by Boye, Kody
Dakota nodded. “I should go,” he said.
“Thank you for the food, Dakota.”
“You’re welcome.”
Dakota slid the chain off the door and left without saying goodbye.
The following morning, Dakota stood in the lobby looking over an array of plastic bottles, fertilizers and vegetable seeds. His heart still hurt from yesterday afternoon, he busied himself with his work in the hopes that giving life to something new would help relieve the ache in his chest. First he set the fertilizer inside a plastic bottle, the soil from which life would grow, then sowed the seed with a press of his thumb and a brush of his hand. Once the world was made, he made its Heaven and its Earth, the head of a bottle taped to the top. Then he gave it a sun by placing it in the bay window, and thus the universe was made by the hands of a creator.
Am I really though? he thought. Am I really?
He was not a practical God. Given the task of making life in such a bleak situation, he could easily fail. With so few seeds and so many people to feed, the odds seemed stacked against him. There was no Atlas to carry the world, no Iris to offer the rain, no Gaia to protect the innocent. There was nothing, he knew. He was all alone.
“Dakota?”
He turned his eyes up. Steve stood nearby, hands in his pockets and bare arms glorious in the white undershirt he wore. “Steve?”
“Everything ok?”
“Everything’s fine,” he said.
“You were gone a long time last night,” Steve said, stepping forward. “Did something happen?”
No, Dakota thought, but simply shook his head. “Like I said, everything’s fine.”
“Something happened last night, Koda. Don’t lie to me.”
“Not now, please.”
“No one’s going to hear us,” Steve said, stepping up to the window to examine the terrarium Dakota had just set up. “Neat.”
“You wanna help me?”
“What do I do?”
“Cut a plastic bottle in half, fill it with fertilizer, put seven or eight seeds in a few holes an inch apart, then tape the top half of the bottle to the bottom half.”
“Got it.”
Steve took place beside him. A box-cutter in hand, he excised a milk jug’s upper half and began to fill its guts, eyes complacent and hands steady. “So,” he said, poking the holes in the dirt. “Dish.”
“He told me no one’s ever done anything that nice for him since his mom threw him a surprise birthday last year.”
“Is his mom gone?”
“She was staying on a base. He thinks she’s still alive.”
“He asked about your parents, didn’t he?”
“He did.”
“And?”
“I told him the truth.”
“Nothing more than you can do than that.” Steve wrapped an arm around Dakota’s side. “It’s tough, bud.”
“I know.”
“I miss my mom and dad all the time. Then again, I had it a little differently than you. Late baby and all.”
“Are you glad that they didn’t have to go through this?”
“You have no idea.”
“When he first said it,” Dakota began, “I started thinking about how it might feel to not know if your mom was safe or if she’d been killed. I didn’t cry, but I did blink a tear out.”
“You’re a good man, Dakota. There’s not many people who have such a kind heart.”
“Thanks, Steve.”
“No problem. Try to cheer up. You can’t worry about what you don’t know.”
“I guess,” Dakota said.
He didn’t bother to mention how hard that actually was.
The day came and went as though it had never happened. One moment it was light, then it was dark. By the time dinner rolled around, Dakota’s nerves were on fire and the hair on the back of his neck was standing on end.
“What’s your problem?” Steve whispered, seating himself at the table.
“N-nothing,” he managed. “Just cold.”
The excuse was not likely to work. Though the rain had continued through the night and partially into the morning, it hadn’t continued past midday, when the dark clouds had parted for the rays of golden sunlight. To say it was cold was an overstatement. If anything, it was only partially chilly.
And that’s not because of the weather, Dakota thought.
A lump appeared, then disappeared in his throat as he swallowed.
A door opened downstairs and a pair of footsteps echoed up into the hallway.
“Ah,” the sergeant said, nodding as Private Roberts, in military fatigues, and Corporal Marks, in civilian casual, appeared. “Pleasure to see you, gentlemen.”
“Yes sir,” they both responded.
Dakota wrapped a hand around a cup of water to still his trembling wrist.
You’re going to look like an idiot if you keep doing that.
“I have a cold, that’s what I’ll say.”
“Evening, Dakota,” Jamie said. He smiled, reached forward and wrapped his fingers around the brim of the fold-out chair beside him. “Care if I sit here?”
“No,” he managed, coughing out the word. “Go ahead.”
“Something up?” Steve asked as Jamie seated himself.
“No.”
“Just making sure.”
“Now that everyone’s here,” the sergeant said, standing, “I’d like to propose a brief moment of silence.”
“Sir?” Private Roberts said.
“A moment of silence, Private Roberts, for the men and women who have died in our country.” A chorus of agreement went up around the table. Armstrong raised his hands to silence the voices, then bowed his head and closed his eyes.
Every head at the table fell forward.
Dakota closed his eyes.
What do I do? he thought. Pray?
Whoever said one had to pray during a moment of silence?
Content with the logic behind his notion, he laced his fingers together and breathed in, then out. In the moments that followed, a stream of thoughts entered his mind and blossomed over his darkened vision. First came charity, for her grace of life and her sparkling-red flowers, then came justice with his blue robes and equal ways. White came next, with its pure form and its straight edges, but did little to brighten the stars shining amongst the sky. He felt Jamie breathing at his side and tried to push his anger at the sergeant aside, but couldn’t.
His hand fell. It landed on top of the corporal’s.
“Excuse me,” he whispered, pulling his hand aside.
Jamie tilted his hand up and laced their fingers together.
“Lord,” the sergeant began, “we thank you for the gifts that You have given us, for the lives that You have saved and the grace that You have offered. We offer You our prayers in these dark times and ask that you pity us for the mistakes that we may make. We are only mortal. Amen.”
“Amen,” Dakota said.
Dakota raised his eyes.
When his and Jamie’s gazes met, the man’s lips parted in a smile.
Their fingers broke apart just as Desmond approached with dinner.
“So,” Steve said, seating himself on his cot. “What was up with you tonight?”
“Honestly?” Dakota asked.
“Honestly,” Steve replied.
“I was nervous.”
“About what?”
“Dinner. It didn’t help when Jamie sat down beside me.”
“Why not?” Steve asked, leaning against the wall.
Dakota looked down at his hand. “I set my hand on top of Jamie’s and he laced our fingers together.”
“You a fag?” Ian asked from his corner. Both Steve and Dakota looked over at him.
“I’d appreciate it if you wouldn’t call me that,” Dakota replied. “But yeah, I am, if that’s what you mean.”
“I don’t care. And sorry. No harm intended.”
“None taken.”
“So you guys had a bromance goin
g there,” Steve chuckled. “That’s something.”
“It wasn’t a bromance,” Dakota sighed. “It was…well…I don’t know. This is why I don’t tell you anything!”
“I’m not making fun of you, Dakota. If anything, I think it’s cool that the corporal’s not afraid to show a little affection. It takes a big man to do that.”
“I guess,” Dakota shrugged.
Steve raised an eyebrow. Dakota knew what was coming before it even came out of Steve’s mouth. “You like him,” his friend said, “don’t you?”
“What’s not to like?” he asked.
“Suit yourself, bud.”
“Might not be best to cuddle up to a military guy,” Ian said, stripping his shirt over his head. “Don’t want to get yourself any unwanted attention.”
“You don’t think anyone would do anything to him, do you?” Steve asked.
“I know guys like the deputies. Well, used to, anyway. Let me tell you, they were some mean motherfuckers.”
“You’ve never,” Dakota started, then stopped. “You know…uh…”
“What? Jumped someone for being gay? I’ve done some bad shit in my life, kid, but I ain’t never done that. Kirn and Wills though? They’ve got trigger fever as it is— you don’t want ‘em turning that aggression on you.”
“I doubt the sergeant would approve of that.”
“The sergeant’s buddy-buddy with them. Haven’t you noticed that?”
“No.”
“Well, can’t blame you for not. All I know is that I’ve seen him treat them better than the rest of the soldiers.”
“Ian’s got a point,” Steve said. “You might want to pick your battles here, Dakota.”
“I know,” Dakota sighed. “Besides, I don’t think he’s gay.”
“No?”
“No. I don’t.”
Steve frowned. Ian spread out along his cot and set an arm behind his head.
Pick your battles, the voice in his head said.
Pick them he would.
Voices stirred Dakota from sleep. Half-in, half-out of consciousness, he heard someone say they were ‘going out,’ then the sound of guns being loaded.
Shortly thereafter, he blacked out and fell back asleep.
Later that morning, he woke to the sound of a creaking mattress and opened his eyes just in time to see Steve pulling his pants up his legs. “Hey,” he said, snapping the button into place.
“Hey.”
“You awake?”
“Kinda,” Dakota said, rolling onto his back. “I heard them leave this morning.”
“Them?”
“The soldiers.”
“You hear what for?”
“Probably a supply run. I’m guessing Jamie’s still on house arrest.”
“You going to see him today?”
“I don’t know. Why?”
“Just wondering.” Steve stretched a shirt over his chest. “Armstrong never said none of us couldn’t go see him.”
“I guess.”
Do I really want to go see him though?
The reality was, he couldn’t allow his feelings to overwhelm his better rationale. On one hand, he could go see Jamie just to offer him company, to talk and to ease the burden of loneliness. On another, though, he could be going for a completely different reason, one that allowed the pleasures of the heart and the comfort of a compassionate human being.
No one’s going to make you go see him. You can decide later, after you’ve woken up.
“Koda?” Steve asked. “Want to see if we can bum a few rolls off Ian?”
“Sure,” he said. “I’d be more than happy to.”
Two knocks and a whisper later, he was standing in Jamie’s room with two rolls and a glass of apple juice in hand.
“They don’t bring you breakfast,” Dakota asked, “do they?”
“No,” Jamie said, tearing a piece out of the roll. “They haven’t been.”
“I would’ve brought you something if I had known.”
“You’re going to get in trouble if you get caught, you know?”
“I’m not going to get caught.”
“How do you know?”
“I don’t.”
Jamie sipped the juice. His hunger seemingly-sated, he set the half-eaten roll and its complete companion down along with the juice and turned his attention on Dakota. “I really appreciate you doing this for me.”
“I know.”
“I’m serious, Dakota.” He paused. The tone in his eyes changed so dramatically that a pang of confusion rumbled throughout Dakota’s chest. “About what happened the other day…I shouldn’t have dumped that on you.”
“I understand.”
“I hardly know anything about you and you seem to know my whole life story.”
“Not really.”
“Well, it basically goes something like this—I was born in 1986 in Rigby, Idaho. My dad died in the Gulf War when I was five, so, naturally, I was a bit lost growing up. In 2004, I turned eighteen, joined the army, and was immediately sent to Iraq. I was there right up until I came back home four months ago.”
“Eight years,” Dakota mumbled.
“I can’t say it was fun, but I was lost and didn’t know what else to do. I figured I owed it to my dad to serve the country he died for.”
“I can understand that.”
“What about you? Where’d you come from?”
“I was born up the road,” Dakota said. “Lived there until all of this happened. You know the rest of the story—mom died when I was eleven, dad ran off shortly after.”
“Who did you live with?”
“I lived in a foster home.”
“No relatives?”
“Dad’s lived overseas. Mom was the last in her family.”
“Oh,” Jamie said. “You care if I ask you something else while we’re at it?”
“Go ahead.”
“How come you seemed so nervous last night at dinner?”
“It’s not that.”
“You can be completely honest with me. I know some people have problems with soldiers.”
“It’s really not that,” Dakota sighed, sliding his hands into his pockets. “It’s just…I don’t know.”
“You can tell me if something’s wrong.”
“Can I tell you that I’m gay?”
Jamie didn’t respond. He simply sat there, indifferent.
Great.
“That’s why you were nervous?”
“You’re a good-looking guy, Jamie. I won’t lie when I say I have a crush on you.”
“That’s cool.”
“So…you’re not bothered by it?”
“No. Why would I be?”
“I don’t know. Maybe it’s just me.”
“Well I personally don’t give a shit, but I wouldn’t go broadcasting it if I were you.”
“You don’t think anything would happen, do you?”
“I’m not asking you to go back in the closet,” Jamie said, “but I don’t doubt that Kirn or Wills could get a stick up their ass and decide to fuck with you just because you’ve got a hole to fuck with.”
“In harsher terms than I expected.”
“I’m just saying watch your back. I’m sure you already know that though.”
“I do.”
“Good.” Jamie nodded. “I hate to kick you out, but it might be best if you leave before they get back.”
“Ok. Thank you, Jamie.”
“No, thank you.”
Dakota pressed his hand to the doorknob and opened the door.
A wave of relief washed over him the moment he stepped out of the room.
“Two times and you haven’t been caught,” Steve laughed, slapping Dakota’s arm. “You’re getting pretty lucky there, kid.”
“I guess,” Dakota said, sliding his hands into his pockets.
“You seem down.”
“I’m not.”
“You know,” Steve said, placing his hands behind his he
ad as they continued down the hallway, “that kind of thing ain’t good for ya.”
“What?”
“Hanging around people who depress you. It’s not good for your health.”
“What’re you talking about, Steve?”
“The last two times you’ve gone to see Jamie, you’ve come back all moody and shit.”
“It’s not like I can help it,” Dakota shrugged. “Besides, I’m not moody. Just indifferent.”
“About?”
“Our current situation.” Dakota stopped. Steve continued forward a few more places, but paused when he saw that Dakota wasn’t following him. A single rise of one of Steve’s inquisitive eyebrows made him frown even more. “Why do you always give me that look when you know I’m not telling you something?”
“Because I’m trying to teach you not to keep your mouth shut.”
“I told him.”
“Told him what?”
“That I’m gay.”
Steve frowned, then shrugged.
“What’s that look for?” Dakota asked.
“Was I supposed to say something else?” Steve reached up to scratch his chin. Stubble framed his chin, softening his appearance even further.
“I don’t know,” Dakota sighed, falling back against the wall and resigning himself to fate. “I knew I was only going to get disappointed going into this.”
“So this whole thing—bringing him food, sneaking out to talk to him, staying in his room for hours at a time—was all to see if he was gay?”
“Call me selfish. Go ahead.”
“I’m not saying you’re selfish, Dakota. God, buddy, that’s the last thing I’d ever think.”
“I know.” Dakota closed his eyes, then opened them when a flicker of guilt skittered across his ribcage.
“If anything,” Steve said, joining him against the wall, “you’re making a friend out of this.”
“I already have a friend. You.”
“Whoever said you could only have one friend?”
No one, Dakota thought, leaning into Steve’s side. That’s some stupid rule I imposed upon myself.
“You know,” Steve said, curling an arm around Dakota’s back, “maybe he’ll surprise you.”
“I doubt it.”
“Don’t they say that everyone’s bisexual to a degree?”
“That’s just a stereotype, Steve.”
“Guess I’m part of that statistic then—yannow, being bi and all.” Steve chuckled and pushed away from the wall. He started toward the window, but turned before he could make it there. “Just look at it this way, Dakota—you’re doing a good thing. Isn’t that good enough for the time being?”