by Marie Sexton
With heartfelt gratitude to:
Amy and Carol, for their ongoing guidance.
Troy, for helping me hash out those final 11,000 words.
My husband Sean, for supporting me in every way possible through this entire endeavor, even when I paid more attention to Angelo than to him.
Zach…
I OWN a video store, but I hate movies. I know. It’s completely ridiculous.
It just sort of happened. I guess it started after college. I went to the University of Colorado. My parents wanted me to go to Colorado State, in Fort Collins, but I insisted on CU. I argued that it was a better school, but that wasn’t the real reason. CSU was for veterinary, forestry, and agriculture students; CU was for partying.
In hindsight it was a pretty shitty thing to do to my parents. The tuition was a lot higher than at CSU, and I spent all five years drunk or high or both. I barely managed to graduate with a degree in business management. I think my GPA was somewhere around a two. Pitiful.
Of course I did more than just get drunk and high. I also had sex a lot. My senior year I dated Jonathan, and after graduation, I followed him to Arvada, a suburb on the west side of Denver. He was an accountant. I was a bum. I got a job at the movie rental place down the street and continued to spend my time drunk and high and having sex—sometimes not with Jonathan.
The day arrived when I came home, and he was gone. On the bright side, that was my wake up call. After that I managed to get my shit together—for the most part, at least. But I never did get another apartment or another job. And when my boss, Mr. Murray, decided to retire, I took out a loan and bought the video rental store.
It seemed like a good idea at the time.
So now here I am: thirty-four, single, and the not-so-proud owner of A to Z Video Rental. Did I mention that I hate movies?
Late spring in Colorado, and the weather was stereotypically perfect: sunny, with the temperature hovering around eighty. I had finally broken down and turned on the air conditioner in the store.
A to Z Video occupied one of four spots in the building. Three of the spots were downstairs—my store in the middle, flanked by a holistic bookstore and a head shop. Between the two of them, my store always smelled like sandalwood incense. The entire upstairs was taken up by a martial arts studio, owned by Nero Sensei. I wasn’t sure if Nero was his first or last name, but mostly we just called him Sensei. Today, the parking lot in front of our building was filled with martial arts students, all wearing those white pajamas they favor, doing some type of forms in unison and sweating their asses off.
It was Friday afternoon, and I had one customer. He had been in several times lately. He was skinny, with dark skin and thick, black hair that hung in his face, and he looked like he barely had to shave. I’m not good at ethnicity. Maybe Latino, maybe not. He was walking along the shelves, looking at movies. Sometimes he would stop and look at me and shake his head. I had no idea what his problem was.
He had just returned a movie called Blue Velvet. I was staring at that stupid movie, trying to decide where it was supposed to go on my cluttered shelves. On the one hand, it had Dennis Hopper in it, which to me said Action. On the other hand, the pictures on the box made it look like it was in black and white, which meant Classic. I gave up and stuck it in the first empty spot I saw, on a shelf labeled Special Interest. That seemed good enough.
That was when Mr. Right walked in. He was my height, just under six feet, but built heavier than me. He obviously worked out.
He had blonde hair and blue eyes. He was wearing dark gray slacks and a white dress shirt, open at the collar. I quickly checked my own shirt and was relieved to see that it was still relatively clean. I hadn’t dropped any of my lunch on it for once.
“I’m Tom Sanderson,” he said, holding his hand out to me.
“I’m your new landlord.” I had read about people with rich baritone voices. He actually had one. There was a dimple in his chin. He was incredibly hot, and even better than that, he was looking me up and down with obvious curiosity.
Work was suddenly getting a lot more interesting.
“Nice to meet you,” I said as I shook his hand. “Zach Mitchell.”
“Zach.” He hung on to my hand a bit longer than he needed to, before letting go and glancing around. “Nice place.” He actually managed to not sound sarcastic when he said that. I hadn’t done anything with the store in years. The movie posters on the walls were faded and dusty, and showed new releases that were several years out of date. “How’s business?”
“Not bad.” That was a lie. It was bad. Not nonexistent, but certainly not great. In fact the punk with the attitude was practically rush hour, in and of himself. I looked back at Tom. “I survive.” That much at least was true. “You’re my landlord now?”
“Sure am. Don’t let that fool you, though. I’m not a bad guy.”
He gave me a killer smile.
“I’m sure that’s true,” I said.
He looked at me for a minute, like he was sizing me up, then smiled again, and said, “Let me take you to dinner tonight and I’ll prove it.”
I couldn’t believe that a guy as attractive as him would ask me out. I’m pretty average: five-eleven, brown hair, blue eyes, average build. Average, average, average. I know I’m not bad looking, but I’ve never been one of those guys that people notice, lust after, or are immediately attracted to. You know— those guys. Guys like him.
“That sounds great,” I said, hoping that I didn’t sound overenthusiastic.
“I’ll stop by here and pick you up at six.”
I hadn’t had a date in months. I was definitely counting the hours.
Later that afternoon Ruby stopped in. Ruby owned the holistic bookstore next door to my shop. She was in her sixties, at least. She was barely five feet tall and probably weighed less than a hundred pounds. Her hair was silver, cut short and well styled, and she always wore smart-looking pantsuits. Today’s suit was charcoal gray, with a sky blue scarf around her neck that matched her eyes.
She looked like somebody’s rich grandmother.
That illusion was always shattered the minute she opened her mouth. That was when you realized she wasn’t quite playing with a full deck.
“Hey, Ruby,” I said. “Did you meet the new landlord?”
“Of course I did,” she said in disgust. “What a terrible man.”
“Oh?” She was so serious, and I was trying not laugh. “Why do you say that?”
“He had no soul,” she said, as if it was the most obvious thing in the world. “Couldn’t you tell? Just dark, all around.” She shuddered. “He’s going to be trouble, Zach.” She shook her finger at me. “You mark my words.”
“Okay.” What else could I say?
“That’s not what I came to talk to you about, though. I want you to know I had a vision about you last night.”
Ruby claimed to be psychic. She was always having “visions.”
I’m not much of a believer in that kind of thing, but I never had the heart to tell Ruby that. “Is that right?” I asked casually.
“It’s the truth. I saw you. You were standing with an angel.
You were in an auto-parts store, and you were handing out plates of chicken Alfredo.” She looked at me expectantly.
I never knew what to do or say after hearing her “visions.”
Was I supposed to clap? Or be astounded? Or look frightened?
“Ummm….” I stammered, instead. “That sounds very interesting.”
“I thought so too.” She was still looking at me with anticipation, like I might suddenly break down and admit that I had indeed been serving pasta at Checker just the other night with Gabriel himself at my side.
“An angel?” I asked dumbly.
“Why, yes!” S
he beamed at me. “Isn’t it wonderful? I keep hoping you’ll meet a nice girl, and now I know you will!” Never mind that I had no interest whatsoever in meeting a “nice girl.” I had told Ruby at least twenty times that I was gay, but she always acted like she hadn’t heard me. I was pretty sure she thought it was just a phase and eventually I’d grow out of it. “I just had to tell you. I thought you would want to know.”
“Of course, Ruby. Thanks.” I managed to keep a straight face when I said it too. “I appreciate that.” She nodded sagely, then turned and headed out the door. She was just pushing it open when a thought crossed my mind. “Ruby,” I had to ask, “was I dead?”
She looked back at me in surprise. “Of course not, dear. Why would you be dead?”
“Well….” I felt silly, but now that the thought was in my head,
I really wanted to know. “If there was an angel there, then I must have been in heaven, right?”
She shook her finger at me. “Don’t be a smartass, Zach. There aren’t any cars in heaven.”
After her came Jeremy. Jeremy’s head shop was on the opposite side of Ruby’s bookstore, but Jeremy was no long-hair, sandal-wearing hippy. He was the father of three teenagers, he wore a tie every day, and he was an active member of the PTA as well as the city council. In addition to all that, he was a staunch supporter of the Libertarian party. Most of the time that didn’t matter, but this was an election year, which meant that Jeremy was in full-blown campaign mode.
“Zach, I want to know if you’ve thought about who you’re going to vote for in the presidential election.”
I was woefully uneducated when it came to politics. “Do we even know who the candidates are yet?” I asked. Weren’t there primaries or caucuses or something first?
He shook his head at me in disgust. “Zach, it doesn’t matter which talking heads the Republicrats put up as their candidates.
Either way you’re voting to maintain the status quo. Is that what you want?”
“Ummm….”
“Are you pro-choice?”
“Sure, I guess.” Abortion’s not something a gay man has to think about often.
“And you must be in favor of allowing gays to marry?”
“Of course.” But I’d have to actually date somebody first, right?
“And you believe in the decriminalization of marijuana?”
“I suppose.” There was no way I was going to argue with a man who sold bongs for a living on that one.
“Don’t you think you should be able to vote against our out-of- control welfare state without having to vote against those basic rights? Basic rights which should be protected by our constitution?”
“Well—”
“Have you even read the constitution, Zach?”
I had to stop and think about that. I didn’t remember having read it. How could I get through twelve years of public education and five years at a major university, without ever reading the constitution? “I don’t think so,” I admitted in surprise.
He shook his head at me. “Neither has the president, Zach. Think about that.”
He left a stack of pamphlets on the counter and headed for Ruby’s. It was going to be a long campaign season.
Since it was Friday, all of my regular customers came by as the afternoon wore on. First there was the punk, who had left shortly after Tom, but before Ruby’s disclosure of her angel and pasta vision. Then came Jimmy Buffett. I couldn’t remember his real name, but he was a dead ringer for the “Margaritaville”-man himself. He always seemed to be embarrassed when he brought his movies up, and I could only assume it was over the terrible Hawaiian print shirts he wore. Next was Eddie. That wasn’t his real name, but he always had on an Iron Maiden T-shirt with the ghoulish Eddie on the front, and he sported the same hairdo as the lead singer. He always seemed pissed at me. I blamed the music.
Last, there was Goth Girl. Black hair, thick black eyeliner that always made it look like she had been crying, and three piercings in her bottom lip. She glared at me challengingly as she paid for her movie, and then it was time to lock the doors.
I had worried through the last hour of the day that Tom wouldn’t show, but he arrived promptly at six. He took me to a fabulous restaurant. We drank a bottle of Chianti and made small talk. There was no doubt that he was flirting with me. Afterward he drove me back to A to Z, then walked me to my car.
“The previous owner was facing bankruptcy, so I got the building at a good price. He wasn’t much of a landlord. Do you realize you don’t even have a lease at the moment?”
“Yeah, Mr. McBride wasn’t that big on contracts. I paid the rent, and that was enough for him.” I realized that also meant I could now be evicted at the drop of a hat.
“I’ll be writing up new lease contracts soon. The bad news is, I don’t know if I’ll be able to keep the rent the same. The building needs a lot of work and I am, in the end, a businessman.”
That was definitely bad news for me. I barely managed to make ends meet now. If he raised my rent, it could be a problem.
“How much of an increase am I looking at?”
“I’m not sure. I haven’t worked through everything yet.” He stepped up close to me, and my heart started to race. “Can you afford a rent increase?” Somehow he made that question sound unbelievably sexy.
“Not really,” I managed to say. He put his hand up and brushed my cheek.
“I don’t want to run you out of business,” he said as he stepped closer. He was now almost pressing against me.
“That makes two of us.”
He smiled, and I thought my knees would give out. He pushed closer and brushed his lips over mine. He smelled amazing. I leaned into him, and then he really kissed me. His tongue pushed into my mouth. I felt both of his hands grab my ass, and he pulled me hard against him. Even fully clothed I could feel how firm and muscular his body was. The kiss ended much too soon and left me breathless.
“Maybe,” he said in that low, sexy voice as he pulled back, “we can work something out. Would you like that?” he asked.
“Absolutely.”
“Good.” He smiled and stepped back. “I can’t wait to see you again.”
As I drove home in my old Mustang—the same one I’d owned since college—I couldn’t help but wish that I had invited him over.
The lingering excitement from that one kiss wasn’t quite enough to alleviate the loneliness I felt as I climbed the steps to my apartment.
At least I only had a couple of hours to kill before I could go to bed.
I poured myself a glass of wine and turned on some music. I had a half-finished jigsaw puzzle spread across the dining room table, and I sat down to work on it. A lot of my evenings were spent working some kind of puzzle—crosswords, Sudoku, whatever would pass the time.
Jonathan’s cat, Geisha, wandered in. I still thought of her as Jon’s cat, even though he hadn’t been there to take care of her for almost ten years. She had long silver hair and green eyes. He was the one who had left her behind, but she had never forgiven me for not being him. She eyed me with open contempt, as only a cat can, and then disappeared through the cat flap in the living room window.
I remembered how excited Jonathan and I had been when we brought her home. We’d had so many plans.
It was all such a long time ago.
How had I come to this—still living in the same apartment, working at the same video store? I had managed to survive the DVD revolution but for what? I had no love for my business, and yet I couldn’t imagine doing anything else. I knew it was only a matter of time before I was forced to close. I should have done it years ago.
And yet I had no idea what else I could do.
I was just drifting along, like a man in a life raft, waiting for the next storm to sink me. It was too depressing to contemplate. I finished my wine and went to bed.
TOM called me the day after our date to tell me he’d had a good time and to assure me that I would be seeing him again, although h
e didn’t say when. A couple of days passed, and I didn’t hear from him, but I wasn’t worried. I was actually too busy to be worried. I had exactly one employee, a twenty-two-year-old named Tracy. Or maybe it was Tammy. I had a hard time remembering. She was always high and practically bathed in patchouli. She had just no- showed for her fourth shift in a row. I decided it was safe to consider that her resignation.
The problem was, it had actually been a pretty busy day, and I really could have used some help. The rush had finally ended. The skinny punk with the attitude was back. Today he had returned Blade Runner. I’d never seen it, but at least I knew it went in Sci-Fi.
I watched the punk. He stopped and picked up a movie. He looked over at me, shook his head a little, then walked over and put it on a different shelf. Was he moving stuff around? I couldn’t find anything to begin with. I didn’t need him making things worse.
I was about to say something to him when Tom walked in.
Like before, he was wearing dress slacks and a crisp white shirt with the top buttons undone. He looked amazing.
He leaned on the counter and looked into my eyes, and I knew
I had the most ridiculous smile in the world plastered across my face.
“Hey,” he said in that smooth sexy voice. “I’ve been thinking about you.”
“Glad to hear it.”
He looked around the shop and saw the punk, then turned back to me and whispered, “Will he be long?”
I shrugged. “Maybe.” But right then, the punk grabbed a movie off the shelf and brought it up to the counter. Mad Max.
Good. I knew where that one went too, which would save me time when he returned it the next day. I barely paid attention as I took his money, and then he was gone.
Tom followed him to the door and locked it after he left. Then he turned back to me with a smile. “Alone at last.”
My heart was suddenly pounding. My palms were sweaty and I had a hard-on that was threatening to rip the buttons off of my jeans. Tom walked over, still smiling. He nodded at the door behind me. “Where’s that go?”