by Sithkitten
sithkitten@kittymail.com
Well, since I've got a JP III fic already written (and yes, I started on it about five minutes after I got back home from seeing the movie on opening day *eg*) I figured I'd just jump right in and start posting. The fic is called Once Bitten and has three parts, but Part I is really long so I'm splitting it up into several parts- not sure how many yet. Here's the intro off my website (which is http://sithkitten.slashcity.tv , by the way):
Once Bitten
(Otherwise known as "The Story That Ate My Life!")
Note: there are hugely obvious discrepancies between the movies and
this story. You see, I'm a huge Michael Crichton fan, and wouldn't
ordinarily even consider slashing his characters. But you see, the
movie... omigod. The third movie wasn't taken from a Michael Crichton
book, and you can tell. It's like the movie was a fanfic itself, with
a few bits of canon thrown in for good measure, and damn was it
slashy. I've taken some stuff that was canon in the book Jurassic
Park (and maybe some from the Lost World- I'm not too sure any of
that applies directly, but it may have influenced my subconscious)
and used it here, and I've also made some adjustments and
assumptions, especially with ages. Anyone familiar with the beginning
of the book Jurassic Park- well, I've thrown a bunch of it clean out
the window, just like the movies did, especially the details about
Dr. Grant.
Anyway, if you see stuff that doesn't jive with the movies, it may be
from the books. If you see stuff that's not in either books or
movies, then it's mine.
And there's an additional disclaimer required here, beyond the
usual "This is fanfic, not for profit" stuff. Many of the places I've
used in this tale are real, but none of the people are. Any
resemblance to real people is purely coincidental.
Massive thanks go out to Karen, for keeping me going on this thing
and pointing out my booboos. Thanks- and I swear I'll get that happy
stuff written for you! I really will!
And the other usual info...
Title: Once Bitten
Author: Sithkitten
Archive: sure, if you want it- just let me know URL
Rating: R
Summary: In the beginning, there was Billy...
Disclaimer: see above ;)
Feedback: crave it- good, bad, or in between :)
"So, where's the trailer?"
"What's that?" Alan Grant paused in his survey of the new site.
College students and museum volunteers swarmed everywhere, getting
set up for another long summer digging for dinosaurs. He turned to
face the speaker.
It was a young man, one who looked vaguely familiar. Alan rooted
through his memory, without success. Dark brown eyes smiled at him.
"The trailer you used to have on the site. What ever happened to it?"
"Do I know you?" Alan was puzzled. He hadn't had a trailer on site in
years. "And the trailer was here mainly at Dr. Sattler's insistence."
"Ah, I see." The young man- hardly more than a boy, really- smiled
again and extended a hand. "Billy Brennan. I spent a summer at one of
your digs a few years back, when you worked for DU."
Alan clasped the hand briefly, then remembered. "Oh yeah- Jackie and
Frank Brennan's kid. Choteau, right?"
"That would be the one."
"Got you hooked, huh?" The kid had a nice smile, warm and friendly.
Maybe he'd do better on the dig as an adult than he had- what, six
years ago now? Had it really been that long? Amazing.
"Yeah. Enough so I've been trying to sign on with you for a couple
years, now."
"Well, we always need more hands around here- it's just the money
won't often allow them." Alan spotted something disturbing- a group
of newbies, setting up their tent in close proximity to the
grid. "Damn fools," he muttered, and strode off to deal with them.
Life settled in rapidly to the familiar pattern of the excavation
site in summer: eat, sleep, dig. This was a new site, hand-picked by
the Director of the museum, who was showing an unhealthy interest in
the Paleontology department lately. Unhealthy because he was only
interested in results- quantity, not quality. Since the debacle in
San Diego, everyone had gone dinosaur mad. While Alan appreciated the
publicity for his field, he was disturbed by the increasing trend
towards sensationalism. Forget about the backbone of the industry-
people weren't interested anymore in reconstructing the ancient
habitat. All they cared about was finding more and more skeletons,
and better make it good ones- and while you're at it, could you
discover some nests, too? We need some eggs for our display. And try
to make it good eggs- none of those measly fragments.
At least the site was promising. All the signs were there that
indicated dinosaur fossils- exposed layers dated back sixty-five
million years, abundant fossilized remains of plantlife, a geological
report that stated clearly the site had once been a prehistoric
swamp. And this year the techs had promised to have the imaging
system up and running, correctly, which should cut down dramatically
on time spent searching for remains. Based on the preliminary survey,
he'd had the grid laid out to mark off a starting section of about
six hundred square feet. Off to the side, he could see the tarp going
up, strung between four poles to provide shelter for the computer
equipment. He strode over to lend a hand. Even if he couldn't operate
all the stuff, at least he could help move it.
"Anything I can do over here?"
"Not really, Dr. Grant." His research assistant, Kelly Matthews,
spared him a glance before returning her attention to the unloading
process. "We've got everything under control."
"You sure? Maybe I could just-" He reached out towards a piece of
equipment.
"Don't touch that!" she yelped, diving to block him. He grinned at
her, hearing the chuckles of her helpers as she fussed over the
whatever-it-was, setting it up just so. She'd had ample experience
last season with his luck around equipment. Then the kid, Billy,
caught his eye.
"Dr. Grant? Could you give me a hand with this?" Billy jumped up in
the bed of the nearly emptied pickup and wrestled the gas-powered
generator towards the edge. Alan moved over willingly, and together
they unloaded the heavy generator and positioned it near the
pavilion. "Thanks," Billy said, smiling at him.
"No problem." Alan left them to their job, migrating slowly around
the camp and making sure all was going well. He always felt awkward
and out of place on the first day of a dig. This time, the feeling
was worse, because he'd only been on this job for a couple years. He
spared a moment to regret the loss of his DU job, but only a moment.
This was his job now, and he had to make the best of it and do it
right.
He found his way to his battered old Army tent and sat under the
front flap, overlooking the camp. Sometimes, his ego still smarted-
reduced to one of the pathetic creatures he'd once despised, a museum
curator. Damn. But money was money, and no one else had wanted to
offer him a job after... after.
Tomorrow the real fun would begin. Tomorrow, he'd take the newbies in
hand, show 'em which end of a brush to hold, set them to work
clearing off the top layer of the site. There'd be a few minor
discoveries, causing excitement among the newbies and tolerant smiles
from the old hands. Then Kelly would have the results from the more
detailed surveys, and he'd set the crew to work in earnest.
And maybe, just maybe, this would be a good season.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
"Dr. Grant? Dr. Grant, come here!"
A breathless young girl raced up to Alan, nearly crashing into him.
He straightened from the skull he was trying to expose, a hand on his
back to ease tense muscles. "What is it, Fran?"
"It's Billy- he said to come get you, *right away*." She grabbed his
arm and tugged urgently.
Alan rose, wondering again why he'd continued to allow parents to
bring kids along, and followed Fran. She led him around the edge of
the dig, past a few campsites, and over a slight ridge. Billy was
there, kneeling on the ground.
"Billy! I brought him!" Fran ran up to him, excited. "Just like I
said I would!"
"Good girl, Fran. Thanks." Billy smiled at the girl, then stood and
beckoned Alan closer. "Dr. Grant, I think you should see this."
"What is it?" Alan moved in close, stepping around the girl. There
was a mound in front of Billy, a circular- "Is that-"
"A nest." Billy nodded, eyes shining. "It is."
Alan dropped to his knees beside the mound. Visible through collected
dirt and debris were the lumps of intact eggs.
"Holy-" He broke off, with a glance at the girl. "-cow. How'd you
find this?"
"Tripped over it, actually." Billy looked both embarassed and
pleased. "I almost fell into it and noticed the egg-shapes."
"Amazing find," Alan said. He rose, dusting his pants off. "Better
get it marked off and added to the grid. Then you can start
excavation."
"Me, Dr. Grant?" Billy's eyes were wide with mingled surprise and
pleasure.
"Yes, you, Billy. You found it, so you get to work on it." Alan
smiled at the young man's obvious eagerness, then moved away. "Now,
if you'll excuse me, I've got a jawbone to work on over there."
"Thanks, Dr. Grant! I'll get right to work."
Alan smiled as he headed back to his skull. He was glad the kid had
made such an impressive discovery- give him something useful to do,
and keep him happy. Kelly had been running the kid ragged so far. She
had taken an instant dislike to him, for some reason known only to
her. But he was always cheerful, always ready with a smile and a
helping hand.
****
Alan was out for his nightly prowl through the area surrounding the
camp, an effort to stave off sleeplessness, when he encountered
something unexpected- Billy. "Uh," he said, startled by the
appearance of another person out wandering in the night.
"Dr. Grant?" Billy sounded surprised, as well. "What are you doing
out here?"
"Just out for a walk. And you?"
"Same here. I couldn't sleep."
"Oh. Me either." Alan paused, searching for something to say. Billy
looked at him, silver moonlight making him seem almost unreal. "Never
ran into anyone out here before, not at this time of night anyways."
"You do this often?"
"Often enough." He shifted awkwardly, wanting to get away without
seeming rude.
"Me too. I'm a bit of a night owl, myself." Billy smiled, showing no
inclination to just move on and let Alan resume his solitary
wanderings.
"I never used to be, but... things change." No way was he about to
admit the reason behind his insomnia to the kid.
"Yeah... down here, anyway." Billy looked past Alan, to where the
Milky Way was visible in a broad spangled band, draping across the
horizon.
"What?" Alan tilted his head to the side, wondering what the kid
meant.
"The stars never change. Wish I'd brought my telescope along, it'd
give me something to do on nights like this."
"Oh, but they do change," Alan said. "Just wait- there's a couple
comets coming over the next couple years, not to mention when the
planets line up. That ought to be something to see."
It was Billy's turn to be surprised. "You like astronomy too, huh? I
almost majored in it, but there's no such thing as an astronomy
program out here."
That set off a discussion that lasted until Arcturus was riding
perilously close to the horizon. Alan was the first to notice the
time.
"Uh," he said, blinking with surprise. *Surely it can't be that
late...* But a quick look at his watch, with its almost painfully
bright blue backlight, confirmed that it was, indeed, that
late. "Look, it's been fun talking to you, but it's time for me to
hit the sack." He rose from the convenient rock he'd perched on some
time ago, stretching stiff muscles. Rocks weren't his preferred
choice of seating, by any stretch of the imagination.
"What?" Billy blinked in surprise at his own watch, then got to his
feet as well. "Yeah, I'll say! Past time, even, with the way you
always get people up and working at indecent hours of the morning."
"Hey, we're out here to dig, not nap!" Alan grinned, not too tired to
tease the kid.
"Yeah, yeah- let you tell it! Good night, Dr. Grant- or should I say
morning?" With a cheery grin and a wave, Billy headed for the camp
and his tent.
"Night, Billy," Alan said quietly, then turned towards his own
bedroll.
Somehow, Alan found himself falling into a habit of late night talks
with Billy. The kid was pretty amazing, really- so young, and yet
he'd done so much. He'd spent a couple years in the military, then
taken a year or two to travel and decide what he wanted to do with
himself, finally settling on college. But he was still investigating
multiple avenues of education, and all the while finding the time to
keep up on hobbies like astronomy and mountain climbing. Amazing,
really, how he could still have so much enthusiasm for so many
different things.
And when the kid decided to do something, he did it well. Alan
quickly came to depend on him during the days as well. Billy could
tame the most obstinate piece of equipment, and do it with a smile.
And he was lucky. Alan thought Kelly, his assistant, was going to do
something drastic the day Billy found the intact juvenile raptor
skeleton- she was trying to put together a dissertation about the
early lives of carnivores and hadn't yet found any evidence to back
up her theory. But Billy just smiled and stepped back, letting her
take over the excavation of the skeleton, and instead helping Alan
with his partial adult deinonychus.
"Do you do that on purpose?" Alan asked, as Billy set to work on the
thighbone.
"Do what?"
"Deliberately piss Kelly off."
"Who, me?" Billy asked, with overblown innocence. "Would I do such a
thing?"
"Wouldn't put it past you," Alan said, forcing his attention back to
the fossil in front of him. Damn, but why did the kid have to be so
young?
"No, really," Billy continued in a more serious tone. "I don't do it
deliberately. She just doesn't like me."
"You've got that right." Alan grunted. "If I have to listen to one
more of her gripes about you, I think I'm going to throw something."
"She gripes about me?"
"Yeah. She's full of it, though, so I wouldn't worry about it. I
think I picked the wrong assistant from the crowd this time."
"How many applicants did you get, anyway?" Billy looked up, curious.
Alan grinned ruefully. "One."
"Seriously?"
"Yeah, seriously. The media may be going dinosaur-crazy these days,
but that doesn't necessarily translate into academic interest."
"Huh."
Silence fell, punctuated by the normal sounds of a dig- tapping,
scraping, and the underlying gritty sound of brushes patiently
cleaning rock away from bone. Then, with an effort at nonchalance,
Billy spoke up.
"So, does your assistant have to be a paleontology major?"
Alan picked a stubborn pebble out before replying. "No, there isn't
any such thing at this school." He snorted. He had expressed his
opinion, loudly and frequently, of a school which expected a museum
team to carry all the weight of research, field work, and
publications as well, without the support of a full paleontology
department. And he'd been told, loudly and frequently, that there
wasn't enough interest or funding to offer paleontology courses. "But
it helps. The job is geared towards final year students and grad
students who need to get experience on a dig, or material for a
dissertation, or whatever. Kelly came from out of state, and actually
is a paleontology major."
"Oh."
The disappointment in his voice made Alan continue, even though he
knew he shouldn't. "But that's just the official job. You've actually
been more help than Kelly has, this time out."
"Better not let her hear you say that," Billy grinned.
"Yeah." Alan focused on the bones again. Safer. Much safer. The bones
wouldn't get him in trouble, the way a certain pair of laughing brown
eyes might.
"It's become kind of a hobby of mine, you know."
"What has? Pissing Kelly off?"
"Hey now, I told you I don't do that on purpose! No, I meant
paleontology."
"You know, I'd wondered about that. When you were out at Choteau, a
few years back, I got the impression the dig was the last place in
the world you wanted to be."
"Yeah, well," and Billy paused for a moment, cleaning a tricky bit of
rock away from the bone. "I changed my mind. It was interesting, you
know? Even if I didn't let on. And then I started reading- read your
book. Both of 'em, in fact."
"Yeah? And?" Alan concentrated on the ribs a few inches from his
nose. They'd been crushed, probably by the weight of sediment on top
of them, making excavation rather tricky.
"And I read some other books too, and bugged my parents, and
eventually wound up here."
"Why here? I mean, if you were so interested, you could have hit a
university with an actual paleontology department, instead of a
museum."
"Yeah. Well, basically, it boiled down to in-state tuition."
"I see."
"Plus I've always liked Bozeman. So I came here."
"And took up digging, along with annoying research assistants." Alan
pried loose a bit of rib, brushing sealer over it and laying it aside
to dry.
"Would you lay off about that already?" Billy laughed. "Yes, I make a
habit of annoying people!"
"I'd noticed."
"Dr. Grant," Billy said, in such a serious tone that Alan glanced up
at him. "If I didn't know any better, I'd say you were developing a
sense of humor."
Then he lost the battle to remain serious and smiled.
"Then it's a good thing you know better," Alan replied, unable to
restrain the corners of his mouth from twitching upwards. "Because
everybody knows I don't have one of those."
"Like I really believe that," Billy said softly, still smiling.
Something in his eyes reminded Alan inevitably of the fierce
concentration of a predator, intent on prey. A chill ran down his
spine and he turned away. He had to be careful. This kid was
dangerous.
****
The season wound down slowly, each day blurring into the next. Hot
days, made bearable only by the steady breeze, contrasted sharply
with cold clear nights. Billy became a permanent fixture at Alan's
side, always willing to lend a helping hand.
And then came the end of the season. The museum volunteers had long
since packed up and gone, leaving behind only the serious scientists
and students. Storms were moving in, threatening the dig, and it was
suddenly time to get back before school started again. Alan stood on
the rise where his tent had been, overlooking the last of the
preparations for departure. Kelly was in her element, supervising the
final loading of the equipment into the truck. Alan idly considered
getting a trailer for the next season- there was getting to be more
and more sophisticated crap, which was costing more and more money.
Really, putting it all in a trailer would be more intelligent than
packing it under a pavillion...
"Dr. Grant?"
"Hmm? Oh, hello, Billy." Alan turned his back on the activity below
and faced Billy.
"I was just about to head out, and I thought... well, here." Billy
held out a piece of paper, and Alan took it automatically. "If you
ever need anything- help with your computer, or whatever- you just
give me a call, okay?"
Alan looked at the paper and swallowed hard. A phone number. Uh-oh.
This could be trouble. He pulled out his wallet and tucked the paper
away safely. "Thanks, Billy. I'll do that."
"Good. See you later, then."
Billy walked away, back down to where his ride back to town was
waiting. Alan watched him go, suddenly conscious of the fact that
there would be no more Billy. Not around to help out during the day,
not around for a late-night discussion of stars or predator
behavior... no more Billy.
He tried to convince himself that that was for the better, but he
wasn't sure he believed himself.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Alan stared at the blank screen, too frustrated even to swear. His
meager knowledge of computers hadn't been enough to restore the
program, and there was no one he could call- especially not at this
hour. He checked his watch- ten thirty. Well, okay- not too terribly
late, but still, there was no one available that could fix the thing.
He sighed. No hope for it. Slowly, he pulled out his wallet, rifling
through it until he found a particular slip of paper.
*Bad idea, Grant,* he thought, smoothing wrinkles from the worn slip
with its seven dangerous digits. *Very bad idea.*
But he did it anyway. He picked up the phone and dialed, heart in
throat. He couldn't decide if he was relieved or disappointed when an
answering machine picked up.
"Hello, Billy, it's Alan Grant. I was having a computer problem, and
thought maybe I'd take you up on your offer of assistance, but I
guess you're not home. My number here's-"
"Dr. Grant?" A breathless voice interrupted him. "Just got in- heard
the phone ringing while I was on the way up the stairs, but couldn't
get the door open in time-"
"Billy!" Suddenly, this didn't seem such a good idea again. "Uh..."
"Did you say computer problems?"
"Yeah, the damn thing's crashed and been giving me fits for the last
hour or so." He took a deep breath, steadying his nerves. Idiot.
Overreacting to the kid like that... pure idiocy.
"You at the museum?"
"Yeah, in the basement."
"Be right over."
There was a click. Alan stared at the phone for a long moment before
replacing the receiver in its cradle.
*Knock it off, idiot,* he told himself. *Keep it professional.*
He tried to ignore the snickering of his subconscious, which knew
full good and well that he'd been wishing for an excuse to use that
number for a month now.
Alan pushed away from the computer with a decisive motion, raising a
cloud of dust. He rose and stalked restlessly around the room,
looking for a distraction. He settled on sorting fossils, tagging
innumerable bones which were still in their boxes, sealed and
awaiting prep work. Brainless work, really- something the preparators
usually took care of. But it was something to occupy his hands and
fill the time, something to keep him from thinking about a certain
pair of warm brown eyes... damn.
He managed to get into the job, so into it that the slight tap at the
door startled him. "It's not locked," he called, putting the fragment
of femur down carefully.
The door opened, revealing Billy, clad in jeans and a bright yellow
windbreaker. "Hi," he said, with that familiar warm smile- the one
that reached out and wrapped you up in it, like a hug.
"Hi." Alan felt a rather foolish grin spreading across his face, and
nipped it in the bud, before it got out of hand. "Thanks for coming
out."
"You're welcome!" Billy glanced around. "Is that it?" He nodded to
the blank monitor.
"Yeah." Alan made his way carefully through the long tables to crouch
down beside Billy, who was already in the chair, tapping keys.
"What the hell?" Billy muttered, frowning.
"My sentiments exactly," Alan nodded.
"What program are you running?"
"Uh... actually, I don't know its name," Alan admitted.
"Is it Windows, or DOS?"
"DOS- I know that much, at least."
"Right. Then I'll try this..."
Alan watched quietly as Billy did arcane things to the machine.
Screens full of information came and went, while Billy muttered to
himself.
"Aha!" Billy's smile lit the entire room. "Found it- there was a
problem with file permissions, the computer wasn't recognizing your
right to open the program file. Wonder how that happened?"
"I touched it," Alan laughed, relieved, as the classification program
sprang to life.
"Oh, come on now, Dr. Grant- you're not quite that bad." Billy
laughed as well, transferring his attention from the computer to Alan.
"Seems that way, sometimes," Alan sighed. "Otherwise, why would I
keep having to call people to rescue me?"
"Hey- you can call me anytime. I'm glad to help." Those brown eyes
were smiling at him again, warm and happy. Alan blinked and looked
away.
"Better watch out, I might take you up on that," he threatened.
"Feel free! As long as I'm home, anyways. Today I was out with some
friends- had just gotten home when I heard the phone ringing."
"Isn't it a bit late to be out, when you have school in the morning?"
Alan grinned. After the last summer, he knew Billy was as much of a
night owl as he was.
"Late? C'mon, Dr. Grant, it's early yet." Billy laughed. "What are
you up to in here, anyway? Putting all this stuff in the computer?"
"Yeah." Alan sighed, looking at the endless piles of fossils. "This
is the stuff most people never see, the dark side of paleontology."
Billy snorted. "Usually, I have lab techs do this part, but I'm a bit
shorthanded."
"Well, why didn't you say something?" Billy grinned. "Just show me
what to do, and I'll do it."
"Well..." Alan tilted his head, considering.
"Come on, Dr. Grant- you know I'm a hard worker," Billy wheedled,
eyes sparkling.
"Oh, okay," Alan sighed. "On one condition-" and he held up an
admonitory finger.
"What's that?" Billy's grin wavered uncertainly.
"Quit calling me Doctor all the time. Name's Alan." With a quirky
grin, Alan rose and moved to the table nearest to the computer.
Billy blinked, then his grin returned full force. "Okay, Alan. What
do you want me to do?"
"Since you've got the damn thing behaving so nicely, could you put
the numbers in the computer? I'll call 'em out for you."
"Sure thing. How's this work? Let's see..." He looked over the
screen, noting the required fields. "Okay, looks like I just need a
description and the number, right?"
"Right. The rest is already done. Ready?"
"Go for it."
"Okay, metatarsal number 0117635, whole..."
Together, they managed to catalogue nearly half the fossils. Alan
completely lost track of time, distracted as he was by Billy's
presence. It wasn't until both men were yawning and the numbers were
starting to waver in front of Alan's eyes that he thought to look at
his watch.
"Good god!" he exclaimed, blinking and looking again, just to make
sure.
"What?" Billy said around a yawn. He stretched, rubbing his eyes.
"It's four thirty!"
"No way," Billy gaped at his own watch for a moment, then turned to
Alan with a sheepish grin. "Guess we got a bit carried away, huh?"
Alan smiled ruefully. "Guess so. And I suppose you've got early
classes, right?"
"Me? Hell, no." Billy's eyes crinkled with amusement. "I know better
than that. I don't have a class until 2 today."
"Good." Alan marked the place where they had left off. "Guess we'd
better clear out of here, though. I'm surprised the cleaning crew
hasn't chased us off- they usually come around at about one thirty."
"Huh. I'm glad they didn't, though."
Alan looked at him sharply. There it was again, the warm and inviting
look that he found so dangerous about this young man, with his ever-
ready smile. "Yeah. We got a lot done tonight."
"That wasn't quite what I meant. I missed talking with you."
Alan was falling, plummeting through space. Billy's eyes were all
that anchored him to reality. "Yeah, me too," he said, voice rough
around the edges. Then, "Well, we'd better clear out of here. You may
be able to take staying out all day and up all night, but not me."
Billy chuckled and shut down the computer. "Like I believe that-
remember, I know how late you stay up, and how disgustingly early you
make people get to work."
"Hey, nobody made you sign on with me last summer." Alan waited by
the door until Billy joined him, then shut off the lights and locked
up.
"I know. Makes me wonder where my mind was." Billy grinned.
"Beats me, as much as you complained."
"Hey- not fair!" Billy laughed. "You have to admit, I'm not the whiny-
ass brat I used to be."
Alan glanced at him sidelong, with a faint smile. They reached the
stairway and door to the parking lot, and he opened it. "You're right
there," he said thoughtfully. "And I also have to admit, you do a
damn good job, too."
The single bulb illuminating the parking lot lit Billy's smile
softly, transforming his eyes into bottomless pools of
shadow. "Thanks." Then he looked away, up at the sky. "Deneb sure is
bright tonight."
"Mm-hmm," Alan nodded, with a smile for the memory of their first all-
night discussion of the stars. "And so are the Pleiades."
"Who would ever have believed you could find enough time for a hobby
like astronomy?"
Alan snorted. "Anyone that knows I stay up all night, that's who.
Have you ever seen the scope at Taylor?"
"There's a scope at Taylor?" Billy, startled, looked away from the
glittering heavens.
"Yeah," Alan nodded. "Crandall's got an eighteen inch reflector that
he pulls out for the meetings on Fridays."
"Meetings?"
Alan felt a deep satisfaction, even though he knew it was rather...
well, silly. At last, he knew something Billy didn't! "Yeah. The
Southwest Montana Astronomical Society, last Friday of every month
but November or December."
"I never knew about that." Billy turned back to the stars. "Wish I
could see the scope. I've got a C-8, but that's nothing compared to
an eighteen incher."
"Come by some Friday," Alan invited. "That is, if you're not out
having fun. I go over there most Fridays, hang out with Crandall and
look at the stars. Been helping him chart asteroids for a while now."
"That'd be great," Billy said. He shivered as a stray bit of chill
breeze found its way through his jacket. "Well. It's not getting any
earlier."
"You're right." Alan resumed the trek towards his truck. "That
yours?" he asked, indicating a dark colored Volvo wagon tucked into
his Ford's shadow.
"Yeah." Billy sighed. "Not much of a car, but it gets me around
town."
"Give me a good truck, any day," Alan said. "Cars break around me."
"You have some of the worst luck, don't you," Billy laughed. They
reached the vehicles, and Billy paused, looking up at Alan in the
pool of light from the lamp above. "See you around?"
"Yeah. Thanks again for coming out tonight. And... you got the number
for the back room?"
Billy shook his head.
"Here, then," and Alan fished a piece of paper out of his wallet and
found a pen in his pocket. He scrawled the number on the paper
quickly, before he could think twice about what he was doing. "Don't
be a stranger."
"Better watch out," Billy said, stowing the paper carefully in his
pocket. "I might come back and bother you if you say things like
that."
"Go right ahead- I'll just put you to work!" On that note, Alan
turned away and climbed into the truck. He started the engine with a
roar and glanced out the window to see Billy slowly turn and get into
his Volvo. Alan cranked the heater up and let the engine warm for a
couple minutes. Billy pulled out with a wave, and Alan watched him
go.
*Why does he have to be so damn young?*
****
The phone rang, startling Alan out of his attempt to classify a
stubborn bone. He answered it. "Paleontology, Grant speaking."
"Dr. Grant, hello! It's me, Billy."
Alan's eyebrows shot up in surprise. "Billy! Hello. What's up?"
"Nothing, really. I just wanted to see if that offer was still open,
about the telescope."
"Of course it is." Alan swallowed hard. He hadn't expected...
Especially when the kid hadn't called. True, it had only been a
couple days, but somehow he'd thought the kid would have called by
now.
"What time should I be there, then?"
"Ahh..." Alan tried to think, but his thoughts scattered elusively,
refusing to cooperate. "I usually go over there around seven. Meet me
here? That way Crandall won't run you off by mistake."
"I'll be there." Alan could imagine Billy smiling, warm and happy.
"Great. See you Friday, then?"
"Yeah. See you."
Billy hung up. Alan set the phone down and tried to turn his mind
back to his work, but it was very difficult when all he could see was
warm brown eyes smiling at him.
****
Friday evening.
Alan went through the motions of work, pretending that this was just
an ordinary day. Pretending there was absolutely no reason to look
forward to the evening, beyond the usual chance to play with the big
telescope. It wasn't working.
After about the tenth time of rewriting the same sentence, Alan gave
up working on his grant proposals and leaned back in his chair,
stretching and staring at the clock. 6:31. Well, at least it was
getting closer to the time...
A chill raced down his spine. What did he think he was doing, anyway?
Meeting up with Billy wasn't just stupid, it was damn near suicidal.
Kind of like playing with fire, in the middle of an oil slick... one
wrong move, and the flames would ignite, and the only escape would be
to dive deeper. Billy was trouble. He should just stay away from the
kid.
And yet- he missed him, very badly. Over the summer he'd grown
accustomed to having the kid around to help out, to talk to and
bounce ideas off of- hell, even to distract him from the job
sometimes, and forcibly remind him that there was more to life than
digging. Maybe not much more, but still...
6:33. Alan swore and tore his gaze from the clock. It wasn't doing
him any good at all to keep staring at it, and certainly wasn't
making the time go by any faster.
Okay, what could he do? All the bones had been catalogued and sorted.
The ones that needed testing or other special work had been packed
off to the labs. His filing was caught up, for probably the first
time since he'd started this job. The grant proposals were a lost
cause- he couldn't think coherently, how could he expect to write
clearly?
*Well, there's always the theoretical side of things...*
Alan rested an elbow on his desk and propped his head on his hand.
There'd been a theory tickling away at the back of his brain for a
while now, and he hadn't had a chance to think it out. Something
about raptors... He made an effort to seperate memories of the
raptors on the island from his beliefs about *real* raptor behavior.
What was known about the ancient raptors... intelligence was obvious.
The critters had managed to bring down much larger and stronger prey,
and it wasn't from scavenging, either. Scavengers would have only
partial kills at the nesting site, and there would be marks of more
than one variety of teeth left on the bones. The positioning of the
nests suggested some kind of social structure- pack animals?
*The dominant female eyed him shrewdly before barking unmistakable
commands to her followers...*
No, dammit! Hammond's theme-park toys weren't the real thing. *Real*
discoveries were made out in the field, not in the genetics lab. He
felt a momentary vindictive glee that Hammond had been taken down by
his own creations, then dismissed the feeling as unworthy. Sure,
Hammond had screwed up- a colossal mistake that had cost lives and
careers and much personal suffering. But the man had also paid the
ultimate price, eaten like any other piece of carrion by little
scavenging procompsognathids, and thinking vindictive thoughts
wouldn't change history.
6:37. Was the damn clock broken? Surely more than four minutes had
passed.
There was a knock at the door, and then Billy stuck his head in. "Dr.
Grant? Mind if I come in a bit early?"
Alan slewed around in his chair, startled and trying to hide it.
"Billy! Hi. Uh, no, mind? Why should I? Uh, I mean- sure."
Billy smiled and came the rest of the way through the door. He
glanced around, then perched on the edge of an empty sorting
table. "Sure looks different in here without all the bones laying
around."
"Yeah." Alan ran a hand through his hair and regained his
composure... mostly. "So how've you been?"
"Oh, pretty good- I was done with everything early tonight, so I came
over here a bit early. Hope I didn't interrupt anything important?"
"No- I was just thinking, really, about raptor behavior."
Billy leaned forward, eyes alight with interest. "Really? And what
were you thinking?"
"Intelligence." Grant looked away before he could get caught by those
wonderfully expressive eyes. "Intelligence, coordination- social
structure- it was all there, I'm sure of it, but how can we show it?
It's so hard, with only scattered remains."
"What about physical attributes?" Billy suggested. "I mean, brain
capacity, stuff like that."
"There's been too few intact skulls in good shape to determine much
about that. Although, there is a peculiar formation, which I've no
solid evidence for, but it appears to be some kind of resonance
chamber."
"Like a dolphin? For sonar or communication?"
"I'm not sure. I need to find an intact adult skull, complete with
this chamber, to investigate the possibilities more fully."
"Maybe we'll find one this summer." Billy smiled, and Alan was
startled into looking directly at him.
"We? You signing on again?"
"Wild horses couldn't drag me away," Billy said softly. Then his eyes
clouded with uncertainty. "That is- if you'll have me?"
Alan's heart pounded. Say no, tell him to stick to photography or
whatever the hell he's majoring in this week... "Of course." He
smiled. "You're more help than my research assistant. Why wouldn't I
have you?"
Relief lightened his features. "I don't know, but it's happened
before. You know, I've applied to go on your dig for the last three
years, and only made it last year."
"Sorry about that." Alan shook his head. "I'm not really in charge of
who goes or not- that's the department head, deciding just how many
people we can afford to pay."
"I'd even volunteer, you know."
"That's even harder to get," Alan said. "There's strictly limited
space for the volunteers, because they're more of a liability than a
help. Just don't tell them that."
Billy snickered and grinned, glancing at him with merry eyes. Alan
returned the grin. He was certain he knew what Billy was thinking of-
one of the museum volunteers last summer had gotten it into her head
that she should be in charge, and had spent the rest of the season in
trying to order the project to her liking. Alan could still hear her
voice shrilling orders to his crew.
"Especially not Lois," Billy said, confirming his guess.
"Lord, sometimes I wish I had more control over who goes out- I'd
damn sure block her from ever appearing on the roster again!"
"Oh, come on, Alan- surely you enjoy letting such a knowledgable
personage take charge of your expedition?" Billy's eyes gleamed
wickedly.
Alan snorted. "I'd do better letting you take over, and you're a
what, photography major now?"
"Actually, I'm thinking about changing."
"Again?"
"Yes, again. What do you think would be better, paleobotany or
paleontology?"
"You're asking me? A former professor of paleontology?" Alan shook
his head. "As if there's any other field out there. But you know you
can't do that here- remember, no paleontology department."
"Oh, damn- you know, I'd actually forgotten about that. Makes no
sense, really, that they'd push the museum staff so hard for bigger
and better discoveries, yet not be willing to have a real
paleontology department." He glanced at the clock. "Hey, it's after
seven. Gonna let me see this amazing telescope?"
Alan looked at the clock and blinked in surprise. 7:04. *It really
must be broken,* he thought bemusedly. He could have sworn Billy had
only been there a couple minutes. "Yeah, come on." He rose from the
swivel chair, which promptly rolled away from him. "Don't you dare
laugh," he said warningly. Billy's lips twitched.
"Alan, I can't help it- you and your luck!" He laughed, and Alan
swatted at him half-heartedly.
"Well, come on, then. You won't get to the planetarium sitting there
laughing."
Billy fell in behind him, double-checking the door to make sure it
was locked. Alan grumbled. "Sorry," Billy said insincerely. "Old
habits die hard, I guess."
"Habit. Huh. One time, just *one* time I forget to shut something
off, and now you think I need checking up after always."
"But Alan- that one time was pretty major, after all." This time it
was Billy's turn to swat at Alan, knocking his ever-present floppy
hat off just as he got it settled. Alan caught it and righted it. "I
mean, no matter how you look at it, leaving the main generator
running when everyone's packed up for a weekend and gone to town is
pretty damn major."
"Yeah, yeah. Wouldn't need the damn generator if people didn't insist
on the damn computer crap. And I still don't know why I let them talk
me into okaying a whole weekend off. Like we really had enough time
to spare."
"It was the Fourth of July, Alan!" Billy said, with a long-suffering
sigh. They reached the end of the building and followed the walkway
to the planetarium.
"Yeah, whatever." Alan shook his head. "Fireworks. They all wanted to
go watch *fireworks*."
"Even you have to admit it was an impressive display." Billy grinned
at him.
"Not my kind of fireworks," Alan said, then abruptly realized he'd
said it out loud when Billy shot him a startled look. He looked
around quickly for a distraction, to no avail.
"And what exactly are your kind of fireworks, Alan?"
There it was again, the speculative look he'd seen so often on the
kid's face over the summer. Alan's ears burned. "Never mind. Look,
there's Dr. Crandall."
Billy let him get away with it, rather than pursuing the issue. Alan
introduced Billy to Pete Crandall, head of the planetarium, and then
Billy was all over the telescope. Alan felt a sense of reprieve. He'd
better watch himself better. The kid was already getting way too
close, no need to encourage it.
****
"What?"
"You heard me," Alan said patiently. He looked away from Billy's
bewildered expression. It was like the kid actually didn't
understand. "Lecture tour. The entire western United States. Four
weeks. Got it?"
"Well, hell." Billy leaned back against the wall, arms folded across
his chest. "I guess I didn't hear wrong, then. Need an assistant?"
Alan grimaced at the hopeful look the kid wore. "Come on, now, Billy-
surely you don't think the museum would allow that? I'll only be gone
a month."
Billy sighed dramatically. "A month. Only a month. D'you know how
boring that'll be?"
"Not for me. For me it'll be busy as hell, what with this two stops a
day bullshit. At least it'll just be talking to kids. They're easier
to impress than patrons. And besides, something in me just doesn't
like begging for money."
"I can see that." Billy smiled at him. "You're not exactly the
begging type."
"Huh." Alan stuffed the last of his papers into his leather satchel,
wrestling the zipper closed. "Tell that to the board of directors-
maybe then they'd quit making me grovel for the patrons."
"Something tells me they're not particularly interested in my
opinions. When was it you're leaving?"
"Monday. They don't believe in much notice."
"Guess not. Oh well." Billy looked at him for a long moment, quiet
and remote.
"It's only a month."
"I've heard that before."
"Oh?"
"Yeah." Billy's eyes darkened with memory, focused on some distant
point. "Chris said that before he took off for a backpacking trip
through the Canadian Rockies. Came back long enough to clean out his
stuff and tell me he'd found someone else."
"Chris?"
"My ex."
"Uh." Alan swallowed hard, throat suddenly dry. "Well, that's kind of
a different situation, you know."
"Is it?" Billy's eyes were on him again, sharp as a raptor. "Is it
really?"
"Yeah," Alan managed to choke out, willing himself to believe it.
"If you say so."
And then the awkward moment was past. Billy hopped off the sorting
table and slung his backpack over his shoulder. "See you later,
Alan."
Then he walked out, leaving Alan staring at the closed door in a
state of utter confusion. Only one thought remained in his whirling
mind: *He's too young, dammit!*
But even that thought was unable to drown out the happiness and
incoherent longing coursing through him.
Home at last. Alan pulled into the driveway and shut the truck off,
resting his head against the steering wheel. What a trip. He was so
tired that it felt like the wheel was vibrating, a very disorienting
feeling... he sat up and rubbed his eyes. There, that was better. He
grabbed his travel bag and his satchel, then headed inside.
The door opened before he found his keys. Alan stared at the spot
where the handle had been for a moment, utterly confused. Then he
looked up.
"Welcome back, Alan," Billy said.
Alan's confusion vanished in a rush of warmth. "Billy." He smiled and
stepped inside. Billy closed the door behind him and reached for one
of his bags, but Alan shook his head. "Leave 'em." He dropped them by
the door- they'd be fine there, where he could find them once he'd
had some sleep. "Good to see you, but what...?"
Billy dropped his intense gaze for a moment, a faint flush stealing
across his cheekbones. "You gave me a key ages ago, remember? For
getting to the telescope if you were busy and I wanted to... anyway,
I knew you were due back today, so I came here and waited."
"Thanks." Alan realized he was grinning like a loon and turned away,
aiming for the couch. Billy followed.
"So how was it?" Billy perched on the arm of the couch, while Alan
sprawled across the cushions and put his feet up on the battered
coffee table.
"Hectic," he said. He pulled his hat off and tossed it, rubbing his
eyes again. Now that he was home, the stress of the past month was
beginning to drain away. "I actually missed you, kid."
A smile broke over Billy's features like a wave, lighting his eyes
with joy. "Told you I should have gone along. And I'll bet if I had,
you wouldn't be so tired now."
"Doubtful. Even if you were there, you couldn't have done anything
about the constant rushing from lecture, to airport, to next
lecture... sometimes I wonder who plans these things."
"Was it worth it?"
"Yeah- yeah, I think so. I saw more high school auditoriums than I
ever want to see again, but there were actually some kids asking
intelligent questions, and quite a few seemed interested in
paleontology as a career."
"Why'd you have to do it, anyway? I mean, it's not like there's any
hope of attracting those kids here as students."
"Yeah, I know. But it's a publicity thing, you know- get the museum
name out, make it look like it's taking an interest in education, all
that kind of thing. And maybe, just maybe, some of those kids will
wind up in the field, or their parents will make a contribution...
see what I mean?"
Billy laughed. "Yeah, but it seems like an awful lot of expense and
effort just for some publicity."
"Maybe so, but they do it every damn year." Alan leaned his head on
the back of the couch and closed his eyes. Much better. He felt the
springs give way beneath him as Billy slid off the arm and onto the
cushions.
"Maybe I should go?" Billy's voice was hesitant, reluctant. "You're
tired. You should get some rest."
"Don't go," Alan said softly. He reached out blindly and found
Billy's leg. "I meant it. I really did miss you."
"And I missed you. Badly." Billy's hand covered his, stroking
lightly. Alan sighed and relaxed a bit more. He supposed he shouldn't
have reached out like that, but what the hell... bad idea or not, he
felt better knowing all he had to do was stretch a hand out and the
kid was there.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Alan leaned back on the couch, feeling the day's tensions drain away.
It no longer felt odd, after several months of friendship, to relax
on Billy's couch, letting his mind turn slowly to mush and watching
one of Billy's innumerable movies. Billy was in the kitchen, popping
some microwave popcorn- rapidly becoming standard evening fare, along
with pizza and Chinese delivery.
"What'd you put in tonight?" Billy called. The microwave beeped and
he pulled the bag out, shaking it vigorously.
"Don't laugh, okay?" Alan shook his head. What was he doing here,
anyway, in the middle of this oddly domestic scene, with a boy
scarcely old enough to call a man, watching old movies and eating
popcorn... Then Billy was in the room, giving him an exasperated
look.
"Alan, why would I laugh? I mean, whatever it is, it's obviously from
my collection- why would I laugh at my own movies?"
"Ladyhawke," Alan said. He reached for a handful of popcorn when
Billy set the opened bag on the middle cushion of the couch, then
sprawled against the other arm.
"Cool. I haven't seen that one in ages."
"Me either," Alan admitted. "Not since it was in the theaters."
"You actually go to theaters?" Billy grinned and tossed a piece of
popcorn at him. Alan batted it away.
"Only when someone tricks me into thinking there's a dinosaur buried
in the aisles," he replied. Then the beginning credits ended and he
focused his attention on the screen.
"Somehow I believe that," Billy chuckled.
The movie played on, following the adventures of Mouse, hawk, and
wolf. Alan relaxed further, slowly sinking down into the embrace of
the comfortable old couch. Occasionally, his fingers would brush
against Billy's as they raided the popcorn, sending a tingle racing
through his hand and arm.
They were interrupted about halfway through the movie by someone
banging on the front door, then entering. "Hey Billy, you in here?"
"Yeah, Jack- what's up?"
Alan struggled into a more upright positon as Jack, one of Billy's
innumerable friends, came into the living room.
"You coming tonight?" Jack asked. He waved casually at Alan, but
focused his attention on Billy, waiting for his response.
"Tonight?" Billy frowned, puzzled. "What's tonight?"
"The lake, man- remember the lake?"
Billy smacked his head in consternation. "The lake! I'd totally
forgotten. But Alan and I were going to check out the new software I
got for the telescope tonight."
"Hell, man, you can look at stars out there. Come on, you know you
want to go." Jack grinned at Alan. "You come, too," he
invited. "You'd like it out there."
"Me? Oh, no, I can't-" Alan protested automatically.
"Why not?" Billy looked at him questioningly. "I think that's a great
idea."
"No, Billy. You go. Have fun." Alan looked away, hiding his
disappointment at losing Billy's company for the night, and also
hiding how much that disappointment disturbed him. Dammit, he wasn't
supposed to get so attached to the kid!
"Yeah, right- have fun, while you sit here and watch the rest of
Ladyhawke without me?" Billy shook his head. "I don't think so. Come
on, Alan- he's right. You'd like it." Then, with a wicked gleam in
his eye, he chuckled. "Or do I have to convince you there's a
dinosaur buried in the beach?"
Alan's mouth quirked in a smile before he could stop it, and he
looked at Billy. His gaze was caught and held by the bottomless brown
depths of Billy's eyes, so warm and inviting... Alan swallowed hard.
He could feel his resolve weakening.
"If I ask really, really nicely?" Billy tilted his head to the side,
smiling. "Pretty please with sugar on top?"
Alan burst out laughing. "Okay, okay- you win! I'll go to this lake
of yours. Just quit looking at me like that- you look like a little
puppy dog."
Jack laughed. "Right on, man. So let's go. The others'll be there
already."
Others? Alan thought. What the hell am I getting myself into this
time?
Billy had jumped up and started rummaging through the hall closet. He
tossed a sleeping bag out, followed by a winter coat and another
sleeping bag. "Alan, c'mere a sec," he called.
Alan sighed and got up, feeling in his bones that this was all a very
bad idea. "Whatcha need?"
"See if this fits." Billy handed him a heavy fatigue jacket,
shapeless and soft.
"What for?" Alan held it up. It looked big enough.
"It's still cold as hell up there, that's what." Billy picked his own
jacket up off the floor and put it on.
"All right, then." Alan shrugged into the jacket. It fit just fine.
Billy grinned at him.
"Now you look like you're ready for an adventure."
"Adventure, hell- ready for an iceberg, maybe, but you know my
opinion of adventure." Alan shook his head ruefully. He'd had more
than his share of adventure in his life.
"Yeah, yeah- I know, all you want to do is dig, right?" Billy smiled
fondly and tugged at the lapels of the jacket.
"You've got it."
Jack picked up the bedrolls. "You guys ready?"
Alan shook Billy's hands off and headed for the door. "Whenever you
are."
There was a truck waiting outside, with someone in it. Billy opened
the passenger door. Warm air rushed out, along with the sound of a
radio show. "Hey Eric- move it or lose it." He climbed into the big
Ford, shoving his friend out of the way good-naturedly. "Why'd you
stay out here, anyway?"
"They're running a Coast-to-Coast marathon," Eric replied. "Didn't
want to miss any of it."
Alan found himself wedged between Billy and the door, listening to
the Art Bell show, as the truck pulled out of the driveway. He
considered briefly the best way to get comfortable, then settled on
laying his arm along the back of the seat and pushing Billy over, so
he didn't feel like he was falling into the crack between seat and
door.
He kept his hand clamped on the back of the seat. Why had he agreed
to this, anyway? Billy was brushing up against him as the truck sped
through the evening, racing the dying sunlight up the mountainside.
Alan could feel him, feel every point of contact along his side, warm
and friendly. Too friendly. Way too friendly.
"Hey," Billy said, twisting around so he was speaking almost directly
into Alan's ear. "Do you get out here often?"
Alan shivered and tightened his grip on both the seat back and his
self-control. "Not at all," he confessed.
"Really? Never?" Billy wriggled a bit closer, resting a hand on
Alan's leg.
*Oh, god.*
"Nope." He steadied his voice with an effort. "I don't get much
chance to get out this way."
"And you've lived here how long?" Billy's smile wrapped him in
warmth.
"Don't ask." He wrenched his eyes away with an effort and looked back
out the window. The scenery really was breathtaking- the Rockies rose
about them, straining to reach the sky. A commercial nattered on
aimlessly on the radio. Shadows blended slowly into night as the sun
gave up the battle with the mountains. Billy leaned a little closer.
"Alan, you work too hard."
"Tell me something I don't know," Alan grunted. Work. Yeah, that was
better- think about work. Keep the mind off the way Billy felt
pressing up against him. Or better yet, look at the stars, emerging
in the clear brittle air. Look at the shadows clinging to the ridges,
look at the changing plantlife, look at anything but Billy.
"Okay," Billy said. "Hmm... well, that's the turn-off for the lake."
Alan was startled into a laugh. "Well- okay, you got me there! I
didn't know that."
The truck made a left onto a narrow dirt track. It bumped and
rattled, nearly drowning out the "open lines" segment of the recorded
radio show marathon. Alan listened with half an ear to the callers,
watching the dramatic scenery for as long as it was visible. Then he
wrenched his mind away from the possibilities of an evening in the
cold, snuggled up with Billy- no, dammit. That way lay trouble.
They reached the lake after about an hour on the road- or off,
depending on how you looked at it. A tiny sliver of moon hung in the
sky, glinting off the still water of the lake, with its fringe of ice
clinging stubbornly to the edges. A large fire burned on the shore,
with two other vehicles parked nearby.
Alan surprised himself that night. He found himself talking,
laughing, and having fun- despite the fact that he knew no one other
than Billy. He wasn't even the oldest one there- always one of his
inner fears when hanging out with Billy's friends. Camaraderie,
campfire, and cold... He had to laugh at himself.
"Alan," Billy said, "move over."
Alan looked up, away from a conversation with someone about
dinosaurs, and saw Billy there in the firelight, sleeping bag in
hand. Alan grinned and slid over on his own sleeping bag, which was
spread out on the ground, folded into a large square. "Cold?"
"Freezing, actually," Billy confessed, dropping down beside Alan and
draping the blanket around both of them. "Warm me up?"
Alan chuckled and wrapped an arm around him. "Not too warm, though-
wouldn't want you to melt. What have you been up to, anyway? You
disappeared on me."
Billy laid his head on Alan's shoulder. "I got sidetracked," he
said. "Jackie caught me and got me started about last weekend- you
know, when I went to Yellowstone with the guys?"
"Yeah. I remember. I actually got some work done."
"Hey, be nice," Billy protested with a laugh. "I warned you not to
invite me back."
"Damn, Billy," Alan sighed, holding him closer for a moment. "Even
though I know I should, I can't tell you to stay away. You know
that."
"Yeah. So why do you always think you should try?"
The world narrowed down to nothing but himself and Billy. Alan felt
his heart pounding. Too close, the kid was getting way too close for
comfort. "Trouble," he said simply.
"I'm trouble?"
"Not you. Others. You're a student, I'm not. Catch plenty of hell
over hanging out with you, as it is."
"Screw 'em," Billy muttered.
"No, thanks. I'd rather not."
Billy snickered. "What's this- you're making a joke?"
"It happens," Alan shrugged. "Once in a while."
"Just about often enough that I don't actually go into shock when it
does."
"Hey, if I'm that boring-"
"I never said you were boring," Billy broke in quickly. His arms
snaked around Alan, holding him loosely. "And even if you were
boring, you're warm enough to make up for it."
"Very funny, Billy," Alan laughed quietly. "I see how you are. Here I
thought you actually liked me- but now I know. You just want a giant
hot water bottle."
"Alan," Billy sighed, raising his head. His eyes reflected glints of
starlight as they fixed on Alan's face. "Don't be silly. You know I
like you."
There it was again- that feeling of falling, drowning in those warm
brown eyes. Recklessly, Alan decided to go with it, rather than
fighting against the kid for once. He smiled. "Yes. I know."
"Then why do you run so fast, hmm? Every time I think I've gotten
through to you, you flip out and run."
"Does it feel like I'm running?" Alan's heart was in his throat. He
couldn't believe he'd just said that.
"Not right now, but-" Billy shook his head. "What about tomorrow? Or
worse yet, Monday?"
"Look," Alan groped for the words to express his situation clearly.
It was hard, because he didn't fully understand himself. "What else
am I supposed to do? I'm Curator of Paleontology at the museum, and
you're a student. They don't look too kindly on university faculty
and affiliates getting friendly with students. And we're definitely
too friendly for their tastes."
"That's all it is, then? Not-"
Alan waited.
Billy sighed. "I guess I understand," he said eventually. "But that
doesn't mean I have to like it. At least I won't be a student
forever."
"Amen to that." Alan rested his cheek on top of Billy's head. How
could he explain to Billy all the complex reactions the kid caused in
him? Easier by far to blame his distance on work.
"I just get the feeling that's not all that's bothering you."
*Very perceptive.* Alan rubbed his shoulder, feeling the smooth
texture of the kid's jacket slide beneath his fingers.
"It's not, is it." Billy shifted, moving away and looking at Alan.
Firelight flickered, and Alan suddenly became aware of the people
around them.
"Uh..." He glanced around. There was a bit of activity- people were
getting up, heading for one of the trucks. "What's up with them?"
Billy looked around. "Looks like some of them are leaving. Wonder
why?" Then he returned his gaze to Alan. "You don't get off that
easy, though."
"How so?" Alan fidgeted. Maybe running was the way to go, after all.
"Crap." Billy shifted, looking around. "Look, my legs are killing me,
and the log's been vacated. Let's go over there, where it's more
comfortable, and you can tell me what's bugging you."
Alan sighed. "Must I?"
Billy stood up, pulling the sleeping bag with him. The cold night air
hit Alan in an icy wave, and he shivered. "Yes. You must."
Alan clambered to his feet as well. He'd really been sitting cross-
legged for far too long- his legs felt like blocks of wood. He picked
up the other sleeping bag and followed Billy to the log. Billy took
one sleeping bag and laid it out on the ground, draping part of it
over the log. Then he dropped down under the other sleeping bag and
leaned up against the log, with a challenging grin at Alan.
"Well? Gonna stay out in the cold all night?"
Alan sighed. "Billy- you're going to get me into so much trouble, you
know that?" He lowered himself down carefully, wishing he was about
twenty years younger.
"Not here, and not now," Billy smiled, holding the blanket up. "Now
come here and tell me what the problem is. I'm tired of guessing."
Alan leaned up against the log, legs stretched out in front of him
under the blanket. "You were right, this is much better."
"Alan..."
"Can't blame me for trying."
"Would you just spit it out already? Is it me?"
Alan blinked. "You? Hardly. The problem's entirely with me."
"So? And no more of that work-related crap. Why do you run from me?"
Brown eyes bored into his, every bit as intense as a raptor.
"Billy..." he sighed. "Look, let's just say I have some problems,
okay? Nothing to do with you."
"Dr. Sattler?"
"Not even." He snorted. That had been doomed from the start. "But
look- friends?"
"Of course. But Alan," and Billy raised a hand to his face, stroking
lightly. "I don't give up easily."
Alan leaned into the touch, eyes closed. "Don't think I don't count
on that, Billy," he whispered.
"So does that mean I shouldn't give up? That maybe someday I'll get
through that barrier and actually reach you?" Alan could hear the
smile in his voice, as he curved his hand around the back of Alan's
head.
"You already have." Alan leaned closer, safe in the darkness behind
his eyelids. There was no one else there, no outside world- no quiet
murmurs of voices, as the remaining group broke off into pairs or
seperated completely and drifted off to sleep. No rules, no fear of
censure or job loss... no fear of commitment, no worries about
driving away the person he cared most about...
"I think you're just scared, aren't you." Billy's arms were around
him again, drawing him closer still.
"Maybe." Alan was quivering deep inside. He slipped a bit further
down, so he was resting more on Billy than the log. "Why do you have
to be so damn young?"
Billy chuckled. "Why doesn't it surprise me that you said that? I'm
not all that young, Alan."
"Yes you are. Trust me, you are. And I'm not- old, worn out, bitter
as hell... and so tired of all the bullshit."
"Hey, what do you mean, old and worn out?" Billy protested
softly. "You are not. And as for bitter, well- you have your
reasons."
"Screwed, and screwed again." Alan sighed. He wished he could remain
like this forever, safe and secure. "Did I ever tell you about the
island?"
"No, you didn't." Billy held him gently, not demanding anything, just
offering closeness and companionship.
"It was hell on earth. They started out so... so beautiful. But they
aren't beautiful. They are dangerous and unpredictable, with no real
social framework or established behavioral patterns... I mean, yeah,
they operate on instinct. And I swear, there's a lot more going on
with the raptors than instinct. They're so smart- they hunted us down
so easily, it was terrifying."
"Why don't they have learned behavior?"
"Because," Alan said, seeing the labs again in his mind's eye. "They
were grown, not hatched into the proper framework of a community.
They were born into a lab, grew up in isolation. There is no way
there for them to learn proper behavior. Part of growing up for any
animal is learning how to be the kind of animal it is... you know
what I'm saying?"
"Yeah- kind of like kittens and puppies. It looks like they're always
playing, but they're really learning how to hunt and interact with
each other."
"Exactly." Alan nodded against Billy's chest. "No social structure,
no way to know how to behave- only instinct. Perhaps, with a proper
social structure, the raptors wouldn't have been so vicious- for a
long time I had nightmares about their nesting grounds. It was like
the ultimate in proof for Malcolm and me, both- that the animals were
breeding at all, and that they didn't know how to raise their own
young..."
"How did they survive?" Billy's hand found its way into Alan's hair,
stroking lightly.
"Luck, I think. Instinct provided them with enough guidance to let
them eat what was good for them, luck let them catch or locate what
was right for them- like the foods rich in lysine."
The stroking hand felt good in his hair. Too good, but he wasn't
fighting it tonight. For once, he felt oddly relaxed about the whole
situation- possibly because of how strange this whole night was. The
evening had definitely been permeated with a sense of unreality, as
though he was on another world, in another life... like he'd wake up
at home in his own bed, and it would still be Friday morning.
"Alan..." Billy murmured, holding him closer. "I'm so glad you
survived. I couldn't believe, at first- and then I read your second
book. It was all real."
"Too real." Alan shivered. "Their eyes were the worst- you could see
them working out problems. You know, it was an incredible idea, but
it was doomed to failure from the start. Just like me and Ellie."
"What happened?"
Alan debated telling him, then figured what the hell. The kid was
determined to chase after him, might as well clue him in as to what
he was in for. "She couldn't handle me, she said. Repeatedly."
"How so?"
"I get a little... overprotective, I guess you could say. Obsessive.
And she didn't like that."
"Well." Billy was quiet for a moment. "I really can't see where she's
coming from, on that one."
"She didn't like me worrying about her all the time. And on top of
that, she wanted kids. Lots of kids."
"Yuck."
Alan laughed. "Yeah. And besides, we got along much better as
friends."
"Good."
Alan sighed deeply. He wished... god, how he wished he was younger,
or Billy was older. Or that there was no problem with the ethics of
getting involved with a student. Or...
"What's wrong now?"
It was getting colder. A bitter breeze snaked its way down the back
of Alan's borrowed jacket, provoking a shiver. He tugged the blanket
up further. "Nothing, really- just thinking."
"Hey, leave some for me!" Billy protested. He pulled on the topmost
sleeping bag, covering Alan completely.
Alan laughed and threw the blanket back, sitting up and opening his
eyes. The burst of cold air was worth it, to see Billy scramble after
the blanket. "See what you get for burying me?"
"Now, wait a minute, here." Billy laughed, with a pouty look. He
scooted down so his shoulders and neck leaned against the log and
pulled the blanket up under his chin. "There- better?"
"Yeah." Alan copied his pose, glad to get back under the warm
blanket. Ridiculous, really- being out here in this kind of cold,
without even a tent. It was barely above freezing, or so his nose
insisted. But then... "You know, the stars look brighter from up
here, somehow."
"Yeah. And it's not like there's that much light pollution in town."
"Hardly any. But here it's different- like the mountains lift us
closer or something."
"Could be. Or it could just be that this is a special place."
"I'd have to agree with that," Alan said, dreamily. "Very special."
"So are you." Billy found his hand and squeezed it.
"Billy... don't go there, okay?"
"Okay, I won't- for now. But I'm telling you, Alan- one of these days
I'll break past those defenses of yours."
"Why?"
"Why?" Surprise colored his voice. "Why? Because I want to."
"Huh."
The conversation continued on into the night, drifting from topic to
topic randomly. They kept their voices low, out of deference to the
sleepers around them. But they didn't sleep until nearly dawn, and
even then Alan remained in a state of semi-awareness. He was both too
exhilirated and too frightened to sleep deeply, so he drifted in and
out of dreams, and he thought of Billy.
//They were stalking him again. He could feel Them getting closer,
but he couldn't see Them. Every detail was there- this time was real.
He could tell. The air was dripping with that particularly tropical
humidity, the kind that made you feel trapped inside a giant sponge.
He could hear others crying in the distance, haunting cries that no
human ears should ever have heard. And the smell- that peculiar
overripe scent of the island. He wasn't sure how he'd gotten there
this time, but here he was, and They were hunting them. He could feel
Their eyes on the back of his neck. He tried to find Them, but it was
useless- Their color-shifting abilities were far too advanced to
allow a weak-eyed creature like a human to find Them unless They
wished to be seen. Where the hell was his flashlight? If he only had
his flashlight, he'd be safe, They couldn't shift fast enough to keep
up with the beam of light, and They hated to be exposed.
There, what was that? The rustling was getting closer. They were
getting closer, and Billy was out there too. Billy was helpless
against Them- he'd never faced anything so dangerous, so ruthless
before... where was he? Where was Billy?//
"Alan!"
//Ah, there he was. Alan fought to get to him, to find Billy before
They did, before he died.//
"Alan! Wake up! It's okay, I'm right here."
//He could hear Billy calling him, begging to help him, but They were
there already. They reached Billy first and attacked with a shrieking
roar, and he could hear Billy calling his name as he died...//
"Alan! Wake up, it's okay now."
Strong arms held him, warm lips kissed his face tenderly, Billy's
voice in his ears... Alan woke with a gasp. He halfway sat up, then
fell back into Billy's arms. He wrapped his arms around Billy's warm
living body, buried his face in his neck.
"Now you know why I don't sleep well," he whispered hoarsely.
"The island?" Billy said softly, stroking tangled hair back from
Alan's face.
"Yeah. Damn near every time I try to sleep."
"That sucks," Billy said. Slowly, Alan relaxed in his arms. This was
much nicer than waking alone from the dreams.
"Sorry," Alan whispered.
"For what?" Billy's voice, although barely audible, still sounded
surprised.
"For waking you up. I should have warned you."
Billy kissed his forehead again, and Alan smiled. "That's all right.
I mean- not all right that you're having nightmares, but all right
that you woke me up. In fact I think I'm flattered."
"How so?" Alan murmured drowsily. The warmth of Billy in his arms and
the soothing comfort of his stroking hands were lulling Alan back to
sleep already, despite the glimmering of dawn on the horizon and the
icy air.
"Because you were calling my name."
"Had to find you, had to get to you before They did."
Billy was safe. He had Billy in his arms, safe and warm and alive.
Alan drifted back into sleep gently, secure and content.
They were at Alan's place, one Friday, for a late lunch and a movie
on cable. The remains of a pizza rested on the coffee table in front
of them, and the movie wound slowly down into the end credits. Alan
reminded himself for maybe the hundredth time that night that he
shouldn't let Billy get too close, then gave up. He wanted Billy to
get too close. Why bother denying it any longer? Ever since that
night, what, two weeks ago now, he hadn't been able to pry the kid
away from his side with a crowbar. Hadn't wanted to, either, much to
the consternation of his coworkers. But all he cared about was Billy,
and the way the kid was showing him how much more to life there could
be than dusty old dinosaur bones.
"Well," Billy started, and sat up. Alan caught at him, pulling him
back down.
"Where do you think you're going?" He smiled, letting his hands
wander for once. Billy shivered and moved closer.
"Work, of course- but you're making that very difficult."
"Good." Alan's hand curved up behind Billy's head, drawing him closer
still. "Billy," he breathed. "I shouldn't be doing this."
Billy smiled. "But you are."
"But I am." Alan looked at the man in his arms. Young, so very young,
but looking back at him with a kind of transparent joy. Alan smiled
and leaned closer, closing the slight distance seperating them. At
first, his lips just brushed lightly against Billy's, then it was
real, and the world vanished into the pleasure of the kiss.
"You have the absolute worst timing," Billy murmured, against his
lips. Alan didn't care.
But then Billy pulled away, and he had to care. "Billy-"
"I'm sorry, Alan, I really am. But you know I have to go now. I have
to go to work."
"Damn work, anyway," Alan muttered. Now that he'd finally gone and
done it, broken down enough to kiss Billy, he wanted more. He
silenced Billy's protests with another intoxicating kiss, not pulling
away until they were both breathless. Then he released Billy,
panting, and watched him struggle up off the couch.
"See you later," Billy said, then left.
****
*Later.*
Alan prowled his house restlessly, waiting for later. He had a
shower, made an effort at straightening up the living room, gave up
on that as hopeless. He tried to watch tv, but that didn't work well.
So he picked up a book, but found himself staring at meaningless
words.
"Ridiculous," Alan growled. He tossed the book aside and went out the
back door to the deck, where his telescope waited. That worked. He
was able to lose himself in trying to get a decent image of the fuzzy
comet that was scheduled to make a close-in appearance sometime near
August.
Billy worked at, of all places, a local Subway sub shop. He was
scheduled from five till nine tonight, which meant he'd get back
anytime between nine thirty and ten. Alan glanced at his watch every
few minutes, but it served no purpose, as he couldn't see the
numbers. And he certainly wasn't about to turn on the light, just so
he could see that it was only eight o'clock, or whatever time it was.
So he glanced, then he returned to adjusting the focus.
Finally, all was set up properly, and Alan clicked open the shutter
on the camera for a time-delay shot of the comet. He stepped back and
let the equipment do its thing, wishing absently that computers were
as easy to master as cameras.
Inevitably, his thoughts turned to Billy. What if the kid just went
home after work? What would he do then? Just sit here like a big
idiot, trying to deal with disappointment.
And hell, why would the kid want to come back, anyway? Alan dropped
to the bench beside the sliding glass door and leaned against the
house, legs stretched out in front of him. He still couldn't figure
out why Billy persisted in hanging around him, anyway. Not like he
was much of a prize- old, tired, and with the social skills of a
fossilized velociraptor.
He shuddered. Bad comparison. The blasted things had left quite an
impact on him, during those hideous days on the island. He still
could see every detail of them, from the highly intelligent eyes to
the fascinating color-shifting ability. Even modern chameleons didn't
possess that degree of control over their skins. An image flashed in
front of his memory, of the ghost-white raptor covered in chain-link
patterns of shadow. Amazing. Absolutely amazing.
But then his objectivity vanished when the thought crossed his mind
that a raptor could blend right in to his bushes and he would never
know it was there. He shivered and wrenched his mind away from the
thought, but not before he glanced around the porch, making sure
there was no motion where there should be none. As if he'd be able to
see anything in the darkness, anyway...
Better by far to think about Billy. Dangerous though the kid was, he
didn't hold a candle to the dangers of the raptors. Billy's danger
was of a more mundane nature, that of caring for another human being.
Not to mention what would happen if their relationship was discovered
by the museum higher-ups... but worry about that later.
He checked the timer on the camera. It had less than a minute to go,
so he waited. He peered through the scope, careful not to bump it,
then the camera beeped softly. He shut it off, then swung the
telescope around to one of his favorite targets- Saturn. He'd just
gotten focused on the rings when he heard the front door open and
close. Alan forced himself to stay bent over the scope as footsteps
sounded inside, then the door slid open.
"Hello."
At the sound of Billy's voice, Alan at last allowed himself to
straighten from the lens and turn around. "Hello, Billy."
"I'm back." Billy smiled shyly, and shoved his hands into the pockets
of his battered yellow jacket.
"I see that." Alan swallowed hard. Well, here it was, later, the
moment he'd been waiting for... He turned and covered the telescope
quickly, snapping lens covers in place and securing the wrappings. "I
was just looking at Saturn."
"Cool."
For once, Billy was as ill-at-ease as Alan himself. Alan paused
before turning away from the scope, trying to decide one last time if
this was really what he wanted. Because once he reached for Billy,
there would be no turning back. Even if nothing happened, tonight
would mark a turning point, because Alan wasn't running any more.
"Hey."
Alan looked up, feeling a smile spreading across his face. Yes. It
was going to be just fine.
"You okay?"
"Very much so," Alan said. He gave the telescope a final pat, then
left it. He went to Billy, still smiling, and took his hand, leading
him inside, where it was warm. "So how was work?"
Billy shut the drapes over the glass door before replying. "Work
sucked," he said, turning his intense eyes on Alan. "Because all I
could think about was you."
Alan wasn't sure who moved first, himself or Billy, but he was sure
that his arms were around Billy, that their lips were meeting with a
fiery urgency that dwarfed the gentle passion of earlier. "Missed
you," he murmured, pushing the windbreaker off Billy's shoulders.
"Missed you too," Billy said, pulling Alan with him towards the
couch.
But Alan stopped him, peeled out of his worn green sweatshirt, and
smiled at Billy's look of complete frustration. "C'mere," he said,
holding Billy's face in both hands, stroking lightly with his
thumbs. "You still sure about this? Still want me?"
Billy blinked up at him, eyes wide. Then he smiled, a slow smile
which spread from his eyes across his entire face. "More than
anything. You know that."
"Then I'm yours." Alan kissed him, no longer afraid. He moved towards
the bedroom, discovering that while it was difficult to kiss someone
while walking, it wasn't impossible.
"Mine," Billy said, in a tone of wonder. He sat on Alan's bed and
stripped his shirt off quickly. "For real? You're not going to regret
this in the morning, run out on me again?"
Alan fumbled with his buttons, frustrated. "No, Billy," he said,
finally giving up and just pulling the shirt over his head. "I'm done
with running."
Then he was on the bed too. He pulled Billy close, reveling in the
feel of warm skin. They sank down together, kissing hungrily. Billy's
hands were everywhere, driving Alan over the edge of rational thought
and into a realm of pure animal passion. He was peripherally aware of
hands undoing his pants, of a moment of seperation- he made an
incoherent sound of loss, reaching out for Billy, then Billy was back
in his arms, with no more clothing to come between them. Better than
his dreams, better than anything he'd ever felt before...
Afterwards, a long time later, Alan was drifting into sleep when he
thought he heard Billy say something, very quietly... "I love you,
Alan."
//Floating free and easy, drift through the grey on wings like a
dove... so easy, so free...
Then They were there, so abruptly that it hurt when the pleasant
drifting vanished into brittle shards. They broke through with a
roar, pinning him against a wall, and They were going to eat him this
time-
-and then Billy smiled at him, and They melted, dripping slowly into
a vanishing puddle on the floor, with a despairing shrieking wail.
They were gone. Billy was there.
He was happy.//
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Something was missing.
Alan woke abruptly, aware that something wasn't quite right. He lay
still for a moment, eyes closed, trying to puzzle out the feeling.
Then he heard the water turn on in the tub, and he remembered...
Billy.
A rush of warmth swept over him with the memory of last night, of
what they'd done. His eyes flew open- well, the eye that wasn't
buried in the pillow did, anyway. His fingers clenched at the sheets,
then he forced them to relax. There was no reason to get upset.
The running water spluttered, then transformed into the sound of the
shower. Alan heard cheerful whistling, then the shower curtain
sliding aside. He could easily imagine Billy in there, water
streaming over his head, down his strong shoulders, across his
chest... Alan swallowed hard, then smiled as he heard Billy singing
something- utterly off-key.
Alan rolled onto his back and stretched. Despite his automatic
panicked response when he'd realized what they'd done, he felt
incredibly relaxed and content. Content- hell, that just wasn't
strong enough to describe what he was feeling. He felt like a cat
purring in sunshine, like the king of the world... like joining Billy
in the shower. Hmm. Interesting possibility.
He rolled out of bed and padded into the bathroom, bare feet making
no sound on the carpet. The room was already steaming up, fog
creeping from the edges of the mirror towards the center. Alan pulled
the shower curtain aside enough to see in, making enough noise to
warn Billy that he was there.
"Mind if I join you?"
Billy turned to face him, washcloth in hand. He smiled. "Not a bit."
Alan stepped into the shower, sliding up against Billy for a wet
kiss. Hot water streamed over both of them. Billy's hands glided down
Alan's back, leaving goosebumps despite the heat.
"One condition, though," Billy murmured when they came up for air.
"What's that?" Alan filled his eyes with the sight of Billy. He
hadn't exactly been looking much last night, in the dark... Billy was
beautiful.
"Wash my back?" He ran the hand still holding the washcloth over
Alan's back, around his side, and up his chest. Alan caught the
washcloth away with a smile.
"Gladly. Turn around." He reached for the soap, working up a generous
lather on the cloth, while Billy turned around and put his hands on
the wall. "Hmmm... better watch out, standing like that- you might
get something other than you expect..."
Billy chuckled and wiggled invitingly. "Is that a threat or a
promise?"
Alan stepped up close, scrubbing at Billy's back with one hand, while
the other hand made explorations of its own on Billy's front. "A bit
of both, I think," he murmured, nibbling at Billy's neck.
"Mmmm..." Billy shivered and twisted around into Alan's arms, kissing
him hungrily. "Good, 'cause I didn't get nearly enough last night."
"Shameless," Alan teased, then gasped. Billy's hands were convincing
him that he didn't really need to take a shower.
"And proud of it." Billy stopped what he was doing long enough to
rinse off. Alan watched him with a slight smile on his face, watched
the soap bubbles and the water streaming down Billy's skin... nice.
Very nice.
Then Billy was done rinsing, and Alan pressed up against him again,
kissing him, while he reached down one-handed and turned off the
water. "Come on, too slippery in here."
"Agreed." Billy pulled away and opened the shower curtain. He made a
cursory attempt to dry off, then passed the towel to Alan.
"Oh yeah, right- give me the wet, used towel..." Alan smiled and
rubbed at his hair. He made an even more cursory attempt to dry off
while Billy laughed at him.
"Not my fault you've only got one towel."
"And how would you know how many towels I've got, anyway? There's
more than one, they're just all dirty."
Then he decided he was dry enough and tossed the now-soaked towel
onto the counter, propelling Billy backward out of the bathroom,
across the bedroom, and into the bed.
****
"Hey."
Billy dropped his backpack and perched on the wall beside
Alan. "Where've you been?" He didn't look away from the sunset, well
aware that he wouldn't be able to control his reactions in public.
"Sorry I'm late- I got hijacked by some friends. They seemed to think
I needed to go to the Mall."
"Oh. When you didn't show up, I was worried."
"Sorry about that. I got away as soon as I could- and I tried to call
you, but there was no answer."
Alan snorted. No, there wouldn't have been an answer... When the kid
hadn't showed up after his last class, he'd gone out to try and find
him. No Billy, anywhere- not at the student center, or the library,
or the inside of the planetarium- no answer on the kid's home
phone... what happened? Where was he? Was he mad? What had Alan done
to make him stay away...? "Nah, I wasn't in."
"Alan... what's wrong?" Billy reached out, then thought better of it.
There weren't many people around the outside of the planetarium on a
Friday evening, but better not to take any chances.
"Nothing, really. Just-" Alan shrugged. He glanced at Billy, then
looked away before he could forget where they were and wrap his arms
around the kid to reassure himself that everything was alright.
"You really were worried, weren't you," Billy said softly. "I'm
sorry, Alan, I really am. I'll make it up to you, okay?"
The soft, caressing tone of the kid's voice was almost enough to make
up for the worry. "Is that a promise?" Alan smiled, thinking of ways
he could hold the kid to that offer.
"Yes, most definitely," Billy breathed, in that unmistakably sensual
tone which sent shivers racing up and down Alan's spine. "I missed
you badly, and I wanted to get away- but they were teasing me like
hell about, well, about you, so I stayed. But now- I have a lot to
make up for, don't I?"
"Yes," Alan agreed. "Yes, you do. And you know what?"
"What's that?"
"Crandal can damn well do his charting alone tonight."
Billy chuckled and rose from the wall. "I was hoping you would say
that. Your place? So no one interrupts?"
"Sounds good to me."
Alan rose from the low brick wall, starting off around the building
to the parking lot. He felt rather silly, now, for his earlier
worries and fears- obviously, the kid had a life of his own, and it
wasn't like they were out in the open about this anyway. But he
couldn't help it- it was part of his nature to worry about things
that were out of his control, to stress out over small things... he
wondered if Billy could understand.
Once in the safety of the truck, Billy reached out for him. "Alan-"
"What?" Alan threw the truck into reverse, backing out of his spot.
"How's this going to work, having to pretend we're just friends?" He
sighed. "Never mind. It's going to work, because you're worth it."
"You sure?" There it was again, the paranoid fear clawing at his
throat. He tried to ignore it, concentrating on getting the truck out
of the parking lot and through the streets of the town.
"Positive. Absolutely positive." Billy smiled. Alan dropped his hand
down to Billy's, where it rested on his thigh.
"I still can't see why you say that."
"Because it's true." Billy's smile widened. "Where else am I going to
find someone willing to look at stars with me, or indulge my
obsessions for digging up dinosaurs and watching movies?"
"Seems like you could find someone, somewhere."
"But I don't want someone, Alan." Billy grew serious for a moment. "I
want you."
*I can only hope he really means that,* Alan thought. *That he won't
change his mind, or decide that it was much more fun chasing after me
than being stuck with me...*
But when they reached Alan's home, his fears dissolved, laid to rest
by Billy's ardent apology.
*Hmm*... Alan looked over the myriad faces in the lecture hall,
wondering how to catch their attention. They stared back at him with
varying degrees of interest, with Billy being the only one who looked
fully alert. Alan smiled to himself. *Screw the ethics. This'll
really throw 'em for a loop*...
"Anyone know why I said the animals of Jurassic Park weren't real
dinosaurs?"
A sea of blank faces greeted his question, except for Billy's. He
looked puzzled for a moment, then his eyes crinkled and he raised a
hand to his mouth, probably smothering a laugh.
"Yes, Mr. Brennan? You have the answer for us?"
"Yes, Dr. Grant, I believe I do." Billy smiled. "Because the animals
there had no knowledge of themselves as dinosaurs. They had no
parents to teach them behavior, no established social structure. They
had nothing to go on but instinct. Am I right?"
"Sounds like you've got it to me." Alan returned the smile, glad
Billy was there. Somehow, seeing a friendly face in the mass of
students made this much easier. Plus, the memory of that night, when
they'd had this discussion before, was very warming.
"And what about these creatures? What exactly are they, and do they
have a right to independent existence?"
That woke them up. Students other than Billy began to take an
interest in the discussion, although Billy was still the most willing
to volunteer information and theories.
The discussion wound down to a natural closing point a few minutes
before the end of class, so Alan packed his things away and released
the group early. Billy waited, while people made their ways out of
the lecture hall.
"Alan? Got a minute?"
Alan glanced at Billy. He quirked an eyebrow and indicated the door,
but Alan shook his head and shrugged. Billy sighed, but nodded
understanding and left. Alan returned his attention to Dr. Browning,
who'd watched the interaction with faint surprise.
"What's up?" Alan asked, burying his regret beneath a layer of firm
control and professional demeanor.
"I hadn't realized you knew Mr. Brennan." The somewhat rumpled man
peered at him out of sharp brown eyes, not missing a detail.
"Yes, he's spent a couple summers on the dig, and helped out in the
lab a few times. Why?" Alan tried for casual, tried not to snap the
man's head off. He hadn't implied anything at all, just asked a
question.
"Just wondering." The brown eyes rested on him a moment longer,
considering, then flicked towards the clock. "I suppose I'd better be
going. I was just curious, though- it's not like you to get overly
friendly with the students."
*Oops.* "Well, maybe not- but he's hardly my student. More my
research assistant than anything else."
"Good." Browning nodded decisively. "See you Friday, then?"
"Same time, same place," Alan sighed. Really, he didn't like doing
these guest lecturer spots at all. He'd gotten out of the habit of
teaching. At least this time Billy was here, even if it was in a
field he'd never remotely considered teaching in before. "Is that
all, then?"
"Yes." Browning shifted his attention to his briefcase. Alan shrugged
and moved away, heading for the door.
"Just be careful, Dr. Grant," Browning said behind him. But it was
quiet enough that Alan could ignore the warning and move on as though
he hadn't heard.
Outside the door to the lecture hall, Billy was waiting. Alan felt
the tension lift from his shoulders and his face relaxed into a
smile.
"Sorry about that," he said. "I had a feeling you'd wait, though."
Billy smiled and fell in beside him as they progressed through Wilson
Hall. "Of course. What was up?"
"Just Dr. Browning, wondering why I'm on such good terms with one of
his students."
Billy twitched with irritation. "Nosey old bugger. He bothers me."
"How so?" Alan felt the familiar urge to protect, to take care of
someone who was important to him.
"Always gives me the creeps. I'm not sure why, it's just... something
in the way he watches us, I guess."
"Us?"
"The students. He gets this look on his face, like- I don't know. I
can't describe it. But he bugs me."
"Well, that's not good- considering that he's teaching a course on
moral theory and ethics. And why didn't you tell me you were taking
that class, anyway?"
"Thought you knew."
"If I'd known, I wouldn't have been so surprised when you walked in."
"And here I'd thought you were just surprised because I was on time."
"Well, that too," Alan admitted. "Where are you heading now?" They'd
reached the front door, emerging into the pale spring sunlight.
Stately evergreens rippled and shimmered in the breeze, casting
shifting shadows across the front of the old building.
"Nowhere, really- no classes until four. How about you?"
"I should go back to work." Alan sighed regretfully. It really was a
beautiful day.
"I don't think so." A mischievous grin appeared on Billy's face. "I
think you should come with me."
"What?" Alan automatically followed as Billy set off through the
trees.
"Is the truck over here, or did you walk?"
"Are you kidding? Nice day like this, of course I walked. Now where
are you going?"
"To the truck," Billy replied, with an infuriatingly cheerful grin.
"Well, I kind of figured that," Alan said at his dryest. "Now will
you kindly tell me what's going on in that devious little mind of
yours?"
"Not now, Alan- I'm plotting!" Billy's eyes sparkled. Alan made a
half-hearted attempt at getting annoyed, then gave it up as useless.
The kid was just too damn cute for his own good when he got in one of
these playful moods.
"Fine, then- plot away, but you're not going to get anywhere as long
as I have the keys."
"Yes I will. Because you're going to take me where I want to go.
Aren't you?"
One look at the artful pleading expression Billy wore was enough to
set Alan off laughing. "Not if you don't tell me where that is," he
said at last.
"Hmmm," and Billy smiled, a sly little smile. "The Mall?"
Alan fished his keys out of his pocket, toying with them. "You're
just bound and determined to get me out there, aren't you?"
"Yeah, sure am!"
"What is it about that place, anyway, that you want me to see so
badly?"
"Nothing, really- just the whole place itself. It's really cool.
You'd love it. And they have the best sub shop in town..."
"So you keep saying." Alan tossed his keys, caught them, then
nodded. "Okay. You win. I'll go to this mall of yours."
"Ha! It's about time!"
Alan surrendered to the inevitable and went to the Mall. It was a
street, really, with dozens of little shops and sidewalk cafes. It
was fairly crowded- after the long winter, people were more than
willing to get out and enjoy some sunlight.
Alan had to laugh at the name of the place Billy made a beeline for-
"The Best Little Sub Shop In Town."
"Billy," he said, "I thought you meant the place had the best subs,
not the owners with the biggest egos..."
"The egos are deserved this time. Trust me, you'll see." They carried
their orders out to a table in the sun and sat down.
"If I didn't trust you, I wouldn't be here." Alan meant for that to
come out light and teasing, but it backfired. Billy caught the
serious tone and smiled slowly.
"I know." The sun picked out the highlights in his hair that Alan
hadn't seen since the previous summer. For one long moment, Alan was
conscious of everything and nothing- the way the wind played with the
leaves of the tree down the sidewalk, the warmth of sun on his thigh,
the crisp clean scent of spring, the murmur of conversations from
other tables- all of which was both intensely clear, yet meaningless,
reduced to insignificance by the look on Billy's face.
*I do not deserve this,* Alan thought, drinking in the details of the
moment. *What could I have possibly done to merit this?*
"Dr. Grant?"
Alan shook himself, the magic shattered, and turned to face the
speaker. "Yes? Oh- hello, Dr. Hutchings. Out for a late lunch?"
"Actually, I had an errand to run which brought me down here. May I
ask what you are doing?"
Alan kept his expression smooth and pleasant with an effort. "Just
came here for a sandwich. I missed lunch, as I was busy with the
Philosophy class."
Her eyes narrowed as she nodded. "I see. And this would be...?" She
looked at Billy, hostility flickering under her icily professional
gaze.
"Haven't you met before? Dr. Hutchings, this is Billy Brennan, my
research assistant. He's the one that's managed to keep the computers
running smoothly this year."
"Pleasure to meet you," Billy said, extending a hand. She took it in
a brief handshake, then drew back.
"I wasn't aware that you had an assistant outside of the department."
Alan seethed inside. If she hadn't been the head of the paleontology
department, he'd have been sorely tempted to say something rude. But
she was his boss, so he swallowed his resentment and nodded. "Yes,
actually he's been working with me since last season. Billy's been
very helpful."
"I'm glad to hear that, Dr. Grant. However," and she paused, with a
significant look at Alan, "perhaps you should devote more time to
your work, and less time to personal pursuits, especially in the
company of students. Or have you completed the work on the fossils
for the new exhibit?"
"Very nearly, Dr. Hutchings. Nearly enough that I feel secure in
taking enough time off for a lunch break." Alan couldn't keep his
voice completely devoid of emotion- some of his distaste oozed
through his control.
"Excellent. Don't let me stop you, then."
She turned, with the precision and economy of movement that
characterized every gesture she made, resumed her brisk walk down the
street.
"Bitch," Billy muttered. Alan waited until he was sure she was out of
earshot before he replied.
"There's times I'd agree with you on that, but still- she is my boss.
And she really does have a valid point."
"Excuse me?" Billy raised his eyebrows and shot Alan a disbelieving
look. "Explain."
"She's right, you know." Alan looked down at his sandwich, which
suddenly wasn't nearly as appetizing as it had been a few minutes
ago. "I should be back at the museum. I have work to do."
"Bull." Billy was tense, eyes lit with an inner fire. "You know why
she said that? It had nothing to do with you having to work. She
didn't like me."
Alan shifted uncomfortably. "I noticed. And that's not good, not good
at all."
"Why not?" Billy pounced on him with all the intensity of a striking
predator. "Why isn't it good? And why didn't you tell her that it's
none of her damn business who you've got working with you in your
lab, and it's none of her damn business who you're with in your free
time."
"Billy, she's in charge of the entire Department of Paleontology.
What do you expect me to do, tell her to leave me alone?"
Billy nodded. "Yes, Alan, that is exactly what I expect you to do.
Look, how many times is this going to happen?"
"What?" Alan blinked, taken completely by surprise.
"You giving in to some high-and-mighty idiot that's just trying to
jerk your chain. Or mine, for that matter. You need to stand up for
yourself sometime, Alan. You let them walk all over you. Do this, do
that- oh no, you can't do *that*, it just wouldn't be proper..."
"Billy!" Alan protested, getting over his shock. "Things don't work
like that. This is my career we're talking about. Think about it. I
have to keep the higher-ups happy. They give me money. I give them
dinosaurs, all pre-packaged and sanitized for the general public. If
I go against what they want, I'm out on the street."
"Have you ever stood up for anything you believe in?" Billy's eyes
bored into him relentlessly. "Have you ever just taken a chance?"
"Not with my way of life." Alan leaned forward a little. "Think about
it, Billy. You've got no real worries- got your grants and loans to
cover your tuition and living expenses, plus some on the side from
your job, and no real bills to speak of. But me- I don't have it that
easy. This job is all I've got."
"That's where you're wrong, Alan." Billy pushed his chair back and
stood up. "You've got me."
Then he turned and walked away.
Alan stared, heart in throat, for a few seconds, until his mind came
out of its stunned state. "Billy!" He scrambled to his feet, nearly
toppling the small metal table. Then he steadied himself and caught
up to Billy in a few long strides.
"Don't go," he choked out, around a sudden mind-numbing terror. He'd
faced a rampaging T. rex and hunting velociraptors with less fear
than he felt at this moment.
"Why not, Alan? Going to give me a reason to stay?"
The cold, shuttered look Billy wore was enough to tie his midsection
into knots. "Billy- don't do this to me, don't make this a choice
between you and my life-" That was the wrong thing to say. He could
see it immediately, in Billy's response- a flare of anger, then
nothing, and Billy turned to walk away again. "Look, I said that
wrong. You're part of my life, an important part- but can't you see
where I'm coming from?" He caught Billy's arm. "Can we at least go
sit down again, instead of discussing this in the middle of the
sidewalk?"
Billy nodded once, sharply. Alan felt a hint of relief- maybe the kid
would be willing to listen to reason, to not go running off like
that...
They went back to the table and sat down, scaring a pair of sparrows
away from the abandoned subs. "Well?" Billy said, arms crossed on his
chest.
Alan took a deep breath and tried to organize his thoughts. "I don't
know what to say." Billy snorted. "Really- I care about you. You know
that. But I also care about my job. I've been out in this world long
enough to realize that life's not fair, and sometimes, to survive,
you have to put up with getting screwed around. What you said is
very..." He paused, searching for the words. Billy's eyes didn't
waver from his face. "...very *right*. I shouldn't let anybody
dictate my life, or who I spend time with, or any of the rest of it.
But in reality, there's other factors involved. Can't you understand
that?"
"I can understand that you always want to play it safe- that you'll
never take chances." Billy's voice was still tight with anger,
although not nearly as furious as before.
"Billy..." Alan started, then found the answer he was looking
for. "The way I see it, there's two kinds of people- the astronomers,
and the astronauts." Surprise flickered across Billy's face, but he
didn't say anything. "The astronomers are the ones who sit back and
observe from a position of perfect safety. But the astronauts are the
ones who get out there and go for it, who launch into space at any
risk... do you see what I'm saying?"
"Yes, Alan." Billy sighed. "I do see. You're the ever-cautious
astronomer. But even astronomers have been known to go out on a limb
sometimes."
"I... I can't. I just can't risk it." Alan shook his head sadly. "I
need some form of security in my life. Can't you understand?"
Billy nodded. "Yes, Alan. I can understand. Forgive me if I seem
unreasonable, but I can't help but think you could find a way to have
your security without being a doormat. Now if you'll excuse me, I
think I'll walk back. It's only a couple miles."
This time, Alan didn't stop him when he left, just sat and stared at
his forgotten sandwich.
Billy was gone.
He'd never done that before, never just got up and walked away. The
ever-present fear within him, the fear of losing Billy, uncoiled and
struck full force.
*Stupid, Grant- really stupid. You never should have done this.
Safer, so much safer to just keep the kid away, to not care...*
But he knew, even as he thought it, that it was impossible not to
care. He needed Billy. The kid was part of his life now, one he
couldn't do without. And now he'd gone and pissed the kid off. Now
what? How could he face life without Billy, if the kid was mad enough
to just walk away? And all because he was trying to keep his job
safe. Maybe the kid was right. Maybe he needed to tell the bitch to
shove it, that it was none of her concern who helped him out in the
lab. But it was her concern... after all, as head of the department,
she was ultimately responsible for everything that went on within the
department.
Alan got to his feet slowly. The magic of the day had been utterly
destroyed, shattered beyond repair. He walked slowly down the street
to where they'd left the truck and got into it. There was no Billy in
the passenger seat. Would there ever be again?
*You've got me,* he had said. *Got*, not *had*- maybe that was a
positive sign, an indication that the kid was willing to work through
this. Alan hoped so.
He drove back to the museum. It was Wednesday. Billy should have been
there to help him work with the designer, planning out the new
displays for the summer. Somehow, he doubted Billy would be there.
He wasn't. Alan immersed himself in the discussion with the designer,
planning what would go where, how the displays would intertwine, what
kind of interaction they could manage for the younger children...
But all he could see in his mind was Billy walking away.
By the time Alan got home that night, he was so tense that he had a
mind-boggling headache. Billy wasn't there. The phone remained
stubbornly silent.
Alan knocked back a few painkillers for his headache and took a shot
at proofreading the paper he'd just finished, with Billy's help.
*Situational Ethics: an in-depth look at the morality of species
genesis.* In it, he'd followed the course of discussions between
himself and Billy, expanded it a bit with material from the class
he'd taught recently, and packaged the whole in a form suitable for
any one of a dozen science journals. But it wasn't helping to
distract him from thoughts about Billy.
The headache began to ease off a bit, finally responding to the
medication. Much better. The house was quiet and peaceful... too
quiet. Alan would have given anything to have Billy there, with the
tv cranked up a hair too loud, flipping through the cable channels
and exclaiming with delight over whatever was on the History Channel.
Or maybe finding a movie on Showtime or HBO... Alan smiled fondly. He
wondered it the kid had ever guessed that the main reason he was
willing to sit through so many movies was to make Billy happy.
Something they could do together, without worrying what people would
think- with or without an attendant crowd of Billy's friends sprawled
across his couch and floor. Didn't matter if they were there or not,
Billy would be happy...
*You've got me.*
"Do I?" Alan said aloud. "Do I really?"
He pushed away from his desk, suddenly unable to look at the paper
any longer. He looked at the silent phone, reached for it. Then he
let his hand fall. Did he really want to make that call, to find out
whether Billy was at home or not? No.
Suddenly, the house was too confining. He had to get out, had to go
somewhere- the lake. Yeah. That would work.
He went back out, got in the truck. Hmm, looked like getting some gas
would be a good idea. He headed for his usual station, filled it up,
then hit the road.
Driving steadied his nerves. The steady roar of the engine, the hum
of the tires on the road, the rising moon- it was all very peaceful,
very tranquil. He followed the road up into the mountains, driving
too fast but not caring. There was a certain freedom to the feeling
of flying through the night, along the level approach to the
mountains, then hitting the first curves with reckless speed.
By the time he reached the lake, Alan was marginally calmer. He
parked the truck and got out, wandering along the shoreline. There
was the blackened spot where the bonfire had been, there was the log
where he'd spent his first night nestled in Billy's arms... He
sighed.
Would the kid be there when he got back? He hoped so. He walked along
the sandy shore until it changed into a steep rocky incline, plunging
into the frigid waters of the mountain tarn. Then he turned and
wandered back to the log, perching on it and playing with the sand.
Not sand, strictly speaking- more like very fine gravel, a leftover
from glacial ice, and worn down by the lapping of the waves on the
shore...
Billy. What was he going to do about the kid? He wanted this to work
out, he really did- but could he get around his own damn
insecurities? Out here he could admit it- here, where the only
witness to his thoughts was the whispering wind. He let the grainy
sand trickle through his fingers. He was going to have to hope Billy
had meant what he'd said... *You've got me.*
He had to get himself sorted out. He'd let the kid in, let him get
close- even though he'd known it was a bad idea. But it was too late
now, and he was going to have to strike some kind of new balance. The
kid was important. Seeing him walk away like that had only
underscored how important he'd become. Alan fought the panic down,
before it could take control and undo all the good the moonlit drive
had done. The kid still wanted him. He had to. Because he still
wanted the kid. Just because he could be an idiot didn't mean he
couldn't recognize a good thing when he had his nose rubbed in it...
He sighed.
Maybe he'd better get back home. Really, driving out here had been
pointless, from a strictly practical point of view, but he felt
better. Yes, he'd go home, and call Billy, and apologize.
And he'd find a way to deal with the people at work that wouldn't
hurt the kid.
He drove home much more carefully than he'd made the trip up. The
night was quiet, with very few cars on the road. Luck was with him-
the three traffic lights between the open highway and his house were
green. He pulled into his driveway, half expecting to see Billy's car
there. It wasn't.
*Don't even start, idiot,* he told himself firmly, and went inside.
He tossed his jacket and hat in the general direction of the couch
and picked up the phone, not even needing to turn a light on to get
Billy's number right. The phone rang. And rang.
And rang.
Somewhere after the tenth ring, Alan gave up. Billy wasn't home. And
he hadn't turned the answering machine on, either. He put the
receiver down carefully, numb inside. Now what? The kid wasn't home.
He made his way to the couch through the darkness. He wasn't sure how
long he sat there, not thinking, leaned back against the cushions of
the couch and staring at the shadows on the ceiling. Eventually, he
shook off his apathy enough to go in the bedroom. Might as well lay
in bed and stare at the ceiling.
He made an effort to go through his usual nighttime routine, although
he couldn't quite face the shower. Too many memories in there
already.
He paused on his way out of the bathroom, one hand on the light
switch. There was a lump in his bed.
A Billy-shaped lump.
Alan shut the light off. Relief made him light-headed. Billy was
there. He gripped the doorframe for a moment, then crossed the room.
He sat on the edge of the bed and rubbed Billy's back.
"Hey kid, wake up," he said quietly.
"Mmmmmm," Billy responded, moving slightly.
"C'mon, you can do it," Alan coaxed. His hand wandered up and down
Billy's back. "Wake up."
"Do I have to?" The sleepy protest made Alan smile.
"Yes, you have to. Wake up, now."
Billy rolled over, stretching, and yawned. Alan rested his hand on
Billy's stomach, suddenly sure that everything would be just fine.
"I'm sorry, Billy," he said. Billy sighed.
"I'm sorry, too- I shouldn't have gotten so upset. I know you
wouldn't really put your job over me, but I was just so damn mad..."
"No, you had a right to be mad. I'm sorry. I shouldn't have let her
get away with that. I'm going to have to find a way to make this
work. Because I really want it to, okay? And I'm going to do better."
"Alan," Billy interrupted. "It's okay. Now will you quit apologizing
and kiss me?"
"Gladly," Alan breathed. He bent down and kissed Billy, first on the
forehead, then on the lips. He felt Billy's hand reach up and tangle
in his hair. He transfered his attention to Billy's jawline, to his
neck, his shoulder...
"Alan..."
"Hmm?" Alan nibbled on Billy's collarbone.
"Got a problem here."
Alan froze, instantly apprehensive. "What?"
"You're out there." Billy moved over, holding the covers up. Alan's
apprehension melted away into a warm glow. He slid under the covers,
up against Billy.
Their lips met again. "Billy... I thought you'd gone for good." But
he wasn't- he was here, in Alan's arms, warm and willing.
Alan shivered as Billy licked along the edge of his lip. "Never," he
whispered, then kissed Alan again. "I could never leave you."
"Good-" was all Alan had time to say, before all rational thought was
engulfed in a wave of pure passion.
****
Alan stood behind the chair, resting his hands on Billy's shoulders.
The computer beeped, then obediently launched the new program.
"That's it, then? It'll work now?"
Billy leaned back and smiled up at him. "It'll work. All you need to
do is click on the little skull icon to start it. Then it'll do the
rest. And it'll even remind you if something's missing from the
file."
Alan shook his head. "I'll bet I can still find a way to mess it up."
Billy reached up and covered one of Alan's hands with his own,
drawing breath to reply, when the door to the lab banged open. Both
men jumped and turned towards the door, eyes wide.
"Dr. Grant, I-" The intruder looked up from the papers in his hands
and froze.
"Dr. Kessler. Can I help you?" He stepped away from Billy, feeling
his guts clench tight with apprehension. Just what he needed, the
Assistant Director of the museum.
"Yes." The assistant director's eyes bored into him, cold and
grey. "If you'll excuse us?" He glanced significantly at Billy, who
rose with a quiet goodbye to Alan and left. Kessler watched him
leave, then turned on Alan as soon as the door closed. "Dr. Grant.
I've spoken with you before about having people here who aren't
affiliated with the museum program."
"He's my research assistant," Alan said flatly. He leaned against the
table and crossed his arms over his chest.
"On the digs, perhaps- but this is museum property, and he is not
employed by the museum. And he is, in fact, a student not majoring in
museum studies, and has no reason to be here. And what's more, I've
had complaints about you, involving inappropriate conduct."
"What kind of complaints?" He kept his voice steady, not reflecting
any of the sick dread within him. It was happening, oh god it was
happening- what he'd been afraid of all along.
"There are people who allege, and based on what I've seen here I'm
inclined to believe them, that you are involved in an inappropriate
relationship with Mr. Brennan. This behavior is immoral and unethical
and must be stopped immediately. This museum is part of the
University, and as such must be a safe environment for all of our
students. Faculty and staff must conduct themselves appropriately at
all times. I'm placing you on probation, Dr. Grant. You have been
warned about this behavior in the past and obviously have not heeded
those warnings. Perhaps you will heed the official probationary
process and cease this shameful abuse of your position."
"Excuse me?" The words were out before Alan could stop them,
propelled by the cold fire of rage building steadily within. "I have
done nothing wrong. There are no rules, laws, or regulations against
someone in my position finding an assistant, regardless of major. And
there is *nothing* immoral, unethical, or shameful about having that
assistant install a new program on a computer."
"Perhaps not, Dr. Grant, but it is your behavior in question here,
not the duties of the assistant- who, might I add, is still not
officially part of the museum staff, and still has no right to be in
this employee only area. Consider this matter closed. You will be
under official observation for the rest of the semester."
Alan glared at Kessler, unable to think of anything to say that
wouldn't endanger his job further.
"Now, I originally came down here to tell you that we must have the
nesting display completed by next week."
"Talk to Cass," Alan interrupted. "We finished cleaning the last of
the skeletons last week." He remembered Billy laughing at him as he'd
packed the last partial skull away carefully. *They're rocks, Alan-
what, do you think they're going to break?* And his own answer,
*Maybe not, but I just put an awful lot of effort into restoring
them, and I don't want to risk any further damage.*
Then Billy had caught his hands and pulled him close, his smile
lighting the entire room, and kissed him.
"Very well then. Now, make sure you conduct yourself appropriately in
the future. And if Mr. Brennan is seen here again, further action
will be taken."
Dr. Kessler turned sharply and left.
*Fuck.*
Alan sank down in the chair, head in hands. Well, it had happened-
the jig was up, the word was out, and he was officially a marked man.
And all because he had a weakness for the kid.
"Alan? I saw him leave, is it safe to come back?" Billy's voice
sounded from the door, and he raised his head and turned.
"No."
Billy blinked. "What?"
"I said no. It's not safe to come back. In fact, you have to leave,
and not come back here again."
Alan felt cold, distant, as though he weren't really connected to the
person saying the words. Billy's eyes, confused, focused on his face.
"What do you mean, Alan?" The confusion in his voice was like a knife
to the gut.
"You have to leave. Now. And you can't come here anymore. I'm on
probation, and they'll have someone watching me like a blasted hawk
for the rest of the semester. And if they see you here, I'm in even
deeper. Now go."
He turned away, unable to look at the kid any longer.
There was a long moment of silence, while Alan attempted to go back
to work. Then, "We'll talk about this later." And a faint scuffling
noise, as Billy turned and left.
Alan buried himself in the mind-numbing work, using it to distract
himself from the lost feeling inside. The sorting room was suddenly
echoingly empty, filled only by remnants of a past so old they didn't
even have ghosts clinging to them. His fingers tapped automatically
at the keys, entering information into the new program- *that Billy
had set up* -and slowly reducing the never-ending backlog of
paperwork.
After a while, the pain went numb inside. He forced himself to
distance his emotions, thinking objectively, until he could see that,
yes, continuing the close relationship he had with Billy was a very
bad idea. It was bad for the school, it was bad for the museum, it
was even bad for him and Billy both. Just a bad deal all around. He
would break it off cleanly, he would not ever allow inappropriate
feelings to color his judgment again-
*-he would go home to an achingly empty house, he would not go over
to Billy's for any reason or no reason, he would never taste those
warm and willing lips again...*
His heart twisted. His soul cried out, a wordless wail of protest
that resolved into an all-encompassing *why?*
----------------------------------------------------------------------
"Why, Alan?"
Billy huddled in on himself, a bundle of tension. His eyes were wide,
staring with blank incomprehension.
*This can't go on. We have to stop this, now, before things get any
worse.*
It had sounded good earlier, in his head. In fact, it had sounded
reasonable and well thought out. But now, with Billy in front of him,
looking at him... now it didn't sound so good.
"Because this is all a bad idea," he muttered, unable to meet those
eyes any longer.
"What is, Alan? Having a part-time lover?"
Alan winced and looked back at Billy, hurt. "You're not- you know I
care, too much-"
"Then blow this off. We have something good going here. Let's not let
these assholes screw it up for us."
"Billy- you don't understand. It's not just 'these assholes,' it's
your future, and mine. You don't need this kind of trouble. And my
job is on the line here. And I knew I should never have-" His throat
closed up and he swallowed, hard. "Look, personal feelings aside, it
looks bad, you know? And this is a small town, a college town- you
know how that would affect your future here."
"Alan." Billy shook his head. "That didn't even make sense. I'm not
going to let you dump me without a damn good reason, and maybe not
even then. Why the hell are you trying to pull this crap?"
"I told you. This isn't working. You're too young, we're too
different, and we just can't go on like this. Please understand."
"All I understand is that you're scared again. You're running, just
like you did before. Just because Dr. Kessler doesn't like me."
"It's not that. Can't you see? We've been heading for trouble, all
along." Alan willed himself to believe it, to remember how awkward it
was to hide things at work, even to remember how downright dangerous
it could be to be seen together in public. People out here didn't
approve of some kinds of relationships, no matter who was involved.
"I don't see that at all. In fact, up until the minute Kessler walked
into that room, I'd say things were going damn good. Or don't you
remember as far back as this morning?" Billy's lips curved in a
gentle smile, remembering.
"But-" Alan took a deep breath. "There's more to life than sex.
What's the good of having a relationship if we can't be open about
it?"
"Ask that of all the thousands of closeted couples out there. I'm
sure they'll tell you there's ways around prejudice."
"Dammit, Billy- think for a minute! Suppose we do stay together.
Suppose Kessler finds out. I lose my job. With that kind of black
mark on my record, to go along with the aftermath of the island,
who's going to hire me? From the viewpoint of the schools and
museums, I'm going to look like a pervert, preying on impressionable
students. And then we'd be stuck trying to survive on your part-time
Subway job."
"If you cared," Billy said softly. His voice trembled. "If you
really, really cared about me, it wouldn't matter. I'd give up
everything for you."
"But that's not the point." Alan realized his hands were clenched
together so tightly on his knee that the bones were creaking. He
forced them to relax. "The point is that neither one of us should
have to be in that situation. How long do you think this could last
if I lost my career?"
"When you said you were mine, I took that to mean forever."
He couldn't do it. He couldn't face the pain in those eyes any
longer. He had to look away. "Billy... can't we just be friends? It's
safer. I can't be seen with you, I can't have you as assistant at the
museum any longer- how can we survive that kind of strain without
coming to hate each other?"
"I could never hate you, Alan."
"You could. If I lost everything, if everything went to hell- things
would change between us. Better to end it now, before disaster
strikes. If I lose my job..."
"So what you're saying is, your job really *is* more important to you
than I am."
Ooh, that hurt.
"And you'd rather give in to the demands of a bigoted asshole than
give things a chance with me."
Alan hunched over, curling around the stabbing, twisting pain brought
on by Billy's words... and the niggling, guilty little suspicion that
he was right.
"And you really don't care enough to try to overcome your fear."
The quiet, calm voice was tearing him to shreds. He could have
handled violent temper, rejection, denial- anything but this calm
dissection of his motives.
"Billy- you *are* important to me, and I *do* care about you, but I
can see that this can't go on!"
Billy looked away, eyes glistening. "You've got yourself convinced, I
can tell." He swallowed. "And you're one of the most stubborn men
I've ever known. Okay." Alan saw a single tear spill over, falling
down Billy's cheek. He watched its path with morbid fascination,
longing to reach out and brush it away. "I'll go. But I refuse-" and
his voice broke. He took a few deep breaths, then looked at Alan and
continued. "I refuse to go away entirely. Maybe you can't deal with
me as a lover. Maybe you're actually right, and it's a bad idea-
which I don't believe for a minute. But I'll be *damned* if I'm just
going to let you walk entirely out of my life like this."
"Billy," he choked out, around the lump in his throat.
"Friends, at least? I don't think I can live completely without you."
"Billy," he tried again. "Can you agree? Can you understand, and
agree that we can't... can't..."
"Dammit Alan, I don't understand, but I'll go along with it. Just
don't expect to get rid of me completely, because I won't allow it."
"Just friends. No more."
"Just friends." Billy sighed heavily. "Good night, Alan."
And then Alan's life got up and walked out the door.
****
//Billy was there. For a moment, he wondered why it felt strange, but
then shook the feeling off. Of course Billy was there. Where else
would he be? He smiled and reached out for Billy, to pull him close
and love him, but couldn't reach him. Billy lay quietly, staring at
the drifting clouds above, completely unaffected by his efforts to
reach him. He just couldn't touch Billy- it was like there was some
kind of protective bubble around the kid, preventing any contact.
"Billy! Billy! Why can't I reach you? Can you hear me?"
"Why did you do it, Alan?" Billy asked, still staring at the drifting
clouds above. "All I ever wanted was your love, but you just kept
pushing me away. Why, Alan? Why?"
"Billy!" he cried out in despair, stretching a hand out but unable to
reach Billy. He was fading, the kid was disappearing into the grass,
still whispering *why*...
He felt tears stinging his eyes. Billy was gone, gone- his fault. All
his fault.
Then the roaring began.
They were there.
Just like before. They were everywhere. Only it wasn't like before-
They were mad, now, mad because Billy had kept Them away for so long.
He ran, half-blinded by tears he couldn't stop, trying to make the
safety of the trees. But They were there too, and he ran away from
Them- They were in front of him, They were behind him, They were to
the side of him-
He ran towards the one place that They would not go-
Off the edge of the cliff.
"Billlyyyyyyy..."//
Alan woke with a sickening jolt, gasping for breath. No, oh no- not
again. He'd thought the nightmares were gone. He'd thought Billy had
chased them away.
Then he reached for Billy in the darkness, and found only the empty
bed.
"Billy," he whispered in shocked disbelief. "Billy- what have I
done?"
The empty place in his bed had no answer for him. But the empty place
in his heart told him with a savage wrench of pain that he'd made the
biggest mistake of his life.
Friday night.
Alan locked up his office, heart heavy in his chest. Ordinarily, this
being Friday night, he'd head over to the backside of the planetarium
and a night of stargazing with Billy and Pete Crandall. But now- no.
He just couldn't face that. If Billy was there, how could he handle
it? Or worse yet, what if Billy wasn't there? That would be even
worse, in a way. A distinct slap in the face, absolute confirmation
that he didn't consider Alan worth keeping as a friend-
*You're the one who dumped him,* his conscience nagged. *And you
think you have any right to his friendship now? Get a clue, old man.
Just get a clue.*
And so Alan walked out to his battered old pickup truck, opened the
door, and drove away. He didn't even glance behind him, just headed
off campus as fast as he could, and towards the house that was every
bit as lonely as he had feared it would be without Billy.
Try as he would to fight them off, the memories overtook him inside.
Billy smiling at him from the couch, the gentle warmth of his eyes as
he'd looked at Alan- *Rough day? I can make it better*... Or that day
on the Mall, the last time they'd really been out together, Billy
giving him one of those looks, the kind that made the rest of the
world vanish. For a long moment, there had been just the two of them
and the sunlight waking highlights in Billy's hair...
*Yeah, but then what happened? It went to hell, of course,* Alan
reminded himself sourly. He thought about going out on the patio and
setting up the telescope, but just couldn't summon up the interest.
Besides, Billy was out there too, hooking the scope into his laptop
and playing with that new program. Or fiddling with the camera,
before taking the dramatic quarter-moon shot that hung on the wall
overhead. Or just looking at him in the quicksilver light of the
stars, listening to whatever theory had been currently bothering
him...
Alan shook off the memories and pulled out his notes on the new paper
he was working on. But he couldn't get rid of the ache inside, or the
ever-present feeling that he'd made a huge mistake this time, one
that could never be fixed.
****
"Missed you last week," a quiet voice said. Alan, startled, knocked
into the telescope, sending the stars blurring crazily.
Billy was there. He looked just the same as always, standing there
with his hands in his pockets and half of a smile. His eyes shone in
the starlight. A line of a half-forgotten song ran through Alan's
head- *and every star in the sky was taking aim at your eyes like a
spotlight.* He swallowed hard.
"Had things to do," he said, in a reasonably normal tone.
"Too bad." Billy stared at him a moment longer, then started to set
up his computer. Alan felt tension settle in iron bands across his
shoulders. Crandall looked from one to the other, puzzled.
*Bad idea, Grant,* he told himself. Bad enough when they'd had to act
like there was nothing between them except friendship. Now they had
to act as though nothing had ever happened- no, er, relationship, no
breakup, no nothing. Just friends. He fixed the focus on the scope
again, pointing it at the asteroid belt.
"Got that thing running, Billy?" Crandall stepped up close to Billy
and the laptop, and Alan was surprised by a jolt of jealousy.
*Ridiculous,* he chided himself. But the jealousy remained, for the
ease of interaction between the two.
"About as good as it will ever get, I suppose." Billy tapped a few
keys, then moved around Alan, checking the connections. Alan backed
away, feeling a sudden irrational fear of any possible contact. He
saw Crandall looking at him again, puzzled, and gave himself a mental
shake. He resolved to conceal his reactions better. No need to clue
old Pete in that there was anything going on here.
Somehow, he managed it. It was hard, but he made the effort and
managed to treat Billy as he had before... before. Like last summer,
on the dig, when he was just a friend. When it didn't matter what he
wanted, because he knew it could never be... When he'd been able to
control himself. He should never have slipped. Never. He wouldn't
allow himself to slip again.
But his heart ached within him.
It got easier, somehow. Now that he'd gone and taken the initial
plunge, quit avoiding Billy, it actually got easier to deal with him.
Somehow, they managed to strike a balance, find a way around the
awkwardness. Alan was glad. He'd missed Billy, more than he had any
right to. Although he'd never admit it to the kid, he had felt like
he was dying inside, a bit at a time, without Billy there to keep him
alive. Ridiculous, really, but there was no controlling some
emotions. They obeyed their own irrational rules, leaving Alan to
struggle through life in an attempt to deal with them.
They never quite achieved the ease of their relationship before, but
Alan was convinced it was better this way. And if he sometimes caught
Billy looking at him with undisguised longing... well. The kid would
get over it. Friendship was better than nothing, after all.
The days sped by, bringing the end of the semester and the summer
trek to the badlands. Same site, this year- the museum director had
been pleased enough with last year's findings to authorize another
season of digging. Alan managed to forget until he actually reached
the site that Billy had been signed on the roster for this dig since
the department head had posted the sheets last April.
Here, too, Alan found himself returning to the pattern established
last summer- depending on Billy's capable assistance during the days,
enjoying long rambling conversations in the night... It was scary. He
was having a harder time remembering the reasons why he'd broken
things off with the kid.
****
"Look out!" Alan shouted and tried to save the computer. But it was
too late- Fran, excited by the activity in the camp, had already
barreled right into the table. Alan caught the monitor, easing it the
rest of the way to the ground. He felt something in his shoulder give
way at the unexpected impact and swore. "Be careful, Fran! How many
times do I have to tell you not to run in the camp?"
"I'm sorry, Dr. Grant," she said, green eyes wide and anxious. "I
didn't mean to!"
"I know you didn't," he said, bracing himself to lift the monitor
back onto the table. His shoulder protested the effort, but the
monitor was back in place. Alan felt Billy's sharp eyes on him and
straightened his shoulders, rather than rubbing at the sore spot like
he wanted to. If the kid noticed, he'd never get any peace. "Got
everything working?"
Billy nodded, eyes searching Alan's face. "Are you okay?"
"I'm fine," he said shortly. Great. Just what he needed. "Let's see
this imaging thing of yours."
Billy's eyes held his for a moment longer, then the kid nodded and
looked away. "I've cleaned up the program and improved the quality a
bit- you can see shell fragments, along with many different bones.
I'd say this was a predator's nest, and that the adults were feeding
the young here."
"Offering evidence for the family unit theory," Alan said, bending
closer to the screen, pain momentarily forgotten.
"I'd say. Getting this thing out will be a real challenge. Might just
make this whole season worth it, though."
"My mom and dad can do it," Fran chimed in loyally. It had been her
parents who'd spotted the odd formation and called for computer
imaging.
"I'm sure they can, Fran." Alan wondered what kind of nest it had
been, what variety of dinosuar had lived here on the verge of a
prehistoric swamp and raised its young. Had they been caring,
nurturing parents? Or had they merely dropped prey into the nest and
left the young to fend for themselves? Perhaps he'd find the clues
underneath the accumulated detritus of sixty-five million years.
People were jostling at him, trying to get a better view, especially
Fran's parents. Alan stepped away from the screen, deep in thought.
He rubbed absently at his sore shoulder, wondering if he should shift
the focus of the expedition from the adult fossils to the nesting
area. So little was known about the nesting habits of the
predators...
He felt Billy's eyes on him again and stopped rubbing. Damn the kid,
anyway- always there, always getting in the way-
*And helping out, and trying to make sure you take care of yourself,
and making the computers work*... his conscience chimed in. Hmph.
Still, the kid could be annoying.
*Oh, yes- so annoying that you depend on him completely. So annoying
that you miss him when he's not around. Badly. So annoying that you'd
give anything to have things back the way they were.*
Alan turned abruptly and went back into the bright afternoon
sunlight. Uncomfortable thoughts had no place here, in a working
environment. He ignored the snickers of his mind and returned to work
on his hyracotherium skeleton.
He'd thought he'd gotten those awkward feelings under control. He'd
thought his armor was secure, impregnable... safe. Maybe he should
have just pushed him away completely. Maybe it was a mistake
continuing to be friendly with the kid. Maybe he'd better just break
it off completely- for real this time. No more friendship, even.
The outline of the hyracotherium blurred in front of him.
****
Later that evening, Alan sat by his tent, alone. The camp was quiet
now, its few inhabitants settling down for the night- even the kids.
Some had gone into town for a night in a motel. Others remained,
camped out under the vast Montana sky. His shoulder was aching
steadily, despite the pain medication he'd taken. But the stars were
out, shining cold and brilliant, with their eternal lure.
"Alan?"
His head snapped up at the sound of Billy's voice. "Yeah?"
"You still up?" Billy emerged from the shadows behind the tent. He
smiled, visible even in the dim starlight, and Alan felt his heart
skip a beat.
"Yeah. Just thinking."
"As usual," Billy teased lightly, dropping down to sit beside
him. "You're always thinking."
"Yeah, well, better than never thinking at all."
"Hey, that's not fair! I think- sometimes."
"I never said I meant you."
"Yeah, right," Billy nodded. "I believe it." He laughed, then
abruptly sobered, playfulness gone entirely. "How's your shoulder?"
"Fine." Alan was taken off guard and rubbed at it without thinking.
Billy's eyes narrowed.
"You're hurt, aren't you." It was a statement, not a question. Billy
laid a hand on Alan's shoulder, and he twitched. "I knew it! Those
damn monitors are heavy. You should have let it fall."
"Yeah, right- and where would I get the money for a new one?" Alan
shifted away, irritated. "Better a sore shoulder than a busted
computer."
"And wasn't it you that always said real paleontologists don't need
computers?" Billy wouldn't be deterred. He felt at the injured
shoulder carefully. "Good lord, Alan, this is nasty! All swollen and
hot- you must have torn it pretty good."
"Careful!" Alan jumped when he hit a particularly sore spot.
"Here, let me take care of this for you," Billy said, scooting around
behind Alan. His hands started to rub gently around the sore spot.
"Billy, what are you doing?" A hint of panic was in his voice. *Oh
no, oh not this again, make him get his hands off me*... But he
didn't say anything.
"No, no- I don't want to hear a word of complaint. You have to take
better care of yourself. Off with that shirt, now- this just isn't
working all that well."
"But!" Alan shivered at the thought of Billy's hands on his bare
skin. Not good, not good at all... *Too good.*
"Quiet, you! I told you, no complaints. Maybe I can't keep you from
hurting yourself, but I can damn sure put you back together." Billy's
hands didn't reflect the stern tone of his voice as they smoothed the
pain away almost magically.
"But it's cold out!" Alan managed, as a last resort. Those hands were
wearing away at his self control, at his very sanity.
"Then go in your tent and lay down," Billy suggested. "This'll work
better with you relaxed, anyway. You know that."
*Relaxed?* Alan thought in a daze, as he obediently rose and went in
his tent. He was anything but relaxed. *Just a backrub, he's given
you backrubs before and you've survived. He's not going to jump you.
He agreed it was better this way.*
"There, much better," Billy said, when he'd pulled his shirt off and
laid down on his bedroll, quivering sightly. Billy settled beside him
and started rubbing again, lightly, all over Alan's back.
Alan gave up trying to resist and just drifted. Billy's talented
hands were turning him into a boneless puddle of relaxation. He
hadn't realized how tense he was until the tension was released.
Knowing it was dangerous but beyond caring, Alan let himself pretend
there was more involved here than a simple backrub- that he'd never
pushed Billy away, never hurt him, that there were no reasons why
this could never be... it was nice. Very nice, in fact- quite easy to
imagine Billy's hands were not only gentle, but loving. Easy to
imagine there was more to come...
"Oh, no you don't," Billy said softly.
"Hmm?" Alan jerked his mind guiltily away from the fantasy.
"You're not falling asleep on me now."
"Not sleeping," Alan protested drowsily.
"Sure, sure- whatever you say, Alan. But you're not going to sleep on
me, because I've finally got you back where I've wanted you all
along."
Then he pressed his lips to the spot right between Alan's
shoulderblades, sending an electric thrill through him and bringing
him sharply awake in less than a second. "Billy! Don't. Please
don't!"
"Shh," Billy breathed, shifting so he was laying half across Alan's
back. "Don't you dare tense up on me, Alan, or I'll be forced to do
this all over again." He kissed the back of Alan's neck, brushing the
hair aside.
"Billy- Billy, no, you can't! You're too young, I'm-" His hands
clutched at his bedroll, shaking, as Billy's lips wreaked havoc on
his defenses. He wanted this, oh god he wanted this so badly- but it
couldn't happen, there were too many reasons why it would never work.
They'd been through all this before. It was impossible, doomed from
the very beginning, and he couldn't survive it all happening again.
"Don't you dare say you're too old!" The sudden fierceness of Billy's
voice startled him. "You're what, thirty-eight? So what? I'm a big
boy now, Alan, and I know what I want. And fourteen years isn't
enough of a difference to make it worth pretending I don't. It never
mattered before, and it doesn't matter now. And if it comes to that,
I'm damn sure older than I was when you said you were mine."
"But Billy-" Alan wriggled around, out from under Billy, until he was
laying on his side. His shoulder twinged, but he ignored it. He could
barely see the kid, but he felt better facing him. "There's no way
this could work- don't you realize that? I thought you understood,
that we'd agreed..." He reached out, almost against his will, and
found one of Billy's hands.
"I realize no such thing, Alan. You want me as badly as I want you.
I've seen the way you look at me, when you think I won't notice. You
said just friends, sure- but your eyes say something else. Your eyes
say you still care about me, and be damned to the prejudiced
bastards."
*Oops.* Alan tried to compose his thoughts, to steady his nerves. But
he couldn't bring himself to let go of Billy's hand. "But I know it
could never work out," he said softly. "We're too different. There's
too many reasons why it would be a very bad idea to go back- back to
the way we were before."
"Alan," Billy sighed. He moved closer, rearranging himself until he
could run his free hand through Alan's hair. "Different is good. That
way there's something to learn about each other, interesting things
to discover- I damn sure wouldn't want someone identical to me.
What's the fun in that? And we had fun. You know we did. We would
still be having fun, if not for that damnfool Kessler."
"But- the school- you're a student, I'm faculty... You think what
happened in May was bad? What if there was actually a reason for them
to be upset, proof for them to base their accusations on? If they
caught us together, after what happened before, my job is gone. So is
my career." It was getting harder to think straight.
Billy chuckled. "Doesn't matter. They can't do a damn thing about two
people who are both of legal age having a relationship, especially
since you're a curator, not a professor anymore. I've checked into it
since then. They have no legal grounds for protest, and if they try
anything- well, we could make them look like royal fools."
"But-" was all he managed to say before Billy was kissing him. The
last of Alan's resistance crumpled and he fell back on his bedroll,
pulling Billy with him. The kiss was every bit as good as he
remembered. He buried his hand in the crisp brown waves of hair,
clutching Billy's head frantically. After a long, breathless moment,
Alan pulled away. His fingers traced down the edge of Billy's
face. "Billy," he sighed.
"Don't you dare try to make me go away," Billy said shakily. "Not
after that. Lord, Alan, I've missed you." He stole another kiss, less
intense, but still enough to make the world's foundation rock.
"No- you win, I can't do it. Not again. You win." Alan smiled,
knowing it wasn't visible, but helpless to prevent it. "But don't you
think you're a bit overdressed?"
A soft chuckle answered him. "I think you're right." Billy sat up and
peeled his shirt off. "Better?"
Alan pulled him close again, delighting in the feel of bare skin. His
hands discovered once-familiar territory anew, provoking
shivers. "Better," he murmured, nibbling Billy's neck. He'd wanted
this for so long... damn the consequences. "But still overdressed."
"Oooh," and Billy slid a hand down to tug at Alan's belt. "In that
case, so are you."
"Easy enough to fix," and Alan released his hold on Billy, removing
the rest of his clothing and his boots in record time. Billy did the
same.
Then Alan felt Billy stretch out beside him, skin on skin, and the
outside world vanished in a rush of electric shock. There was nothing
but Billy, nothing but the fire in his veins and the burning pleasure
of lips and hands in the darkness. Nothing but the fulfillment of his
dreams, and the feeling of something coming right at last.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
He woke alone, from a deep and dreamless sleep. Alan fought down the
instantaneous panic and reminded himself that this was the camp,
after all. Billy could hardly be seen coming out of his tent, not
without causing a world of problems. But still... Alan wished it
could be otherwise.
He sighed. Not again. Why had he given in to the kid? Now it would
start all over again, the hiding, the attempt to seem just friends,
the risk... hell.
*But it's worth it,* whispered the satisfied voice inside his head.
*Billy's worth it. Did you really think you could live without him?*
Alan shook his head, with a faint smile. No, the voice was right- he
couldn't live without Billy. But he could damn sure make the effort
to live with him.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
"Dr. Grant, are you busy now?"
"Excuse me a moment," Alan said to Lisa, a pretty blonde freshman
who'd been driving him to distraction with her utterly pointless
questions. He turned, to find Billy watching him, with a sardonic
smile on his face. "Not really, Billy- something you need?"
"Yeah- mind if I ask you something? In private?" Billy shot a look at
Lisa, who flipped her hair back over her shoulder, clearly annoyed.
"I guess I'll just go help Harry," she said, not quite pouting.
"You do that," Alan nodded. Then he followed Billy into the trailer,
easily the most private place available on the site.
"You looked like you needed rescuing," Billy said, with a smile. He
turned one of the chairs backwards and sat on it, arms resting on the
chair back.
Alan dropped down into another chair with a grateful sigh. "Yeah. She
was driving me crazy."
"I could tell." Billy's eyes were warming him inside, filling up the
achingly empty place within. "But I really did want to talk to you."
"Yeah? About what?" But Alan knew already.
Billy didn't disappoint him. "Us," he said simply.
"Yeah. Somehow, that doesn't surprise me." Alan smiled, reached out
and ran a finger along Billy's arm, just because he could. "What does
surprise me is that you still care."
"Always, Alan. Always." Billy's voice shook with the intensity of his
feeling.
"I do too, Billy." Alan tried to steady his own voice. "I never
stopped caring. Bad idea or not, I still need you."
"Good."
Alan chuckled. "Why do you say that? Not like I'm much of a prize."
"Bullshit." Billy's response was immediate, emphatic.
"Yeah, right- let you tell it." He smiled, then it faded. "Why,
Billy? Why are you willing to take another chance on me? Seems like
you should want to stay away from me, very far away."
"Not likely." Billy sighed. "And don't try giving me that line about
being better off as just friends again."
"But it might be true." It was hard to say those words, but they
needed to be said.
"No!" Billy's denial was fierce and sudden. "I refuse to believe
that."
"You're willing to put up with... well, with me?" Alan asked, heart
in throat. "Willing to risk losing everything, willing to give me
another chance?"
"I always have been."
"Billy... What if it happens again? What if I get... scared?"
"You already are, Alan," Billy pointed out. "I know you. I know how
you are. What I don't know is why you find it so hard to believe that
I really do care about you."
Billy shifted on his chair, gazing steadily at Alan's face. Nothing
about him suggested willingness to back down. Alan felt a momentary
surge of panic, but then lost it in a wash of weariness. He was tired
of his own reactions, his own paranoia... it had already cost him
Billy once, be damned if he was going to ruin this second chance just
because he was afraid.
"Why would you?" He leaned on the table, trying to seem casual, even
though his entire midsection was churning.
Billy shut his eyes briefly, a pained look on his face. "Alan..." he
sighed, then opened his eyes again. "Look. We've been over this
before. There are hundreds of reasons why I care about you, hundreds
more why I'm attracted to you, and only one why I won't leave. Do we
really need to go over that again?"
"One?" Alan asked carefully.
"Yes, one. You."
"I don't quite understand what you're saying." Alan fought to control
his automatic reaction- to draw away from the uncomfortable subject,
to retreat to a safe distance and not let the kid any closer.
"I won't go away, because I think you're worth sticking around for."
Billy reached out and caught one of his hands. "Alan, listen to me.
You are an incredible, complex, fascinating person, and I find you
irresistable. This isn't something that will go away, either- face
it, if getting dumped for no real reason wasn't enough to shake me
off, there's no way you are going to be able to get rid of me. You
are part of my life, and I need you- I need to be around you, to be
with you... How many times do I have to say it before you believe me?
You are the center of my universe, and I love you."
"It's hard for me, Billy," Alan said softly. "Very hard. Because I
just can't see why-"
"Quit worrying about it," Billy interrupted. "Just take me at my
word, and let me be with you."
"I'll try." Alan glanced out the window. The normal camp activity was
reassuring, safe. He could look out there without threat to his
sanity. But what he wanted was in here... "I'm sorry," he said
abruptly, turning his attention back to Billy. "I was scared, and I
screwed up. You were right."
Billy squeezed his hand. "It's okay- now. But if you ever, ever pull
a stunt like that again..." He shook his head.
"Then it'll be your turn. I won't try and stop you going if you feel
it necessary."
Billy sighed. "Hard to imagine, but you've got a deal. But until that
happens, which is hopefully never, you're stuck with me, got that?"
"I've got it."
"And you're going to take a shot at believing me this time?" The
pleading look Billy wore was enough to unravel the last of Alan's
defenses. It was terrifying, yet exhilirating- nobody had ever gotten
this close.
"I promise." He smiled and clung a little tighter to Billy's hand,
his anchor in a sea of uncertainty. "And I'm not going to let other
people's opinions come between us ever again. And while I'm at it,
I'll do my damnedest not to hurt you again."
"So let's see if I've got this straight," Billy said, a spark of
amusement kindling in his eyes. "No more running, no more trying to
dump me, no more letting people push you around. And if you do any or
all of the above, I'm gone."
"Yeah." Alan's voice was hoarse with emotion at the very suggestion
of Billy walking out on him.
"You've got yourself a deal then, Dr. Grant." Billy smiled.
He was drowning in Billy's eyes, and he wasn't fighting it any
longer. The moment stretched on, then both men heard running
footsteps outside, followed by the impact of a small body with the
door. It sprang open and Fran stuck her head in. "Dr. Grant? Are you-
oh!"
"Yes, Fran, I'm here. What is it?" He turned towards the door, mildly
irritated by the interruption but too happy to be really bothered.
"They sent me to find you. Dave's got a problem..."
Alan glanced at Billy, with a half grin and a raised eyebrow. Billy
returned the look with a smouldering fire in his eyes that promised
louder than words, *later*. "C'mon, let's go deal with this problem,
then," he said, pushing his chair back and standing up. Alan followed
him out the door, then they set off to work, together.