Authors: K.Z. Snow
had gone south and his balls had paled, so to
speak, from blue to whatever the hell their natural
color was. Moreover, he’d resigned himself to
writing off Jonah Day. Any negativity about his job
was a deal breaker. He didn’t need the label
white
trash
slapped on him—not on top of all the others.
Scrubbed free of makeup and dressed in his
comfortably shabby street clothes, Dare pushed
open one of the Sugar Bowl’s heavy front doors.
The air outside was a brisk blessing. Steeled by
righteous indignation, or at least trying to convince
himself he was, Dare strode to the employee
section at the left edge of the parking lot.
“Dare!”
He spun toward the voice. Shoes slapped
softly on the asphalt. A few cars crawled toward
the exit, lamplight glinting off their shells.
“Wait!”
Jonah emerged, breathless, from a swatch of
near-darkness. He stopped a foot away from Dare.
At his back, beyond the frontage road, the muted
growl of freeway traffic had thinned.
It was close to eleven.
“I’m sorry,” Jonah said, looking directly into
Dare’s eyes. “I didn’t think before I opened my
damn mouth.” Nervously, he ran a hand through his
ruffled hair. “What I said at the bar—it has more to
do with me than with you.”
“Really?
How?”
Beneath
his
frigid
skepticism, Dare was impressed. Men had waited
for him in the parking lot before, but never this
long, and never to apologize.
“I know it sounded like I was….” Jonah’s
forehead crimped. His gaze darted away from
Dare’s face. “Like I was put off, like I was passing
judgment. But, see, the thing is—”
“You don’t have to explain. A lot of people
would react the same way.” Remaining aloof, Dare
kept pushing, pushing, testing Jonah’s limits. He
hadn’t liked himself when he’d done it before, and
he didn’t much like himself for doing it now. But
he felt driven to.
“
The thing is
,” Jonah repeated sternly,
raising his voice to demand attention, pushing
back, “I admire your self-assurance. Envy it,
actually. I’ll admit I was stunned at first, maybe for
reasons I don’t….” He closed his eyes for a
second, then switched tracks. “You put yourself
out there, all the way. And you’re good at what you
do. Very expressive and agile and….” He licked
his lips. “I thought you were gorgeous on stage.
More than gorgeous. Extremely hot. And so at
ease. You know your body and you take pride in it.
I’m sorry if I….” Groaning, flustered, Jonah
looked at the starless sky. After inhaling and
exhaling, he continued. “You’ve got your act
together, Daren. And I don’t mean your stage act—
which, by the way, had me mesmerized. I mean
your acceptance of yourself.”
Dare stared at him. The son of a bitch had
done it again. Without a single blessed clue how to
be manipulative, how to be anything but
awkwardly honest, Jonah had alternately charmed
and bulldogged his way through Dare’s defenses.
“Don’t admire me,” Dare said quietly. “I’m a
shitty role model. My stage act is the
only
thing I
have together. I’m surprised you haven’t figured
that out.”
Jonah shoved his hands in his pockets and
stared at the lamplight pooled around his feet.
“And I’m surprised you haven’t figured out that
I’m not too good at figuring things out.” His wan
smile, when he glanced up, was just as self-
effacing as his words.
Again, Dare was disarmed. “It’s getting kind
of chilly out here. You want to sit in my car?”
“You haven’t said if you accept my apology.”
“Obviously I accept it. I didn’t ask you to sit
in a car with me just so no one’ll hear you scream
when I slap you around.”
Another smile, delighted instead of self-
deprecating. “You’re not meeting anyone? You
don’t have a date?”
“Jonah, I don’t think I’ve
ever
had a proper
date.” Dare resumed walking toward his vehicle. It
wasn’t as new and spiffy as Jonah’s, but it was
closer.
“That’s surprising. I would’ve thought you got
propositioned plenty.”
“I do. But a proposition usually results in a
hit ’n’ quit, which isn’t a date. And I don’t even do
those
anymore.” The driver-side door made a
cracking squeal as Dare swung it toward him. “Not
often, anyway.” He got inside and opened the
passenger door.
“Well, you can afford to be picky, that’s for
sure.” Jonah settled into the seat.
Dare felt a shiver of excitement as he recalled
Jonah’s declarations just minutes earlier: that he
thought Pepper Jack was gorgeous and hot and
found his act mesmerizing. But it was the aborted
statement that intrigued Dare the most.
“I’ll admit
I was stunned at first, maybe for reasons I
don’t….”
Don’t what? Want to admit? Dare decided not
to bring it up. Not yet, anyway.
He pushed the seat back as far as it would go,
lowered the backrest to a more relaxing angle, and,
stretching out, linked his hands behind his head.
Jonah watched him. It seemed Jonah had been
watching him a lot. Dare thought he must’ve come
across as a curious creature indeed to a teetotaler
who wore suits and sold crop hail policies to
farmers.
“I want you to know,” Dare said, facing him,
“that being provocative is part of my stage
persona. It isn’t part of
me
.” He realized that
wasn’t entirely the truth. “Okay, so maybe it is, a
little, but not all the time and not in the way you
think.”
“I realize that now. It was insensitive of me to
imply… whatever I seemed to be implying
earlier.”
“That I’m a slut.”
Avoiding Dare’s gaze, Jonah murmured, “I
really am sorry.”
“Do you mean that? ’Cause if you don’t, if
you’re just trying to be all mannerly and shit—”
Through with being abashed, Jonah looked
him square in the eye. “I mean it. What I told you
out there is the truth.” He surely knew what Dare
was getting at.
I can’t confide in you about the
most horrific episode of my life if you think I
initiated it.
“May I ask you something personal?”
Dare chuckled. “I don’t think we need to get
permission from each other anymore. Our whole
acquaintance is based on asking personal
questions.”
“It
is
pretty bizarre, isn’t it?” Jonah said. “We
haven’t even made it to the friendship stage.”
Dare angled to face him. “I don’t know.
Maybe we have. Or we’re at the doorstep. What
do
you
think?”
“I’d like to think you’re right.”
Beyond the cozy enclosure of the car,
occasional laughter and shouts echoed through the
parking lot as more patrons entered and left the
Bowl. The clubby dance hall called Crystal was
open now, and the go-go boys were doing their
thing. Some customers came just for that; others
didn’t care to hang around when the evening turned
manic between the hours of ten and two.
“By the way,” Jonah said, “I don’t drink
because I’m a recovering alcoholic, not because
I’m a prude.”
It took Dare several seconds to realize his
mouth had fallen open. “Oh.”
“Bet you weren’t expecting
that
.”
To say the least. Dare was stymied. Just when
he thought he had this guy figured out, his
assumptions were smashed.
“But you’re so young.” It was the first and
only thing that popped into Dare’s overtaxed brain.
Lame
, he thought.
Lame, lame, lame
.
Jonah didn’t seem to notice. “I actually
started drinking while the stuff with Clayton
Wallace was going on. My mother always had
beer and wine in the house, sometimes hard liquor,
too. Then I really ramped it up once Clay was out
of my life and more stuff happened, which
eventually landed me with GG. She’s the one who
finally got me into rehab.”
How calm he was! “Holy shit. How’d you get
through high school?”
Jonah shook his head and shrugged. “Sheer
pigheadedness, I guess. I had something to prove to
myself. Maybe to my mother, too. Wallace had
made me feel spineless. Damned if I was going to
be a
total
loser. So I was a binge drinker at first. I
restricted my partying to weekends and holiday
breaks. It didn’t become a fulltime thing until after
I graduated.”
“Then how’d you make it through college?”
“I almost didn’t make it
in
. Even after I did, I
dropped out after a few months. If I hadn’t been
with GG by then and she hadn’t pushed me into that
program, I would’ve boozed my way into
oblivion.”
“Did you, uh, discuss the abuse in rehab?”
The cold night air seeped more noticeably
into the car. Jonah wrapped his arms around his
ribcage. “No. I wasn’t ready to. It was hard enough
just admitting to my drinking problem and the
promiscuity.”
“Oh, so
that’s
what you meant when I asked
if you were gay. First you said no, then you said
you didn’t know, then you said something about
having been too fucked up to figure it out.”
The color in Jonah’s cheeks seemed to
deepen. “Yeah, that’s the time I was referring to.
I’d get blasted and have sex with anything that
moved, then at some point I’d black out. After
rehab I just avoided the whole issue. I had to focus
on staying sober.” He gave Dare a sidelong glance.
“That’s why I admire you. You
haven’t
avoided
the issue. You didn’t let—what was his name?
Howard?—turn you into some simpering, growth-
stunted eunuch.”
“Hey.” Dare give Jonah’s thigh a light shake,
just enough to secure his attention. “First of all, it’s
perfectly understandable how that experience
twisted your self-image out of alignment. You
were only eleven when that prick got a hold on
you. You were like Silly Putty. Second, I’m not as
well-adjusted as you think I am. And third,
although I can’t speak with absolute authority on
this”—Dare managed a smile, but it felt too tense
to be jocular—“I’ll venture to say you’re not a
eunuch.”
Jonah’s left leg began to bounce, rapidly, his
heel tapping against the floor mat as if a muscle
spasm had seized his foot. He glued his gaze to the
dashboard. Just as Dare began to think, despite
how loony the thought was,
Oh shit, maybe
something happened to him and he actually
has
been castrated
, Jonah abruptly stopped jiggling
and spoke. To the windshield. As if Dare were
sitting on the hood of the car.
“I realized something at the Zandt Pavilion,
even though I didn’t want to admit it to myself. I
was attracted to you. And tonight I realized
something that rattled me even more. You really
fuckin’ turn me on, Dare. And it scares the hell out
of me.”
Chapter Ten
THIS was not supposed to happen. This seemed
like a boxcar full of wrong for all kinds of reasons,
not the least of which was their reason for getting
together in the first place.
Jonah had excused himself and bolted from
Dare’s car after his confession—he never did get
around to asking that “personal” question—and
Dare had pretty much obsessed about it all the way
home and halfway through the night. The following
morning, as he prepared for his Sunday gig with
the Polka Doodles, his nerves squirmed.
Sure, he’d entertained some lewd thoughts
about Jonah Day. But they’d been harmless,
divorced from any intention to act. He’d had
similar fantasies about a lot of guys.
Why couldn’t Jonah have kept his damned
desires to himself, as Dare had been doing?
“Get my tie on straight, would you?” he asked
Carver, who’d just come out of the downstairs
bathroom.
Carver made a lazy U-turn and shuffled up to
Dare. Staring at the tie, he scowled. “It’s a fucking