Authors: Ethan Day
Tags: #MLR Press; ISBN 978-1-60820-237-9; Sequel to Sno Ho
seemed like the right time.”
“What about all of your…” I glanced around the room, “…
stuff?”
“Hell, we’ll sell it,” Rocky said.
“Or you two could take it for your new home together!” Dixie
said excitedly.
Now Wade sat up on the edge of the sofa. “Wow…um…well
that’s really generous of you…but.”
“The desert motif doesn’t actually fit in well with the snow
covered mountains, Mom.” I held back a smile at hearing Wade
exhale in relief. “But thank you for the offer.”
“That’s true,” Wade nodded, doing his best to hide his
joy. “Besides, you should take the money from selling your…
collection, and treat yourselves to something extravagant.”
I gasped, reaching over and grabbing Wade’s knee. “And just
think, honey. They can pull the RV right up to your house when
they visit for Christmas!”
“Plug it right on it!” Dixie squealed. “Instant! Square!
Footage!”
Wade popped another penguin into his mouth, nodding as if
he were too excited for words.
I leaned over and kissed his cheek and gave him a big squeeze.
“I’m picturing all the beautiful holiday memories we’ll be creating
already—aren’t you, sugar bear?”
“Mmm hmm.” Wade smiled, squeezing me back as he
continued to chew.
“Well ain’t that just the sweetest thing you’ve ever seen?”
Dixie said, her eyes welling up.
Life in fusion
131
“Don’t go getting all mushy, woman.” Rocky stopped rocking
and grabbed Dixie’s wrist as she got up out of her chair. He
yanked her over, pulled her into his lap, and she squealed again.
“Last thing we need is for you to spend the next hour fixin’ your
make-up.”
“Well you don’t have to announce it like that.” She turned to
Wade. “I don’t know if Boone happened to mention it, but I was
the reigning Ms. Texas at one time.” She turned back and shot
her husband a dirty look. “So it wouldn’t actually require that
long to fix
my
face.”
“Ah, but it’s a nice face.” Rocky tickled her and she screamed
as he growled like a beast, pretending to rip into her throat with
his teeth.
I started to laugh as Wade stared at them, wide eyed, obviously
wondering what the fuck he’d gotten himself into. I knew I was
supposed to be embarrassed by them, but I wasn’t really, at least
nothing beyond skin deep. On some sick and twisted level, I’d
always found them to be adorable…despite being the train wreck
I knew they were.
They were happy. And there was something to be said about
the fact they had lived their lives not pretending to be anything
other than who they were. I’d never realized how important of a
role model they’d been until coming to grips with the fact that I
was gay. I was very lucky to have them and I knew it.
Wade had started to grin at them as they finally began to settle
back down. He absentmindedly shoved another penguin into his
mouth and I leaned into him, happy to see his instincts kick in as
his arm went around my shoulder. We settled back into the sofa
and I whistled, getting my parents’ attention.
“Will you two stop acting like teenagers in heat?”
“Goodness me, woman, we’ve humiliated our son again!”
“He can get the hell over it,” Dixie said with a snort. “I’m
more worried why they aren’t acting like teenagers in heat.”
I pointed at my neck after catching my mother’s attention.
“You’re hickeys showing, Momma.”
132 Ethan Day
Wade let out a loud rolling laugh as he looked between myself
and my parents. I knew he was half embarrassed I’d mentioned
it, but had been unable to keep himself from losing it.
Her hands shot up to her scarf and I knew she was blushing,
despite not being able to witness the evidence, due to the pounds
of make-up.
She pinched my father, who was belly laughing. “Dirty ass
man.”
“You weren’t complaining last night when I…”
“Okay,” I said, cutting my father off as Wade started to
lean closer to me. “Let’s try a new game called, we don’t share
everything
.”
“Oh hell, monkey,” Dixie said climbing off my father’s lap.
“He’s family now. We need to treat him that way.”
She winked at Wade, who nodded a thank you in her direction.
“And I do believe I’m owed one photographic trip down
memory lane,” Wade said, getting all serious.
“We can do that some other time,” I said, shooting my mother
a death by homo look should she so much as dare.
“What little we’ve managed to salvage, you mean,” Rocky
said, casting an equally nasty expression back at me.
Wade’s eyes widened as he turned to me. “You promised to
provide evidence of these so called awkward years.” He glanced
back to my parents. “I find it difficult to believe, despite his
insistence, that he was once geeky.”
Dixie burst out laughing, then sat on the arm of my father’s
chair. “He has such a complex about that. I swear I have no clue
where that comes from.”
My mouth fell open. “Hello…from you, is where it came.”
“Why do children always blame their mothers?” she asked as
if completely shocked by the accusation.
“You called me
monkey
so often, I thought it was my name!”
Wade was staring at me, trying to hold back his amusement.
Life in fusion
133
“A silly, totally innocent pet name,” Dixie said. “He had these
long, skinny legs and arms and I thought he was so cute…like a
little monkey.”
I placed my hand on Wade’s knee. “My first words were,
Monkey want juice
!”
Rocky was full-on laughing, while nodding his head and
pointing at me, like I was right.
Wade was attempting to hold back his laughter as he cocked his
head to the side. I rolled my eyes at him, knowing he desperately
wanted to tease me.
“The worst part was the betrayal of having my own mother
responsible for tagging me with the nickname, Ba-Boone.”
“It’s not my fault!” Dixie squealed, trying to defend herself.
“A name which stayed with me all through elementary and
most of high school, mind you.”
She folded her arms, defiantly. “I never once called you that.”
“Well sure, it only took what, five minutes, before a none-
too-clever first grader turned Monkey into Ba-Boone?”
“So wait…” Wade wiped his eyes which were now watering.
“Are there pictures or not?”
“I got up one night to find that one,” Rocky pointed at me,
“standing in front of the fireplace burning all his baby pictures.”
Wade smacked me in the arm. “You didn’t!”
“I was fit to be tied,” Dixie said. “Can’t ever remember being
so angry with him.”
“How old were you?”
“He was twenty-four!” Rocky said. “Snuck back home in the
middle of the night like a cat burglar and set fire to all of them.”
“That’s really awful,” Wade said, shaking his head at me.
I folded my arms and settled back into the sofa, making sure
they all knew I wasn’t the least bit sorry.
“I’ve found a few since then, though.” Dixie winked at Wade.
134 Ethan Day
“I’ll show them to you some time when he isn’t around. He’s
sneaky that one—I don’t want him to know where I’ve hidden
them.”
“I’d like that,” Wade said, smirking as if he’d beat me at some
game I wasn’t aware we’d been playing.
“Get up off your butt Rocky and go fire up that grill,” Dixie
ordered, getting up off the arm of the chair. “Let’s cook up the
burger-dogs.”
“I’m gonna need another beer then,” Rocky announced, like
it was condition of his surrender into doing her bidding.
I squeezed Wade’s leg and got up as well.
Wade followed my lead. “Anything I can do to help?”
“You can tell him all about that Olympic stuff,” Dixie said
thumbing toward Rocky, who got up out of his lounger. “He’s
been like a little kid all excited to meet a real life Olympian.”
“Geez-us Dixie!” Rocky slapped his leg. “Now the poor boy’s
gonna think I’m one of them stalkers.”
I laughed, realizing my father had no clue what being a stalker
actually meant.
“We’re family now, right?” Wade shrugged. “So we’re
supposed to tell each other everything.”
“Christ, he’s been drinkin’ the Kool-aid,” I muttered.
My mother smiled before walking over and giving Wade a
big hug. “You young man, are like Christmas and my birthday all
rolled into one.”
Wade was grinning and looking very cheesy when she let
loose of him.
“Sweet,
sweet
man,” Dixie added as a condemnation of my
snark.
“That, and he adores talking about himself,” I added. “Huge
ass ego on this one.”
“Then he’ll fit right in,” Rocky said as Dixie reached over and
pinched the hell out of my other arm.
Life in fusion
135
“Ouch!” I frowned, rubbing my arm.
At least both sides will
match, now
.
“Serves you right,” Wade said, all but sticking out his tongue
at me before leaning over and kissing my arm where my mother
pinched me. “He’s been jealous ever since he found out I have a
sandwich named after me.”
“Wow!” Rocky said, staring at Wade as if he’d just been
handed the Nobel Peace Prize. “That’s impressive.”
“Yes, yes,” I said as my parents started walking toward the
kitchen. “You now have a son in law you can
really
brag about.”
“Oh my,” Dixie said, looking at Rocky. “I hadn’t even thought
of that.”
Rocky tossed his arm over her shoulder. “Me either.”
“Let’s hope the house doesn’t sell too quickly,” she said. “I
can hardly wait to rub a few people’s noses in it.”
I laughed as they disappeared into the kitchen tossing out the
names of their lifelong friends who constantly bragged about
their children and grandchildren. Wade came up behind me and
wrapped his arms around me.
“They’re…” He trailed off as if searching for just the right
word.
“Certifiable—coo coo for cocoa puffs—sick-n-twisty?”
“Sweet.” Wade kissed me on the cheek. “I love them, and I
love you.”
“You don’t have to lie, sweetie.” I sighed. “They’re a lot to
take.”
“That’s true,” Wade chuckled. “But they accepted me with
open arms and without condition. And I love that they’re like
you. They don’t hold anything back.”
“I can’t believe my parents are going to be mobile.” I felt a
teeny pang of guilt thinking I was holding back the nagging fears
I had. “You realize they’ll be able to drop in at a moment’s notice.
We may never have any peace.”
136 Ethan Day
“Like peace is possible with you in a room?”
I gasped, shocked for about two seconds, before realizing he
was right.
“I’m afraid to ask but I feel like I must,” Wade said, swaying
back forth, rocking me.
“Okay?”
Here it comes, the something awful I’ve been expecting. The
other shoe. The jig that’s now up.
“What the hell is a burger dog?”
I grinned, turning around in his arms so I could face him. I
could tell my Mr. Anal-eater, no pun intended there, was fretting
as to what the hell he was about to put into his body. “It’s just
seasoned hamburger they roll up into the shape of a hot dog.”
Wade shook his head, obviously confused, and I gave him a
quick peck.
“Why?” he asked.
“So they’ll fit on a hot dog bun, silly.”
Wade laughed under his breath. “Well that explains it.”
“I would certainly hope so,” I added, knowing he was being
sarcastic.
He stared into my eyes for a moment, trying, I assumed, to
decide whether or not to push for more or let it go. He settled
for another kiss.
“Aww, that’s the sweetest thing I’ve ever seen.”
We both smiled hearing my mother, but I could tell Wade was
the slightest bit uncomfortable because he pulled away. It was
nice to see him vulnerable and unsure of himself. It was usually
the other way around, and the tiny crack in his armor made him
even sexier.
Don’t get me wrong, I knew it was Wade’s unwavering belief
that we were meant to be that was powering this relationship.
Not that I didn’t want it…us…
him
. It was his conviction that had
a way of quelling all of my own fears, most of the time. But it
was nice to see him slightly off kilter, making me feel as though
Life in fusion
137
I could be there for him once in a while as well.
It was like he was on a constant state of alert, as if keeping
watch for anything off in the distance that might be headed our
way. He didn’t want anything to derail us on our path. I felt bad
for him, as I was well aware he was doing most of the heavy
lifting.
Dixie suddenly snapped out of her trance and started shoving
Rocky toward the sliding patio doors. “Go fire up that grill, you
hear me?”
“Yes Momma.” Rocky said back at her, while making a whip
cracking sound as he spun around on his heel.