Four Truths
Disclaimers: Tim Bayliss and Billy Tallent
don't belong to me, and I'm making no money here.
Classification: Slash (Billy Tallent/Tim
Bayliss), crossover (Hard Core Logo/Homicide: Life on the
Street)
Notes: This is not a part of either the
Going Under series or the Marigold series. It's different,
yet another permutation of getting these two characters together.
The story title refers to Buddhism's Four Noble Truths. All
quotes are from Stephen Batchelor's Buddhism without Beliefs
unless otherwise noted.
Thanks for early reading, encouragement, and good suggestions
from my posse (Ardent, Ramius, Bast, and Lena), and thanks
to all who read and commented, including Kit and AuKestrel.
Thanks to Bethann, who is the beta in my head even when she's
not betaing. Beta thanks to CatMoran and Ardent.
Soundtrack: The Tragically Hip, In Violet
Light.
Spoilers: Everything in Homicide and Hard
Core Logo, but with specific HLotS references to Colors, Double
Blind, Fallen Heroes, The Truth will Out, Zen and the Art
of Murder, and Life Everlasting (Homicide: the Movie).
Warning: Discussion of past non-con (canon
for characters).
Rating: NC-17.
Summary: Tim doesn't go to funerals anymore.
Feedback me at bodge38@earthlink.net
Four Truths
by shell
copyright 2003
The crucial distinction [is] that each truth requires being
acted upon in its own particular way (understanding anguish,
letting go of its origins, realizing its cessation, and cultivating
the path).
I. Anguish
August 1997
The presence of anguish is an opportunity for understanding.
It's 3 am when I finish up at the bar. I haven't told anyone,
not even Frank. The funeral is the day after tomorrow, but
I'm not going.
I don't go to funerals anymore. I told my mother I had to
work, and she pretended to believe me, just like she's pretended
my whole life that there's nothing wrong with our family.
As I close up, ushering the last couple customers out the
door—including Kellerman—I can feel the numbness
that's surrounded me for months starting to break. I hurry
through the rest of the routine, knowing if I don't get out
of here quickly I'm going to grab some bottles, take them
home, and drink until I'm numb again.
I get in my jeep, but instead of driving the short distance
to my apartment, I find myself on my uncle's street. I pull
over opposite his house, my hands painfully tight on the steering
wheel. I take a few deep breaths and try to calm down, but
it doesn't work.
I turn around and head back towards home, but I drive past
it and get on the highway, heading north. A couple hours later
I'm in Harrisburg, the sky turning pink. I pull into a rest
area and watch the sun come up, the mountains turning incredible
colors in the morning light. Then I turn around and drive
back to Baltimore, to my cousin's house.
I manage to beat most of the rush hour traffic, pulling into
Jim's driveway just before 8. Once I get there, whatever's
kept me going all night (I went to the bar after a twelve
hour shift in Robbery) leaves precipitously. I'm practically
asleep in my car when Shannon comes out to get the morning
paper and sees me sitting there.
She comes up to my window.
"Tim? Is something wrong?"
I shake my head, get out of the car. "Is Jim home?"
She nods. "He's in his study. You sure you're all right?"
"Yeah, yeah, I'm fine, Shannon."
The two older kids have already gone to school, but little
Kurt's still at home. He comes running up to me, launching
himself at me, and I pull him into my arms, burying my face
in his hair, until he struggles to get down, wanting to go
check out what the dog's up to. I put him down reluctantly
and head towards the study; I can feel Shannon's stare following
me, but she doesn't say anything.
Jim looks up from his desk as I come in the room; as soon
as he sees me, he gets up.
"Tim, jesus, what's wrong?"
He gets up, comes over, hugs me, but I can't do anything
but stand there, frozen, unable to move or speak. Jim manages
to get me over to the loveseat in the corner, and he keeps
asking me what's wrong, but I just shake my head, and eventually
he stops talking and just waits.
"He's dead," I choke out a few minutes later. "He's
finally dead; he's gone. Both of them are gone."
I've never talked to Jim about my uncle, and he's never talked
to me about Kurt. The knowledge has been there, under the
surface, for more than thirty years, but it's remained unspoken,
in the way George was never invited to Jim's holiday gatherings,
the way his kids were never alone when George was around—Jim
and I were always there, watching.
I doubt Jim ever told Shannon. If he never talked to me about
Kurt, how could he tell his wife? I'm sure she suspected something,
but she knew better than to push it. Jim and I, we both have
the Bayliss temper, even if we keep it under wraps far better
than any of the three brothers—my father, his father,
and George—ever did.
Today, though—this morning, this particular morning—Jim
finally says something.
"Good," he murmurs. Then, more forcefully, "Good.
I'm glad that son of a bitch is finally dead. I wish he'd
died years ago."
I'm pretty sure it wasn't until after their father died that
George went after Kurt. After all, he'd had me to keep him
entertained, for years. No real need to add to that until
I got a little too old to suit him, until John wasn't there
to protect his sons anymore.
I look up; Jim's looking at me curiously. "Your mom
said you were actually helping the bastard, getting his groceries,
helping him shave, actually taking care of him. Is that true?"
I nod dumbly.
"Jesus, Teej, why the hell would you want to do something
like that? Why would you want to do anything for him after
what he did?"
"I don't know," I answer, looking down again. "See,
I thought—I thought, somehow, facing him again, that
it would help. I went over there, and I was going to confront
him, do something to get back at him, but then I saw him,
and he was weak and old, and he couldn't even take care of
himself, and I couldn't do anything. He was helpless, you
know? He couldn't do anything to me anymore, and I wanted
to be the better person, so I helped him. But I hated it.
I hated him just as much as I always had, still do, and I
still don't know where to put it."
I meet his eyes. "Where do you put it, Jim? Where do
you put your hate? Was that why you shot that Turkish kid,
why you get into those fights?"
He bristles, then deflates, shakes his head. "I don't
know, Teej. Probably. Kurt—he was doing better after
he joined the Army, and then he was killed, and he never had
a chance to live his life, you know?"
"Yeah, I know."
"God, I miss him." Jim says, head in his hands.
"Yeah, me too." I squeeze his shoulder.
Neither one of us seems to have anything else to say. We
sit there on the sofa for another couple minutes, and then
Shannon knocks on the door frame.
"You staying for breakfast, Tim? I can make some eggs."
I come back to myself with a shake. "Yeah, sure, eggs
sound good. Thanks, Shannon."
As soon as she leaves, Jim says, "Are you going to be
okay, Teej?"
I nod. "Of course. I'll be fine, Jimbo. Don't worry
about me."
"Okay," he answers. I think he's relieved. I'm
not okay, and we both know it, but I'm back on a relatively
even keel, and that seems to be good enough for both of us
at the present moment.
I manage to eat breakfast like a normal person, or at least
a normal person who hasn't slept in over 24 hours. Not that
that's anything new. I drink a couple cups of Jim's high-test
coffee, then head home for a quick shower.
Then it's back to work—just another day in Robbery,
which requires little brain power and thus suits me just fine
on this day, although tomorrow I'll no doubt be driving Frank
crazy again with my frustrated need to get back to Homicide.
No, for today, Robbery's about my speed, despite the ragging
I get for coming in late. I manage to push away the clichÈd
thought of George robbing me and my cousin of our childhoods
and focus on the string of purse-snatchings we're working.
To my surprise, it works, and the next few days pass, and
then the weeks after that, and then we're back in Homicide
and I forget about George again. As much as I ever can.
II. Craving
February 1999
Letting go of a craving is not rejecting it but allowing
it to be itself: a contingent state of mind that once arisen
will pass away.
It's a slow night at the bar, like most Mondays. There were
a few customers for dinner, and Mike Kellerman came by, got
drunk, and headed back to his boat. Other than that, it's
been pretty empty. Completely empty this past hour or so.
I think about closing up early, but instead I just draw myself
a Natty Bo and brood—something I've been doing even
more than usual lately. Since I killed a man. I told Meldrick
the other night that beer wasn't the answer. I'm hoping I
was wrong.
The second draft hits me harder than it used to—all
those months of abstinence, I guess—but the buzz doesn't
keep me from noticing when he walks in around 1:30. It takes
me a minute to place him, but then I nod to myself. I don't
ignore him the way Munch insisted we ignore Leno, but I don't
fall all over him, either. I wouldn't call myself a fan, after
all—haven't listened to much beyond the couple singles
on the jukebox—but I recognize him. I should—I
may not listen to Jenifur, but my sister's been into them
for years.
He orders some coffee and lights a cigarette, gazing curiously
at the pictures above the bar as I pull out the pot and pour
him a cup, give him the cream when he asks for it. He tosses
down a ten and ignores the change I give him. Then he glances
across the street, looks down, shakes his head, and grimaces.
Looks up again, meeting my eyes for the first time, his expression
frankly curious.
"Fuck. Am I in a fucking cop bar?"
"What's the matter—you have something against
cops?"
He shakes his head, smiling at my tone. Jesus. His pictures
don't do him justice.
"No, not especially," he replies. "Not anymore,
anyway. Why, are you one?"
I reach out a hand; he shakes it, and I feel the calluses
on his fingertips. "Detective Tim Bayliss, partner in
this fine establishment."
"Billy Tallent, guitar player."
"Yeah, I know."
He shrugs. "What sort of detective work do you do, Detective?"
"I, uh, I work in homicide."
His gaze widens. "Homicide, huh? So tell me—you
ever shoot anyone?"
"Yeah," I say, wincing inwardly, wondering why
I'm even answering the question.
"Really? I always figured that was a tv thing, you know?
Figured real cops probably didn't actually shoot people very
often."
"They don't."
He looks at me for a minute, assessing, then visibly decides
to drop it, which is a relief. He goes back to his coffee,
and I go back to my beer. Back to my beer, and back to watching
him, because he is quite simply the most attractive man I've
ever met, despite the lines in his forehead, despite the fact
that he could use to gain a few pounds and quit the smoking
that's stained his long fingers. A couple times I catch him
looking at me, too.
Then he meets my eyes and speaks again, and I forget to breathe.
"You know, the taxi driver who brought me here must
have thought it was pretty fucking amusing. I told him I wanted
him to take me to a place called The Gay Nineties, and he
brought me here instead."
I manage to push the thought of Roger Fisk out of my stunned
brain. "The Gay Nineties, huh? You sure that's where
you wanted to go?"
He smiles again, and I think we're speaking the same language.
"Yeah, if my information was right, that's where I wanted
to go. You think you could help me out?"
"You know, the thing is, I'm about to close up here,"
I manage to answer, hoping I'm not imagining this. Fuck it—fuck
it all. Fuck being a cop, and fuck being a Buddhist, and fuck
celibacy, at least for tonight. "I'll be heading home—it's
just a few blocks from here. It's not a bar, but if you wanted,
you could come with me, uh, to my place."
He looks at me deliberately. "And what if I wanted to
suck your cock, Detective?"
I let out a strangled sound; he smiles and shifts a little
on the barstool. "Jesus. Okay, just let me take care
of a couple things, and then we'll be out of here, all right?"
"Whenever you're ready." He doesn't say another
word as I finish up, just hands me his coffee cup when I ask
for it, then follows me to the door, goes through it when
I open it for him, and watches as I lock it behind us. Then
he just as silently follows me home, down the street and up
the stairs and through the door, until he's standing in my
living room.
I'm not sure what I should do. His mouth is incredible, curved
up in a half smile, and I move closer, intending to kiss him,
but before I can he reaches out and palms the front of my
jeans. My dick's been half hard since he told me about the
cab driver, with a side-trip to harder when he said he wanted
to suck it, but now I actually feel a little light-headed
as all blood flow above my waist seems to stop. He pops the
button on my fly and eases the zipper down, then reaches into
my boxers.
"You got condoms?" he asks in that soft, scratchy,
so fucking sexy voice.
I nod. "In the bedroom. Come on."
I manage to make it without tripping. Once we're there, he
takes over, pushing me onto the bed, pulling down my jeans
and boxers while I throw my sweatshirt onto the floor and
open the drawer in the nightstand. He kneels between my thighs,
strokes me a couple times, which is all it takes until I'm
fully erect, slowly rolls the condom over my cock, and I'm
so fucking close, and he's barely touched me. I reach for
the buttons on his shirt, but he bats my hands away and goes
down, mouthing the head, one hand on my balls, the other on
the shaft, and I lean back, and I try to make it last, but
I can already tell it's going to be over too quickly, because
even with a condom on, he knows how to do things with his
tongue like I've never felt before, and then his fingers press
back behind my balls and in and I'm coming hard.
"Jesus," I say when I can manage to breathe and
talk again. He smiles, a little smugly. I pull him up on the
bed next to me, but I have to let go when I realize I not
only still have my pants on, I haven't even taken off my shoes.
He strips quickly and efficiently while I'm still struggling
with my laces, wishing I'd worn shoes I could just kick off.
Finally free of encumbrances, I turn and see him stretched
out on the bed, lazily stroking his cock.
"You, uh, you want some help with that?" I get
out, wincing inwardly. Yeah, that was smooth. He smiles a
little and nods, but I see the way he's staring at my mouth.
I lick my lips, and his gaze intensifies. Yeah, I can do that.
I can definitely do that.
It's not what I'd prefer in an ideal world, but I grab another
condom from the drawer before I get up close and personal
with Billy Tallent's dick, which is long and straight and
hard—a thing of pure beauty, better than any koan. I
have no doubt my performance doesn't measure up to his—he's
clearly done this more than I have, and he's no doubt received
his fair share of blow-jobs from who knows how many grateful
fans—but from the noises he makes, he seems to be enjoying
himself, and he doesn't last much longer than I did before
he stiffens and comes, his hand tightening briefly in my hair,
then loosely caressing before dropping to my shoulder.
I let go of his softening penis reluctantly and look up to
find him lying back in the bed, watching me. I move up next
to him, once again thinking about kissing him, but when I
do he turns his head and I get his cheek instead of his mouth.
He grimaces and apologetically places his hand along the side
of my face. Then he gets up and heads into the bathroom, and
I figure that's it—he'll get dressed and leave. And
it's not that I didn't enjoy it—jesus, the last time
I experienced anything that intense involved a coffin—but
I'm disappointed there'll be no chance for anything more.
He surprises me again, though. When he comes out of the bathroom,
he gets back into bed. When I look at him curiously, he says,
"I know it's not what's expected, but would it be okay
if I got some sleep before I left? I had a fucker of a day."
"Hey, sure, sure, no problem," I stutter, confused.
"Stay as long as you like. Mi casa and all that."
He smiles. "Great. You want to get the light?"
"Right, right," I mutter, reaching for the switch.
Then I get up. "I'll, uh, I'll be back in a minute."
When I finish in the bathroom and come back to bed, he's already
asleep, snoring softly. I curl around him, careful not to
wake him, and watch for awhile in the dim light before sliding
into sleep myself.
I wake from dreams of Larry Moss, hearing Billy say my name.
He flips the switch, and I blink a little in the light. He's
standing next to the bed, fully dressed, smoking, a saucer
serving as an ashtray.
"I thought you'd be gone," I mumble thoughtlessly,
then add, "I'm glad you're not."
"I was getting ready to call a cab, but you were—well,
you weren't exactly saying anything I could understand, but
it didn't sound good, so I figured I'd wake you up."
"Yeah, sorry about that. Nightmares." I rub my
eyes and stretch, aware he's watching me closely, aware of
the sheet slipping down, exposing my cock, which twitches
at the thought: he's looking at me, and he looks hungry. "Since
we're both awake and all, you want to go again?"
He smiles, stubs out his cigarette, and starts unbuttoning
his shirt. "Can I fuck you? Do you do that?"
"I—" I swallow. "Yes. Jesus, Billy,
yes." Shocked at the need and desire in my voice, because
it's not something I've done more than a couple times, with
Chris, and it was fine, I enjoyed it, but the idea of Billy
inside me turns me on more than I would have thought possible.
"Got any lube?"
"Yeah, in the drawer with the condoms," I answer,
glad I bought some a year ago, before Chris and I broke up.
"How do you want me?"
"Side's good," he answers matter-of-factly, and
I turn, and then his fingers are stroking down my back, but
then they hesitate. "What the fuck happened to you, Detective?"
he asks softly, gently outlining the scars from the bullet,
the chest tube, the surgery.
"I was shot last year."
"It looks bad. Was it?"
"Yeah. Yeah, it was bad. But, you know, I'm okay now."
Except for a new nightmare to add to the group of regulars,
and a near-constant backache that makes my former back problems
look like nothing, and the fact that I died on the table,
my partner left me, and I thought I'd gained a spirituality
I've discovered I never had. Yeah, I'm okay.
"Does it hurt?" His fingers are moving again, massaging
gently.
"Sometimes. What you're doing, that feels really good."
"Turn over."
"What?"
"I said, turn over, Detective. Your back's a fucking
mess."
I do as he says, astonished. He digs into my shoulders, his
touch strong, deep, and fucking perfect, smoothing out tension
I didn't even realize was there. I stifle a chuckle, because
Billy Tallent is giving me a backrub, but then it turns into
a groan as he hits a spot right above the bullet hole, and
his fingers stop.
"Too much?" he asks.
"God, no—it's great," I say, and he goes
back to work. A few more minutes and my back feels better
than it's felt since before I was shot. "Jesus, Billy,
is there anything you're not good at?" I murmur.
"Yeah," he mutters, his fingers still. "Plenty."
Then he starts again, and I forget about the sadness in his
voice, because his hands are heading down my back towards
my ass, and the way they're moving now is not designed to
soothe.
I spread my legs with a sigh, and he urges me onto my side,
then starts kissing the back of my neck while one hand explores
my ass and the other works its way around to my cock. I enjoy
those sensations for a minute, then grab the hand I can reach
and bring it up to my lips, kissing the palm, then sucking
first one, then a second, finger into my mouth. He moans into
my neck, then starts sucking on my earlobe, and I can feel
his dick pressed into my back.
There's a pause while he grabs for the lube and puts a condom
on, and then one slick finger, and I bend my knee up, and
then he's pressing in, and he hesitates for just a second,
but then he keeps going, not slow and careful like Chris always
did but just going for it, and it burns a tiny bit at first,
but then it just feels fucking amazing, better than Chris,
better than the blow-job hours ago, and who would have even
believed that was possible, but this—this is like nothing
else has ever been, satisfying something deep inside me, Billy
deep inside me, thrusting hard, grunting, until I have to
brace myself with one hand on the headboard, the foot of my
unbent leg against the footboard, rocking back against him
with every thrust, his hand sure and tight and fucking perfect
on my cock, and he comes first, but I'm right behind him,
and it blasts through me like you wouldn't believe.
I get my breath back a moment before he does, only to start
laughing as the few brain cells that are working hope my neighbors
are sound sleepers, because between him and me and the creaking
bed, we made enough noise to wake the dead. It's the first
real laugh I've had in days, and I relish the way it takes
me over, until Billy's laughing too, and we're almost as loud
as we were a minute ago, and that just gets me going again,
and it feels even better than coming did.
Eventually we both regain our composure, and I feel a soft
kiss on my shoulder as Billy pulls out. "What the fuck
was that all about?" he asks.
"I have no fucking idea," I answer, laughing again.
"Okay," he says, "no problem." Then he
gets up and heads to the bathroom. He returns a minute later
and hands me a washcloth.
"Thanks," I tell him, and he smiles at me, and
it's different from the other smiles I've seen tonight—softer.
Sweeter.
"I should be thanking you," he tells me, getting
back into bed.
"Yeah, well, you're welcome," I say, puzzled. I
turn out the light again, then move closer to get out of the
wet spot, until I'm almost spooning him. "Is this okay?"
He murmurs that it is, but he flinches when my arm brushes
against his hip, so slightly that it's almost imperceptible.
I move back a couple inches, more confused than ever. And
just as attracted. But I'm also pleasantly worn out from all
that's gone on, so the confusion doesn't keep me from falling
asleep, with no more nightmares.
This time I'm the one who wakes up first. I watch him sleeping,
his face soft and vulnerable on the pillow, facing towards
me, one arm slung over my chest, one leg over mine. Christ,
he's beautiful. When his eyelids flicker and his arm twitches,
I close my eyes again and pretend to be asleep, give him time
to wake, to move away. Then I mumble and stretch and open
my eyes again, to find him once again watching me.
"Morning," I say, allowing myself to caress his
shoulder briefly. "What time is it, anyway?"
He turns to look at the clock. "Not morning anymore.
Fuck, I've got to get out of here, back to the hotel."
"You want some coffee?"
"Yeah, coffee's good," he answers absently, running
his fingers through his hair.
"You can grab a shower if you want."
He nods. "You got an extra toothbrush?"
"Uh, no, but you can borrow mine."
"Yeah, okay," he says, sitting up. "You want
to use it first?"
"Sure, sure," I answer, sitting up next to him,
reluctant to leave the bed.
He turns to me with a sly grin. "Well, what the fuck
are you waiting for, Detective, an engraved invitation?"
"I, uh, I was just thinking, after I start the coffee,
I could join you in the shower."
"You got enough room in there for both of us?"
"Hey, one of the selling points of this apartment was
a roomy shower, one where I didn't have to bend half over
to get my hair wet."
"Bend half over, huh?" he asks. "You sure
showering's all you've got in mind?"
"Oh, I'm sure it's not."
Showering turns into soap, shampoo, and handjobs, and I really
want to kiss him, but I remember last night, so I settle for
mouthing his ear while he sucks on my left nipple and jerks
me off. And okay, it isn't as powerful as it was when he was
fucking me, but it's still my third orgasm in under ten hours,
and it's with someone who turns me on more than any other
person of either sex ever has, so it's still pretty fucking
amazing.
I watch his profile as I get out coffee mugs, his skin and
hair golden in the sunlight. Then I laugh at myself and pour
the coffee.
His cell rings as I'm handing him the mug, and he answers
it with an annoyed, "What?" I listen to his half
of the conversation, fascinated.
"Fuck. It's a radio interview, right? So we'll do it
on the phone, in the car. No, I'm not at the fucking hotel—listen,
just send a car, okay? Think you can handle that?" I
grab a pen and one of my business cards and write my address
on the back, then add my phone number and hand it to him.
He glances up and mouths, "thanks," then gives the
address to whoever he's talking to. "No, it's in Fells
Point somewhere, I think. I'm sure I'll have plenty of time
to get to the airport, Trudy—just chill the fuck out.
The interview will be fine. Yes, I'm fine, too. Yeah, see
you at the airport. No, I'm not. Tough shit. Yeah, fuck you
too."
He thanks me for the coffee and asks if I have any cream.
I get the milk out of the fridge, grateful I bought a new
half-gallon yesterday. He pours some into his cup and then
asks for a spoon. I get it out of the drawer and start to
hand it to him, but then I freeze. He takes it out of my hand.
"What the fuck is wrong with you?"
The question brings me back to myself. "Nothing,"
I mutter, turning to pour myself a cup—black.
"Look," he says patiently. "It's going to
be awhile before the car gets here, so why don't you tell
me what the fuck is going on with you, giving you nightmares,
making you practically fucking catatonic over a spoon?"
I look at him. "You sure you want to hear this?"
"It'll pass the time." He's gazing at me, and despite
the tone of his words, his eyes are kind.
So I tell him about Roshi Felder's murder, shooting Larry
Moss, and the stupid fucking spoon. The words flow easier
than I thought they would. I tell Billy about how Lewis and
I disagreed on who the killer was. I tell him about the Temple
of the Shining Pearl, and the people who lived and studied
there. I tell him about following Larry Moss into that abandoned
row house, listening to him rave about Roshi Felder's disrespecting
him by handing him a spoon. I tell him about Moss pulling
a gun, firing it over my shoulder, and then aiming it at my
heart.
I haven't talked to anyone about it since that night—except
the department shrink—and it's a relief to tell someone
who's not another cop, who doesn't immediately tell me I followed
proper police procedure and imply I should just get the fuck
over the fact that I killed someone.
Billy doesn't tell me anything like that—he seems to
understand, listens sympathetically, asks thoughtful questions.
When I tell him I'm not sure I can be a Buddhist anymore,
though, he tells me to quit the fucking bullshit. Turns out
he knows a little about Buddhism—he doesn't practice,
but Jenifur played a benefit for Amnesty International, and
he got to talking to Richard Gere and Sting backstage. And
I hate to admit it, especially given where he learned it,
but what he says makes some sense. I end up promising him
I'll give Dennis Kohler a call, talk to him about what happened.
Then he looks at his watch.
"Hey," I say, just as he says, "Listen,"
and tears off a corner of the newspaper.
"What?" I ask. He grabs a pen and writes something
on the scrap of paper.
"It's just—I don't know when we'll be in this
part of the country again, and for all I know you're a country
and western fan, but if you're interested, just call this
number, and there'll be a ticket waiting. Backstage pass,
too, if you want."
"I'm not a country and western fan," I tell him,
smiling. "To tell you the truth, I don't know Jenifur's
stuff that well, but I think their guitarist is pretty incredible."
"Yeah, well, you should have heard my old band,"
he says, shrugging his shoulders. His phone rings again, and
he answers it, then goes to the window. There's a limo pulled
up in front of my building. He grabs his jacket and turns
toward the door, tells me he has to leave.
"Billy, wait."
He puts his phone in his pocket and looks at me. I move closer
and put my hand on the back of his neck. "Can I kiss
you? Do you do that?"
He half smiles. "Yeah. Yeah, I do that." I urge
him closer, cupping the back of his head, and he turns his
face up, and there's no hesitation at all, and I kiss him
softly, once, then again, and he's not pulling away, not deepening
the kiss, just kissing me back, his lips gentle on mine, and
his hand comes up and brushes my cheek, and I open a little,
tongue flicking gently against his upper lip. He sighs and
opens his mouth, and we keep kissing for another minute, and
it's sweet and tender and good, and then he breaks away with
another sigh.
"I've got to go," he says reluctantly.
"Right, right, you have a plane to catch." I lean
down to place one last kiss on his forehead. "Goodbye,
Bill."
"Goodbye, Tim."
Then he turns and walks out the door, and I know I'll probably
never see him again. I go to my window and watch for him,
wait until he comes out the front door, turns, looks up briefly,
and then gets into the waiting limo and drives away.
In the months to come, I obsessively search the internet,
look up old issues of Spin and Rolling Stone at the library,
and read everything I can find on Jenifur, Billy Tallent,
and Hard Core Logo, which turns out to be the name of the
band he was in before, up in Canada. I've never been particularly
interested in punk music, but I order a couple cds from Amazon
and listen to them, wondering about Billy's relationship with
Joe Dick, wondering if that's where he learned to give blow
jobs. I wonder how he felt when Joe shot himself.
Then everything falls apart, and I try to forget about Billy
Tallent, about the noises he made when he fucked me, the way
he looked when he sucked my cock, how sweet he tasted when
he finally kissed me.
I never do talk with Dennis Kohler.
III. Alone
November 2000
We realize that until this point we have not really been
on the path at all. We have been following hunches, heeding
the words of those we respect, exploring blind alleys, stumbling
and guessing. No matter how strong our resolve and conviction,
all along there may have been a nagging unease that we didn't
really know where we were going. Each step felt hesitant and
forced, and we were terribly alone. . . .
We walk back into the squadroom, and I go to the Board and
rewrite Ryland's name in blue. No one notices, though—and
that's when we hear the news.
I can't believe it—Gee can't be dead. It's just not
possible. He was a force of nature; nothing could stop him—how
could he be dead?
The news breaks through the numbness and I start crying a
little, wondering if I'll make it to the funeral. I want to
go to the funeral. Fuck—what have I done, telling Frank?
They won't let me go to the funeral now.
Frank ushers me into the Box, closes all the blinds, and
leaves. He doesn't put the cuff on me, though, and he doesn't
tell me where to sit—he just opens the door for me,
then turns and leaves.
I don't know how long I sit there. Eventually Frank comes
back in, and he's got Meldrick with him. Meldrick looks almost
as shaken as when Crossetti died.
"What's this all about, Frankie?" Lewis asks. "What's
so all-fired important you had to drag me in here now?"
"I have a lead for you on the Luke Ryland murder,"
Frank says calmly, looking at me, waiting for me to confess
again, I guess. But I'm tired of it—too tired to shoot
myself, too tired to kill myself by other means. I don't say
anything. Maybe if I shut up now, I'll still make it to the
funeral before they lock me up.
"Hold up a minute, there, Frank," Lewis says, hand
in the air, warding him off. "Think about what you're
saying."
"He confessed to me, Lewis—"
"I don't want to hear nothing about no confessions.
Not tonight, not ever. Not where Luke Ryland's concerned.
Anything the two of you talked about, that's between the two
of you. And you're not a cop anymore, so it's hearsay—not
admissible."
"What? What the hell are you saying, Lewis?" Frank
asks with all the considerable incredulity he can muster.
"You got the equipment off, right? Nobody's gonna have
a recording of this, the blinds are drawn, no bosses watching
through the window?"
"No one's watching," Frank answers. "You think
I'm going to let Gharty in on this? I know he'll be involved
eventually, but right now I figured it'd be best to talk about
this amongst ourselves."
"Amongst ourselves, right," Lewis says derisively.
"Because you know best, as usual. You think I'm stupid,
Frank?"
"Don't be ridiculous, Meldrick."
"Ridiculous," Lewis snorts. "Yeah, that's
me, Mr. Ridiculous." He comes over and sits across from
me. "Bayliss, do you think I'm stupid?"
"No, I don't, Meldrick."
"You think I don't know who pulled the trigger on Luke
Ryland? I'd think it was Sheppard, maybe, except she don't
have the cojones. Main thing is, I got no evidence. Like I
said this morning, whoever did the deed knew how to execute
an execution. And that's what it was. The same thing the State
would have done if the trial hadn't gotten fucked up. Personally,
I happen to be in favor of capital punishment, especially
where shitheads like Ryland are concerned. Anyone who did
that deed deserves a medal, not a prison sentence."
He turns back to Frank. "Gee's dead, Frank, and you
helped bring in his killer, along with Bayliss, here, so I'm
gonna give you the benefit of the doubt tonight. I'd suggest
you forget anything you might have heard about Ryland's murder
and leave the investigation to the primary on the case, huh?
And as far as the primary's concerned, that name can stay
in red forever. Matter of fact, I just erased it off the Board
completely. Don't think Gharty's gonna have a problem with
that, either."
He looks at me again. Then he grabs me by the shoulders and
shakes me. "Listen, bunk—I am not letting you turn
into another Crossetti. You'll get yourself to some doctor
for some Prozac or something if I have to drag your sorry
ass in myself, understand?" When I don't say anything,
he shakes me again. "I asked you a question, Bayliss.
You gonna get yourself to a shrink or what?"
"All right, all right, I'll go to see somebody,"
I answer, intending no such thing.
"Don't think I won't make sure you do," he tells
me, then turns to Frank. "And you—you get out of
my sight."
"What?"
"You heard me, Frank. You don't belong here anymore.
Go home. Go home to your wife and kids and forget about this.
Forget about Bayliss. It's not as if you haven't done it before."
"You can't ask me to forget about this, Lewis."
"The hell I can't! Think for a minute. We put Bayliss
here away for killing Luke Ryland, like you want—"
"I don't want to put him away—"
"Yeah, fine, whatever, you don't want to, but you're
going to anyway. What happens to Eric Thomas James?"
Frank stares at him.
"You think Danvers is going to be happy to hear the
cop that arrested Gee's killer, the one who took his confession,
is dirty? That leaves him one witness, the guy who was along
for the ride, unofficially, not even a cop anymore."
"Son of a bitch," Frank mutters, hand on his head,
just like up on the roof. "You son of a bitch!"
Only this time it's aimed at Lewis and not me.
"So it seems to me like you've got two choices here,
Frank. You can go over my head to Gharty, go to Danvers, do
whatever you need to do to put your partner, the man who fucking
saved your life, in prison for something that needed doing,
or you can shut the fuck up and make sure the man who killed
Gee gets what's coming to him."
The two of them stare at each other for a long minute. Then
Frank shakes his head.
"Fine, Lewis. You win. I'll go home, and I'll try to
forget about this, for Gee. But I'm done. You hear me, Bayliss?
I'm done with this. I'm done with you." And I know he
means it. I could threaten to kill myself again, and he wouldn't
be happy, but he'd still walk away. Once Frank Pembleton makes
up his mind, that's it. Case closed.
And strangely, after everything that's happened in the past
two days, I don't really care. I confessed, he heard me, and
I didn't kill myself, and now it's over. Gee's dead, and for
some reason I don't want to die. At least not until after
the funeral.
Lewis keeps after me in the days to come, through the funeral
and what follows. I talk to a shrink recommended by the department
a couple times, lie repeatedly to Lewis, and eventually he
gets off my back.
Once a deal's been worked out that'll put James away for
life, I do what I should have done months ago—maybe
even years ago. I leave Baltimore. I go to Portland, Oregon,
where my sister moved after her divorce. I find myself a job
as a bartender, since that's the only thing I know how to
do besides being a police.
I'm never going to be a police again.
IV. Flight
March 2001
Flight is a reluctance to face change and the anguish it
implies.
The guy—a bouncer, I guess he is—looks away from
the young girls surrounding him as I approach. "Can I
help you?" he asks politely.
"Yeah. Yeah, you can. My name is Tim Bayliss, and I'm
here to see Billy."
"Tim Bayliss?"
"Yes."
"Let me check." He consults a list, frowning. "You're
not on the list."
"Are you sure? Could you check again?"
I carried that scrap of newspaper with the phone number on
it around in my wallet for over a year. I didn't notice it
was missing until after I moved—it must have fallen
out when I paid for something. Even two years later, it only
took me about thirty seconds to decide to buy a ticket to
the Jenifur concert when they came to Portland, and less than
that to try to get backstage.
Thinking about that scrap of paper gives me an idea, and
I pull out my wallet. Yeah, I still have a few business cards
stuck in there. "Look, here's my card. Do me a favor
and just give Billy a call, let him know I'm here—he
can decide whether or not he wants to see me."
"You're a cop?"
"Uh, yeah. Yeah, I'm a detective," I lie.
"Wait a minute. Your name's familiar—I think you
used to be on the list, maybe."
"It's been awhile since I spoke with Mr. Tallent. A
couple years, more or less. Listen, please, just give him
a call—what do you have to lose?"
He frowns again, but pulls out a cellphone and presses a
couple buttons. I listen in as well as I can. At one point
I hear him describing me: "Yeah, he's pretty tall—taller
than me. Brown hair, glasses; I think his eyes are brown.
He has a card saying he's a detective in Maryland, but he
didn't show me his badge." Then he hands the phone to
me.
"Hello, Billy?" I say.
"Is that really you, Detective?" His voice sounds
just like I remember it.
"Yeah, yeah, it's really me."
"Okay, uh, give me an hour or so to get back there and
shower, then meet me at the hotel—fuck, which hotel
are we staying at? Uh, at the River Place Hotel. Trudy here
tells me I'm in room 1375. Can you find that okay?"
"Sure."
An hour later, I knock on the door of room 1375, a suite
at the end of the hallway. Billy opens the door and gestures
for me to come inside; he's wearing loose jeans and an unbuttoned
flannel shirt, and his hair is still damp. He's put on a little
weight since I saw him last; it looks good on him.
I want to touch all that skin, to taste it, but I control
the impulse, follow him to the sofa, and sit down.
"What the fuck happened to you, Detective? I tried to
call you when I was in Baltimore four or five months ago,
back at the beginning of the tour, but your phone was disconnected.
Went to that bar, but the fucker who was working there wouldn't
tell me any more than you'd left."
"I'm not a detective anymore, Billy—call me Tim,
okay? And I did leave, about six months ago. My sister lives
here, and I wanted to spend more time with her and my niece."
"Didn't know you had a sister."
"There's a lot you don't know about me—a lot I
don't know about you, either."
"I do know one thing," he says huskily, placing
his palm against my cheek.
"What's that?" I get out, leaning into his hand.
"My dick's been hard since I heard your voice on the
phone."
"Yeah?" I ask, smiling. And then I lean in and
kiss him, and there's no hesitation in the way his mouth opens,
his tongue meets mine, and his arms go around me. A few seconds
later he's pushing me back against the sofa, grabbing at my
shirt, pulling it up, then reaching down to my waist. I manage
to wrestle his shirt off and unbutton his fly, both of us
barely avoiding flailing elbows, and I'm making desperate
noises as he frees my erection, and I shove his jeans down,
and he shifts and I shift and our cocks are lined up, and
he puts his hand around us both, those long callused fingers
stroking us together, and I feel his teeth in my shoulder
as he shudders and comes, and it's only been a few minutes
since I walked in the door, but I don't care; it doesn't matter,
because I'm coming, and it's messy and hot and so fucking
good.
I lay there, astonished, for a minute or two, his head resting
in the crook of my neck, his breathing harsh in my ear, my
arms around him, one hand running idly through the damp hair
at the back of his neck. He starts to move, and my arm tightens
instinctively around him, but he just shifts a little and
kisses my cheek softly. We stay there for another few minutes,
and then he gets up, grimacing a little as he pulls his jeans
together, and walks out of the room. I hear water running
in the bathroom a minute later.
I don't know what to think. I sit up and begin to pull my
clothes back in order, but then he comes back, wearing a bathrobe.
"Oh, you have to go, huh?" he says, sounding a
little disappointed.
"No, no, I don't have to go," I tell him quickly.
"I thought maybe you—"
"Nah, I'd like it if you stayed. I thought I could order
some room service, if you want. If you're hungry. There's
another robe in the closet, if you want to clean up a little,
get out of those clothes."
"Yeah. Yeah, that sounds great, Billy."
He frowns. "I'll make you a deal. I won't call you Detective
if you don't call me Billy. I'm not seventeen anymore, Tim.
I'm forty fucking years old. Call me Bill, all right?"
I stand and move toward him, squeezing his shoulder. "No
problem, Bill."
"So, a burger sound good?"
"Uh, I'm a vegetarian—"
"Fuck, that's right, you're a Buddhist." I don't
correct him. "Go on, get out of those clothes; I'll get
us some food."
I go into the luxuriously appointed bathroom and clean up
a little. The robe feels great against my sweat-cooled skin.
I stare at myself in the mirror, unsure how the hell I got
here, but determined to enjoy every minute of it, for however
long it lasts.
Bill's off the phone by the time I make it back. He's sitting
on the edge of the bed, wrapping a bandaid around one finger.
"Tore a callus," he explains. "Bandaid fell
off in the shower earlier."
I sit down next to him. "You guys were great tonight."
He smiles. "Glad you enjoyed the show."
"I enjoy this more, though," I add, reaching out
to stroke his cheek.
"Yeah?" He smiles again, one of those sweet smiles
I've only seen a couple times.
I nod. "Yeah. Definitely."
"So you going to tell me why the fuck you quit being
a detective and ended up moving to Oregon? And don't tell
me some bullshit about your sister. Something had to have
happened—was it that homeless guy?"
I'm going to have to be careful—he's extremely perceptive,
and I have no intention of telling him the real reason I left
Baltimore.
"My lieutenant—former lieutenant—he was
actually running for mayor—he was shot and killed. That,
combined with some other stuff, like the thing with Larry
Moss, just made it clear to me that I needed a change, that
working as a homicide detective wasn't good for me anymore,
if it ever was. So I left."
"Did it work?"
"What do you mean?"
"Is it better here?"
"I think so. I haven't been here long enough to tell
for sure."
He nods in acknowledgement, bright blue eyes focused on mine.
It's overwhelming—I have to look away, because I'm tempted
to tell him everything. Then I look again, because I can't
look away.
"It's really great to see you again," I murmur.
"You look—fuck, you look fantastic."
I lean in and kiss him again, soft and slow, and he slips
his tongue into my mouth with a sigh, and I take my time,
exploring his lips, mouth, taste, relishing the fact that
neither one of us has anywhere else to go until morning. Whatever
issues he had about kissing me two years ago must be resolved,
because he is obviously enjoying this as much as I am, moving
back against the pillows, pulling me with him, loosening the
sash at my waist and running his hands over my chest, my back,
my belly, and down to my cock, hardening again at his touch.
I open his robe and start exploring the rest of him, still
taking my time, learning the colors and textures of his skin,
his hair, the taste of his sweat. He moans when I nuzzle his
cock, now fully erect, a drop of moisture at the tip, and
I can't help myself, I have to taste it, so I do, and he moans
again, louder, and I rest my cheek against his erection, feeling
his pulse beating rapidly beneath the hot, silky skin, and
I nuzzle it again. Then I move up and kiss him again, because
as much as I want to taste him, there's something I want even
more.
I sit up long enough to get both our robes off, then kiss
him again before laying back on the bed. "I want you
inside me," I tell him, and he groans and kisses me fiercely.
"Fuck, Tim, I don't have anything," he apologizes,
reaching down to stroke my cock.
"Okay, okay, hold on," I mumble, getting up and
rifling through my clothes until I find the small tube and
condoms I put in my pocket before I headed to the concert
tonight. I hand the tube to him, and then I roll the condom
down, and I can see he's trembling, he's so close, but he
opens his eyes and takes a couple breaths, and then I pull
him on top of me.
"I've never—" he says, "Fuck, how do
we do it like this?" And I show him, bringing my legs
up over him, and I take the tube back and open it, and put
some on his finger and some on his dick, and he preps me quickly,
his breathing harsh, eyes locked on mine, and then he presses
in, murmuring, "oh, fuck," and entering me in one
smooth thrust, and I wrap my legs around him, and he starts
thrusting fast and hard.
I grab his chin. "Slow," I tell him, even though
my dick is all in favor of fast and hard. He gasps, closing
his eyes tightly, then opens them again, and I can feel the
muscles in his arms shaking as he starts thrusting again,
more slowly, and he's biting his lip, and I move my hand from
his chin to his mouth, and he grabs my thumb with his teeth,
playfully, sucking it into his mouth, moving it in and out
in time with his thrusts, and then he shifts a little, and
I moan, and that's it for both of us, it's back to fast and
hard, and it's so fucking good, and I give up and reach down
and give myself a couple strokes and then I'm coming, and
it's fucking incredible, and then I open my eyes and he's
watching me avidly, my thumb still in his mouth, fuck, he's
so fucking beautiful, and then he throws his head back and
starts to shake, moaning long and low, and comes with a couple
desperate thrusts, then collapses on top of me, breathing
hard. He stays there for a few seconds, then kisses my collarbone
and pulls out, throwing the condom in the trash, settling
in next to me on the bed.
And then there's a knock on the door.
"Fuck," Bill says, laughing. "Room service
must be here. Good thing for them they didn't get here a little
earlier." He pulls his robe back on and heads leisurely
for the door, and I flee into the bathroom to get cleaned
up again. Besides, I'm not at all sure he wants anyone to
know I'm here. By the time I come into the living room, the
waiter has set up the food and left.
"Hey, this is quite a spread," I murmur, staring
at the variety of food and drink spread out in front of us.
"I, uh, I wasn't sure what you'd like, so I kind of
went overboard," he replies, sounding a little embarrassed.
"It's all part of the rock star rep, anyway, right?"
I grin at him. "Sounds good to me." I grab a bottle
of water and drink it down, and Bill watches me drink. I make
a connection between some things I've read and something that's
been bothering me for two years. "Shit, it was the beer,
wasn't it?" I blurt out.
"I didn't order any beer—you're a vegetarian,
so no meat; I'm an alcoholic, so no beer."
"No, I know, I mean, that's why you wouldn't kiss me,
isn't it? Because of the beer."
"Oh," he says, sitting back, "you mean that
night in Baltimore."
I nod.
"Yeah, I was having kind of a shitty night, really wanting
to just get fucking plastered. Seeing you drinking that beer,
smelling it on your breath—I'm sorry."
"No, it's okay, jesus. I'm the one who should apologize."
"What the fuck for?" he snorts. "You didn't
know."
"Yeah, I guess you're right." I smile. "I'm
glad it wasn't something else."
"What, that I'd have your dick in my mouth, but I wouldn't
kiss you? No, it was just your beer breath," he replies,
but the way he looks, I can tell there's something he's hiding
from me. Whatever it was, though, he seems to be over it now,
so I tell myself not to worry about it anymore and go back
to the food, which tastes fantastic. Then something else occurs
to me.
"Did you stop smoking?" Because there are no ashtrays
out, and the room smells fresh, and I think there was even
a no-smoking sign on the door.
"I'm fucking trying," he says, shrugging. "My
kid's grandfather just died of emphysema, so she's been bugging
me non-stop."
"Quitting smoking, that was really fucking difficult,"
I tell him, "but it does get easier."
"Oh yeah? When?"
"After a couple years," I say, laughing.
"That's not buddies," he says, throwing a french
fry at me.
We both turn out to be pretty damned hungry, eating almost
all of the food—veggie burgers, french fries, spinach
quesadillas, and three different desserts. "Can I ask
you something, Bill?" I say as take one last bite of
cheesecake.
"Sure."
"You and Joe Dick—were you lovers?"
He shakes his head. "Lovers? Fuck, no, that's not the
word I would use, not for me and Joe. Jesus, he'd fucking
kill me if I used a pussy word like that." He looks at
me. The bitterness in his voice is unexpected. "Were
we 'sexually involved'? Yeah, you could call it that. Love,
hate, sex, power, violence, addiction, need, abuse, incredible
fucking highs and horrible fucking lows—lovers is far
too pleasant a word for what we were."
"You did love him, though, didn't you?"
"Yeah, I loved him, for all the good it did." He
pushes the plate in front of him away. "Listen, I'm tired;
aren't you?"
"Right, it's late—what time is it, anyway?"
"Fuck if I know—3 or so, I guess. I gotta be out
of here by noon, so if we want to get any sleep, there's no
time like the present."
"You sure you don't mind me staying?"
"No, it's cool. This kind of hotel, there's probably
even an extra toothbrush in the bathroom," he adds wryly.
"Yeah, probably," I say. "You go ahead. I'll
stick this outside."
"Don't forget the Do Not Disturb sign," he says,
winking, then heads into the bathroom.
This time he doesn't flinch when I get into bed next to him
and move close, but there's still a certain tension in his
shoulders, so I settle for kissing the back of his neck instead
of doing what I want to do, which is wrap my arms around him.
Still, when I wake up, I find his head on my arm and his legs
tangled in mine.
He fucks me again when he wakes. This time we succeed in
taking it slow, and it's incredible, sweeter and more intense
than anything I've experienced before. Neither one of us says
a word as we shower together afterwards.
There's no time left to eat—they end up having to hold
the bus for him. We exchange phone numbers again—this
time he gives me his own home and cell numbers—and then
he asks if it's okay if he calls sometime, just to talk. I
tell him I'd like that, and he kisses me softly, and I leave,
wondering if he could possibly have meant it.
V. Awakening
April 2001
Awakening is no longer seen as something to attain in the
distant future, for it is not a thing but a process—and
this process is the path itself. . . . We have not been elevated
to the lofty heights of awakening; awakening has been knocked
off its pedestal into the turmoil and ambiguity of everyday
life.
A week later, it's another boring night at the bar when my
cell phone rings.
"Hello?" I say, still conscious of the instinct
to answer, "Homicide, Detective Bayliss," even now,
a year after I left the first time.
"Hey, Tim, it's Bill."
I don't even want to think about how hearing his voice makes
me feel. Not now, when one of our regulars is staring at me.
"Bill, hey, how are you?"
"Fucking exhausted—this tour is a fucker. But
we just added a new show in Seattle, and I was wondering if
you might be able to make it up there."
"If I can, sure." Like anything's going to stop
me. "When is it?"
"Next month, the 26th. I think it's a Wednesday. You
think you could get some time off and make the trip?"
"Yeah, with that much notice, I'm sure I could. When
will you be getting into town?"
"Not until that afternoon—we'll be flying in from
the Midwest somewhere. Chicago, I think. But then we've got
a day off—we don't leave for the Texas leg until the
28th. So we'd have a little more time than before. I mean,
if you wanted to stay both nights."
"Yeah, yeah, I'd like that. That'd be great."
He calls a few more times in the following weeks, or I call
him, just shooting the shit, him complaining about the band's
bass player, me complaining about annoying customers at the
bar—nothing in-depth or especially personal. And at
the end of the next month, I make the three hour drive up
to Seattle.
I get the VIP treatment this time—a seat in the front
row, backstage pass, the whole nine yards. The concert's even
better than it was in Portland, and I catch Bill looking at
me off and on throughout the show.
He fucks me in the dressing room, on the sofa, still sweaty
and hyped up from performing, and it's incredible. I joke
afterwards about being a groupie, and it pisses him off. He
stands up, half out of his clothes, looking like he's about
to throw something.
"You're not a fucking groupie, Tim!"
"Then what am I? What else do you call someone who follows
the band up to Seattle to get fucked by the guitarist?"
"Groupies are fucking teenage girls who don't give a
shit about anything other than the fact that they fucked someone
famous. I gave up fucking groupies a long time ago."
He pulls his pants back up, tucks himself back in, his shoulders
tight, his expression angry.
"Okay, fine, I'm not a groupie. What am I, your lover?
Come on, Bill, this is only the third time we've seen each
other in two years. It's not like we really know each other."
"And whose fault is that?"
"Yours as much as mine," I tell him, annoyed. "You
want to get to know me? Then talk to me."
He looks at me and shakes his head. "Not now. I need
a fucking shower." He walks towards the bathroom, then
turns. "Listen, why don't you just meet me at the hotel?
Trudy'll get you a key. You can shower there, if you want."
"You're sure you don't just want me to go?" I ask.
I can't keep a touch of frustration out of my voice.
He sighs, comes back and lays his hand along my cheek. "I
want you to meet me at the hotel. I don't want you to go.
Okay?"
"Okay, fine," I answer, pissed off and confused
and attracted. As usual.
The hotel room's another huge suite, like the one in Portland.
I take a leisurely shower and dress in one of the omnipresent
bathrobes. A few minutes after I get out, there's a knock
on the door, and a waiter brings in a huge tray. It's another
half hour or so before Bill shows up, during which time I
nervously pick at the food, although I don't actually eat
any of it.
I jump up when I hear the door. He walks in wearily, but
he smiles a little when he sees me. "I see you made yourself
comfortable," he says, grabbing a bottled water and sitting
across from me.
"Yeah, I tried. So, are you going to tell me what the
hell that was all about?"
He sighs, running a thumb along his jaw. "I think you
have some serious misconceptions about me, Tim. And I guess
that's partially my fault—it's not like I told you any
different—but I guess I thought you knew me a little
better than that."
"What are you talking about, Bill? What misconceptions?"
"The whole rock and roll stereotype—the drugs,
the sex, the groupies. Is that what you think I'm all about?"
"No, of course not."
"Don't fucking lie to me," he barks.
"I know you're don't drink anymore. I've certainly seen
no signs that you're doing drugs. You can't tell me you're
not a rock star, because you are, but I haven't seen you destroying
any hotel rooms or anything."
"But I must still have sex with groupies, every chance
I get, right?" He's getting really pissed off again,
and I don't know what to say to him.
"I don't know—I guess I did kind of assume—"
"Well, you assumed wrong, fucker." he retorts.
"I gave up that bullshit years ago, when I gave up drinking.
I don't fuck groupies anymore. I don't generally fuck anyone
at all." He shakes his head angrily. "Fuck."
I stare at him. "Wait a minute—what?"
"You heard me, Detective," he says. "I'm not
out there every night with a different piece of ass. I don't
generally hang out in gay bars and give blow jobs to strangers,
and I certainly don't accept them from skanky fifteen year
old girls who just want to say they've seen Billy Tallent's
dick."
I stare some more.
"What's the matter, Timmy? I thought you'd like hearing
you're the only one I fuck. Or did you not want this to be
an exclusive arrangement? Because if you've got something—someone—better
waiting for you back in Portland, or in fucking Baltimore,
then all you have to do is say the word—"
I cross the room and sit next to him. I take his hand in
mine. "I'm sorry, Bill. I never thought—I made
a stupid assumption, and I apologize."
"Yeah, you fucking did," he snaps, then sighs.
"Apology accepted."
"Good, good," I murmur. "I really am sorry—shit,
Bill, I had no idea I was being such an idiot. I—fuck,
I haven't been with anyone else. I don't want to be with anyone
else."
"Is it so hard to believe I might feel the same way?"
"No, no—it's just—you were looking to pick
someone up, that night in Baltimore, or am I wrong about that?"
He looks down at our hands. "I didn't know what the
fuck I was doing, Tim. I didn't have a fucking clue. Was I
planning on going to that other bar? Yeah. But I didn't know
what I was going to do when I got there—just watch people,
get drunk, maybe get someone to suck me off in the men's room,
if it turned out to be that kind of place. Maybe I just would
have turned around and gone back to the hotel room. But I
ended up at your bar instead, and once I saw the way you were
looking at me, I just went for it."
"That's an understatement," I tell him, and he
smiles. "I'm glad you did, though."
"Yeah, so am I," he says quietly. "I didn't
know what to expect—didn't know what you wanted. I didn't
know what I wanted. But that night—it was great."
He pauses, takes a drink of water. "I did go to a couple
gay bars, in a couple towns, after that. But I didn't do anything
but sit there, drinking coffee, looking for someone who looked
like you."
"Jesus, Bill—"
"Sorry to shatter your illusions," he says, sounding
bitter.
"No, no, that's not what I meant," I say. "I
just—I'm glad. I'm surprised, but I'm glad it meant
as much to you as it did to me." I run my finger along
his jaw. "Because it did mean something to me. It meant
a lot to me. I was in a really bad place that night, and you—shit,
Bill, you were amazing. That night was incredible. But the
thing is, each time we've been together, it's been even better."
"Yeah, it has," he says. "And I don't want
to fuck it up."
"Neither do I." I give his hand a squeeze. "And
I meant it, Bill—I haven't been with anyone else. Not
since that night in Baltimore."
"Not since then? That was two and a half years ago,
Tim."
"I know how long ago it was." I shrug. "I
know something else, too."
"What's that?"
"I'm clean. I got tested once a year when I was a cop,
and I kept it up—figured it was a good habit."
He looks at me speculatively. "The label, back when
Joe—back when I joined the band permanently, I was pretty
fucked up. They tested me every six months for three years.
I still get tested every year."
"So, if we're both negative—"
He nods. "Which we are."
"I'll understand if you want to keep using condoms.
I know it's the safest thing to do. But—"
He puts his fingers firmly against my lips.
"Shut the fuck up," he says gruffly. Then he replaces
his fingers with his own lips, kissing me slowly, thoroughly,
tongue tangling with mine, his hand at the tie of my robe.
He releases my mouth and kneels between my thighs, and my
dick's getting hard just from him looking at it, from wondering
if he's—and then he nuzzles my balls, licks the inside
of my thighs, tastes the tip of my penis with the tip of his
tongue, and I lean back, moaning. He stands again, offering
me his hand, and I can see the outline of his erection, and
I pull him to me for another kiss, feeling his hardness behind
the old, faded denim, startlingly soft against my skin. He
pulls me into the bedroom, taking off his shirt along the
way, and I stop us to suck one tight nipple, popping the button
on his fly and easing the zipper down.
"Fuck," he murmurs softly. "Oh, fuck, Tim,
come on," and I follow him and he pushes me onto the
bed, but gently, and I throw my robe over the chair and he
peels off his jeans, no briefs, and I think, he did that for
me.
He climbs onto the bed, kissing me quickly, then turning
to face the foot, and I'm not sure if this will work, because
it never did before, with women, because I was always so much
taller, although it was fun trying. I've never tried it with
a man before, and somehow it works, because his long, beautiful
cock is right there, right where I can reach it and touch
it and taste it, and I feel his lips and tongue lightly brushing
mine, his head resting on my thigh, and I rest mine on his,
and it works just great, fuck, he's doing that thing with
his tongue again, slowly, so slowly, and there's nothing between
my skin and that tongue, and it's so good I lose myself for
a second, groaning. I see his cock twitch in front of me,
and I go back to it, licking, nuzzling, and then taking it
in, and I hear him moan in turn, and once again I'm wherever
I go when I'm with him like this, so fucking perfect, in the
moment like I never could be when I was meditating, and then
I bring one finger to my mouth and get it wet, reaching behind
and entering him, and he stiffens sharply, and I wonder if
I should stop, because I haven't done that for him before,
but then he moans again, and I feel his fingers enter me,
his tongue fluttering again, and I come into his mouth, long
and hard and so fucking good, and the pulses seem to last
forever, but they're still over too soon.
I have to let go of his dick for a few seconds, long enough
to regain my breath, but then I suck him down as deep as I
can, reaching for his prostate, using my free hand on his
shaft, or occasionally on his balls, and within another minute
he groans louder, his pulses start, and I swallow as much
as I can, greedily licking my lips after I release his softening
cock. We stay there a few minutes—his thigh makes a
very comfortable pillow—and then I feel his hand on
my shoulder, urging me to get up so he can move.
He turns around again, settling into my embrace, and we kiss
again, sharing tastes. I reach down and pull the covers up
and over us, and I fall asleep, this time, finally, with Bill
in my arms.
I wake suddenly, and Bill's twitching, moaning a little.
I touch his shoulder, and he startles awake instantly. He
says something as he sits up—I think it's "Joe"—jerking
away when I put my arm around him.
"Nightmare?" I ask gently.
"What?" He turns to look at me, but I can't make
out his expression in the dark. "Uh, yeah. Nightmare."
"You want to talk about it?"
"No."
"But it was about Joe?"
"Fuck off."
He gets up and heads into the bathroom.
Shit.
I wonder again whether I should just leave, but I don't.
I turn the light on and sit there, listening to the water
running in the bathroom, until he comes out, gets back into
bed, pushes me back against the pillows and starts kissing
me hard. It takes me a minute, but then I'm getting into it,
my erection growing, and then he's pulling me onto my side
and turning in my arms.
"Fuck me," he says, sounding a little desperate,
pushing his ass back against me, and he's shaking, but it's
not—I reach around, and he's flaccid, and I push him
away.
"What the fuck is going on?"
"I thought I made it pretty clear," he retorts.
"I want you to fuck me. What's the matter—don't
you do that? Or is it that you don't want me? Because I've
got evidence to the contrary," and he grabs my erection.
"You really want me to fuck you?" I ask sarcastically,
pointing at his limp penis. "Because the evidence of
that is pretty fucking lacking."
"So what?"
"So you're not into it, and I'm not into that."
"You think I've never taken it up the ass before, is
that it?"
"No, that's not—jesus, Bill! That's not the—"
"Because I have been fucked, fucked up and down and
sideways, fucked in the head and up the ass by the master
fucker of all fuckheads, but you wouldn't know anything about
that, would you, Detective?"
I have no idea what to say to him, how to answer his pain.
"I'm not Joe, Bill," is what I eventually settle
on.
"No, you're not," he replies after a minute, his
voice flat. "Fuck, you could never—" then
he gets up, pulls his briefs on, and walks over to the window.
I grab my robe from the chair and another one from the bathroom,
laying it across his tense shoulders. He jumps.
"Jesus, Bill, what the fuck did he do to you?"
I breathe. And the realization hits. Why the hell didn't I
figure it out before?
"He fucked me, Tim," Bill says coldly.
"He raped you," I say, my voice shaking.
He shrugs. "You could call it that, I guess. Considering
I was passed out drunk when he did it. I woke up, though."
He woke up. Jesus, of course you did. Fuck, I'm sorry, Bill.
Cautiously, I put my hand on his shoulder. He sighs and moves
closer, and I put my arm around him. "I'm sorry, Bill."
"What the fuck do you have to be sorry for?"
Shows how much he knows. "I'm sorry he hurt you. I know
you loved him."
He turns to me. "Yeah, I did. Even after, I still did.
Isn't that fucked?"
I shrug. "It's human, is all I know."
"He loved me, too, you know. He was just—fuck,
he was a dick. The Dick. Fucking asshole, fucking taking himself
out, not even fucking talking to me."
"Maybe he didn't want to talk to you."
"What the fuck does that mean?"
"Maybe he thought you'd talk him out of it, and he didn't
want that."
He sighs and leans his head on my chest. "Yeah, maybe."
"It's cold out here. Come back to bed?"
He comes with me without a word, doesn't protest when I take
off both our robes, pull back the covers, and tuck him into
my arms. Instead, he puts his head on my shoulder, one leg
over mine, his hand moving in idle circles on my chest. I
kiss his forehead and hold him until he falls asleep again.
Eventually, I do too.
Dreams of making love segue seamlessly into Bill's lips and
tongue on my chest, his hand languidly stroking my morning
erection, his cock silky hard against my hip. I run my fingers
through his hair, and he rests his cheek against my chest.
"Morning," I murmur.
"Yeah, whatever," he answers, and I hear the smile
in his voice. "It's about time you woke up."
"You okay?"
"I'm fine, Tim. No more nightmares." And then he
starts kissing me, and that leads to him fucking me, this
time without anything between us, and it sounds stupid to
say it's incredible, but it is, even better than before, and
that sounds stupid, too, but it's nothing less than the truth.
Once we get out of bed, we've got the whole day—well,
the whole afternoon, once we've eaten—and we do the
tourist thing, because I've never been to Seattle before,
and it's practically Bill's home town, since he grew up just
over the border in Vancouver. We go to the market and the
arboretum, just walking around, enjoying the view of the mountains,
then eat at a vegetarian coffee house called the Green Cat
CafÈ for dinner.
We talk a lot that day. I hear more about Joe, although he
never brings up the rape again. I tell him about going from
QRT to the Mayor's Security Detail, and about parlaying that
into a spot in homicide. I tell him a little about some of
the cases that still haunt me. He tells me what it was like
finding out he had a five year old daughter, and about the
year long court battle before he could see her.
As we leave the Green Cat, he offers to show me the club
scene, saying there are still some decent bands, years after
the end of the quote unquote Seattle scene, but I decline
and tell him I'd rather go back to the hotel and get him naked
again. He grins and grabs a taxi.
By the time I leave the next morning, pleasantly sore in
more than one place, I know I've fallen in love with him,
and I'm terrified. In the months to come, I see him twice,
each time for a single night. Every few days we talk on the
phone. It's not nearly enough, but it's all I've got.
VI. The Path
September 2001
In the cessation of craving, we touch that dimension of experience
that is timeless: the playful, unimpeded contingency of things
emerging from conditions only to become conditions for something
else. This is emptiness: not a cosmic vacuum but the unborn,
undying, infinitely creative dimension of life.
It's another Monday night in the bar, with only a couple
people in all night, and it's empty now, and I'm starting
to close up early when the phone rings. I know it's him before
I pick up, even though he usually waits until after closing
and calls my cell phone.
"Joe's Bar," I answer, because maybe it's not him.
"Hey, it's me."
"How was it tonight?" I think he's in Denver, although
that might be tomorrow.
"Good. It was good. How was it for you?"
"Empty. Boring. Typical Monday night. Wish you were
here."
"Yeah, so do I."
"I'm closing up."
"Suppose I should let you get back to it, call you when
you get home—we could have phone sex."
It's been three weeks since the last time I saw him, when
he showed up one night at my apartment, late, stayed 36 hours,
and left again. I haven't washed the pillowcase, fancying
I can still detect the scent of his hair gel on it. Fuck,
I miss him.
"Yeah, that sounds good, but you don't need to hang
up yet, you know."
He sighs sharply. "What is this, Tim?"
"What do you mean?"
"This thing with us—what is it? Are we fuckbuddies?
Is that what it is? Because I don't think we get to fuck often
enough for that, and, don't get me wrong, I'm in favor of
the phone sex, but it's not enough, not nearly. And seeing
you every month or two, that's great, it's fucking fantastic
when I'm there, but—shit."
"I don't know what it is. You're right about it not
being enough, though." I don't say what I want it to
be, because even admitting it to myself is terrifying. Not
to mention unrealistic.
"Fuck."
I carry the phone over to the door and lock it, then sit
down in one of the booths, working up my courage.
"The thing is, I know what I get out of this,"
I say hesitantly. "What I don't see is what you get.
You could have anyone you want for a fuckbuddy, or for whatever
you wanted."
"And you couldn't?"
"Going to bars and picking up strangers isn't my idea
of a good time," I say, then wish I hadn't.
"You think it's mine? Fuck you—I thought we had
that conversation already."
"Sorry—I didn't mean—"
"I told you, Tim, I don't—I haven't been with
anyone else. That hasn't changed."
"I know. I apologize."
He sighs again. "Listen, the tour's over in a month.
You think you could get some time off?"
"Yeah, I think I could."
"I've got a house up on Vancouver Island—I bought
it so I'd have a residence in Canada, a place my daughter
could come to visit—"
"I thought she lived in Regina—isn't that in Saskatchewan?"
"I love my kid, Tim, but there's no fucking way I'd
buy a house in fucking Regina—it's the middle of nowhere.
No, the house, it's nice, right on the water—it's actually
in Port Alberni, on a lake. I like to go up there, summers,
get out of the fucking LA heat. And, uh, I was wondering if
you'd like to come up there with me. Spend some time—more
than just a night or two together. Time to do more than just
fuck."
"I'd like that," I answer, a little stunned. "How
much time were you thinking?"
"You think you could get a couple weeks?"
"Yeah, probably. Yeah, yeah, sure, I could take a couple
weeks." Just try to stop me. Fire me. I don't give a
fuck.
"Cool. Check with your boss, or whatever you need to
do, and let me know when. Any time after the 12th is fine."
My boss is willing to give me the time off, once I make it
clear I'm taking it no matter what. I'm the most reliable
bartender he's got, and I've taken more than a few extra shifts
when someone else didn't show up, so he doesn't want to lose
me.
Up until this point I've done a good job of hiding my relationship
with Bill from my sister and niece, but they've both figured
out something is up. Casey's the one who asks me point-blank,
the day before Bill and I leave for Port Alberni, while we're
eating a picnic lunch by the river.
"When are you going to tell me about whoever it is you're
seeing, Uncle Tim?"
"What makes you think I'm seeing anyone?"
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