Authors: K.Z. Snow
bothered in the least. There were no signs of
impatience, no shouts or foot-stomping.
Dare hustled to the back bathroom to relieve
himself, dab the sweat from his face, and comb his
hair. After grabbing a bottle of water from the
kitchen cooler, he returned to the stage and sat on
the edge, legs dangling. He wanted to let Jonah
Day ogle him. If, that is, Jonah was so inclined.
Seemed he was, although he didn’t watch
Dare steadily and confidently, the way guys in bars
watched and sent signals to each other. Jonah
chatted with his grandmother and whatever
acquaintances wandered up to their table. Between
conversations, he idly scanned the crowd.
His gaze kept flicking over to the stage.
Dare was sure of that. Jonah’s eyes were
large and bright. It was impossible to miss each
directed flash of green.
Go lights
, Dare thought
with a private smile. Should he proceed?
Within another few minutes, the band
regrouped on stage and resumed playing. Jonah
and his grandmother stayed. Dare was inexplicably
pleased.
The “Pennsylvania Polka,” then a schottische.
“I’ve
Got
a
Wife
at
Home”
and
the
“Liechtensteiner
Polka.” A
waltz,
another
schottische.
Jonah and GG danced, talked for a while with
an older couple, danced some more. Once again
Dare was the one doing the watching, and the more
he watched, the more intrigued he became. Jonah
wasn’t like any of the other men he knew. Dare
wanted to find out what lay beneath that polite,
doting-grandson veneer. Maybe he needed to. The
keenness of his curiosity rather surprised him, but
he couldn’t seem to quell it.
Any effort to become acquainted with Jonah
Day might not pan out. Dare once again told
himself he could be setting his sights on a yawn-
worthy straight dude, maybe one who had a
clarinet fetish. Jonah’s glances, which kept
coming, could’ve carried admiration for Dare’s
musicianship, not his manhood.
How could he find out once and for all?
Should he ask Jonah out for a drink? A milkshake?
By the second break, Junior’s wife and Bob’s
sister were in the kitchen, setting up a small buffet
for the band. Dare had no choice but to hang out,
nibble on some wings, and shoot the breeze.
Don’t
leave
, he kept thinking to Jonah.
We’re not done
with each other yet.
The third and last set, like the first two, went
smoothly enough, although Dare had lost his desire
to move to the music. At first he feared Jonah and
his grandmother had left. But no, they’d simply
moved to a different part of the pavilion.
Finally, the set concluded with “In Heaven
There Is No Beer” and Bob’s solo performance of
the “Accordion Waltz.”
Before he even returned to the kitchen to
disassemble and case his clarinet, Dare blew off
the stage and headed for Jonah’s table. GG
immediately beamed at him, and it must have been
her reaction that made Jonah turn. His smile was
more reserved than hers as he rose from his chair.
“Hi,” he said, shaking hands with Dare.
“Thanks for coming over.”
GG gazed up at them, bright-eyed and alert.
She didn’t seem all that old—probably hadn’t
hit seventy yet—and, in spite of her apparent love
of flamboyant clothing and jewelry, wasn’t overly
made-up like a lot of her female contemporaries.
Back in the day, she could’ve been a hippie. Or
did she predate that era? In any case, Dare
immediately got the impression she was sharp,
real
sharp.
“Jonah,” she said, “aren’t you going to
introduce me?”
An impish expression crossed his face, giving
it a whole new dimension. “No. I’m going to
ignore you. You got enough attention today.”
GG dug her red-orange fingernails into her
grandson’s wrist… but not hard. “You know what
a harridan I can be.”
Jonah removed her hand. “I suppose I
would
know if I understood the word.”
This must’ve been how they interacted—
playfully, with good-natured sarcasm. Dare’s
assumption was right; GG was no dummy. And the
young man with the emerald eyes definitely had
some hidden facets.
“Mr. Boothe,” Jonah said, “this is—”
“You don’t
really
go by ‘Mr. Boothe,’ do
you?” GG broke in, looking up at Dare. Her eyes
were a lighter, more piercing version of Jonah’s.
“That’s not how Bobby introduced you.”
Sighing, Jonah muttered, “I’ll just let her take
over,” and sank back into his chair.
Smiling, Dare offered his hand. “I’m Daren.
Clarinetist Ordinaire. Pleased to meet you.”
GG not only took his hand, she placed her
other one over it. “Gina Gonzalez Martinsek.
Grandmother Extraordinaire.”
“Don’t lie to the man,” Jonah told her.
She ignored him. “The pleasure is mine,
Daren. And you underestimate yourself.”
Dare could’ve sworn her eyes sparkled for
emphasis.
“Now if you’ll excuse me,” GG said, rising
from the table, “I need to take care of more
pressing business.”
“You left your spackle in the car,” Jonah said
to GG’s back as she walked away.
GG turned. “Thank you, but my bladder
doesn’t need spackle. A sling, maybe.”
Dare chuckled as he sat at the table. He had to
make his move before GG returned. “I hope I’m
not being too forward, but I wanted to ask you—”
“I’m glad you came over,” Jonah said,
lowering his voice, growing more somber. “I
wanted to ask you too.”
Dare stalled out. The words he had planned
to say were still lodged in his throat, that whole
stupid spiel about polka bands in the area, how he
wanted to familiarize himself with the best ones.
Dumbly he stared at Jonah, who was slipping on
his suit coat.
“Oh,” he said finally. “You mean you wanted
to ask
me
out?”
“Yes.” Jonah tugged at his shirt cuffs.
“Nothing formal, just someplace casual. I suppose
you don’t have your phone on you.”
Dare shook his head. Bob strictly forbade
cell phones on stage.
Jonah reached into his pocket, pulled out a
thin leather wallet, and extracted a business card.
“Here’s all my contact information. Just call or e-
mail when you have a chance, and we’ll set
something up.”
“Oh. Okay. Thanks.” Dare was still at a loss.
The invitation didn’t compute. He hadn’t expected
Jonah to be the pursuer. “Yeah, it’ll be easier to
talk when I’m not on the clock.”
“Definitely.” Jonah leaned closer. He smelled
of a cologne Dare recognized but couldn’t identify,
a pleasantly heady, moderately expensive one. “I
figured you might be wondering about my
connection to Dr. Battaglia.”
A cold squall blew through the center of
Dare, making his breath go shallow. “What?” he
whispered.
Jonah might not have heard, but it didn’t
matter. GG had returned. Dare didn’t have another
chance to be alone with Jonah Day and find out
why this unremarkable young man had awakened
the barely-sleeping dragon of Dare’s past.
Chapter Four
FUCKING great
.
Carver, Dare’s twenty-nine-year-old brother
and only sibling, was stretched out on the couch
with his iPad centered over his face.
In spite of the fact they barely tolerated each
other, this living arrangement was preferable to
sharing a cramped apartment with a near-stranger.
Besides, it was a great location. Dare occasionally
performed in Milwaukee and Chicago and other,
smaller cities in the area, and Waterford was
pretty much smack in the middle of the cluster.
He threw his keys on the hall table with
obvious vexation and more carefully set his
clarinet beneath it. “I thought you were going to an
art fair or something with whatshisname, the guy
who owns the gallery.” After pulling off his shoes,
he went into the living room.
“Mart.”
“Okay, art mart.”
Grudgingly, as if it were an imposition,
Carver sat up. “No. His
name
is Mart.” He
squinted at Dare. “What the hell are you wearing?”
“My band outfit.” Dare dropped into one of
the recliners and pulled off his tie. Jonah Day’s
business card, still buried in the shallows of his
pants pocket, gave his hip a gentle poke.
I will not
be ignored, pal.
The reminder further abraded his
mood. “I had it on when I left this morning. You
must’ve seen…. Oh, that’s right. You were still in
bed.” Dare pushed back and stared at his white-
socked feet, hands linked over his belly.
Carver continued to study him. His torso
seemed to be balanced on the tips of Dare’s toes.
“Didn’t it go well?”
“It went great.”
“So why do you seem so pissy?”
And
why
do
you
seem like such a
supercilious
dickhead?
Carver still hadn’t
explained why he hadn’t gone out.
Instead of answering, Dare closed his eyes.
His friends and coworkers generally thought it was
the coolest thing in the world to have a queer
sibling—theoretically, a confidant, cheerleader,
and comrade-in-arms all bundled into one
supportive package. But Carver Hamilton Boothe,
he of the MBA and macho manner and Spanish
Modern aesthetic (or whatever the hell it was),
had precious little in common with, or sympathy
for, guys who gave away their gayness as soon as
they opened their mouths or stepped into a
shopping mall.
Carver was about as straight as a homo could
be without engaging in hetero sex.
Thank God
, Dare thought at least once a
week,
he’d never set foot in the Sugar Bowl
.
“Well?” Carver said. “What’s the problem?”
Dare sighed. Carver, all too familiar with his
brother’s moods, would keep picking until he got
an answer. And maybe it would help to talk. “I met
someone, a guy about my age who takes his
grandmother out dancing every week. I guess he
recognized me, but I don’t know from where. He
wants to get together and talk about… something
having to do with Dr. Battaglia.”
“Your shrink?” Carver looked as baffled as
Dare felt.
“Former shrink. Maybe his, too, for all I
know. He didn’t have a chance to explain.”
“So are you going to meet up with him?”
“I don’t know.” Dare covered his face.
“Goddammit, why won’t that shit go away and stay
away?”
Carver rose from the sectional and slid his
iPad onto the coffee table. “Because it’s your lot.
It ’s
been
your lot ever since you invited the
attention of a pervert. And you should keep that in
mind while you’re doing whatever it is you do at
that club—”
A spring of rage snapped Dare forward and
up, making him nearly trip over the footrest.
Without a shred of reasonable thought he pitched
himself at his brother, pitched himself at Carver
the way he should’ve pitched himself at Howard
Pankin in that cluttered backroom echoing with
xylophone notes and sick desire and the slithering
rustle of soiled hands over smooth, clean skin.
“Hey,
hey
, settle down!” Carver grabbed his
wrists.
For a moment their locked arms pumped in all
directions, jointed braces in a mechanism run
amok. The word
invited
kept striking like a flint,
reigniting Dare’s fury. His jaw hurt from being
clenched. “You cold, ignorant—”
With a surge of gym-acquired strength,
Carver flung Dare onto the couch, sat on his legs,
and pinned down his arms. “Chill. Okay?” He
must’ve guessed a knee to the groin would’ve been
Dare’s next move; little brother didn’t have much
of a repertoire when it came to fighting. “I
misspoke. I’m sorry.”
“The fuck you are.” Dare bucked to throw
him off.
It wasn’t necessary. Still gathering his breath,