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No. 5132
Thanks, everyone! (I love you guys, too!)
(The secret to writing the same story from a second POV is totally re-reading every line as I write so the dialogue stays the same, 'cause I know I'd totally flub it up if I went by memory, and then some sharp-eyed person would call me on it... Well, okay, and I add some dialogue in when there are gaps, or leave different bits out instead, I guess... Anyway, yeah, I am totally not doing any of this from memory, so don't be way too impressed)
~~~2~~~
We move back to Teufort—eventually, we always do. It is not much, but… I suppose the little hamlet is the nearest to home I have, currently. At least I have my habitual pied-a-terre in the local hotel, and the hotel is not far from the bar.
The bar, I could use. The combat does not wear on me, but the Sniper does. Whenever I venture near him, my courage flees me. I am a stoic killer of men all the rest of the time, but I cannot repay his act of kindness with a knife in the back. Far from fading with time, my strange fondness for the man has only grown. In watching him, silently, I have come to know some of his little habits and rituals on the battlefield. I have come to know so much and not nearly enough.
I waste too much time on him, but there you have it. It is better, when I tell myself not to seek him out at the start. At least that way, I can go after the others on his team. Continue my campaign of petty revenge against the mad doctor. At least that way, I can pretend that it is merely by virtue of not meeting him that I do not take my stabs at him, and not because I am helpless around him.
I do not like to feel helpless…
The bar in Teufort is the dustiest and the saddest such establishment I have ever been in, and the selection leaves much to be desired, but there is gin, cheap though it may be, and vermouth, and a bartender who knows how to mix them well enough. The quality may be lacking, but it is as dry as the desert it is mixed in, and that is all I really require out of a martini, when it all comes down to the bottom line.
“Mercenary, huh?†The bartender says. It seems the extent of his conversation skills, and so I merely nod.
I keep my gaze on the mirror behind the bar, on the door. If I cannot have a wall at my back, I can have the mirror. Force of habit, I suppose, for we are supposed to remain civil in town, not to fight outside our working hours. We are not supposed to interact with the other team much at all, I think. The Soldier’s plight illustrated the point neatly.
I do not care, though. Not when the door swings open and I see the man I had alternately stalked and avoided looking back at me in the dusty glass. My heart stops and lodges itself in my throat, and I cough for the barman and force myself to look away from the Sniper’s reflection.
“My friend has just come in, Monsieur. I owe him a drink, from when we were out-of-town. Make it the best in the house, s’il vous plait.â€
“Your money.†He shrugs. I settle my tab every weekend, after all, and I have money I do not spend. The most expensive thing in this horrid place wouldn’t put a dent in my wallet even if I did.
After a time, the Sniper joins me.
“Thought you bought the last round.†He lifts his glass in my direction.
The Red Shed? I snort. “Those wretched things are like horse piss.â€
There is a clear ‘and how would you know that?’ just in the tilt of his head and the quirk of his eyebrow, and for my part I am half tempted to make the argument that he is the expert on piss between us, but I say nothing.
“Well, next one’s on me.†He shrugs.
I smile, and I am grateful for my mask, with the heat I can feel flooding my cheeks. I very much look forward to this ‘next one’, and I toss back the rest of my drink, and watch him do the same.
“So, how has the war been going for you of late?†I ask.
“Oh, you know. It goes.†He shrugs. “How’s the, uh, body?â€
“My body is spectacular, thank you.â€
He coughs, and summons the bartender again. “All right, mate, what’ve you got?â€
The man shrugs. The Sniper looks at me a moment, then back to the bartender. “Have you got something French? My… friend, here, is French. I oughtta… oughtta buy wine or something, long as it’s my turn to buy the drinks, yeah?â€
“Kind of you, if not wholly necessary. Besides, I doubt—“
“This is the only bottle we have.†The bartender announces, pulling it from its place under the bar.
“I’ll take it.†The Sniper slaps a couple of bills down on the bar. There are no proper wine glasses, so once the bottle is open, he merely pours into the tumbler and martini glass we already have.
It makes for an… interesting taste, but nothing worth complaining about, and not when the company I am in is so handsome.
We sip at it—not excellent, but on its own merits, not terrible—and discuss life, the war, the amusement and madness encapsulated in light anecdotes and easy laughter, and when we discuss cinema, I swear his touch rests along my arm so much longer than it needs to…
“Oi, it’s a dead zone up there, last place we were at? That single radio station about drove me up the wall.†He draws back at last, but even then his hand drags down my sleeve almost reluctantly.
“Mm. Always the… the more inoffensive rock and roll? Yes. It is not to my tastes, either. Not that I suppose we enjoy the same music. I… I do not know much about Australian music.†I return the touch, though I do not dare linger too long. His bare forearm is warm, even through my glove I can feel the heat of his skin.
“Some of it’s all right. I don’t know much about French music.†He grins lazily over at me, and my heart goes right back up into my throat at that…
“Some of it is all right.†I joke.
He pulls a cigarette from one of his vest pockets, and a matchbook, and when he struggles to get the match to light, I lean over with my lighter to provide a flame.
“Cheers.†He nods.
“De rien.†I do not draw back yet this time. He accepted the gesture, and when the moment stretches on and he neither leans back from me nor pushes me back from him, I feel a little bolder.
I fill our glasses, the third for each of us now, and try to plot out my offer. “I still feel in your debt.â€
“All right. You can buy us another round after this.†He smiles, raises his glass in a toast, and I am glad he feels this relaxed around me, considering our history, but it is not a long night of drinking I have in mind.
“No, no, that… that is not enough…â€
He shrugs, but he does not make a move yet. Very well. I know how to skate along the razor’s edge of subtlety.
“If there’s ever anything else I can do…†I do not make a show of ogling him, merely let my glance fall to his lap for half a moment, let my eyelids lower just so. To lick my lips would be crude, a look will suffice. It is clear enough what I wish to give.
“Excuse me a minute,†He throws himself off his stool, staggers outside, but I do not think he is so drunk. Repressed, then?
I give him a moment, but I do follow. I don’t know if I should apologize, it seemed to me as if he had some interest in me, when we were in the bar, touching lightly as we laughed over inconsequential things, joking back and forth. Still, I don’t want to let things go, not like this.
He is standing in the street, but the whole town is empty, there is not much danger of a car coming.
“Do you want to talk?†I join him, keep my voice free from the flirtation of earlier.
“Might not be a good idea, all things considered.â€
“If you change your mind… Through tonight, I have a room in the hotel.â€
“That’s definitely not a good idea.â€
“To talk.†I press. “If you want to. Talk. Room three-oh-two. I am going there now… the last real chance for quiet, before the working week. I hope you do change your mind. I feel… I feel we should discuss this, perhaps.â€
No response comes, and I do not wait long for one. If he wishes to speak with me, even if it is only to tell me I was mistaken, then he can find me. If he would rather pretend it did not happen, then… Well, it is not the worst thing to happen to me, if I do not have him. Perhaps in time I will even get over this silly infatuation.
Still, when I do reach my room, I cannot still myself for more than a second. I leap between the bed and the chair, I pace the floor ‘til I can imagine leaving a permanent depression in the floorboards. At the first knock, I am opening the door.
“Were you watching through the peephole all this time?†He asks, one eyebrow raised, his lips in a smirk.
“Pacing, actually.†I still can’t quite still myself, but at least the truth is less ridiculous and embarrassing than the notion of standing there with my eye glued to the peephole. “You came at just the right moment, I was passing the door.â€
“Look, I’m not sure why I came.†He glances away, looks around the room.
“That’s fine.†I say, tone mild. If I push too hard, he will bolt, but if I leave him too much room, he will wriggle himself free and run just as sure. And I did not imagine those moments between us. Still, I suppose that much of the world holds little tolerance for the homophile, it is not unreasonable to think he has reservations about pursuing a man. Not unreasonable to think he has only pursued women in the past, or lived chastely in his van in the wilderness. “Perhaps it’s all… sudden, for you. But I was not the only one who leaned into the space between us, down in the bar. And your hand reached for my arm. You can play the virgin if you like, but you cannot play the naïf.â€
There. My voice is not harsh or accusing, nor too warm, but the lines have been drawn. There will be no lying, no denial, but there is still room to back away from more. It would disappoint me, yes, but I cannot answer for him. I can only make my own position clear.
“No. No, reckon not.â€
“It’s all right with me if it’s only talk tonight.†I assure him. “The room is mine every weekend, whether I use it or not. When I am not trapped in some sadistic medic’s refrigerator. Again, thank you.â€
“Thanked me enough.†He shrugs, blushes. Charming…
“If you say.†I sit on the bed, and after a moment’s deliberation he takes the chair I have left him. “As I said, the room is mine every weekend. From Friday night to Sunday morning, I am here. If you ever wish to do more than just talk, I will be here. If you never do…â€
I try to pretend at least a little cool, I turn my eyes from his to protect myself, but I look back, and maybe in that moment I give away more than I intend.
“You’d rather I say yes.â€
“Of course I would rather you say yes.â€
“Why?†He shifts, uncomfortable, and I had not really expected the question…
Still, I suppose I can do my best to answer it, with honesty, yes, but with some distance and dignity also. “Why not? Are you not lonely? We do not have many opportunities out here… not many. Sometimes one gets lucky, one willing to take the risks, but… I have always been too careful, until you… Mon sauveur, you opened that door, and for that moment, you were… you were the world for me. You granted me my release, that is a big part of it. Even if we met in town, without that… I could have pretended that you were not my enemy, and greeted you politely, but I would not have taken the risk.â€
It feels good, to admit so much. Feels safe, to have as much discretion as I managed.
“I don’t—“ He shakes his head, but cannot finish. Still, no great leap of intuition to think he is speaking of the refrigerator—he had been uncomfortable with the subject earlier, and with facing too much gratitude.
“My apologies, of course. We won’t speak of the… incident, further. Needless to say it occurred. And so I had to notice you. To think of you. To see you when I close my eyes, sometimes. So I took the risk—and it is a risk, isn’t it? Whenever I am outside my own country, it seems so…†I stop myself from saying anything overtly rude about the barbarism of outlawing the practice of any sex between consenting adults, but it has always struck me as stupid. And, of course, inconvenient, for one who is so inclined. I rephrase the main thrust of my point. “You express an interest in another man, and he takes it as an affront.â€
“Yeah, well. I don’t take that sort of risk myself, normally.†He says, body language prickly, tone gruff, but he does not say he lacks the desire.
“If a little thing like that threatens a man’s masculinity, then it must not be a very certain thing.†I say lightly. Then my eyes land on him again, and I cannot help some heat. “But not you… your masculinity is a real thing. You live a difficult life, not because circumstances force you, but because the rewards are sweeter and the lessons learned are richer, when the work is bloody and the life is hard. You are professional, your work is clean, and I admit, I have been impressed by you. But, as I said, had we not… met, the way that we did… I doubt I would have approached you this way.â€
“Yeah, well…†He looks pleased with the praise, before he restores his scowl. “You’ve done some good work yourself, haven’t you? At my expense, often as not.â€
My answering laughter is not unkind. “Not quite that often. But yes, perhaps more than some of the others. You are a tempting target. You are so focused… but you put up a good fight if I tip my hand too early. May I be honest?â€
“Too late not to be, isn’t it now?â€
I laugh again, softly, and allow my foot to touch his, only just, as I sense his guard dropping. If he draws back, then I will do the same, and restore our borders, but if he allows the flirtation…
“Once,†I confess. “I let you hear me coming, when I was close enough to stop you from getting at your blade right away. I was curious…â€
“Yeah, you’re real curious, ain’t ya?†He says it with some attempt at teasing scorn, but… it is not an insult, if it is true.
“Who would come out on top, if it was just you, and me.†I continue, voice low. “No guns, no knives.â€
It had been an enjoyable experiment, as it lasted. I had discarded my own weapons, focused instead on keeping him from his, so that the contest would not end too quickly, so that I could see for myself how strong he was without the aid of a knife or a gun. We are closely matched, but I found him just a little bit stronger then—no telling how much is down to adrenaline, but he had me on my back, the length of his body pinning me down, and even in those days before my feelings for him were warm, there was some physical attraction, at least on my part.
Our Pyro burst in before the fight could become interesting—or embarrassing—and the airblast knocked us apart—knocked the Sniper out the window.
“We didn’t get much time to test that, did we?†He lets out a brief laugh, also remembering.
“We could test it now.†I offer in a whisper. “We will not be interrupted.â€
He rockets to his feet. Too much, you fool, too much…
“Dunno if I can do this, mate.â€
I stand and place a hand on his elbow. “I understand. The war is between us, always. I can understand not wanting to… to embark on this. But I will be here, every weekend, whether you come or not. So, just remember. You can always change your mind.â€
“Haven’t made my mind up yet.†He shakes his head.
“You can still change it.†I promise. “You can always change it.â€
My hand falls away, slow, I don’t want to stop touching him. He can’t meet my gaze, looks me in the eye and away several times in short succession.
“I’m going to leave now. But next weekend I’ll be sober.†He takes a step back, but it is also slow. And perhaps… perhaps he does not truly want to stop being touched. “And I’ll think about it.â€
“Mm. Perhaps it is a good decision to make sober.†I smile and lean back from him, to show there are no hard feelings in his going. “At the very least, if we are both sober next weekend, it means the performance will not suffer.â€
He sputters out his response, and I walk him to the door, keeping a respectful distance between us, but I allow my smile to remain flirtatious. At this point, it does not seem to harm anything if I do.
When he is gone, I strip out of my suit and lie back on my bed and think about the way it could have gone, if, instead of shying away from me down in the bar, he had come up to the hotel with me after I first offered to do anything to thank him.
‘Anything?’, he would have asked, with a challenge in his voice, and I would have said ‘Monsieur, anything’. I imagine his hand skating along my cheek, imagine going to my knees to worship at his altar… His cock, I think, must be long… not too thick, but solid all the same. To fit the rest of him. I imagine him whispering to me, suck at my own fingers as I pump myself—a poor substitution, but as long as I am relegated to the land of make-believe…
It’s quick, and it leaves me cold, but at least afterward, I can sleep.
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