Author's note: All of the characters in this story are of age, 18+.
~
You would appreciate the look on my face at the bar. A vapid, neutral smile, which I force up to my eyes the way you always told me to. I am fully the creep now, old as I am. He is the young guy, available - deliciously available to me, with his large hands, blockish arms, what, twenty-four? twenty-five? Half my age. Two and a half decades ago, I was him, well, in spirit if not in affect. Out on the town, looking for a good time. Though I never had a body like that, good god.
And today, tonight, me, out at a bar like I'm a twenty-something? How ridiculous. Really, though, it feels like it could be just a few weekends ago, in the slippery slide of time. What? A thousand weekends ago? He has hands like that one porn star I like, in spite of myself, in spite of your eye rolls, the thick one. In the one about the salad. The taste of gin in my mouth because you always liked gin and I despise it, the sour, acidic taste of it, the unpleasant bite behind the molars. Jaxton something, that's his name, I think.
Here I am in my nice jeans, trim for a man my age, for an old creep, in my trim jacket, my beard trimmed, my sails neatly trimmed, thanks to the gin. My male pattern baldness on display, disclosed. Nature's changing course, untrimm'd. Very nicely buzzed. A cocktail at the hotel with a few colleagues before ducking out and walking here, to this bar, not overfull yet at this hour. Then a gin and tonic, no, no, the good stuff please, I slide my card across the bar. Keep it open. A polite smile. Yes sir. He might as well have said, OK, grandpa.
You're young until you're not, and by then it's too late. But the young are forever young and it is not possible, there is not even the faintest glimmer of becoming old, of being thirty, forty, or - gasp - fifty. Fifty! Did you ever think we'd be fifty? You always said gin tasted like Christmas. A paroxysm of winter juniper in the mouth, you said. I'll give you a paroxysm in your mouth, I said. Those heady days, the winter we spent shivering in that tiny, drafty flat in So Ho, curled together, drunk with the improbability of it, of finding one another. Your hand in mine, your golden eyes, your body against me. The bubble of us, safe from the rain and death swirling outside.
The kid, Jaxton, comes to stand next to me. Dark, curly hair and bright blue eyes. He stands next to me, like, casual. Just stands there. Not close, but not
not
close. I get it, after a beat. I know what I am supposed to do even though I feel ridiculous. I turn to face him. Hi there. What are you drinking? His easy smile. He is effortlessly young, in his body. All muscles and cum. He's big, built solid. Taller and bigger than me, like a young cat with his big paws and pearly teeth. So young and unrumpled. Why is he here, smiling at me? Probably some sort of hustler. Going to lure me off to some back alley where he and his mates will jump me, punch me hard in the guts, knock the wind out of me and take my wallet, laughing while I writhe on the pavement.
Or maybe he's just a horny kid, John. With the hots for daddy. Is it so hard to think that you might be attractive at your advanced age? Your voice in my head, urging me on. Your laugh, ringing in my ears. Your hand in mine, in the bed in the bright blue room. Too bright. You said you knew you always hated blue for a reason, grinning, grimacing, through the pain. Promise me that you won't wallow in this, you maudlin shit. Get out there again, enjoy what remains of your waning libido, will you, old man? Another grin, another grimace.
I thought austerity might help. I cut out sugar, then carbs. Then alcohol. Then coffee. That was a real bear, but the headaches and the bleary fog of the days was something of a relief, a welcome absence from myself. And at night, sleep.
Bona fide
sleep. But, despite the satisfying bite each compounded austerity, each triumphant shedding, I didn't find the ultimate blankness I was seeking. Turns out throwing emptiness into emptiness doesn't work.
I'll have what you're having, he says. Two G and T's please, I say, with a wink to the barkeep, himself a pleasantly curated specimen. So well groomed, these boys. Meticulously crafted, hair, skin, clothing. They must see right through me. This tasteful denim and jacket ensemble, the close-cropped hair - through to the sweatpanted nights at home, in bed at eight with our tea and popcorn and a shitty movie. Don't flatter myself, I hear you berating me. You think he is looking at you that hard, old man? You think he cares? Live in the moment! Touch him, for fuck's sake!
I put my arm on the kid's shoulder, pull him in to bark something witty into his ear. It's getting loud in here. He laughs into his drink and I feel a hitch in my pants as I gaze down at his chest, the smooth skin visible at his neck. He shifts his body toward me and reaches up to pull my ear towards his lips. If I told you that he came back with something equally witty, would you believe me? Up close, his eyes are more gray than blue. He smells divine.
At some point I started walking. Hiking. I don't know what the right term for it is. My trudge, I call it, my ranging, out in the desert. I could hardly bear to be in the house alone. Yes, at night, and no, I don't want to hear about it. It is safe enough. I was so out of shape in the beginning that I didn't get too far. But after a while I found I could go for hours. Hours and hours, weeks, months. I went back to work of course, and I had to start flying out again, those horrible red eyes to the east coast. But there was something about being out there, in the moonlight. The grit of the trail under my feet, moving like a shadow through the rocks. I became obsessed, addicted.
I watch him move among other bodies, his hand on a back, a shoulder, a thigh. Men he must know. Men he's no doubt been with, fucked. I watch him dance. No, of course I don't dance. I'm installed at the bar, weirdly chatty, an extrovert all of a sudden. I am in town for work. Yes, from the UK originally. Wow, you don't say? Now that
is
interesting. Who knew that there were actual conversations to be had here, at these bars, among the old creep brigade. Perhaps, at bar time, we will settle for each other. If our desperate, baited hooks cast into the thronging mass of young flesh, in the form of free drinks, don't land us a whopper.
The stakes are so low, maybe that's why the words are flowing out of me so freely, so free from anxiety. No, no, the stakes really are that low. Abysmally low. Please allow me to have this moment of low self-esteem and non-expectation, OK? It is what it is. Your most-hated phrase. I buy some more people some more drinks. Drinks, drinks for everyone! What is money, after all? What good is disposable income if not to dispose of it like this? I am the man of the hour. This what you wanted, right?
I feel a tug at my belt-loop and a moment later I am making out with Jaxton at the end of the bar. Yes, like a trashy slag. The creep brigade is eyeing me jealously, I have betrayed them. There are a lot more people here now. How long has it been since I've had my tongue in someone's mouth? I'm a little surprised and disappointed at how easy it is. I'd forgotten it was this easy, startled to realize that I've been wearing ruby slippers the whole time. I paw at his crotch and feel his erection. Might as well strike while the iron is hot.
Bless his heart, Jaxton is smiling at me like a puppy. A puppy I want to fuck. That might be a line too far, creep-wise. Now that I am not young, all my thoughts are suspect. He will fall in love with me, beg me to come with him to Indiana for Thanksgiving. Mom, Dad, this is my boyfriend, John, from Britain (cringe), who is wearing a sport coat and a turtleneck. Pleasure to meet you Mr. and Mrs. Jaxton, your home is exceptionally lovely. You are, horrifically, my age. I brought you a bottle of sparkling rosΓ©. Charmed, they most certainly are not.
My parents, don't worry about them, you said. They are appalling snobs. The accent will be enough. And it was, exactly as you said. They won't be able to contain themselves, the prospect of trotting you out at their ridiculous garden party, you said. Oh, John, you absolutely MUST come back to the cape in May for our little shindig. A wink from you, a nervous chuckle from me. Of course, of course, Diane, I'd be delighted. Your jovial parents, cold as ice under all that linen, you said. And you were right, again. Chuck and Diane. I haven't heard much from them, since. A phone call. A card on my birthday, with a check. A check? My hands shook as I ripped it up. A fucking