Ken let out a
small sigh as he hung up the phone; the call had not been completely
unexpected. Dr. Conrad Cooper, Wes’s
father, had called to ask if he and his wife, Liz, could come over later in the
week to talk with them. Ken had a fairly
good idea of what the discussion would be about. Both of Wes’s parents had developed a budding
friendship with Kevin, the abused young teen that Ken and Jess mentored, at a
barbecue several weeks earlier. Ken suspected that they were going to talk
about fostering Kevin.
Waiting several
days with this discussion hanging over their heads would have been stressful
for Ken, let alone what it would do to his volatile Jess. Ken had instead asked
if they could come over that day. The
Coopers were agreeable, and promised to leave right away.
Looking out the
window, Ken took a fortifying breath.
Jess had just taken the lawn mower out of the workshop. The plan for the day had been to work on the
yard, but that had changed and he needed to inform Jess.
Less than an hour
later, the four adults sat at the kitchen table and discussed the future of a
lost boy. Conrad and Liz had explained
that they’d filled out forms to be foster parents shortly after Wes had
graduated high school. Although they
were approved, they’d not taken the step to take in a child. But that Saturday barbecue at Wes and Link’s,
they’d felt a tentative bond begin with Kevin.
They had put in a
call to the state foster program and had been directed to Kevin’s case worker,
Ms. Carol Lindy. Ms. Lindy had assured
them that Kevin was available for fostering and she was delighted that they
were interested in him. The case worker
had moved mountains to get the necessary home visits and paperwork filed so
that Kevin could be placed with the Coopers soon.
Ken watched the
play of emotions run across Jess’s face.
When Liz reached over and placed her hand on top of Jess’s tightly fisted
one, he knew that Liz understood what Jess was feeling.
“We want you and
Ken to continue to be mentors,” Liz said firmly. “We just feel that Kevin’s
best chance for a future is in a loving home, not a group house full of boys.”
“We haven’t talked
to Kevin about this yet. We wanted you two to understand that we aren’t trying
to nudge you out.” Conrad looked Ken in the eye. Ken knew that Conrad and Liz really weren’t
trying to push Jess and him out. “We’ve talked to his case manager, Mrs.
Lindy. And we’ve finished all the
paperwork. We’ve had one home visit and
will have one more but we’ve been assured that we will be approved.”
Ken nodded at
Conrad. “I’m sure you will. After the barbecue, I wondered if you weren’t
already on the foster list. I saw how you got along with Kevin. I’m sure after the initial shock, Kevin will
be happy with you both.”
Ken was grateful
when Conrad and Liz said their goodbyes shortly after. Jess’s silence was deafening, and although
they didn’t seem intimidated by it, they were astute enough to understand that
their announcement needed time to sink in.
After walking the
Coopers out to their car, Ken found Jess still seated at the table. “You know
this is best for Kevin, don’t you?” he asked the statue that Jess had
become. That statue suddenly came to
life, pushing his chair back and standing quickly.
“I’m going to mow
the yard,” Jess said ignoring Ken’s question.
“Jess. We need to
talk about this. Show a united front for
Kevin’s sake.” Ken kept his voice quiet but firm.
The tone had Jess
pausing for a moment. “We don’t need to talk about anything. Kevin will go live with the Coopers. The
perfect family. I’ve got a yard to mow.”
“Jess…“
As if he couldn’t
stand the compassion in Ken’s voice, Jess stomped toward the door. “The yard
looks like shit; I’m going to mow it.”
“Fine, we’ll talk
about it later,” Ken assured Jess. “Kevin deserves to have this chance and we
have to show we approve or he’ll fight it.”
“Fine. Now back the fuck off, Ken,” Jess
snarled. “You’re my partner, my
sometimes dom, my occasional confessor, but right now I need you to. Back. The.
Fuck. Off!”
Ken took a deep
breath as Jess slammed out the door. He
knew he had to cool down, his own emotions a bit out of control with all that
had happened that morning, and Jess telling him to back the fuck off had his
own anger boiling over. If he went after Jess this angry, he could, would, hurt
Jess. Reaching over to gather the coffee
cups on the table, Ken slammed his hand down.
Jess did not get to tell him to fuck off.
Ken set off
walking purposefully toward the shop where Jess was crouched by the lawn mower. Pulling him up by the arm, Ken quickly had
Jess pressed up against the shed. He
used his large body to pin Jess to the metal siding, not giving him an inch to
move.
Keeping his voice
low, trying to mask the anger he felt, Ken growled, “You don’t get to tell me
to fuck off. You don’t tell even your sometimes
dom to fuck off!”
Ken glowered into
Jess’s eyes. Damn the man, Ken thought
as Jess glared right back at him. He’s
pushing me hard! With sudden
understanding, Ken’s anger melted away.
Just as softly, but much more gently, Ken said, “And you don’t
manipulate me.”
Leaning closer,
Ken kissed Jess hard, savagely, bruising both their lips. Stepping back as he broke the kiss, Ken
looked into Jess’s eyes again. “Mow the lawn, figure out how you feel, and come
inside. I’ll give you what you need, when you ask for it.”
Ken puttered
around the house, trying to give Jess the time and space he needed to come to
terms with his emotions. He tightened
loose cabinets, looked out the kitchen window to check on Jess. Fixed the leak in the bathroom sink, glanced
out the small bathroom window, saw Jess pulling out the weed-eater. Threw a load of laundry in the washing
machine. Noticed Jess was putting away the weed-eater, gathered up the tools
scattered around the house and took them to his workshop in back of the house.
They met in the
middle of the workshop. Ken stood still
as Jess looked him in the eye and walked toward him with his shoulders
straight. That’s my man, thought
Ken. Jess wouldn’t come to him with his
head bowed. No, he’d face his demons with his head held high.
Jess stopped a
little more than three feet from him and said, “I was a shit. Sorry.”
Not invading
Jess’s personal space, Ken agreed, “Yeah, you were. But that was a hell of a shock, huh?”
“Yeah,” Jess said.
Ken walked out and watched as Jess shut the door. They walked toward the house together. “I need
a beer. It’s damn hot out here.”
Looking at the
tracks the sweat had made through the dirt and grime on Jess’s face, Ken agreed
a cold one was needed. Going straight to
the refrigerator, Jess grabbed a couple of beers. Ken caught the can that Jess
had tossed him, and went into the living room, giving Jess the chance to follow
or not.
Ken gave a silent internal
cheer when Jess did follow, slouching onto the couch as Ken sat across the room
on the recliner.
“It was a shock,”
Jess agreed again. “But it is the right thing for Kevin. And Liz said we could
still see him, and do shit with him.”
“Yeah. I really do think they’re the best shot Kevin
has,” Ken said. He knew Jess would come
to terms with the new arrangement, but he couldn’t help but be proud at how
quickly Jess had accepted it. For all
his bluster, the anger he’d kept inside had been slowly dying out.
“You gonna beat my
ass for talking such shit to you?” Jess asked him.
“You need me to?”
Ken watched as Jess mulled that over.
Ken felt that Jess had handled this situation surprisingly well despite
his initial blow up. He’d apparently
worked things out in his mind, while he’d worked on the yard. His Jess was a physical man, which was partly
why discipline worked for him. Ken
didn’t feel the need to use corporal punishment for this, but if Jess wanted
it, he’d not deny him.
Finally Jess
spoke, “No, I don’t need it. I do need a
shower; I stink.”
When Jess went to
shower, Ken took the empty beer cans to the recycling bin in the kitchen. Opening up the refrigerator, he was deciding
what to do about dinner, when his phone rang.
Dinner was soon forgotten as he heard the worry underlining Ms. Lindy’s calm
voice.
“Mr. O’Dell, I’m
calling to see if you’ve seen Kevin today?” she asked.
“No, he’s supposed
to be at the home. What happened?” Ken
knew something had to have happened for the case worker to be calling him.
“We’ve received a
formal request from a potential foster family for Kevin, and it looks to be a
good match,” Ms. Lindy started to explain.
“Ms. Lindy, cut
the bullshit and tell me what’s going on.” Ken wanted her to get to the point.
He heard her sigh
and then say, “Kevin’s run away. He
seemed like he’d accepted that he had a placement pretty well. I hadn’t told him who it was, he just said,
that’s good, and went to his room. An
issue came up with another boy, and by the time I got to Kevin’s room, he was
gone.”
Shit, Ken
thought. Kevin had more than an hour to
hightail it out of there. He could be on
his way to San Francisco by now. “Have you called the police?”
He heard another
sigh on the other end of the phone. “No, I was hoping he’d come back on his
own. He didn’t leave a note, but his
clothes are gone. I’d really hoped he’d
run to you, but when I hadn’t heard anything from you, I started to worry. I need to report this.”
He could tell by
the sound of her voice that she didn’t really want to call the cops. “Ok,
look. Hold off calling the police for
just a few hours. Let me go look for him. I know him, where he hangs out, who his
friends are. Let me bring him home.” Ken
wanted to plead with the social worker, but kept his voice firm and
authoritative. In reality, Ken knew that
Kevin didn’t hang out with his previous friends. The common link between them had been their
disastrous home lives, and Kevin had been happy hanging out with Ken and Jess.
“Ok. I can give you a couple of hours, but no more
than that,” Ms. Lindy agreed.
“I won’t need more
than that,” he promised, hoping that was the truth. “I’ll be in touch.”
Disconnecting the
phone, Ken walked into the bathroom.
Jess was stepping out of the shower as Ken walked in.
“Kevin’s run off.
I’m going to look for him,” Ken didn’t waste words, just stated the bare facts.
“Let me throw some
clothes on. I’m coming with you.”
Ken didn’t want to
fight about this. “I need you here in case he comes over. He doesn’t really have anywhere else to go.”
Ken knew Jess
wanted to argue but common sense prevailed.
“Ok. But let me know where you are and what’s going on.”
After giving him a
fierce kiss, Ken left Jess still wet from his shower and went searching for
their lost boy.
Part 2
Jess walked naked
into the bedroom and picked up his phone.
Pressing the second contact on his list, he chanted to himself, come on,
Kev, pick up; pick up the damn phone. He resisted the urge to throw the phone
when it promptly went to voice mail, settling instead on dropping it to the bed. Either Kevin had turned his phone off or it’d
run out of battery.
Jess didn’t bother
to dress as he went into the kitchen to get a drink. The beer had refreshed him, but he needed
water to hydrate him. Taking a glass out
of the cabinet, and filling it with water straight from the kitchen sink, Jess
gazed out the kitchen window.
Where the hell
could that boy be, he thought to himself.
Noticing the shop door open, Jess went back in the bedroom and pulled on
a pair of cut offs. Just as he was
slipping on his shoes, he remembered he’d closed the door behind him. A sense of déjà vu came over him.
This time instead
of rushing in full of anger, Jess walked in and breathed a sigh of relief. There in a corner almost hidden by the work
bench was their missing boy. Huddled up
with his arms resting on his knees, the boy looked miserable.
“Hey, Kev. Whatcha doing?” Jess asked awkwardly. Hell, I don’t know what to say to the kid, he
thought.
When Kevin didn’t
answer, Jess walked over and crouched in front of him. Smelling the sweet scent of pot, he asked,
“You been smoking? That ain’t cool, ya know.”
Jess flinched when
Kevin looked him in the eye. The look of total despair and hopelessness on
Kevin’s face tore a hole through Jess’s new found heart. That hole became a cavern when Kevin asked in
a quiet, emotionless voice, “What’s wrong with me? Why doesn’t anyone want me?”
Shit, Jess
thought. Where’s Ken? He’s the one who should be dealing with this. Thinking of his cell phone lying on the bed
where he’d dropped it, Jess said, “Come on.
Let’s go in the house where it’s cooler.
It’s hot as hell out here.”
“I thought you
guys were different. I mean you never promised me shit, but I thought you’d at
least let me hang around,” Kevin said as if he hadn’t heard Jess.
“Hey, Kev, you can
always hang here,” Jess said as he sat on the concrete floor. If the discussion was going to take place
here, he might as well be as comfortable as he could get. “No, we never
promised you anything. But Kev, I’m
promising you something right now. Look
at me,” Jess said, when Kevin dropped his eyes.
When the kid brought his eyes back up, Jess could see the blown pupils
from too much pot and wondered if Kevin would even understand what he was
saying. Jess decided he had to say it.
“I promise you, I’m not going anywhere.
I’m going to be right here for you.
Whether it’s helping out with your homework, or kicking your ass for
smoking dope, I’m going to be here.”
Jess knew that
despite being high, Kevin did understand what he was saying when Kevin dropped
his head onto arms and started to shake.
Jess felt completely at a loss.
He couldn’t handle his own emotions, how the hell was he going to handle
a crying 15 year old.
Awkwardly scooting
around and putting his arm over Kevin’s shoulder, Jess pulled the boy to
him. Damn, that made it worse. Where the fuck is Ken, he thought as Kevin
sobbed into his chest.
Trying to pat him
in a comforting rhythm like he’d seen mothers do with their babies in grocery
store lines, Jess thumped his hand on Kevin’s back. Clearing his throat, he
tried for a soothing voice, “Hey, its ok.
Come on. Don’t cry.”
When it seemed
that Kevin wasn’t listening, Jess gave up, let his head fall back against the
wall and just held the teen. He closed
his eyes, and wished he could close his ears as he heard the harsh sobbing of a
kid whose world had collapsed around him.
Continuing to hold
him, even after the sobs had stopped, Jess wished again for Ken to get home. He had no idea of how much time had passed
all he knew was his ass was sore from the hard concrete floor.
“Come on,
Kev. Let’s go inside.”
Jess heaved
himself up off the floor when he felt Kevin move away. Offering a hand down to the teen, he helped
him up. Jess felt like a prison guard as
he took hold of Kevin’s arm, but he was damned if he’d let the kid get away
from him.
Going into the
house, he pulled Kevin with him into the bedroom to get his phone. Using only one hand to text while the other
was still holding Kevin, Jess texted Ken a simple, he’s here. Once he was finished, he asked, “Can I trust
you in the bathroom alone? I don’t
really want to go in with you, but I will if I have to.”
Kevin shook his
head and said in a voice hoarse from his earlier crying jag, “No. I’m not gonna run.”
“Ok. Go wash your
face. You wanna shower? You got clothes?” Jess hadn’t seen any, but
he hadn’t looked for them either. Kevin could have stashed them in the shop.
“No. I did have
some but they’re at Austin’s house. I was going to crash there, but his dad got
drunk and started raising hell. I got
outta there fast,” Kevin explained.
“That where you
smoked the dope?”
“Yeah,” Kevin
admitted.
“Do it again, and
I’ll bust your ass,” Jess said and looked steadily into Kevin’s eyes. When the kid dropped his first, Jess
continued a little more kindly, “Go shower, and meet me back in the living
room.”
Jess rummaged
through his dresser and found some old sweats and a tee shirt. It’d be hot, but it’d cover the kid’s ass,
Jess thought. Opening the bathroom door
just enough to reach his arm in, Jess said, “Here’s some clothes. Put them on when you get out of the
shower. No shorts, sorry, you’ll have to
go commando.”
Closing the door
once Kevin took the clothes, Jess ran his hands through his hair. God, he needed a beer. Glancing at the bathroom door, he wondered if
he should have one with the kid in the house.
Hell, he thought. He’s seen us drink beer, I’m over 21 and it’s legal.
Heading to the
kitchen, Jess almost ran into Ken.
“Where is he?”
“Thank God, you’re
home!”
They both talked
at once. Jess looked at Ken, seeing the
stress and worry in his normally calm man, Jess reassured him. “Kevin’s ok.
He’s in the shower.”
Jess placed his
hand on Ken’s arm as Ken started toward the teen. “Ken. He’s ok.
Let him shower, and get his shit together. I found him higher than a kite in the
workshop, and he broke down completely.
Let him calm down so we can talk to him.”
Ken looked torn
between wanting to make sure Kevin was alright, and wanting to get information
out of Jess. Jess decided for him. “Come
on. You look like you could use a beer,
and God knows I need one.”
Jess quickly told
Ken what had happened in the workshop as they sat at the table drinking their
beers. “He really didn’t say much. Just
wanted to know why no one wanted him.
And then he cried. When he was done, I brought him inside and told him
to shower.”
“I’ve called Ms.
Lindy, and we’re going to keep him the night,” Ken said. Jess nodded, Kevin had spent a number of
nights with them. “I’m going to call the
Coopers and have them come over. We need
to have everyone here.”
Jess wasn’t sure
that was a good idea, but he kept his mouth shut. Ken had mentored other teens, and Jess was relieved
to let Ken handle things. Just as Ken
was hanging up the phone, Jess heard Kevin come out of the bathroom.
“Kev, we’re in the
kitchen,” he yelled out to the boy.
Jess felt his
heart tug when Kevin came in clutching at the impossibly large sweat pants and
wearing a look of hopelessness on his face.
He also saw how Kevin’s fingers gripped Ken’s shirt when Ken grabbed him
in a fierce hug.
“Damn it, boy,”
Ken said gruffly as he hugged the boy.
“You scared 20 years off my life.”
Jess grabbed a
soda out of the refrigerator when Ken directed them into the living room. Jess let out a silent sigh of relief when Ken
sat down next to Kevin on the couch.
Jess handed Kevin the soda and then sat down on the recliner closest to
the front door.
“Why’d you run?”
Ken asked Kevin.
“I don’t know,”
the boy mumbled.
Just as Jess
opened his mouth to talk to them, someone knocked on the door. Jess jumped up to answer it, as Ken slung his
arm around Kevin. Jess heard Ken murmur,
“You’re ok. You’re staying here
tonight. Don’t worry.”
Opening the door,
Jess let the Coopers in. Jess was
relieved when neither of them rushed toward Kevin. Their concern obvious but
under control.
“Hi, guys,” Liz
said, as she walked in. Jess stood back
as Liz and Conrad greeted Kevin and Ken.
Kevin looking
confused said, “Hi Dr. Cooper. Mrs. Cooper.
What are you doing here?”
Conrad Cooper sat
down next to Kevin. “Well son, Ken called us and told us you had run away.”
“I told you before
I’m not your son. I’m nobody’s son,”
Kevin spat out. He turned toward Ken and
asked, “Why’d you call them?”
Jess heard the
embarrassment in Kevin’s voice. Kevin
had gotten along well with both Conrad and Liz at the barbeque; he obviously
didn’t want them to see him this way.
“Kevin, you ran
away before Ms. Lindy could finish telling you what’s happening,” Ken said.
“Yeah,” Kevin
snapped. “Because I’m fucking tired of everyone telling me what’s going to
happen in my life! I’m sick of it! I’ll decide for myself from here on in.”
Jess understood
Kevin’s frustration. At 15 years old, on
the verge of adulthood, but not quite there yet, Kevin felt as though he had no
control over his own life. And he had it
worse than most kids, as the adults in his life were mainly tired, overworked
social workers. Well, Jess wanted to give
the kid a choice over something.
“Kevin, the reason
why the Coopers are here, is because they are the family that wants to foster
you,” Jess said bluntly. Kevin needed to
be told what was going on and to have the decision of whether he wanted to go
with them or not.
“What?” Kevin
asked stunned.
“Jess…“ Ken
started.
“No, let me
finish. Kevin has the right to know,”
Jess interrupted Ken. Turning back to
Kevin, Jess continued, “They came over earlier and told Ken and me. They also said we could still hang together,
you know, be your mentors, or whatever.”
“Kevin, this is
your choice,” Liz said. “I just hope you’ll give it a chance before you make a
final decision.”
Stunned Kevin
said, “You guys want me? To live with
you?”
Conrad laid his
hand on the teen’s shoulder, “Yes, we want you to live with us, finish high
school, maybe even go to college. Ken
tells me you’re pretty good in literature class.”
Jess saw the
relief start to ebb into Kevin’s face as Conrad, Liz and Ken talked to the boy,
not at him. They were giving him the
facts, and letting him make the decision.
“I’ll still get to
come over here right?” Kevin asked looking at Jess.
Jess had to wonder
when Kevin started looking to him for answers.
But he had to admit, it felt good to see that trust in Kevin’s eyes
directed at him.
“Yeah, you’ll
still come over,” Jess said.
The two couples
and the teen continued to talk well into the night, ordering pizza for
dinner. The Coopers left with a promise
to come over the next day so that they could all go to the group home together.
Ken sent the
exhausted teen to bed as Jess picked up the paper plates and napkins. Checking to make sure all the doors were
locked, Jess went into the bedroom.
Flopping down on the bed, he felt totally drained.
“Scoot over,” he
heard Ken say.
“I can’t,” Jess
half teased. “I’m too exhausted.”
“Hey, I declined
to beat your ass earlier today. I could
change my mind,” Ken said in a mockingly stern voice.
“You don’t have
any more energy than I do,” Jess said, but rolled over giving Ken room to get
in the bed. Jess shifted around and got
comfortable on Ken’s hard chest when Ken wrapped his arms around him.
“I can always find
the energy for your ass,” Ken told Jess sleepily.
As they drifted
off to sleep, Jess mumbled, “In the morning.”
End
To read more of Ken and Jess visit their page.
End
To read more of Ken and Jess visit their page.
Dizzy,
ReplyDeletewow, that was surely hard to write. I really like your descriptions of the men and Kevin in this; especially how Jess flipped after the announcement. I'm glad Ken and Jess worked things out between them and that Jess--even though he felt awkward and out of his depth--could comfort Kevin.
Thank you for such a loving story!
Chris T. Kat
ReplyDeleteThis story kind of flowed really well for me. For me I like seeing Jess flip out, but you can still recognize that he's grown so much in his relationship, and within himself. I really like that. I love the awkwardness of Jess with Kevin, so I'm super glad you commented on that.
Thank you so very much for leaving a comment. It made me feel great to read it.
I'm kinda really disappointed because I hoped Ken and Jess would foster and maybe adopt Kevin. *sigh*
ReplyDeleteYou've started my week off great with your comments!! thank you so much! Ken keeps talking to me and telling me he would like to foster a kid long term. Jess on the other hand is growling at me! LOL!
DeleteDizzy