still
hadn’t come up with an adequate answer to
Carver’s looming question:
“Why?”
His mouthpiece clattered to the floor as he
tried to swivel it onto the cork-sheathed neck of
the clarinet. “Shit.” He scooped it up, checked the
reed for any damage, and worked the mouthpiece
into place.
Today they had to do their preparations in a
storage room behind the hall. It was stuffed with
folding banquet tables, stacked chairs, and a
shelving unit brimming with tablecloths, vases, and
decorations. The Polka Doodles were on first. Bob
had persuaded the second band, whose name Dare
had already forgotten, not to start bringing in their
equipment until the Doodles started playing.
Cluster-fuck prevention, Dare assumed.
Max, Junior, and Ernie were setting things up
on stage.
Bob sauntered over, Lucille hanging on him
like a gaudy piece of armor. “Something bothering
you today?”
“Nothing I can’t handle.”
“Just don’t get your fingers confused.”
“Don’t worry.” Dare smiled. “I’m a
professional.”
At least Bob didn’t sneer at that, just uttered a
single
ha
. “Oh, by the way, I want to talk to you
after our set about a duet idea I have.”
Junior stuck his head into the room. “You
guys ready?”
They were on.
Dare didn’t have time to think once they
started playing, and not thinking was, for him, often
a good thing. He didn’t even make a point of
scanning the audience. Then GG danced past the
low stage. Dare’s eyes sprang in her direction as if
they’d been programmed.
Jonah wasn’t her partner. Instead, a tall,
elegant, older man with silver waves of hair
smiled into her face as he led her around the floor.
Now Dare did scan the audience, but only for
a few seconds. He didn’t want to start obsessing
again. Besides, he told himself, the place was too
crowded to spot anyone, and a visual search
would only be distracting.
GG danced with the same man through every
song. Unless Jonah was serving as their chauffeur
or chaperon, which Dare highly doubted, he wasn’t
there. Maybe he’d never show up at a Polka
Doodles performance again.
Even when the set ended, Dare didn’t have
time to think. He had to hustle their equipment off
the stage so the next band could set up.
“Did GG find a boyfriend or something?” he
asked Bob as soon as they were alone at the van.
“She
didn’t
just
find him,” Bob said.
“They’ve known each other for years, but he lives
out of state. Can’t get here too often.” He went
around to the open side-door and shoved some
stuff around. “But I think he’s in the process of
moving. They’re getting married pretty soon. ’Bout
time Hal made an honest woman out of her.”
“No shit?”
“No shit, Sherman.” Bob joined Dare at the
back of the van and leaned toward him. “And get
this. She told Rosie she’s been having the kid take
her out dancing so she can ‘stay in shape’.”
“That
makes
sense.
Dancing’s
good
exercise.” Rose was Bob’s wife; Dare knew that
much. What he didn’t grasp was the reason for
Bob’s lowered voice and suggestive look.
Bob frowned at him. “Christ, you really
aren’t
all here today.” He held his upturned fists at
hip level and executed a few maladroit thrusts.
Dare nearly snorted his tonsils through his
nose. He fell against the door, snickering until his
abs began to ache and his eyes filled with tears.
“Don’t ever do that again, man. I beg you.”
Sheepishly, Bob grinned. “Hey, if you
weren’t so friggin’ dense, I wouldn’t’ve had to do
it in the first place.”
“She’s really that… active?”
Bob turned up his eyes and shook his head.
“The woman’s sixty-eight, not ninety-eight.
Jesus….”
Dare still had trouble wrapping his twenty-
six-year-old mind around it.
“Oh, hey, let’s park our asses for a minute
and discuss my idea. You want something to drink?
I’ll get a pitcher and bring it out to one of those
picnic tables. It’s too loud inside.”
Grateful for the diversion, Dare headed
toward a small, barebones pavilion with a
corrugated tin roof. He didn’t want to go home and
start brooding about never seeing Jonah again,
regardless of the fact he had no reason to brood.
Since last night, he hadn’t
wanted
to see Jonah
again.
Before he had a chance to give that
contradiction much thought, Bob trundled in his
direction with a pitcher of beer and two plastic
cups.
“Okay,” Bob said, setting down their
refreshment. He expertly poured a cupful for each
of them. “Here’s what I got in mind.” As he sat
across from Dare, the picnic table tilted under his
weight like a teeter-totter.
Dare steadied both sloshing cups. “Damn,
Bob, maybe
you
should take up dancing to slim
down. You nearly launched me into next week.”
“Shut up, smartass.” Bob took a long swallow
of brew, voiced a satisfied
ahhh
, and wiped the
foam from his upper lip. “Now, how about we put
a glock and clarinet duet in our program? I listened
to these old hand-crank street organs playing the
‘Clarinet Polka’ on YouTube, and that’s what got
me thinking,
Hell yeah, me and the kid could do
that!
” Enthusiasm made him lean forward. “We
could either play the whole thing together—it’s
only about two minutes long—or go back and forth
like we do on ‘Fascination’.”
Dare felt sick. “I… I don’t think I can.”
Bob leaned back, as if the words had given
him a shove. “Why? I know the tempo’s a little
fast, but I’m sure you can keep up.” He chuckled.
“Prob’ly better than I can. So if we divvied up the
sections like we do for—”
“You don’t understand.” Elbow on table,
Dare anxiously rubbed his forehead—back and
forth, back and forth, mindlessly—until Bob
reached over and grabbed his wrist.
“Hey. What’s up?” He was serious now, no
kidding around.
“I can’t play a duet with the glock. I can’t. It
reminds me of…. When I was a kid, there was a
xylophone at this resale shop.” The ugly story
came spilling out.
Again, Dare withheld the sordid details. But
he made it fairly clear why the sounds produced by
that family of instruments were anathema to him,
why they made him quake with revulsion as cold
sweat beaded on his skin.
Bob listened, stunned, arm upraised and hand
curled over his mouth. “Oh my God,” he
whispered.
“Don’t ask me any questions. I don’t want to
get into it. Let’s just leave it at that.”
“Are you aware that JoJo…?”
“Yes. That’s kind of why we’ve been seeing
each other. To talk about it. How do
you
know
about Jonah?”
“Through GG, of course. She told Rosie what
was up—just in general terms, though—when the
kid came to live with her. I guess his worthless
mother pretty much washed her hands of him.” Bob
heaved a big sigh. “Jesus. First JoJo and then
Max’s niece and now you.”
“Max’s niece?” The reference tugged Dare
away from his personal swamp. He appreciated
the distance.
“A neighbor she was babysitting for tried
pulling something one night. But she’s a tough little
cookie, so she ran from the house and told her
parents. Chester the Molester was in jail by the
next morning. Seems he’d been in trouble for that
sort of crap before.” Bob took a swig of beer.
“Bastard was lucky. If the cops hadn’t got him,
Max and his brother sure as shit would have.”
“I’m glad Max didn’t have a chance to do
anything stupid,” Dare said. “It would’ve sucked if
he’d ruined his life over some scumbag.”
Bob nodded. He lapsed into troubled silence,
his thick fingers sliding over the plastic cup. When
he spoke again, he seemed to address his beer.
“Y’know, when I was growing up I heard
mutterings about monkeyshines like that. So-and-
so’s old man is a little too friendly. Coach X ogles
boys in the shower room. This or that family’s
foster kid was yanked from their home on the QT.”
Bob shuddered. “Gave me the creeps, even though
I didn’t really understand what was going on.”
“Did you ever want to understand?”
“Kind of, but mostly not. I was a kid and kids
are nosy, especially about grownups’ secrets. But I
was scared, too. I remember asking my ma what
happened to Margie, the foster child, ’cause we
were friends. My ma about had a conniption.” Bob
screwed up his face and chopped out a rather
shrewish imitation of his mother’s voice. “‘That
ain’t none of our business! She’s gone now, so you
just forget about her and keep your trap shut!’”
A corner of Dare’s mouth lifted. “I take it