Read When the Stars Come Out Online
Authors: Rob Byrnes
screen characters would have: with a smile on her face and a
song in her voice. No, she handled her challenges by attempting
to destroy anything that got in her way.
And often, she succeeded. She nearly succeeded with me,
too. Kitty Randolph wanted my head, and was probably disap-
pointed that she had to settle for merely ruining my career . . .
N
oah awoke early the next morning, invigorated by a cool, fresh breeze through the slightly open window. He watched Bart, his
eyes still closed in sleep, for a few minutes, and thought that this was exactly the way he wanted to wake up every morning.
After an evening of slow, slow dancing in the gazebo.
Without disturbing him, Noah slipped out of bed and rushed
through his shower and shave, suddenly eager to start the day. He
threw on a pair of khakis and a loose shirt and, twenty minutes
after rising, walked onto the patio. Although the temperature had
finally started to drop, it was still pleasant in the backyard.
He greeted Quinn, who sat and sipped a cup of coffee at that
round glass table.
“Good morning,” Noah said.
Quinn considered that, then said, “If you say so.”
Still, Noah pressed on. “Ready to do some reminiscing this morn-
ing?”
“Not really.”
Noah swallowed and did what he knew he had to do. “About last
night . . . I’m sorry about that. I was out of line.”
“You were.”
And that was that. Noah struggled to remember that magical image
of Quinn and Jimmy dancing in the gazebo, because the magic was
fading quicker than the dew in the morning sunlight.
The men sat in silence for an uncomfortably long time until
Noah finally conceded and walked back to the kitchen, making a
beeline to the coffee pot. He reached it just as Jimmy entered the room, the billows of his robe and Camille trailing behind him.
“Morning, sunshine,” he said, as chipper as Quinn was gruff.
“Good morning.” Noah held up the pot. “Coffee?”
“Please.” He strained to look out to the patio. “And how is Mr.
Happy-Pants this morning? Cooperative?”
“Not really,” said Noah, as he poured. “I think he’s still looking for his comfort level with me.”
Jimmy rolled his eyes. “Get used to it, Noah. It’s been a lifetime and I still don’t think he’s found one with me.”
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“Oh, I think he’s . . .” Noah stopped, realizing almost too late
that there was no need to confess to voyeurism, let alone implicate Bart, if he didn’t have to. “I think he’s just a bit cranky in the morning.”
“Hmmph,” grunted Jimmy, noncommittally. Then, brightening,
he said, “I’m running a few errands as soon as I get some caffeine in me and get dressed. Need anything from the outside world?”
“You’re leaving me alone with him?”
“Forty-five minutes,” Jimmy said, laughing at what looked like
terror on Noah’s face. He would have to remember to tell Quinn to
be a bit easier on the kid. “Plus, you won’t be alone. Bart is somewhere around here, isn’t he?”
“Yes, he is,” said Bart, picking that moment to stroll into the kitchen, like Jimmy clad only in a robe. “I’ll help keep the beast at bay, Noah.”
“Thanks. Coffee?”
“Sure.”
When Jimmy left the kitchen, Bart asked, “So how is he this
morning?”
“Unforgiving.”
Bart winked. “Just remember the dance.”
And so, remembering the dance, Noah steeled himself and
walked back to the patio.
“Do you feel like talking?” he asked Quinn.
“Maybe later. Right now, I’m not in the mood.” With that, he
stood and walked back into the house.
Moments later, Noah decided to follow him, but got only as far
as the kitchen before Jimmy and Bart stopped him.
“I sent him upstairs for a nap,” said Jimmy. “Let him sleep off
that attitude.” He looked off in the direction of Quinn’s departure before continuing, making sure that he had actually left the room.
“I can help you, you know.”
“I wouldn’t be so sure about that.”
Jimmy continuing in a whispered, conspiratorial voice as he
leaned in to Noah. “I don’t want him to hear. He’s not always as
deaf as he lets on. But here’s the deal: I have to take Quinn to physical therapy at 3:30. He’ll be there ninety minutes. After I drop him off, I’m going to come right back home. You’ll be here?”
Noah lifted an eyebrow. “Uh . . . why?”
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“I have something to show you. I think you’ll like it. It will put Quinn in a very good mood, and make him much easier to work
with. But not a word of it to you-know-who, right?”
“Agreed.” Noah cast his eyes downward. “Except . . . I don’t know
if it’s such a good idea for me to keep living out here.”
“Don’t be silly,” said Jimmy. “Take it from someone who’s lived
through it forever. It blows over. Plus, most of your clothes are
here, and Bart won’t let you leave with them, so we sort of have you trapped, don’t we?”
“I guess you do.”
Jimmy and Bart exchanged a smile. “I
knew
you’d see things our way.”
That afternoon, after Jimmy forced the loudly complaining
Quinn into the hunter-green Mercedes and drove off to his physi-
cal therapy appointment, Noah and Bart realized they had the house to themselves. For twenty minutes, at least.
Not a word needed to be spoken. They darted up the stairs the
minute the car left the driveway, and, leaving a trail of clothing beginning at the midpoint of the staircase, had stripped to their underwear by the time they threw themselves on the bed.
Noah rolled onto his back and Bart straddled him, his powerful
thighs pinning Noah’s hips and, beneath the thin fabric of their
briefs, their erections grinding together.
“No deflation problem this afternoon, I see,” said Bart, as he
lowered his upper body until his lips met those of his partner.
A short time later they lay in bed, their hands gently caressing
each other after the hurried intimacy. Neither said a word, afraid of breaking the spell.
It was Bart who finally spoke. “What do you think of Quinn and
Jimmy? I mean, together?”
“I think they fit. I guess you do that after thirty-six years.”
“Do you ever see . . . ?” Bart stopped himself, and Noah knew
that the words to follow would be edited for content. He was right.
“Do you ever see
yourself
in a long-term relationship like that?”
Noah sighed and rolled onto his back. “I don’t know. Decades of
monogamy . . . it could get boring. Personally, I don’t know if I can make a commitment like that.”
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“Oh.” Noah felt Bart pull away from him. “Yeah, maybe . . .” He
paused. “But I sort of like seeing it. In theory, I mean. Mutual support . . . growing old together . . . always having someone to watch your back.”
“It’s like you said: ‘in theory.’” Noah propped himself up on an
elbow and looked at Bart, whose eyes were now lost in wistful
thought. “My father has been married three times, so I’m not sure
that theory always becomes practice. I mean, it’s a nice thing to aim for—that whole ‘together forever’ thing—but the reality is that
people change over time. And it’s rare when they change at the
same time, and in the same direction.”
“Maybe you’re right,” said Bart, distantly and without commit-
ment. “But . . .”
“But what?”
Bart rolled slightly toward Noah. “Well, my parents got married
four weeks after their first date, and they’ve stayed together for almost forty years, so it
can
be done.”
“I know it can be done. I just don’t know . . .” A sound from out-
side the windows—a slamming car door—stopped him. “Shit. He’s
home.”
“That was quick,” said Bart, with what Noah thought was too
much distraction, as he rose from the bed. “Clothes!”
“I’m on it.” Noah leapt from the bed, slid into his briefs, and
darted out to the hall to collect their clothes as the sound of Jimmy’s voice, calling for Camille, rose from the front yard. Ten seconds
later, he deposited their jumbled clothing on the bed, and they separated the items and hurriedly dressed to the accompaniment of a
slam from the front door. Jimmy Beloit
did
love to slam his doors.
He was clutching a brown-papered box and fluffing the flowers
on one of the small decorative tables in the entry hall, whistling tunes from a string of unrelated musicals—something from
Rent
morphed into something from
Fiddler
morphed into something vaguely Sondheimian—when Bart and Noah finally walked down
the stairs. The younger men waved as they descended with feigned
casualness.
“That man,” said Jimmy, chipper as ever as he fluffed the arrange-
ment. “Twice a week for two years he’s been going to PT, and twice a week for two years it’s been an ordeal. I keep telling him ‘Fine, don’t go. Sit on your ass on your patio until your bones fuse into an 184
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L-shape and your muscles atrophy. That way it will be easier for me to shove you down the basement steps and be done with you.’ But
does he listen to me? No. He keeps whining and bitching, but ulti-
mately he keeps going to PT.” He looked up from the flowers and
said, “I smell sex.”
On cue, Noah and Bart blushed and stammered.
“Oh, stop,” said Jimmy. “Boys, I’m sixty-two years old, but I’m
not dead.” He finished his business with the flowers and, waving
the box in their direction, told them, “Follow me. I have something to show you.”
Noah and Bart trailed Camille, who trailed Jimmy, as they de-
scended the stairs to the screening room. Once he flipped on the
lights and they stood in dim fluorescence, he explained.
“I just picked up a package from the post office. Quinn’s birth-
day present.” He set it down on the floor.
Jimmy stepped into the projection room and opened the black-
lacquer cabinet where he kept the videotapes. When he turned, he
was holding the box containing
When the Stars Come Out
. Noah noticed for the first time that it was battered, showing the wear and tear of years of handling.
“This,” Jimmy announced, handing the tape to Bart, “can go in
the trash.”
“The trash?”
Jimmy smiled and picked up the box from the floor. He began
peeling the brown paper from the box. Freed from its taped edges,
the paper fell to the floor, and Jimmy opened the package, reveal-
ing its contents: a selection of DVDs. On the top of the stack was the repackaged, re-engineered, and decidedly more high-tech version of
When the Stars Come Out
.
“And so the Scott-Beloit household joins the twenty-first cen-
tury,” said Jimmy.
“That’s great,” said Bart. “Quinn’s going to love it.”
Jimmy continued to hold the
Stars
case, setting the others aside.
“Shall we give it a whirl?”
Bart looked at his watch. “Uh . . . we don’t have time. Someone
is going to have to pick up Quinn.”
“Not the entire movie! I just want to make sure everything is
working. I think we all know what we would be in for if I gave Quinn W H E N T H E S T A R S C O M E O U T
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this present and the DVD didn’t work, or I couldn’t run the player.
I’d rather do a test run and make sure everything is all right.”
“I see your point,” said Bart. “Why don’t you just play the last
scene. You know the one I’m talking about.”
Jimmy smiled. “My thoughts exactly.”
He disappeared into the projection room as Bart, Noah, and
Camille took seats, and he stayed there as the screen lit up. After a few fumbles working the DVD player—skipping to a scene he hadn’t
wanted to; switching to the Spanish language option—Jimmy found
the introduction to the
Stars
number and dimmed the lights.
Kitty Randolph, circa 1970, blond and wholesome in a white
gown, was again on the screen singing:
When the evening falls, my dear,
And when dream-time calls, my dear,
You’ll be with me;
Of that, no doubt,
I’ll see your face when the stars come out . . .
Noah turned to Bart and whispered. “Very crisp. And the color
is much better than the video.”
Young, handsome Quinn Scott was now on the screen, singing a
serviceable response to Kitty. Then she sang back. And then they
danced.
Noah stole a glance at Bart, whose attention was fully on the
screen. He wondered if Bart saw himself up there, dancing with Kitty, waiting for Noah to appear—black tie around his neck and walking
stick in hand—to steal him away.
“Oh, fuck!” Bart snapped, breaking the mood. “Un-
fucking
-
believable.”
Noah turned his attention back to the screen. “What? What did
I miss?”
“That is so wrong.” Bart’s voice was angrier than Noah had ever
heard. “Can she do that?”
Jimmy stood in the back of the room. Even in the dim lighting of
the screening room, Noah could see he was ashen.
“What happened?” Noah asked. “What did I miss?”
“That
bitch
,” snarled Jimmy.
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“I missed it,” Noah said once again, to which Bart merely sighed
with . . . was that disgust?
“Here,” said Jimmy, and Noah saw he was carrying the remote