Paul M. Rexer headed into the kitchen in yesterday's cotton trunks. He didn't have any fresh underwear with him. Or clothes. Or much else for that matter.
He hadn't expected to see the cutie from work in the street. Hadn't expected to go for lunch, or to spend the afternoon hanging out, and certainly hadn't expected dinner to be part of the equation. And then mind-blowingly good sex to top it off.
Who would have thought that quiet, unassuming little Jake Preston was so much fun? Or such a tiger when it came to sex? He had been. Responsive and vocal and surprisingly eager. And who would have thought he'd like him this much after half a day with him?
Paul smiled to himself and pulled two mugs out of the cupboard. Jake hadn't even stirred when he'd climbed out of bed, hadn't moved a hair by the time he'd used the bathroom. And he looked so sweet when he was sleeping too, with his short brown hair just a little bed ruffled and his face so soft. He slept so quietly that Paul had been half afraid he'd stopped breathing. But no. It just seemed that he was simply much more peaceful asleep than anyone else he'd ever taken notice of.
There were things in the fridge, all very neat. It made him smile. Of course Jake wouldn't just be super organised at work. So there were things carefully ordered in the fridge, but not what he was after. No bacon or tomatoes. Eggs, though. He'd wanted to make more than that though. Pancakes perhaps? He turned to the pantry and opened it up. He felt at home in this little kitchen, like he'd been here a hundred times before. It was nice. It felt... weird. Nice, but weird.
The pantry was looking a little sparse and very neat too. He wondered what Paul usually ate. Probably someone who cooked from scratch all the time. Or didn't eat much at home. He was a small guy, and in good shape, but definitely on the skinny side.
So pancakes would be cool then. If there was a cookbook in Jake's house that would have helped though.
Paul checked the other shelves, finding not a cookbook in sight, but a phone, blinking red at him.
He blinked at it. A phone in the pantry? Well, that seemed odd. The apartment was small, but not
that
small, right?
Messages, he realised. He wondered if they were old. Or important...
He could see himself, carrying in a breakfast tray to Jake, along with a piece of paper with his messages written on it. It felt nice. Domestic. He smiled. He really liked Jake. More than he ever thought he would like a timid colleague no one really noticed unless it was to poke fun at for his work ethic or his neatness. Never maliciously, since he'd stepped in that once, months ago now, but still. He'd never seen this happening.
Paul picked up the pen on the small pad next to the phone and pressed the button for the messages.
"Hey Jake,
" the message started. The voice was bright, loud in the space.
"Honey, I'm so sorry, we're going to have to postpone. Joey picked up something on the flight down, and even thought I'm ok, you know how Joey gets when he's sick and if I went out now, I'm afraid he'd do something stupid like eat a whole packet of cold and flu tablets without reading the label and wash it down with vodka and then I'd find his body cooling in the middle of the floor when I got home. And I don't want that. And neither does he. Anyway, we'll see you soon. Oh, and let us know about Rex, ok? None of us can wait to meet him."
The voice had gone sultry and then laughed.
"Bye, sweetie
." The message ended with a click and Paul stood frozen, not hearing the next message begin to play.
"Let us know about Rex?" He repeated to himself. His skin had gone cold and tight. That was weird. That was not good.
What the fuck was that supposed to mean?
Jake had bumped into him in the street outside his favourite coffee shop. His regular Saturday morning haunt. Had Jake- had Jake
engineered
the meeting? Had Jake followed him? Planned this?
He found himself giving a small shiver. That wasn't right. Jake... Jake couldn't have done that.
Except he could have. Jake was all about plans and lists and details. He drove them crazy at work with his careful graphs and charts. What was to say he couldn't have done this?
And told his friends? Friends who had
flown in
from somewhere?
Shit. What had he got himself into?
Paul stared at the phone a bit longer, and then carefully pressed a button to make it stop. His heart was pounding. His palms were sweaty.
He tried to tell himself to calm down, that Jake was nothing he couldn't handle. But obviously he watched too many horror movies, because now there was this idea nibbling at the edges of his mind that Jake was a serial killer, or a cannibal, and had plans to rape, torture and kill him and bury various parts of his body under the red flowers in the tiny front yard outside his unit and no one would ever know what became of him...
His snort sounded loud in the small space as he tried to tell himself it was ridiculous. But he'd scared himself now and he had the desperate urge to flee.
To get out, now.
To run, before little cutie Jake appeared behind him in the pantry with a smile and a carving knife and a wild, crazy glint in his pretty brown eyes...
*****
Jake's bedroom was fairly small. He didn't mind much. It felt cosy, and it fit his double bed, so that was fine.
The lack of room was generally a problem for other people, rather than for him.
Which, he considered as he stared at the ceiling, wasn't a huge problem in itself, seeing as no one stayed long enough to really notice.
He hadn't done more than roll onto his back since he'd woken up. Well, he'd reached out, found the other half of the bed empty and
cold
, and had quickly drawn his hand back. And then he'd lain there, waiting.
First he'd told himself that maybe Paul had gone to make coffee or something. Except there was no noise at all.
Then he wondered if Paul wasn't trying to be quiet so as not to wake him.
Even so, it was far too quiet for him to have been in the shower or doing anything else.
Jake rubbed his eyes.
He couldn't believe Paul had gone. Not after how amazing everything had been. No way.
He supposed Paul might have got up early, that he might have slept through Paul making coffee. Even now, Paul might be reading yesterday's paper at the kitchen table, or watching the morning news with the tv on mute...
It took effort to pull himself out of bed and pull on some track pants until he could take a shower. Preferably
with
Paul.
But it became abundantly clear that that wasn't going to happen as he looked around his little unit.
Paul had gone.
Jake swallowed hard. He should have realised that before. When Paul's clothes hadn't been folded on the chair in his room where he'd placed them next to his own last night. Before that. When he woke up to an empty bed.
He should have known before that. Before he'd somehow convinced himself that Paul had been interested in him.
Jake hugged himself.
Should have expected it. Should have known that it was too good to be true. Should have remembered that no one wanted him. Not really. People didn't really like him, and didn't want him for anything beyond what he could give them.
And here he was, hurt again.
Hurt? Hurt wasn't the right word.
It was far more painful than that.
It was just more proof. Proof of how lame he was. Of how pathetic he was. More proof that things didn't happen like in the movies. That hoping for something better was useless. Wanting someone to care about and to care about him was no better. It was all a great big joke.
Jake prodded himself into action. It was no good moping. No good sitting around and wondering why he couldn't be more interesting, more exciting. Anything. Just
more
. It didn't do any good.
He stripped the bed and opened the windows to the chilly air outside, and put the sheets on to wash. Then he showered and cleaned the bathroom.
He knew he should eat, but food didn't appeal. And yet, he didn't have many more jobs to do on a Sunday.
Jake decided to dust, since that was something that could never be done too often and since it would take him a while. Windowsills, picture rails, picture frames, the tops of doorframes and light fittings and cupboards. The tops of all the furniture. The legs and backs of all the furniture. Those places that dust caught even when you didn't see it.
But it didn't take him long enough.
Jake decided to eat after all. It might make him feel better.
He ate a small breakfast. Half a cup of muesli, with a quarter of a cup of yoghurt, half a banana, and a glass of juice.
Then he washed the dishes, put them away... and noticed the two mugs standing on the cupboard.
He hadn't put them there. He knew he hadn't. He turned them both so the handles were both facing the same way. But they were still in the wrong place.
Jake put them in the cupboard, and wondered if maybe he oughtn't clean his cupboards out. It had been a few weeks since he'd done that.
So he sat on the floor and pulled everything out, wiped and disinfected all the surfaces and then washed and carefully replaced all the contents. The plastic cupboard was always the worst. Plastic containers always seemed to lose their lids in there.
But he was done with that before long too.
Jake sat back and swallowed hard. This was part of the problem. He knew it, and he couldn't stop. It was Sunday, the weekend, and he was cleaning his house. His house, where no one came.
People thought he was boring, and uninteresting. That he had a dull job and that he was even duller.