Rhapsody on a Theme

Home > LGBT > Rhapsody on a Theme > Page 1
Rhapsody on a Theme Page 1

by Matthew J. Metzger




  Rhapsody on a Theme

  By Matthew J. Metzger

  Published by JMS Books LLC

  Visit jms-books.com for more information.

  Copyright 2014 Matthew J. Metzger

  ISBN 9781611525724

  Cover Design: Written Ink Designs | written-ink.com

  Image(s) used under a Standard Royalty-Free License.

  All rights reserved.

  WARNING: This book is not transferable. It is for your own personal use. If it is sold, shared, or given away, it is an infringement of the copyright of this work and violators will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.

  No portion of this book may be transmitted or reproduced in any form, or by any means, without permission in writing from the publisher, with the exception of brief excerpts used for the purposes of review.

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are solely the product of the author’s imagination and/or are used fictitiously, though reference may be made to actual historical events or existing locations. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  Published in the United States of America.

  * * * *

  Rhapsody on a Theme

  By Matthew J. Metzger

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 1

  There was a fiddler on the platform when the train came in. High, shivering notes met low, shivering commuters in unusually icy December air. Frost was coming tonight, but the fiddler didn’t care. The case lay open at his feet, a yawning maw for money, and he played what he thought the milling crowd of commuters and students from the next town over wanted to hear, played the lively, and the simple, and the easy-to-enjoy. The money-making tunes that every busker knew. That which would, in theory, separate commuters from coins.

  He was wrong. Not just in his assessment, but in his poise and playing. He held the bow at too wide an angle, his elbow was too lax, and his shoulder loose and easy in a way it shouldn’t have been. His hair was tidily scraped into place, and he watched the commuters, brown eyes seeking approval. His discipline was for them, not for the music, and it was the wrong way to tame the strings.

  Jayden didn’t approve. The fiddler was all wrong, and far inferior to Darren’s genius when he’d played. He tossed a couple of coppers into the case anyway—nobody in a good situation would be busking in this weather—and jogged up the stairs over the line. It was cold. The summer had been a long, wet, and miserable creature, autumn hadn’t happened, and Christmas had arrived with the ferocity of a minor ice age. He could have stayed at home with Rachel, spent his leave from his new job on the sofa with a heavy duvet, and called Darren every evening without fail, and without having to leave the house at all. He almost regretted coming.

  Almost.

  “Aiden, Aiden, Aiden!” something shrieked, and then the something hit his knees, bright red hair bursting out from under her woolly hat.

  “Rosie!” he cheered, picking her up and letting her hug his entire face enthusiastically. She was a tiny three-year-old (nearly four, she insisted, on the occasions she remembered that four came after three) with a lingering inability (or outright refusal) to pronounce certain words, and an extreme energy that bewildered the entire family. She also, red hair aside, looked just like Dad.

  “Mummy, Mummy, I got Aiden!” she screamed, and Jayden winced, carrying her back through the ticket barrier under which she’d obviously ducked, and ignoring the indulgent smiles of the platform staff. Mum beamed, held open her arms, and hugged them together, smelling of the Boots perfume counter and baking. She was warm, plump in a fluffy Christmas jumper, and her hair tickled just the way it always had, feathery and floaty. Time was frozen for the moment on Mum, and Jayden soaked up the comforting familiarity of her.

  “Hello, darling,” she said. “Merry Christmas!”

  “Tiss-mas!” Rosie echoed, still cuddling Jayden’s face. He shifted her onto one arm. She would be four in the spring, and she still weighed nothing. She was tiny. “Mummy,” she whined, wriggling. “Can we go home now?”

  “Not yet, poppet,” Mum said, tickling her ribs until she squirmed. Jayden struggled not to drop her. “We have to wait for Darren, don’t we?”

  Jayden suppressed a smile. Rosie struggled with both their names ever since she’d learned to talk, and had eventually decided they were called Aiden and Dan. Unfortunately, even as she’d learned to speak properly, she’d stuck to her versions. They were better, apparently.

  “But when’s Dan coming?” Rosie whined, true to form.

  “Ten minutes, poppet,” Mum said. Jayden glanced up at the arrivals board. Five now, but whatever.

  “…Can we come back later?” Rosie implored, having no grasp of what ‘ten minutes’ meant. Mostly because Mum always insisted she’d be ready in ten minutes, and took hours. Jayden remembered having the same trouble when he’d been little.

  “No, poppet.”

  She squirmed to be let down; Jayden plonked her at their feet, and took the opportunity to hug Mum properly, and breathe that Boots-perfume-counter smell. It always reminded him of Mum. But not everything had remained the same as he’d first suspected, and he frowned. She’d gained weight, and he eyed her suspiciously.

  “Not yet, darling,” she said, and chuckled. “But don’t rule it out.”

  “Mum.”

  “Come off it, darling. If Darren were a girl I don’t doubt I’d be a grandmother by now, and probably several times over,” she scoffed, and Jayden reddened.

  “Mum!”

  “I’m allowed a little fun too.”

  “But I don’t want to know!”

  “And I didn’t want to know about what you were up to either,” she said tartly, and Jayden groaned, covering his face with both hands and going red. “How are the two of you, darling?”

  Better, the voice in his head supplied instantly, and it wasn’t being bitchy for once. They were better. Jayden had transferred to Bristol to do a degree there instead—English and History—and things had been better since then. Bristol had been…had been more like Jayden had expected university to be. And he had been closer to Darren, visiting every weekend. They had worked at a recovery. It wasn’t over—Darren was worse now than he had been when they were kids, unquestionably, but…

  But he was also better than he had been when Jayden had been at Cambridge. Bristol had been easier. Bristol had helped. And Jayden had graduated this last July, and had a framed picture of him in his robe and mortar and Darren in a suit outside the students’ union. Darren had been properly smiling, and it hadn’t looked strained. He’d had his arm around Jayden’s hips, and they’d looked happy, because they were, when the depression let them be. They had been…been working with the illness, chipping away at it, and it had been working, sometimes.

  But the last few months had been hard. Not long after Jayden had graduated and moved into the little house Darren and Rachel had
set up for themselves in Cosham, Darren had been off to London, sent by the force on some training secondment. (Jayden didn’t know the details, because the minute Darren starting talking forensics, his brain just glazed over in a stupid haze.) And Darren had been gone, living in police accommodation in London since the beginning of September for three months.

  It had been hard. Jayden had been terrified that Darren was going to get bad on his own, and Darren had been so out of reach because he’d been working ten-hour days and sleeping ten-hour nights, and…

  “DAN!”

  “ROSIE!” Mum bellowed.

  And it was over. Jayden turned to watch his little sister duck back under the barriers and throw herself across the tiles, and watch Darren’s graceful swoop and catch, throwing her up in the air and catching her again like a sack of flour, lean and lovable in his zip-up black hoodie and blue beanie. He looked a little thinner than he had last time they had managed to meet (mid-October, for all of a day) and he was wearing his glasses instead of his contacts which was a bit unusual, but he was grinning at Rosie and slinging her about on his right arm effortlessly, blowing a loud raspberry on her neck before setting her down and fumbling for his ticket.

  “Mummy, Mummy, it’s Dan!” Rosie shrieked excitedly.

  “Rosie, come here!” Mum snapped. Jayden ignored both of them and reached over the barrier to take Darren’s bag. Rosie didn’t weigh much, but Darren had struggled with picking her up since she turned three. She was just too heavy for his left shoulder. The weakness would never leave it properly.

  “There’s the bastard,” Darren muttered, finding his ticket and jamming it in the correct slot. The barriers opened, and he walked right into Jayden’s grasp.

  “Hello,” Jayden said simply, dragging him to one side before planting his hands on either side of Darren’s face and kissing him soundly. He tasted of spearmint and orange juice and Darren under the flavouring, tasted the way Jayden expected him to taste, and he pushed back into the greeting without pause, cupping a hand around the back of Jayden’s neck and another around his waist, tilting his head until their noses brushed lightly. It wasn’t often that Jayden noticed that Darren had taken an inch on him in sixth form, but he noticed it now, almost arching up into the kiss and wanting, fiercely and desperately, to be alone. He burned with it and wanted to clutch Darren and never let go. It was like a fog clearing, like a lightning bolt to the chest, like life itself.

  “Don’t make me get a bucket of water,” Mum said fondly.

  Jayden broke away, smiling broadly and rubbing his nose briefly against Darren’s before stepping back. Those beautiful green eyes were almost obscured by the pupils, blown wide at the attention, and then awareness crept back in and Darren scowled.

  “That’s cruel,” he said.

  “It’s a promise to keep you going until later,” Jayden returned.

  “Wassat?” Rosie asked.

  “A promise?”

  “Noooo, Aiden saying hello!”

  “That was a kiss,” Darren said.

  She scowled. “I want a tiss! I didn’t get a tiss!”

  “Aww, can’t have that,” Darren said and noisily planted a kiss on her fat cheek. “There you go, Jels.”

  “Jelly!” Rosie cheered. “Mummy, can I have jelly?” she asked, twisting in Mum’s arms, distracted (as always) by the implied promise of a treat that she saw in her nickname. Mum hated it for that reason alone.

  “No you can’t, poppet, we’re having tea when we get home.”

  “Home!” she clapped. “Home, home, home. AIDEN,” she caterwauled when Jayden caught Darren’s hand and pressed another kiss to his cheek. “We’re going home, no more tisses!”

  The woman at the ticket office cracked up laughing; Jayden groaned, mock-saluted, and squeezed Darren’s hand as they followed Mum and her imperious toddler out of the station towards the car park. “She’s terrible,” Jayden said.

  “She’s a brat,” Darren said cheerfully. “Better than Misha was at three and a half, trust me.”

  “How was your trip?” Jayden asked, swinging their joined hands lightly as they crossed the tarmac.

  “Eh.” Darren shrugged. “I slept through most of it. Did a couple of extra shifts to pay off for this week’s leave. Merry Christmas, by the way,” he added, stopping at the car and pulling Jayden in by the collar of his jacket. At the last second, he ducked aside to whisper in Jayden’s ear instead of kiss him. “Your present’s for later.”

  Jayden grinned, pressing a quick kiss to Darren’s mouth before he could slip away, and said, “How much later?”

  “Much later.”

  “Is that a promise?”

  “Mm, bit like yours,” Darren said and escaped, slipping around the other side of the car. He typically sat in the back with Rosie if they came back for a visit; apparently he was better at colouring than Jayden. (Rosie was convinced that colouring inside the lines was the wrong way to do things. She had Dad’s artistic ‘talent.’ And luckily for Rosie, Darren had all the artistic talent of a dead rat too, so it was a creative match made in art-hating heaven.)

  “Are you still going out tonight, darling?” Mum asked as they buckled in.

  “Yep,” Jayden said. It was his Christmas treat: come home, see Mum and Dad and Rosie again, and collect Darren en route from London to Southampton. Stay a couple of days, then go back home with Darren and spend the rest of the week they’d booked off in bed, alone, recuperating from three months apart.

  God, spending nine months apart at Cambridge seemed a world away. And impossible.

  It wasn’t just the worry, really. It was…when Jayden had transferred to Bristol, they’d spent every weekend together, pretty much, and in the holidays Jayden had more-or-less moved into Darren’s flat. They’d gotten closer, especially when Darren had started counselling (and then stopped, and then started again with another counsellor, and then switched again, and you get the idea) and they’d started him on medication last year. It had failed, but they had tried, and they had tried together. They were closer. There were less barriers between them. They were…

  Rachel called them newly-weds. Jayden preferred to think of it as…well, no, he didn’t, because he hated the term ‘lovers’ but suddenly ‘boyfriend’ didn’t seem enough to describe Darren anymore. Suddenly, the idea that he’d had in sixth form, that they’d split up in uni, seemed downright stupid. They weren’t going to go their separate ways. They weren’t going to split up.

  Darren…Darren was forever.

  “We won’t get too drunk,” he promised Mum. “Just, you know, a few drinks and a few dances and everything, and then we’ll be home. Before three.”

  “One.”

  “Two.”

  “Fine, but if you wake up Rosie, you’re in a world of trouble,” Mum threatened mildly. “And if Rosie sees you doing anything.”

  “Like what?” Rosie piped up.

  “Jayden and I have a game we play that Mummy doesn’t like,” Darren said, carefully colouring a square into an outlined circle.

  “Like football?”

  “It’s nothing like football.”

  “Oh. Boring!” Rosie announced to Jayden’s relief, and pushed Darren’s hand away. “It has to be lellow!”

  “What?” Darren asked.

  “Yellow,” Mum said wearily, turning the car into Attlee Road. “Rosie, let’s go and show Daddy your lovely new trainers, shall we?”

  “Yeeeeeeah!” she whooped, and Darren grimaced, hastily extracting himself from the car. He hefted his bag over his right shoulder before Jayden could take it, and offered his left hand as compensation; Jayden rubbed the knuckles, and walked his fingers around the slender muscles. Thinner than the other hand, but Rachel disagreed, so maybe it was just his familiarity with Darren’s hands.

  “What’s my present?” he asked.

  “You’ll see,” Darren said.

  “I want it now.”

  “Well, you can’t have it now,” Darren said.

&
nbsp; “It’s Christmas Eve right now!”

  “Tough shit,” Darren said slowly and pressed a light kiss to the corner of Jayden’s mouth (to the less-than-romantic music of Rosie’s outraged squawk) as some kind of peace offering. “Later,” he whispered in Jayden’s ear, and Jayden squeezed his hand, desire sparking off at the huskily voiced promise. He had missed Darren too much for distance and pleasantries and ‘later.’ Later was now.

  He didn’t wait to say hello to Dad, yelling over his shoulder as he used the captured hand to drag Darren upstairs the moment Mum unlocked the front door. Mum had given up after Darren’s…overdose, and simply shouted, “Door!” after them. Jayden didn’t have a lock on it—in truth, he’d been reluctant after the overdose to get one, you know, just in case—but he’d acquired a chair to keep Rosie out, and wedged it under the door handle. It wouldn’t resist Dad battering the door down, but it easily resisted curious three-year-olds, and the moment it was in place, Jayden turned on Darren and seized his head in both hands again.

  “You’re a tease,” he breathed against Darren’s mouth, forcing him backwards across the carpet, and retracted his tongue just in time to avoid being bitten as they tumbled down onto the bed together. “Tease,” Jayden repeated, straddling Darren’s waist and tangling both hands in his hair to keep him still. “Tease, tease, tease,” he repeated, peppering kisses onto random freckles, as if relearning them, and then he tired of the chase and pushed back past Darren’s lips, finding that edge of spearmint again, finding the way he shifted and moved, chin up and head back, almost nipping at Jayden’s skin.

  “You’re the one on top of me,” Darren said, slightly breathlessly, even though he’d locked an arm around Jayden’s back, and Jayden grinned.

  “What’s my present?”

  “No.”

  “What is it?” Jayden coaxed, kissing the spot under Darren’s ear. Darren shivered, but shook his head. “Come on,” Jayden wheedled, kissing his neck. “It’s already Christmas Eve. You know you want to tell me. Come onnn…”

  “Fuck you,” Darren muttered, squirming; Jayden held him still and started attacking the other side. Darren groaned, and Jayden wrapped his teeth around the jugular and sucked hard until the groan cut off in the middle with a choked sort of noise. He was getting hard; Jayden could feel it. He broke off, kissing the bruise, and smiled against the damp skin.

 

‹ Prev