Authors: Amy Lane
Tags: #Paperback, #Novel, #GLBT, #Contemporary, #Romance, #Contemporarygay, #M/M Romance, #dreamspinner press, #amy lane
they both carefully avoided looking at Chris"s parents for this next part.
“Not quite, but, over that summer, yeah,” Chris said, looking
embarrassed for the first time.
“But I understand Xander was living with you at the time. If you
were in love—”
“Xan wouldn"t do anything—at least while we were underaged—
while he was living with my parents. He"s got that sort of honor thing,
you know? And I didn"t want him living in foster care, so I managed to
wait until we were eighteen. It felt… it felt right, by then.”
230 Amy Lane
Across the room, Andi groaned. “That trip we took, right after
graduation—remember that, Jed? We came home and the whole house
smelled like fabric softener?”
Jed hid his face and said, “Ow ow ow ow—my eyes! Dammit,
Andi—did you need to go there?”
The family might have laughed forever then, but on screen,
Xander"s face got tense.
“What happened?” Penny said suddenly. “I didn"t hear what she
said!”
“She asked about Xan"s mom,” Chris told her, his voice tight, and
the effect on the living room was electric.
“Didn"t your mother pass away recently?” Barbara asked
sympathetically, and Xander shrugged.
“I"d heard that, yeah.”
Chris looked at him, concerned. “When did that happen?”
“Right after the first playoff series—you were still in the hospital. I
had other things to worry about.”
Barbara shifted forward, as though about to get ready to do some
heavy work, in spite of the Chanel suit and the well-coifed silver hair.
“So, Xander, when was the last time you saw your mother?”
Xander looked away again. He did that a lot throughout the
interview, and it only made his regard even more significant when he
focused on something.
“I"d just turned eighteen. Chris and I had signed our letters the
week before, and his folks took us out to eat. We came out of the
restaurant, and there was a woman across from the restaurant
screaming at a guy about giving her some money for his bang as he
drove off. I"m pretty sure that was her.”
Chris looked at him in horror. “Oh, God. Xander. You could have
told us!”
Xander shifted in his seat, and for once didn"t look Chris in the
eyes. “Do you think I wanted you to know?”
The Locker Room 231
“I wanted to know,” Chris said now, and Xander fidgeted, the
object of everyone"s scrutiny and pity, and finally Xander just glared at
them.
“Look, Leo said be honest, okay?”
Leo patted his shoulder, and Xander wanted to die. “Yeah, kid.
Honesty. You has it. What else were you honest about? Should we see?”
“So, Xander, that sounds horrific. How do you recover from that?”
The man"s glare on television was not nearly as frightening as
Xander would have hoped, watching it. It looked miserable, and
mortified, and irritated—not furious.
“I had Chris and I had basketball. It was all good.”
And so on. She covered Chapel Hill, their deal with the Kings
when Xander could have gone anywhere in the league, and then, the
questions they"d dreaded the most.
“But guys—you"re pro ball players. How could you never be seen
with any women, and have nobody suspect?”
Their expressions on television were like two kids caught sneaking
cookies—except a thousand times worse.
“We were seen with women,” Chris mumbled. “We even slept with
a few of them. It was… it was—”
“We were trying to keep our coach off our back.” Xander stepped
in, to get him off the hook. “He… man, every other word out of the guy"s
mouth is „fag". We were just sort of desperate for him to leave us alone.”
“Well, did it work?” Barbara asked, as though this didn"t shock
her.
“It did,” Xander confessed. “It worked for the whole team. But…
we couldn"t do it anymore. It—” He looked miserably at Chris, who
nodded. “I was getting an ulcer, Chris couldn"t stop drinking. I… one
night I couldn"t go through with it. I met up with Chris at the locker
room of Arco, and… we just agreed to quit it. It was worse than being
outed. It was worse than anything. We kissed, you know, to seal the
bargain….” Xander trailed off, and Chris took up the thread.
“And the coach walked in on us, and I was transferred the next
day.”
232 Amy Lane
The interview went to commercial, but nobody in the room tried to
fast-forward through it. The attention of everyone in the room was
focused on the television screen, and Xander thought that if Chris could
run, the two of them would be running along their jogging path, running
with the wind in their face and their shame at their backs, running until
the horrible weight of this confession felt like the sand under their feet.
“That must have been awful,” Andi said, and Chris clenched
Xander"s hand until his fingers turned white.
“Mom—”
“No, Chris. I"m serious. Neither of you boys are like that. I can"t
even imagine how hard that must have been.”
Chris looked sideways at him, and Xander wondered if his face
was as white and blotchy as Chris"s was.
“It really sucked,” he confessed quietly. “I think it was even worse
than living apart.”
“It was like living apart in the same house,” Xander confirmed.
“Those days—” He shuddered. “Horrible goddamned feeling.”
Penny fast-forwarded through the next few commercials, and
Xander was sure it was because she wanted something other than the
silence to fill the room. But the next questions weren"t any more
comfortable. Chris"s DUI, how hard it was to live apart when they"d
been all but married since they"d graduated from high school, the
specifics of the accident and Chris"s recovery—hard questions.
Exhausting questions. By the time the interview was done, Chris was
looking like death warmed over, and it was Xander who called a halt.
“So are you going to enter an alcohol recovery program, Chris?”
“If he needs to,” Xander said, taking control of the conversation
completely. “And that"s all we"re going to say about that, okay? He"s
tired. We"re done. It"s been a pleasure, but—”
The narration took over then: “And I knew that I had overstayed
my welcome. The boys had been more than generous, both with their
time and with their honesty, so I tried one more question before I ended
the interview.”
And the action was in the living room again. “Mr. Karcek, I only
have one more question, and it"s for you.” At Xander"s tacit nod of
The Locker Room 233
permission, she went on. “Your answers in this interview have been
articulate and almost poetic. Do you ever get tired of the press calling
you Cave Man?”
“I do,” Chris said, his voice faint. “Every goddamned time.”
The interview ended, and the narration resumed, concluding with:
“So now that we"ve seen how difficult it is to live under the radar
in the NBA, we asked the boys" agent what they had in mind for their
next move. His response was that their story wasn"t finished yet. For one
thing, Sacramento hasn"t played the championship series. I asked if that
was a possibility, and he told me that as of yet, nobody had contacted
Xander Karcek to let him know he wasn"t invited back to play. In fact, no
one from the ball club has made any acknowledgment whatsoever. As far
as we know, this championship will be special for more than one reason.
Besides it being the first championship series for the Kings since 1953, it
could also be the first time an openly gay player has played a
championship game in the NBA. As Leo Schindler told me, it all hinges
on their next phone call.”
The narration faded out, the credits rolled, and Penny actually
walked over to the television to turn it off.
She turned back and looked at Xander and Chris, clenching hands
together on the couch, and said, “I, for one, am really proud of both of
you. That looked brutal.”
“Can I go now?” Xander asked, and although the room laughed,
one look at Chris"s sympathetic expression told him that at least one
person knew he"d been mostly serious. An answer to that question was
put off anyway, because at that point, the phone—which had finally been
plugged in again—rang.
Leo jumped to get it.
“Guys,” he said, looking at the number on the caller ID, “there"s
only one person this could be. That"s the team owner. Are you ready for
the verdict?”
They looked at each other, and Xander"s mouth curved faintly. He
had Chris. He could face anything.
“Yeah,” he said. “Why not?”
With a nervous smile, Leo picked up the phone.
234 Amy Lane
THAT night, as Xander slept on the couch, soothed by Chris"s breathing,
he didn"t have a nightmare. He didn"t dream about the next day, or what
it would bring, all that was waiting for him on the morrow, and none of it
even crossed his mind.
Instead, he dreamt of an ordinary morning. He would wake up and
go running, and Chris—completely healed—would come with him, the
dogs frolicking at their feet. He dreamt that they would come home and
shower—and maybe they"d even shower together, and wouldn"t that be
fun? And then they"d make love—silly, goofy, wildly passionate love on
the bed that they woke up in.
He dreamt that they"d come downstairs for breakfast, and Lucia
would give them shit about it being eight in the morning, and half the
day was gone, while Penny and Audrey and Mandy, and maybe
boyfriends as well, chattered and talked, and basically made sounds like
family.
It was then, in the dream, as they were eating breakfast together,
that Chris said, “So what are we doing today?”
And Xander"s heart was full of ideas.
About the Author
AMY LANE is a mother of four and a compulsive knitter who writes
because she can"t silence the voices in her head. She adores cats, knitting
socks, and hawt menz, and she dislikes moths, cat boxes, and knuckle-
headed macspazzmatrons. She is rarely found cooking, cleaning, or
doing domestic chores, but she has been known to knit up an emergency
hat/blanket/pair of socks for any occasion whatsoever or sometimes for
no reason at all. She writes in the shower, while commuting, while
taxiing children to soccer/dance/karate/oh my! and has learned from
necessity to type like the wind. She lives in a spider-infested, crumbling
house in a shoddy suburb and counts on her beloved Mate, Mack, to
keep her tethered to reality—which he does while keeping her cell phone
charged as a bonus. She's been married for twenty-plus years and still
believes in Twu Wuv, with a capital Twu and a capital Wuv, and she
doesn't see any reason at all for that to change.
Visit Amy"s web site at http://www.greenshill.com. You can e-mail her