Tommy stands, but he grabs Lawson by the face. “What do you need?” he asks, very seriously.
Lawson closes his eyes and presses his forehead to Tommy’s chest. “For this to be real,” he admits.
College Town, a standalone M/M romance, is now live in all the usual places, links for which are provided above. This was the first time in a looooong time that I've written a self-contained story, and I enjoyed it so much I can't wait to do it again.
Look for a debrief in the next week or so, and until then, happy reading. I'm posting chapter one under the cut below so you can check it out. Thanks so much, everyone, and reviews are love!
Warnings for language and self-conscious angst...
1
Growing up is shit.
It sucks.
Not because adulthood
itself sucks all that much. It does…I mean, it really does…but the problem
isn’t the achy back, or the fuzzy short-term memory, or even the crushing
anxiety of thinking you might have to declare bankruptcy. None of that.
No, it’s realizing that the
person you thought you’d be when you were a kid never manifested. The beautiful
house, the flashy car, the high-paying, prestigious job. You didn’t wind up
with any of those things. And worst of all, the absolute gut punch of it all,
is the crushing truth that, as an adult, once that sugar-sweet high of
adolescence has worn off, there’s no such thing as true love. There’s love,
sure: all sorts of love. But that bone-deep, blistering, clean-scouring and
soul-transcending sort of love you read about in books and watched unfold in
movies? That’s not real. The tooth-rotting love you felt as a kid fades in the
face of the real world; it slips away.
The best you can hope for,
then, is something like contentment.
~*~
“Welcome to Coffee Town, the
only place you can soar with the Eagle Espresso. Can I interest you in one of
our fresh-baked Danishes?” Lawson deadpans, features schooled to match.
“Pffft.” Dana leans across the
counter and socks him in the arm. Hard.
He cracks. “Hey!” Laughing, he
rubs at his arm. “Jesus. See if I ever offer you quality customer service
again.”
“Offer me an Americano and go
on break so you can keep me company.”
“No can do, chica. I lost
break privileges.”
She lifts her brows,
disbelieving. “You what?”
“I’ve” – he lifts his hands to
do air quotes – “abused them, apparently.”
Her gaze drops to the counter,
then lifts again. “Are you writing on your breaks?”
“Well…” He tries not to
cringe, but fails. “It’s just,” he rushes to say, “coffee house, computer –
that’s a peanut butter and jelly match made in heaven right there.”
“Yeah, but you writing in
public isn’t,” she says, and raps her red-painted nails on the marble. “Come
on. They can’t deny you breaks – that’s like, I dunno, an EEOC violation or
something. Americano.” She points at him, then over her shoulder. “Join me.”
“But–”
“Now, Law,” she says over her
shoulder, and wends her way through the crowd toward a table.
Lawson pouts, but only a
little. Takes the next order, then begs an unimpressed Megan to take over at
the register, pulls Dana’s Americano, snags a cookie for himself, and makes his
way to the prime window table she’s procured for them.
“You could at least sit in the
corner by the bathroom,” he says as he folds his long frame down into the chair
and slides her coffee over. “It’s bad enough my manager’s gonna be pissed, now
we’re taking up, like, the best table.”
She makes a face of faux
affrontery. “I’m a paying customer. I can sit where I want.”
Lawson puts his elbows on the
table and hunkers down over his cookie.
“Sweetie, don’t slouch. Your
manager’s not gonna say shit while I’m here.”
That’s true, and hearing it
honestly helps a little.
By virtue of the fact that
Lawson is almost forty and a failed novelist, working the counter at his home
town coffeeshop, his manager, Kyle, is younger than him. A lot younger than
him. A little floppy-haired tyrant who walks with his ass on his shoulders,
running Coffee Town like it’s a place that matters, and not the shop nearest
campus and the busiest by simple virtue of walkability. Kyle screams if Lawson
fucks up the machines; screams if he has to recount the till after close every
night; screams if he gets so absorbed in writing that he eats three cookies
instead of his allotted one and lets his break run three minutes over the
allotted fifteen minutes.
Lawson hates him, but, well,
it’s not like he has any other job prospects at the moment.
Look at me now, he thinks in the direction of the kids
who’d harassed him in high school. Even more of a fuckup than you all
thought I’d turn out to be.
Dana, though, golden hair
braided in a princess crown on top of her head, all of her glowing with good
health in the radiant sunlight beaming through the window, is very much not a
fuckup. She’s anything but. His best friend – real tried and true, since they
were in diapers, blood brothers and die-for-each-other BFF kind of love between
them – started college the summer after high school graduation, right here in
little ol’ Eastman, and got her bachelor’s in three years. Then her masters
after that. Then opened her own accounting firm, just one block down from the
sun-warmed table where they now sit. Dana is a practical person. A shark, he
tells her, laughingly, so she’ll shoot him the bird and then smirk. She was
never cursed with romantic passions and creative streaks; was never crippled by
the sorts of big dreams that have held him and weighed him down, iron shackles
around both ankles.
Today, Dana wears a simple,
perfectly-tailored white shirt, and a black skirt, both understated enough to
tell him they’re expensive. Diamond studs wink in her ears, and he knows
for a fact that her tasteful nude lipstick is seventy-five dollars a tube.
He doesn’t know, honestly, why
she’s still here. In Eastman. In this college town with its odd mix of farmers
and students. She’s not stuck, like he is; she could go somewhere bigger,
somewhere as fabulous as she is.
But she sips her Americano and
pins him with a look, and says, “Actually, I’m not here just for the coffee.”
“Aw. You’re here for my pretty
face?”
“No.” She smiles, but small
and tight, a sudden tension stealing over her features, and it sets a warning
siren to spinning distantly in the back of his head.
He pauses with his cookie in
front of his mouth. Slowly lowers it back to its napkin. “Okay.”
She hesitates a moment,
trailing her nails down the side of her cup, a soft scratching sound. It’s not
like her to waver, and it immediately sets his teeth on edge.
“What?”
She starts to bite her lip,
white teeth poised above it, a girlhood habit he knows she’s tried to outgrow.
She wins the battle, and lifts her gaze, a quick flicker up through her lashes,
expression smooth, but braced for his reaction.
His stomach sinks.
Matter-of-factly, she says,
“Our class reunion is in December.”
He knows that. Has known it
for months – for almost a year, when the email hit his inbox with an innocuous
ping, and then the bottom dropped out of his stomach. That little innocent
tagline sitting at the top of his unread Old Navy promotions and Dell customer
service surveys: It’s the Big Two-Oh, Eastman Raiders!
He was walking down the
sidewalk, after a quick Seven-Eleven run to grab more Equal packets for the
tables, mindlessly scrolling, and the email leaped off his phone, grabbed him
by the throat, and shocked his heart into a wonky two-step. He halted, slumped
sideways against the rough brick of the wall, actually touched the fingertips
of his free hand to his chest and felt the jackrabbit hitch beneath his
breastbone.
Had it really been twenty
years? Twenty? Since he plucked the mortarboard off his head, turned it in his
hands, and wished it had felt like a victory, instead of the end of something?
Yeah, it had. That tracked. He
was thirty-seven, so the math added up.
But still. Twenty years.
Twenty years in which, he realized, standing on the sidewalk with his pulse
throbbing in his throat, he hadn’t moved on even a little bit. Still caught in
an ugly, childish hope, burdened by the defeat of knowing it was a hope that
could never be realized.
He gave himself a solid thirty
seconds to grieve. Then he thumbed the email into the trash, pocketed his
phone, and pushed off the wall. Love wasn’t real – not the kind he’d thought
he’d been in back then. And nobody really went to their reunions, save cheerleaders
and quarterbacks.
So he knows about the reunion,
but he’s tried very hard not to think about it.
He’s shocked it’s Dana
bringing it up, of all people, considering she knows the exact shape and flavor
of the bitterness that sat on his tongue on graduation day.
He sits back in his chair and
folds his arms. “What about it?”
Her brows jump. Calm down.
“You know how Harmony is the president of the Reunion Committee?”
“One.” He lifts a finger from
the crook of his arm without unfolding. “Why the fuck is there a ‘Reunion
Committee?’ And two: how could I possibly have known Harmony was the
president?”
“Uh, maybe because Harmony is
our friend?”
He stares at her, unblinking.
“Maybe because she sends out,
like, weekly update emails about her kids, and her pottery class, and her,
frickin’ new favorite HGTV show?”
He shrugs. “I don’t check my
email,” he lies.
Dana makes a face, because she
knows he’s lying, but doesn’t call him on it. Instead, she does something much
worse. She takes a deep breath and says, “You know how her sister’s pregnant?
The sister who lives in North Dakota?”
Before Lawson can ask what the
hell that has to do with their reunion, he realizes where this is headed, and
his stomach locks up hard, like the cash register when he can’t get the key to
work. He sets the cookie down for good, and shoves it over to her side of the
table. Folds his arms, and says, “No.”
She lifts a hand and says,
“Now, hold on. Let me finish.”
“No.”
“Lawson.”
“Dana.” His heart
hammers, and his palms prickle with sweat where they’re stuffed under his arms,
and every part of his being is going no, no, no, no, no. He can’t
go to a reunion, can’t even be involved in planning it, sending emails,
checking names off lists, ordering fucking cheap champagne, because a reunion
means a homecoming, and a homecoming means…could mean…no. Just no.
Dana sighs tightly through her
nose, and presses on anyway, despite the way he starts wagging his head back
and forth exaggeratedly. “Harmony has to go out of town to help her sister, and
she called me last night in tears, begging me to take over the Committee for
her.”
He stops shaking his head to
huff out an, “Ugh.” Harmony crying is a sad, sad, Disney movie affair, all
giant eyes and hitched breaths and an uncontrollable swell of sympathy that
leads people to do anything to stem the tide of tears.
“And, so…” She shrugs. “I’m
now the de facto head of the Reunion Committee.”
He pulls an exaggerated face,
one that normally makes her laugh.
Now, she frowns, and says,
“I’m nominating you as co-head.”
Lawson takes a deep breath,
and says, drawn out and slow, “Noooooo.”
Her posture collapses, from
straight-backed Executive Woman in Charge, to something slumped and pleading
that reminds him of high school. Of earlier. Middle school, elementary. Come
on, Law! That’s not faaaaiiiir! No, life isn’t fair. He’s learned to live
with it. Mostly. But not so well that he can do this.
He hitches up straighter in
his chair and presses his clammy palms to the table edge. Fixes her with as
steady a look as he can manage. “Dana. Honey. I would die for you, you know
this.”
She nods, corner of her mouth
curving upward in a smile.
“But I will absolutely not,
under any circumstances, get within fifty feet of this fucking reunion.”
She considers him a moment,
nails idly scraping the sides of her cup. “He won’t be there,” she says,
finally, quietly, little more than a whisper. “You know that he – that the two
of them won’t come.”
“I don’t know anything.”
Her head tilts, and the
sympathy in her gaze sends his gaze skittering out through the window, where a
woman tries unsuccessfully to drag a tantrum-throwing toddler past a window
display at the gift shop next door.
He sees her hand cross the
table from the corner of his eye, but still flinches when it settles against
the back of his. He recovers fast, though, and turns his palm up to tangle
their fingers. God, they’re holding hands in public; they’re those
people.
“Well, I know some things,”
she counters, voice supportive in a way he both craves and hates – hates that
he needs that reassurance. That he isn’t stronger than this. “I know that I
love you, and that you’re one of my favorite people in the whole world, and I
know that you’re going through kind of a shitty time right now–”
“Don’t,” he interrupts, a lump
forming in his throat. “Just…don’t, Dana.”
She squeezes his hand and
says, “I also know that those two shitheads won’t show up to our reunion, so
there’s nothing to worry about on that front.”
He dares to glance back across
the table at her, and sees a ferocious sparkle in her blue eyes. “Because they
don’t give enough of a shit to come.”
“Because they know we’d rip
them new ones and they don’t have the balls to come,” she corrects.
A middle-aged woman sits down
at the table beside theirs, gaze going to their joined hands and lingering
longer than is polite, open curiosity writ on her face. She probably thinks
they’re lovers having a meaningful heart-to-heart.
Dana squeezes his hand once
more, then withdraws hers, and Lawson folds his arms again. She takes a deep
breath, and dons a businesslike air once more. “Come on. You’re better at this
sort of thing than I am.”
He snorts. “That’s
demonstrably untrue.”
“Stop selling yourself short.”
“Stop trying to upsell me.”
“Law.” She pouts. “Come on,
Law, pleeeeeaaaassse!”
He has no natural immunity to
begging; it’s always tripped him up. Please, Law, God, please. Hands
twisted up in his shirt, breath hot against the base of his throat.
He squeezes his eyes shut
against memory, not that it helps. He does things physically, sometimes, in the
hope it’ll slam the door on harmful mental practices. It doesn’t, but he goes
through the motions anyway.
“Fine.” When he opens his
eyes, she’s grinning, and he throws his hands up. “Fine! Fine, I’ll help you
run this fucking reunion!”
Dana’s grin widens.
The woman beside them lets out
a shocked gasp.
Lawson turns to her, donning a
grave face, and says, “Ma’am, don’t let her face and hair fool you: that girl
is a Grade A demon.”
The woman rears back in her
chair, baffled.
Dana laughs. “I love you!”
“Yeah, yeah. Keep that.” He
flicks his fingers toward the cookie that still sits in front of her. “I’m
suddenly feeling nauseous as all hell.”
She rolls her eyes, and opens
her mouth to respond – and a shadow falls across the table. Lawson knows from
the shape of its hair that it’s Kyle, just like he knows, before he turns his
head, what sort of expression Kyle’s wearing: the pinched-brow, cat’s asshole
mouth pucker of the truly self-righteous.
Lawson smiles sheepishly at
him. “Hi, boss.”
Kyle jerks a thumb over his
shoulder. “Break room. Now.”
“Yes, boss. Right away, boss.”
When he glances back at Dana
over his shoulder as he follows – trying to duck his shoulders so he doesn’t
tower over Kyle quite so dramatically – she winks and sticks her tongue out at
him. He shoots her the bird, and she smiles.
They’re okay. They’re always
okay.
He just hopes he will
be once this whole reunion business is said and done.
Can't wait to read this
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