35. Graham
35
GRAHAM
One year later
NYC Ballet Gala
T he man Silas is escorting this year is a visiting choreographer. He’s young—or at least younger than the man he was with last year. This one looks like he’s in his forties.
Silas wasn’t kidding about “gala season” last year when the topic of running into him in his role as an escort came up for the first time. I still remember the way he smelled that night on our couch. His scent has changed some since. I love cologne, and I’ve probably gotten him a dozen different fragrances, which means he’s constantly changing things up. It fascinates me the way his natural scent combines with expensive cologne—only ever making them smell better.
Last year, Avery recognized Silas immediately, even pointing him out to me and asking, “Do you think he’s, you know, being paid? ”
“Anything’s possible,” I answered unsurprised that Avery, as a former escort of Katia’s herself, would put the pieces together so quickly.
“Good for him,” she’d said then. “I had a feeling he was gay.”
This year, she also spots him before I do, leaning in to whisper who he is to her best friend—an heiress named Marianne Hayes. They met at this same gala last year when Avery was on the hunt for new friends. They clicked immediately. I’m tagging along with them tonight since Marianne’s husband is out of the country. The women are closer than Avery and I now are, making me the third wheel. They barely notice how little I pay attention to them.
My wife and I have been living separate lives for months, no longer sharing dinner or even coffee in the mornings. While she still makes public appearances with me, at home, we’re nothing more than roommates. Strangers who were once friends. Over the last few months, Avery’s distance has been more pointed. She comes and goes from the apartment without so much as a word my way. She often spends the night out, not coming home until the next morning. She no longer calls me when I’m in DC.
When we do speak, we fight—about money, politics, the way I load the dishwasher. She’s even distanced herself from my parents, which my mother has taken personally. The upside of all this is that I can see Silas whenever I want. It’s led to much more time with him, and so it’s hard to be too upset with Avery. I blame Marianne in part for the change. Her disdain for me is thinly veiled. Still, my ongoing relationship with Silas is the reason Avery wanted distance in the first place, which makes the current state of our marriage my fault.
I wouldn’t trade this last year for anything, which is selfish and shameful in and of itself, and yet, Silas has managed to make me happier than I’ve ever been.
Everything about him tonight is discreet, hanging back during introductions, often waiting for his “date” at their table. He and I are both sporting full beards now. Mine is closer shaved, while his is darker and fuller and so sexy. It’s softer than it looks and feels incredible on my skin.
“Excuse me,” I tell the ladies. “I’m going to say hello to my parents.”
Avery sighs, turning back to Marianne who ignores me, already scouting celebrities. Marianne knows everyone. She’s curt and cold with me, not a fan of being associated with a Republican. I’m well aware of where the Hayes’s spend their money when it comes to the politicians they support.
I have been, to my father’s never-ending pride, living up to my conservative potential. As I’ve grown slightly more comfortable as a senator, it’s required some position-taking on my part. With midterms approaching and my party’s chances of hanging onto the senate in jeopardy, I’ve had to make more public appearances, endorsing candidates whose values and politics are more conservative and extreme than mine, helping them to moderate for crowds of skeptical voters.
I’ve learned the trick on the campaign trail is to make people believe you’re willing to work across the aisle to maintain balance and prevent jarring changes to their way of life. But what I’ve learned in Washington is that no one wants to work together at all. Even when they do, it’s a numbers game.
It’s in my own interest to get as many Republicans elected as possible. It provides me cover for the occasional vote or public statement contrary to my caucus. One of my own campaign promises was to represent all New Yorkers, which occasionally necessitates bucking the party line. I’m still considered moderate in the senate. If the Dems were to take the majority, my votes won’t matter. However, this year, we’re heading for a virtual tie where I’ll either need to fall fully into line or break publicly with the party in order to keep my constituents happy and keep the dream alive of being re-elected.
Campaigning for other congressional hopefuls has meant more traveling when I’d usually be in New York, which is why I’m so intensely greedy for any time with Silas.
On a night like tonight—when I know another man will have him—the need to stake my claim is visceral. I need inside him like I need to breathe. It’s difficult to tear my gaze away when I join my parents. My father wraps an arm around my shoulders and introduces me to the director of the ballet we just watched.
I give my compliments and listen politely as the small, Russian man chats with my parents.
“What did you really think?” my dad asks once the director moves on.
I frown. “About the ballet?”
He nods, like he’s actually interested in my opinion. I shouldn’t be so surprised. I’m not sure if Paul Lawther is feeling his mortality or what, but he’s been inserting himself into my life more and more often, picking my brain about more than politics.
“It was—moving, I thought,” I tell him. “Maybe my favorite yet.”
“Their new principal dancer—the Ukrainian fellow? Did you see his leaps?”
I grin. “I did.” There was a lot I couldn’t help but notice about their newest dancer. The men’s costumes don’t leave much to the imagination.
“Avery looks lovely,” my mother cuts in.
I follow her gaze and take second to admire my wife in her beaded couture gown. It’s the same color of the champagne she’s holding. She glitters beneath the globe chandelier. “She does,” I agree.
“I hope you don’t mind my asking, but is there some sort of problem? A complication I don’t know about?”
I turn back to my mother, confused.
“It’s just surprising she’s not expecting again. She won’t speak to me about it.”
“Agnes, really,” my father chides .
To her credit, my mother does appear to have her foot firmly lodged in her mouth, but she also looks hurt.
I feel the words like a kick to the groin. A direct hit to my masculinity and my ingrained Catholic guilt.
My father pats my back. “Let’s freshen up our drinks.”
I nod and follow him to the bar.
The truth is, Avery and I talked about trying again a month or so after the miscarriage. She said she wasn’t ready—neither was I. It hasn’t come up again. She has her own life now, apart from me.
And I have mine.
If someone had asked me a year ago—on this same night of the gala, whether I thought Silas and I would last this long, I would have said no. I was so sure he’d get sick of my frequent absences—my time constraints. Me in general. But slowly I began to believe in his love. It’s the only reason I’m at the bar with my father talking about the performance and not pushing over tables to punch the choreographer in the face. The buzzing of my phone in my pocket is only more proof we’re constantly thinking of each other.
Silas
I can get us into one of the dressing rooms if you can find fifteen minutes.
I could move a mountain for those fifteen minutes.
Me
How do I get to them?
Silas
Through the performance hall.
It sounds nearly impossible and incredibly risky, but I’ll do anything to touch him before the choreographer can.
I expect my dad to start moving me around the room to make the rounds and shake some hands. Instead, he’s content to gossip at the bar, pointing out people to me and saying things like— “Heard he lost a mint on the Kentucky Derby” or, when he sees a famous movie actress, “Holden went on a date with her once. At least that what he claims. I think I believe him because he said she didn’t sleep with him. Has he told you that story?”
My brother Holden and I don’t talk much about our personal lives. My brothers and I never have had much in common. Holden works for my father’s company as the CFO. Trevor lives abroad, teaching theology in Italy. He comes home for the occasional holiday, but mostly he stays in Rome with his wife who’s from there.
“No,” I tell my dad. “I haven’t heard that one.”
Soon enough, people are approaching us, and my father shifts into meet-and-greet mode, showing me off. While I’m not popular with most celebrities, less famous donors are always happy to see me. Rich people love glad-handing a senator. I’ve never been clear what they think I’ll be able to do for them, but I know quite well what they can do for me—fund my next campaign.
Eventually, we take our seats and listen to the speeches as food is served. A miso-glazed salmon with a delicate whip of potatoes follows a consommé strong with the flavor of leeks. I pick at the food, forever a selective eater. The wine is good, though, as is the chopped salad with mango and goat cheese.
Like he’s pulling a string attached to my chest, I feel Silas stand from several tables away. He heads in the direction of the public restrooms, and I get a text.
Silas
Head all the way to the left down the bathroom hallway to the far entrance to the theater.
A minute later, I excuse myself.
Once I reach the bathroom, I turn, walking to the other side of the lobby, in the opposite direction of where everyone is pretending to pay attention to the celebrity behind the microphone. I assume this is the path Silas took. When the theater door opens easily—not locked, I glance around for anyone else.
Amazingly, the entire place is empty.
“Hey.”
I turn toward the whisper in the shadow of the farthest aisle. “This is a bad idea,” I say, hurrying toward him.
“Better than a bathroom stall.”
That was where I’d cornered him last year when I’d been drunk and unhinged with lust. God knows how many people came and went when I was fucking him that night, but the good news about tuxedos and black shoes is that we were able to remain anonymous. It wasn’t like anyone was going to try and break up what was obviously an intimate moment between two men in a toilet. I got lucky in more ways than one that night. It makes me panicky just thinking about how reckless I’d been.
“You’ve more than made your point about that,” I say, following him toward the stage. “You don’t think the dancers are still back there?”
“The show ended an hour ago.”
“How’d you manage this?”
“I asked a dancer.”
“Was he cute?”
“She was adorable,” he says.
Passing the orchestra pit, we make our way onto the stage and then quickly behind the side curtains. It’s utterly quiet back here, and I take the opportunity to grab him, push him into the wall and devour his mouth.
“We need to make this quick,” he breathes, but his hands are already roaming. He squeezes my ass. “Come on.”
Like he’s got a map of the place, he leads us straight into one of the principal’s dressing rooms. It’s clearly a woman’s with tutus, sparkling tiaras, and pointe shoes. What it’s lacking are surfaces on which to fuck .
I look at Silas, his lips already swollen from the voracious kiss backstage. I feel like I have a fever and he’s the cure—like the only way to feel warm again is inside him. “Drop your pants and put your hands on the wall.”
“Someone let himself out of his cage,” Silas says, eyeing my bulging erection. “Did you bring lube, too?”
I pull the packets out of my front pants pocket and show him. He grabs one, holds it in his teeth, and unbuckles his tuxedo pants. I watch with greedy eyes as he exposes himself, his hard cock jutting forth as soon as his tight black jock comes down.
He dresses like such a slut when he’s got a client. I secretly love it, but openly fucking hate it. If we weren’t in a hurry, I’d make him fully undress, but we have less chance of looking suspicious if we keep our upper body clothing intact.
I open my pants just enough to pull out my dick and lube it. Silas turns, planting his hands on the wall. He parts his thighs, and I step in. My hands immediately slide up the front of his shirt, my fingers finding his nipple piercings—his Christmas present to me last year that I had to wait for weeks to use while they healed.
I tug them as my cock finds its own way into his hole, knowing his body and the way we fit so intimately that when I let myself think about it too much, I start regretting every choice I ever made that wasn’t him.
His head turns as his hips buck back. I kiss him deeply.
My groans are loud as he works my cock with his expert ass, but he swallows them all and lets out a few of his own. My fingers flick and twist the bars through his nipples, and this makes him fuck back onto me even harder. I grind into him, lapping hungrily at his tongue, an orgasm already building, tightening my balls as they slam against his.
He’s in pro mode—too busy trying to get me off to get himself there. “Are you planning to finish inside me?” I gasp as my cock gives a telltale throb .
“If I have to leak your cum on my date, you’ll damn well have to leak mine while you’re sitting like a good little boy next to your parents.”
Fuck…that should not be the thing that gets me off, but it is. I shudder hard and come, making his hole hotter and slipperier. I grab his pecs and bottom out inside him while I force his body still. My hold doesn’t stop his ass from milking me until I’m trembling and incoherent.
When I finally settle, he slaps my hip. We trade places, and I gratefully lean on the wall and breathe while he rips open the packet of lube and stuffs two fingers full of it into my hole. “You’re not even trying to stop me,” he chuckles.
Apparently, I’m “loose” or something. I’ve assured him my asshole works properly under all other circumstances, but when I’m with him, it opens wide.
“Bad little gay boy,” he says, teasing my prostrate and slapping his dick on my ass. “Does it make you feel guilty how much you want my cock inside you?”
“Yes,” I pant, desperate for him to fill me.
“You need to make a confession?”
“Forgive me baby. I need to sin.”
“Fuck yes, you do.”
He slams in, making me cough because I swear he’s up in my lungs sometimes. I reach back to squeeze his hip because I wouldn’t have it any other way. “Love that. Fucking love you.”
“I fucking love you, too. Now shut the fuck up, I’m trying to set a mood.”
“Sorry, baby,” I mumble with half my face smashed against the wall while he shoves my head into it.
“I’m sweating through my tux,” he says, his cock hammering into me.
I grunt. I growl. I whine as my dick pulses out a thin strand of cum while he pounds me into the wall .
“Oh, shit,” he groans, voice breaking. “Gonna fucking come…you’re gonna feel this baby. You might even taste it.”
Jesus…
“God…fuck…coming…” Silas moans as his hips slow to a deep grind. Heat fills my ass, and he pushes in even deeper. His thighs move flush with mine as he quakes through spasm after spasm of his cock.
Sensation rocks me like an earthquake, numbing my limbs, my mind, melting my bones into the wall as his body covers me. He wraps his arms around my middle and breathes into the crook of my neck. “Let’s just get the fuck out of here,” he sighs after a few breathless moments.
I close my eyes and let the thought run away with me. I see us in a cabin deep in the mountains. Snow glazing a meadow and Silas a thirst trap chopping wood to keep me warm by the fire. “What are you imagining?” I whisper.
“Someplace warm and sunny. No galas. No internet. You’re still wearing a suit, though.”
I laugh softly. “You can take the man out of the city…”
He lets out a soft whimper, like a pout. “I need to put you back together.”
“Okay.” I wince when he pulls out, wishing he could stay.
We pull up our pants, but then he moves in on me, hands righting my hair, combing through my beard, straightening my tie and tucking in my shirt. I stare at him, waiting for him to meet my eyes. “How do I look?” I ask when he does.
He gestures to the ballerina’s mirror. “See for yourself.”
I do as he manages his own rumpled self. Then he moves to stand beside me. “What a hot couple,” he says.
“Are we starting to look alike?”
“They say that happens.”
I check my watch. “Shit.” It’s been significantly longer than fifteen minutes.
He rubs my back. “Tell them it was the salmon. ”
“Sexy. Is that what you’re gonna say?”
He laughs. “I’m gonna say I had to take a phone call. You go first.”
I turn to him, and he kisses me. It’s softer and less frenzied than before. “Text me when it’s over?” I ask. He knows what I mean.
He nods.
Then, in a tone that doesn’t leave room for protest, I say, “I’ll see you in the morning.”
He kisses me one last time. “Yes. You will.”