His True Home (Gay Romance)

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His True Home (Gay Romance) Page 1

by Trina Solet




  His True Home (Gay Romance)

  By Trina Solet

  Copyright © 2014 by Trina Solet

  All rights reserved.

  No part of this publication may be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express written permission of the author except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.

  This is a work of fiction. All names, characters, places, events and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, locales or actual events is entirely coincidental.

  All sexual activity takes place between persons eighteen years of age or older.

  This novel contains material intended for mature readers.

  Cover image is only for illustrative purposes. Any person depicted is a model.

  His True Home

  Gay Romance

  Trina Solet

  Chapter 1

  The little boy stood alone by the side of the road. In his hand, he clutched a model of a yellow cab with its doors glued shut. There was nowhere for several miles that he might have come from. The nearest place was the gas station five miles back.

  The boy's blond hair was ruffled like someone had just woken him up and he had sleepily gotten out of bed. His sneakers were in bad shape and one was untied. Next to him was a shopping bag full of his clothes, all of them unwashed. The shopping bag was sitting on the ground as if it had nothing to do with him. When a car sped by, a gust of wind overturned it. It stayed like that, unnoticed, while the child followed the car with his eyes. That car didn't stop, but later on a truck did. At first the old, sky-blue truck went by like it wouldn't stop either. Then, as the boy watched, it slowed down and circled back. It kicked up dirt as it drove off the road to make the turn. The truck came to a stop right next to the boy and its passenger door opened.

  *

  The bus was moving down a two lane road surrounded by green fields that seemed to shimmer in the sun. With nothing much to see, many of the passengers slept. Looking out the smudged bus window, a young man felt restless, not sleepy. He was slim with dirty-blond hair and expressive hazel eyes. If anyone asked him his name, he would say Cory Bledsoe. But always, somewhere in the back of his mind, there was a voice. It said, "Liar, you don't even know your name." Along with that accusing voice there was also a hope that one day he might find out what his name was.

  Weeks ago, his old case worker from social services had called him. That's when Cory found out something even more important than his name.

  "Do you ever remember playing with a toy car, a yellow taxi?" Mrs. Fitzgerald asked him.

  Cory had played with lots of toy cars. He couldn't remember that one in particular. He couldn't imagine why she would ask. That's when she told him that there might be a connection between him and another abandoned child. A DNA test proved it. Cory was stunned into silence when he heard the news. A brother. He had a little brother. There was another nameless boy out there, alone and probably scared. Except he wasn't alone. That little boy had a big brother named Cory. That's why Cory was on a bus headed to a small town two states away.

  Cory's little brother had been left by the side of the road leading to Seaview Pines, a small town a few hours drive from the ocean. Cory had stared at it on the map, determined to go there. Now he was on his way so he could make sure that his brother wouldn't grow up the way he did – always waiting for someone who never came back for him.

  Sixteen years ago, Cory was found hungry and crying in a filthy, empty apartment. No one ever came back to claim him, and he grew up in the system until he was eighteen. For the last year, Cory had been alone, with no family, and few friends. Currently he didn't even have a job. Finding a job had been his main concern until he got that phone call. Now all he could think about was the fact that he wasn't alone in the world. Cory was going to show his little brother that he wasn't alone either.

  As he stared at the countryside through the bus window, Cory wondered if he was passing the spot where his little brother had been left. He wasn't even sure that the road the bus was taking was the same one. He still couldn't help picturing his little brother standing there, helpless, at the mercy of anyone who happened to pass by. He wanted to take him by the hand, tell him it was OK, and that he now had a big brother to keep him safe.

  Only two other passengers got off the bus when it stopped in Seaview Pines. They walked away quickly. Unlike Cory, they knew where they were going. Cory was left to stare around uncertainly, not sure which way to go. He was originally supposed to go to the Town Hall. While on the bus, he got a text telling him to go straight to the mayor's house. "Anyone can tell you where it is," the text said. That wasn't as good as an address though.

  Looking up and down the street, Cory could see a dozen buildings each way. The bus had stopped right in front of the tiny post office. Across the street was the sheriff's office and next to it a diner. There were a few people inside the diner but not many on the street. Cory saw a toothless old man smiling at him from the bench under the awning of the post office. Since he was the only person nearby, Cory approached him.

  "I'm looking for the mayor's house," Cory said to the man.

  The old man mumbled then raised a finger. Next he took something wrapped in a handkerchief out of his pocket. He unwrapped a set of dentures and popped them into his mouth.

  "I talk better with my teeth in. You want the Snowfield House. That's right outside of town that way." He pointed the way. "The mailbox will say Honorable Mayor Miriam Benchley."

  "Thank you," Cory said. As he headed in that direction, he saw the old man removing his dentures and putting them away.

  Walking past small shops and a few empty storefronts, Cory made his way out of town. If it wasn't for the duffel bag he carried, it would have been a pleasant stroll after sitting on the bus for so many hours. The houses he passed were far apart, leaving plenty of room for trees and shrubs to grow wild. Further from the road, he could see fields that had been plowed and had crops growing in rows as well as some that were green or spotted with flowers. Just as he got worried that he was going the wrong way or had missed the mayor's house, he saw the mailbox with the mayor's name.

  Set back from the road, at the end of a curving driveway, there was a one story, light blue house surrounded by an unpainted picket fence. Inside the fence was a vegetable garden. Behind the house was a field and further on some woods. Cory followed the driveway, which had two walkways splitting off from it. One went to a small door on the side of the house. The main walkway led Cory to the front door.

  Cory found that he had to take several deep breaths before he could bring himself to knock. It didn't help, but he couldn't wait for his nerves to settle. He knocked. No one came to the door at first, but he could hear a man's voice inside. When the door opened, Cory found himself faced with a dark haired guy in his mid twenties. He wore jeans and a paint stained, navy t-shirt. If Cory wasn't already a nervous wreck, this guy would have taken his breath away. He was tall with a strong physique. He had beautiful blue eyes and a wide mouth on the verge of a seductive smile. His piercing eyes looked at Cory questioningly, pinning him in place and confusing him a little. But Cory couldn't let this incredibly attractive man distract him.

  "I'm Cory Bledsoe. I'm here to see my brother," he said.

  The guy looked surprised, but contrary to that, he said, "We were expecting you. Come in."

  "We?"

  "I'm Alec Benchley. My mother said you were coming. This is her house."

  "The mayor."

  "Right. Come in," Alec told him. "You can drop your bag right there." He gestured to a corner.

  "And where is my brother?" Cory asked
impatiently.

  "On the back porch," Alec said as he led the way. "We're calling him Teddy."

  "Why Teddy?" Cory asked as he followed him down a hallway covered with paintings and family photos, most of the photos were black and white or faded.

  "Because it's better than 'hey, little boy.'"

  "So he hasn't told you his name? He still isn't speaking?" Cory had been told about that, but he hoped it wouldn't last.

  "Not so far, but he will," Alec said with easy confidence. "There is no medical reason for him not to speak. He's just not ready yet."

  Instead of the porch, Cory found himself in the kitchen. The cabinets were painted white but looked like they should have been repainted a while ago. The countertops were some kind of gray stone. The kitchen was pretty messy, and someone had forgotten to close the bread bag. Alec handed Cory a bottle of water from the fridge without asking if he wanted it. By the way Alec leaned on the stove, Cory could tell that he wanted to have a little talk before taking him to meet his little brother.

  "I'm not sure how much you know so I'll tell you some of it. He was found five and a half miles out of town on the side of the road with a bag of clothes at his feet and a ten dollar bill tucked into his pocket. He hasn't spoken one word since then. The fingerprints found on his stuff don't match any on record. He doesn't match up with any of the kids who have been reported missing. There's no sign of abuse or injury, but he was a little malnourished."

  "That doesn't sound like he was kidnapped," Cory said. His social worker told him the police were looking into that possibility.

  "With that bag of his stuff, probably not," Alec said. "The police think it was most likely a parent at the end of his or her rope."

  Cory had nothing to say to that. Many times he had tried to imagine the circumstances that would excuse the way he was abandoned in that apartment sixteen years ago. Sometimes they were outlandish and childish, sending his parents on some dangerous adventure, threatened, kidnapped, forced to leave him behind. Other times he could only see indistinct faces turning away. He heard muffled voices making some sort of half-hearted apology before leaving. To think that his little brother had to suffer the same fate broke his heart all over again. Except this time, Cory wasn't the little, helpless boy left at the mercy of strangers. He was family coming to claim the abandoned child, here to say, "You are not alone. You have me."

  "Can I see him now?" Cory asked, feeling like he couldn't wait another second.

  Alec nodded and took him through a sitting room toward the back of the house. Glass doors opened to a big, shaded porch. A wooden table was on one side with two wicker chairs on the other. The wooden table was sturdy but well worn. Its surface was covered with papers and crayons. That's where a little boy was sitting in a straight-backed chair with two extra cushions to prop him up. He was around five years old. Hunched over, he was busy drawing.

  Cory held his breath. Suddenly he was more afraid than he could ever remember being. For a while he just stared through the door as the boy continued to draw. He was so focused on what he was doing that Cory couldn't bear to disturb him.

  Since the boy was facing away from them, Cory couldn't really see much of him. He was small and blond and his hair was a little too long. When he heard Alec step out onto the porch, the kid raised his head but didn't turn around.

  "Hey, Teddy," Alec said. "Remember how I told you someone was coming to visit you. This is him. His name is Cory." Alec then addressed himself to Cory. "Cory, that's Teddy. He isn't the most talkative kid, but he is good with crayons." While Alec spoke, the little boy remained turned away from them.

  "Hi, Teddy," Cory said in the friendliest voice he could manage. He was shaking with emotion, but he kept his voice steady.

  "Cory crossed a few states to get here. He'll be staying with us for a while just like you," Alec told Teddy.

  Cory looked at Alec with surprise. He hadn't known where he would stay. All he knew was that he wanted to be as close as possible to his brother. Staying in the same house with him was more than he hoped for.

  Since Teddy didn't move or acknowledge either of them, Alec motioned Cory back inside. Before leaving Teddy, Alec told him, "We'll let you get back to your drawing. You and Cory will see each other again soon."

  Cory waited until they stepped back inside to speak.

  "Are you sure it's OK if I stay here?" he asked Alec.

  "Where else? There's no motel nearby if that's what you were thinking. You want to get to know Teddy, don't you? This is the best way," Alec said.

  Cory frowned but he couldn't really object. It was nice of them to let him stay there, but he felt weird about it especially with Alec being so hot.

  "Grab your bag," Alec told him as he went back to the porch where Teddy was still drawing. Once again Teddy straightened but didn't turn to look at him.

  "Hey, Teddy. Cory is going to be staying in the small bedroom, the one with the bird pictures. You can help me out and show him to his room. OK?"

  Cory smiled at Alec who was obviously just trying to engage Teddy and bring him together with Cory. Teddy didn't respond, but he stood up and came over to stand in front of Cory in the hallway.

  "You're in capable hands," Alec said to Cory and went off to sit in what looked like a den. He opened up a laptop and pretended to ignore the two of them.

  Teddy simply waited in front of Cory. This was Cory's first close look at his little brother so he took a moment to memorize him. He looked so small. His hair was kind of shaggy. His mouth clamped shut. He had blue eyes, which were averted, looking down at the floor instead of at Cory. Though he wouldn't raise his eyes, he seemed alert and not afraid.

  "You lead the way," Cory told him.

  Teddy went back up the hallway and Cory trailed after him, familiarizing himself with the layout. Seeing that Cory didn't move as fast as he expected, Teddy looked a little impatient. The hallway went from the sitting room that led to the back porch on one end to the front door on the other. The den, where Alec was sitting, was the first door to the left. Cory remembered that the kitchen was further on the right. Down the hall were four bedrooms, all of them with their doors open. One of them was clearly Alec's mother's. He could see a woman's robe thrown on the unmade bed and woman's shoes and clothes lying around. Another bedroom had to be Alec's. It was even messier with jeans all over. The open closet doors showed shirts, pants and a few suits on hangers. The mess was on the bottom where shoes were all jumbled together. There was a pile of clothes on a chair, possibly clean, and an overstuffed hamper in the corner. A desk was covered with papers, some of them crumpled. Next to it, a wastebasket overflowed. His bed was also unmade. The extremely disarranged state of the sheets made Cory wonder about how they got that way. Shaking off those unseemly thoughts, he focused on the next bedroom. It was also occupied, or at least half occupied.

  "That's your stuff, right?" he said to Teddy.

  The boy didn't answer, but the answer was obvious. There were two twin beds in the room. One was only roughly made up like it had been slept in the night before. It had a pair of kid's pajamas draped over the headboard. The other one was neatly made but covered in drawings. Other drawings had been put up on the wall with tape. They were drawings of trees mostly, but when he looked closer, Cory saw there were either tree-houses or birdhouses in some of the trees. The scale was iffy so he wasn't sure.

  "They are good drawings," he said to Teddy. "They make me smile."

  For a second, Teddy looked at him then looked down again. He hurried off to show Cory his room. It was the smallest room so far. Only a bed and a dresser fit in it. Cory didn't mind at all. All he cared about was that Teddy was right down the hall.

  As soon as he walked in, Cory noticed that the walls were covered with sketches and paintings of birds. A bird call outside drew Cory's eye to the small, high window. All it showed him were treetops and sky. It made him wonder if the room was once a storage room or something. As Cory stared out the window, Teddy looked closely
at the paintings of birds. It was as if he was studying them.

  "Can you draw a bird?" Cory asked him.

  Teddy didn't answer or even shake his head or nod.

  "You don't have to answer. Just draw me a picture of one," Cory said.

  Teddy looked up at him in surprise, and Cory smiled at him.

  "No pressure," Cory said.

  Alec showed up in the doorway just then.

  "Sorry the room is so small," he said to Cory.

  "It's fine. But it could use a few more pictures of birds. Teddy will take care of that," Cory said.

  Teddy got a funny look on his face, and Alec grinned at both him and Cory.

  "This was my aunt's room when she was a little girl," Alec told them. "She loved birds so my dad drew and painted them for her. On these walls you can see every kind of bird that's found around here."

  "Impressive," Cory said and looked at Teddy, who agreed wordlessly. He seemed less withdrawn than he was at first.

  "Let's take Cory to lunch and show him the town," Alec said to Teddy.

  There was a less hesitant look on Teddy's face when Alec spoke to him. It was natural that he felt more at ease with Alec since he had only just met Cory. Cory still felt a little jealous. He hoped that as they spent time together, Teddy would come to trust him.

  They all headed to the front door together, but Alec went back in. As he stood with Cory in front of the house, waiting for him, Teddy looked kind of fidgety.

  "It's nice out here," Cory said to him. He meant the disorganized garden where he saw some tomatoes turning from green to yellow as well as a few red ones. The picket fence that surrounded it leaned to one side like it might fall over any minute. The road was yards away and free of cars. Instead of traffic, Cory could hear birds chirping. The terrain was pretty flat along the road, which meandered among trees and bushes. Cory had to look pretty far to spot another house.

  For Cory it was weird to be in such an isolated spot, kind of disorienting. The closest thing in his experience was living in a suburb, and that was nothing like this place. He wondered what a guy like Alec was doing living out here. He didn't seem the type, plus Cory was pretty sure he was gay. He had seen that familiar flicker in his eyes when they met. Not that he was going to bring it up. For all he knew, Alec wasn't out.

 

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