How To Rape A Straight Guy Sullivan, Michel (best e reader for epub TXT) đ
Book online «How To Rape A Straight Guy Sullivan, Michel (best e reader for epub TXT) đ». Author Sullivan, Michel
But Wayne, shit, he just sat there behind the wheel, humminâ some kind oâ sixties tune I couldnât quite make out, not lookinâ at anything. It sort of ticked me off, âcause I was wonderinâ if he really understood what we were about to do. No, I was wonderinâ if he really cared. Thatâs whatâs dangerous âbout doinâ the crime -- not carinâ about gettinâ caught. Thatâs when you fuck up anâ lead the cops straight to ya. Anâ me, Iâm a one-timer, already so I didnât want to go down with a second strike. Or third, the way some DAsâd screw around with the law. So after a couple minutes of Wayneâs non-music, I was close to tellinâ the fuck to shut up anâ pay attention; but then he stopped all on his own.
I looked at him, anâ all of a sudden he looked really tired anâ -- I dunno, sad. No, not sad. Stunned. Like heâd just seen somethinâ. A car wreck or disaster that he couldnât take in.
âCurt,â he asked in this voice so soft I almost couldnât hear it, âdo you ever wonder at what youâre capable of? At what youâre really truly capable of doing?â
That spooked me. Anâ relieved me, a little. Maybe Wayne was gonna back out -- which I almost wouldnât have minded.
I shrugged anâ said, âCrazy question. Especially now.â
âYes, it is. You know, Iâll be forty-six in three days, anâ Iâll see it as a grandfather.â
That jolted me. âWhat?â
âMy oldest had her first child a couple months ago. A boy. Kendall. âKen Dollâ. I doubt she caught the irony when she christened him.â
âWait, wait, wait -- whoa. Oldest? Daughter? As in more than one?â
He gave me a smirk. âHow observant you are. I have four. Well, âhad.â I was forbidden contact with them once my wife learned I liked men more than I did her.â
âShit, Wayne.â
âTo put it mildly. It was not the sweetest of divorces. Whatâs funny is, I can understand why she was so upset. Iâd kept it such a good secret for so many years, both before and during our marriage.â
âWhy?â
âCâmon, Curt -- even in Los Angeles there are large pockets of fag haters. In the great Midwest, there are entire states of them. If you want to be accepted by people, do business with people, get ahead in any way, you have to be like them -- big dumb breeders who think art is a Norman Rockwell poster framed on their wood-panelled living room wall. But if youâre careful, if you toe the line, even if they have their suspicions -- so long as you have a wife and four children theyâll never say anything. Unless youâre fool enough to try something with one of their teenaged sons. And there were a couple...â
âThat what got you caught?â
âNot exactly. I was smarter than that. I owned two store franchises from a company in Texas. I had to go down every now and then, so I bought a small house on a nearby river. Not far from a good-sized university. I was thirty pounds lighter, then, all of it muscle. I ran ten miles a day. I never had trouble picking a college boy up. Thatâs where I met Lenny, you know. He was doing his Masterâs in Theater Arts. When we moved out here, he actually built up a nice little resume on television and low-budget features. He was even up for an Emmy, once, and I think a Spirit Award, though I canât swear to that.â
âWhat happened?â
âOh, one of the students I picked up freaked out and accused me of rape. It was just his word against mine, but I was still arrested and threatened with prison. My wife was called and told all about it by the local police. The charges wound up being dropped; it seems the boy in question had drug problems and was put in rehab by his parents. But I still lost my family. My businesses. Everything but the house in Texas. Once my wife knew what it was for, she didnât want anything to do with it. So I sold it and moved here. Lenny came with me. We started over, together. That was seventeen -- no, eighteen years ago.â
âShit, Wayne, you were younger ân me, now.â
âI was never younger than you.â
âWait, dude -- wait, you had four kids; when did you get married, twelve?â
âWhen I graduated college. With a card that said, âCongratulations, Grandma.â Just to let her know I know. My 23rd anniversary would have been last Monday. I sent my ex flowers. My âfuck youâ to the bitch.â
âShit, Wayne.â Knowinâ this sort of spooked me. Anâ got me to wonderinâ too much about what we were planninâ, so I had to ask him, âYou answer me a question?â
âIf I can.â
âBe honest?â
He looked at me, that âI know what youâre up toâ look flashinâ cross his face. âWhat is it, Curt?â
âYouâve never done this, before?â
âWhat weâre doing now?â
âAnything like what weâre doinâ now.â Like to that kid that accused him.
Wayne looked at me with this expression I couldnât read. I didnât budge, but lemme tell ya, I was ready in case he tried any kind of bullshit on me.
âWhy do you ask?â It was more of a statement than a question, but I went ahead anâ took it as one.
âYouâre too cool about it,â I said. âItâs got me just wonderinâ. Wonderinâ how much practice youâve had.â
He smiled. âYou should see me on the inside. Iâm
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