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Never go home

Content Warning: The following work of fiction contains mature subject

matter and graphic sexual descriptions of minors engaged in sexual

explorations.. If this bothers you or if it is illegal to possess

such material in your locality, please hit the delete button now. This

is a work of fiction and any similarity to any person(s) living or

dead is pure coincidence. Under no circumstances should this material

be deemed suitable for minors.

Subject: A young runaway learns to survive on the streets, but can he

learn how to live?

A NOTE TO MINORS WHO IGNORE MESSAGE HEADERS: Running away is just

that, running away, not running to. It is probably the most dangerous

thing you can think of. It can get you killed, it can ruin your life.

There *ARE* options out there. If you need options the best site on

the web that I’ve found is http://www.tdprs.state.tx.us/hotline.html.

The toll free number you can get to from any pay phone in the nation

is 1-800-392-3352. This is a Texas organization but it’s run by

people who actually give a damn and they’ll work with you on finding a

better solution wherever you live. You may still end up running away,

but at least you’ll have the chance to run TO something in the

process. Real life is NOT like this story, it rarely has neat and

tidy endings.

Author’s Second Note: This story is disturbing. It is right that it

is disturbing, and it is right that you should look upon it with some

fear and trepidation. There but for the grace of God go us. This is a

story about coming of age in the worst possible way imaginable, but it

is also a story about hope. To me, the story is very powerful, and it

is my sincerest wish that my writing skills will allow me to do this

story the justice it deserves.

Credits: Many thanks to Sven the Elder for offering me an unofficial

celestial prior to publication and for the kind words which makes

hitting the publish button so dang easy.

Subject Matter: (mm) (m/f) (Romance)

Rating: (X) Not suitable for minors. May be illegal in some areas.

Author: SandMan

Copyright ( c ) 1998 sandman@bitsmart.com

Archive: ftp://asstr.ml.org/pub/Authors/sandman/index.html

Distribution Rights: May be distributed freely WITHOUT MODIFICATION on

USENET, USENET II, not-for profit web sites, not-for profit ftp sites,

and news archival services which offer free public access to archived

articles. All other rights are specifically reserved by the author.

Creation Date: 1/18/98

Distribution Date: 1/22/98

You Can Never Go Home Again (By Sandman)

"To be shelterless and alone in the open country, hearing the wind

moan and watching for day through the whole long weary night; to

listen to the falling rain, and crouch for warmth beneath the lee of

some old barn or rick, or in the hollow of a tree; are dismal

things—but not so dismal as the wandering up and down where shelter

is, and beds and sleepers are by thousands; a houseless rejected

creature." -- Charles Dickens

***

Joey stepped off the greyhound bus in a light drizzling rain and

pulled his coat close around him. Behind him the aluminum doors

hissed shut and the great hulking vehicle pulled away, leaving him

alone in this strange place in the dead of night. He skirted under

the cover and entered the bus terminal, his eyes straining at the

sharp contrast between the gloomy night outside and the harsh

florescents inside.

A few men were stretched out on the benches, all of them looked dirty

and unkempt. Joey gave an involuntary shudder for what they

represented; hopelessness, despair, poverty, all the things he was

just one bus ride and a hundred dollars away from experiencing

himself. Unbidden, the word "homeless" sprang to his mind and he

weighed the word carefully.

Until the moment he had stepped off the bus he had been a normal, all

American fifteen year old kid. He had grown up believing in Santa

Claus, the tooth fairy, and that if he did well in school he’d grow up

and get a nice middle class job, middle class house with a middle

class mortgage, and end up with a middle class wife, and middle class

kids. But now, the full ramifications of what he had done set in and

he slumped down onto a nearby bench under the weight of those

consequences.

The dark spiral of events that had led him to this place swirled

around him beginning seven months ago, a blink of an eye, when his

parents had died in a car wreck. His dad, a jovial outgoing man, had

a passion for sports cars and along with that a passion for speed. He

was a good driver, who drove good machines but for one fault; corners.

The sharper the corners, the faster his father liked to take them.

The bridge where the accident had happened was a sharp ninety degree

bend, elevated and slanted. Just the way his father liked them.

He had taken that curve before, many times. But that day there was a

spot of oil on the road where some vehicle or truck with a cracked oil

reserve had leaked. The big fat tires couldn’t hold onto the road and

the car flew through the guard rail, dropping them two stories onto

another roadway below, right in front of a tractor trailer. His

parents had died instantly. The car disintegrating under the

tremendous impacts. The policemen and social workers who had broken

the news to Joey had tried to avoid telling him that all that was left

of his parents was a twisted mass of blood, bone, and flesh, but Joey

understood anyway. He was a bright kid, and where explanations

failed, tortured imagination supplied the rest.

He only had one living relative, Uncle Bob, his Mother’s brother.

Until the funeral he had never met his Uncle, though he knew that his

Mother did not get along with her brother. She never mentioned why

this was so, but Joey learned for himself soon enough. Uncle Bob for

all practical purposes ignored his new charge. He lived alone in the

suburbs and when he was not working as a salesman he was propped up in

front of the tv drinking beer.

He drank until he was drunk that first night, then he drank until he

passed out. The next night he repeated the ritual. On the third

night after eight beers Uncle Bob switched channels to find one of the

pay services had unscrambled their channel and was showing a racey

film. Joey left the room when his Uncle unzipped his pants and began

masturbating.

After a couple of weeks Joey stayed in his room when Uncle Bob was

home, but even that didn’t help him much when his Uncle decided to

come visiting. And lately he had been visiting often. Uncle Bob,

when he was drunk, was a very violent man. The first beating had

happened on the pretext that Joey had not taken out the garbage. By

the fifth beating Uncle Bob didn’t even need a pretext.

Nothing in life had ever prepared Joey for this. In the span of two

months to be in a loving home with a normal life and then a home with

no love, in a strange city with no friends and the beatings, oh the

beatings. He hadn’t planned to run away, it just happened. The last

beating had been the worst and his ribs still hurt. After his Uncle

had passed out he rifled through the wallet and pulled out a hundred

and fifty dollars in cash. Other than his coat and wallet he didn’t

take anything from the house as he set out.

It had taken all day to walk to the bus station. He had picked a city

at random when he bought the ticket and he had spent all that night

and the next day riding. Sleeping mostly, trying to forget

everything. But now, sitting on the bench in the bus station the

terrible feeling of not having anywhere to go overwhelmed him and

thoughts spun around in his head so fast he was paralyzed as to what

to do now.

"Need some help kid?" a voice asked.

Joey looked up to see a large black security guard looking down at

him, his hand lightly resting on the butt of a large pistol. "No."

Joey said quickly. "I just got in, waiting for my Uncle to pick me

up." The lie rolled easily off his tongue.

"Ticket?", the guard asked. Joey fished around his pockets before

flashing the used ticket. The guard studied it a moment then handed

it back. "Sorry. Just doing my job. Get a lot of runaways now and

again, never hurts to check."

Joey cocked his head. "Runaways? What do you do with them?" He

asked.

The guard shrugged. "Refer them to a shelter I know about. Then I

guess the social workers take over. Either get them back home again

or placed with a foster home."

"Oh." Joey said glumly. The thought of either a shelter home or a

foster family repulsed him. It was something you picked up without

really being taught. Such things were for losers, for people who

couldn’t cope with life. They were not meant for respectable people.

"You sure you’re all right kid?", the guard asked, eyeing him keenly.

"Fine." Joey answered. "Really. Just tired. It was a long trip.

My Uncle should be here in a little bit."

"Uh-huh." The guard said. "Whatever you say."

"I think I’ll go stretch my legs a bit." Joey said, getting up.

"I’ve been sitting way to long." Barely breathing he strode away from

the guard and to the doors. He paused at the street outside, but

briefly before turning right and followed the dark sidewalk in the

drizzling cold rain.

The bus station was out of place in this seedy run down district.

The houses and shops were in various states of disrepair and jumbled

together as if no one really cared that it was some how out of place

to put a house next to an all night book store or a tiny dilapidated

church next to a liquor store. The surreal atmosphere was enhanced by

the light fog and the occasional flickering streetlight. old cars,

none of which looked overly usable lined the streets. Dark alleyways,

clothed in darkness loomed reminding him of when he was younger and

there had been a monster in the closet.

He walked quickly, always aware of eyes staring at him, always aware

of the dangerous looking men who prowled these streets in the dead of

night, always aware that they looked on him as he would have looked on

them if they had suddenly appeared at the mall he used to hang out at

with his friends.

***

He was sitting at a table in front of "The patio", the local mall

mish-mash of various fast food stores. They were sitting at the table

nearest to the walkways, the table where the people watching was best,

the table where it was the easiest to be seen. He was thirteen, and

his best friend David and his other best friend Chris where sitting on

either side of them as they nursed their slurpies.

"Look over there!", Chris had said pointing at a couple in front of a

record shop window.

The man was tall and lean, maybe nineteen years old. He wore a pair

of sneakers with torn canvas exposing his toes since he wore no socks.

He wore a pair of long, aged and ripped jeans. That was actually

stylish, but the worn dirty yellow T-shirt which proclaimed "Gangsta’s

do it with a bang" was not. The T-shirt had no sleeves exposing on

his left shoulder a tattoo of a skull and crossbones. He wore a gold

necklace and an earring dangled from his right ear. But most

startling of all, his short cut hair with a longer tuft which served

as a mohawk effect was dyed pink and green.

The woman was attired in sandals and short cut blue jeans, very short

cut revealing her long slender legs and enough of them to make looking

at her extraordinarily exciting. She wore a plain white T-shirt which

had been rolled up and tied just below her ample breasts, exposing a

flat belly and fascinating curves. She had long blond hair that ended

at her shoulders, and a few locks had been braided and tucked behind

her ear to end on the front of her chest. The man had his hand tucked

inside her pants feeling the right side of her ass.

The boys stared in awe and fascination and not a little fear at the

odd couple. A few feet behind them a portly security guard also

considered them. The man had made some joke and the woman laughed and

they moved on, the security guard moved to follow them.

"Wow.", David said. "Did you see how he had his hand tucked in to

her ass?"

***

Joey shook his head, pulling himself out of the memory. He paused a

moment, for he found himself on the border of dark and light. Here

the streetlights ended, and pitch dark loomed ahead of him. His hair

was dripping wet from the cold drizzle and had fed the water between

his coat and skin to soak his shirt. He shivered as much from the

cold as from fear. He stepped forward and darkness engulfed him.

***

Joey was six, and in bed. He stared at the closet door with more than

a little trepidation. He knew the monster was in there waiting for

him. He knew with all the certainty that if he dropped and object it

would fall to the ground. If the house groaned at night, it was

because the monster was moving about. If he heard a bump in the night

it was the monster pacing, waiting for the time it could finally claim

him.

When he had been younger, the monster had been under the bed. Only

light and the magic of the bed could keep the monster at bay. If a

foot should happen to dangle over the side while one slept, then the

spell would be broken and the monster would grab the foot and pull him

off. What happened after that would be to horrible to even think of.

But his Dad had cast the spell when he was five. For a whole week the

monster had been banished from the house.

The spell kept the monster away from the bed, but it returned soon

enough and took up residence in the closet. His father had cast the

spell again on the closet but it didn’t work. Joey was disappointed

when his father explained there was no monster. Disappointed not

because he believed what his father said, but because he couldn’t make

his father realize just what evil lurked in that small dark room.

But he was six now. His birthday had been yesterday. Why he was

almost a man now. Joey took a deep breath and climbed down off the

bed. His knees wobbled a little, and his heart raced. He almost

bounded back into bed, but a stubborn streak held him. Fear mixed

with anger. This was HIS house, HIS bedroom and it wasn’t right that

the monster made him afraid like that all the time. He took a step

towards the closet. Then another, and another. Slowly, agonizingly

slow he walked breathing hard, feeling his heart pound in his head,

noticing every single detail no matter how small, hearing every sound

no matter how distant - even his parents shallow breathing in their

bedroom down the hall, smelling everything as if for the first time.

His hand rested on the doorknob and he turned and pulled the door

open. Complete, utter blackness greeted him. The monster was in

there, but it wasn’t moving. No sound greeted him, nothing sprang up

to surprise him. Almost he closed the door to return running to his

bed. Almost, but the stubborn streak held him fast. He held up his

hands, clenching them into small fists and stepped into the blackness.

***

"Heya kid!" a voice exclaimed. Joey jumped at the sound coming from

the alley. The voice belonged a drunken dirty man holding a wine

bottle with just enough liquid left at the bottom of the bottle to

slosh around as he waved it. "Got some cash for an old bum?" He was

drunk and his words slurred, but there was a note of excitement in his

voice the excitement of a bit of cash for a new bottle when this one

ran out.

"No." Joey mumbled and started walking again, quickening his pace.

"Five bucks kid." The old wino pleaded. Then his voice hushed

conspiratorially, "For five bucks I’ll suck you off."

Joey stopped and looked back in shock at the old man. The wino smiled

broadly revealing even in the darkness a set of rotted and missing

teeth. Joey broke into a sprint and didn’t stop until he was well

away.

***

"Wanna see something?" David asked.

The tree-house swayed gently in the warm summer breezes. An eleven

year old Joey nodded.

"It’s a secret all right? Just between us. Double swear it.", David

demanded.

"All right! I double swear." Joey agreed exasperated. Single

swearing was bad enough, double swearing was tantamount to selling

your soul.

David leaned over and in a conspiratorial voice said. "You know my

cousin visited over the weekend. Well he showed me something. It

kinda looks gross at first but it’s really neat if you do it."

Joey’s eyes went wide as he watched David slide off his shorts

revealing a throbbing erect penis. For the last few months Joey’s own

penis had been behaving strangely, always getting all stiff and

usually at the worst possible and most uncomfortable times. The

thought of telling anybody about it had never even crossed his mind,

but then neither did the thought that other people’s penises might get

hard as well. Joey was unable to tear his eyes away as he watched his

friend massaging that erection.

"Hmmm." David groaned. "It feels really, really good if you do this.

Try it, you’ll see."

Joey snapped out of his trance and frowned, suddenly aware that his

own penis had grown in a most uncomfortable position as he had sat

watching. If he hadn’t been so uncomfortable he might have declined.

But removing his shorts and setting the penis to a more comfortable

angle certainly wouldn’t be worse than what David was already doing.

Blushing furiously Joey slid down his shorts to the sounds of his

friend’s long slow deep breaths and squishing sounds that was coming

from his hand upon his penis. At David’s prodding Joey wrapped his

hand around his swollen penis and began to move it as David was doing.

His breath hitched as the first electrifying wave of pleasure rolled

over him. David smiled as he watched Joey’s face stiffen, his lips

puckering into a surprised O.

For a minute they watched each other jerking off and then David said,

"There’s something even better." Joey sincerely doubted the accuracy

of that statement at the moment as he rode the waves of pleasure

springing forth from his crotch. "My cousin showed me this too."

David said as he leaned over. Joey stopped his movements,

uncomfortably aware of how close David was. Though they weren’t

touching he could feel his nearness. David pulled Joey’s hand away

from his cock and let his head fall lower. Joey started to say

something, confusion welling up inside him but he could only throw his

head back and moan as he felt David’s warm, wet mouth engulf him.

***

"The foxes have holes, and the birds of the air have nests; but the

Son of man hath not where to lay his head." -- Matthew 8:20

***

Joey walked. He had walked that night, and the next day and now it

was dark again. His feet hurt. His legs hurt. He was cold. He was

hungry. He was afraid. But most of all he was tired, and even tired

wasn’t the right word, exhausted was better description. As long as

he was walking he was OK, but when he stopped he felt the world close

in around him and exhaustion made it’s presence known. That afternoon

he had paused in a park to rest on a bench until he felt to keenly the

eyes of strangers on him. But now in the early evening he was getting

desperate to find some safe place to curl up and sleep.

The neighborhood he was walking in was run down. Small, tiny houses

with peeling paint, overgrown lawns some spotted with ugly bare

patches lined the street. Joey paused in front of one of them. The

lawn had grown wild here, with grasses almost knee high and various

other plants sprouting up. The windows were boarded up as was the

front door. It looked as if a good strong wind would topple the

rickety old house.

The drizzle began to turn into hard rain as he stood staring at the

house. It looked abandoned, it felt abandoned, and he was desperate

for a place to sleep. Cautiously with frequent looks down the

deserted street he slipped around back. The back door at one point

had been boarded up as well, but someone had long since removed the

barricade. The door itself was strewn on the floor, leaving the house

open to the elements.

He stepped inside the dark house, his eyes straining to catch the

feeble light. The place was a wreck, literally. What walls there

were had great gaping holes in them, most of the plaster had fallen

away Garbage, beer cans, old nudie magazines lay strewn about.

Roaches fled as he walked through the house, and every now and then he

thought he saw something a little larger scurrying around, but in the

dim light it was hard to make out.

In one of the bedrooms someone had thrown an impossibly old, stained

mattress on the floor. The thing stank to high heaven of old sex,

moldy fabric, old alcohol and urine. Had he not been so desperate,

his options so limited he would have fled. Even his Uncle’s house had

not been this bad. This place offended his sensibilities. He ran his

fingers through his stringy wet hair despairing at how far he had

fallen.

After surveying the house he found the only halfway livable spot was

the large walk-in bedroom closet. The walls were relatively intact

with only a small hole between the bedroom and the closet. The floor

was wood which had not rotted to badly, and the small place felt good,

safe and at this point he very, very much needed that.

He closed the closet door and laid down. The wood was hard against

his head, if it had been warmer he could have used his coat as a

pillow but his shirt would give little comfort from the night chill

and figured his arm would have to suffice. It took several long

minutes to find a bearable position, it took longer minutes still to

let his exhaustion overcome the fear and anxiety of sleeping in a

strange, dirty, scary place. A single tear rolled down his cheek as he

finally surrendered to sleep.

***

"There you go Honey." Joey’s mom said cheerfully as she made sure his

covers were tight. "Snug as a bug in a rug." She beamed as she

kissed him on the nose.

"Read me a story?", Joey asked. He was tired, but never to tired for

a story.

"Weelll." His mother said pretending to think it over. "I guess so.

But only because you’re so special." She leaned over and said with a

wink and a smile, "I don’t even read to your father!" Joey smiled

broadly at that. It felt so wonderful to feel special. His mom went

over to the book case and pulled out a small reader. "Well, well!

Looks like we’re going to find out all about Hansel and Gretel

tonight!" She sat on the edge of his bed and began to read.

***

Joey woke suddenly, his blood pounding as he stared at the darkened

ceiling. He had been asleep only a couple of hours yet it was a light

and troubled sleep, and a part of him had been alert to the strange

sounds of this place enough to realize when something unusual was

happening. Then he heard giggling at the back door. It was a girl’s

giggle, a sound which said "I’m doing something I shouldn’t. It’s

naughty but I don’t care." Then heavy footsteps rang on the floor.

Closer and closer to where he lay. Despite the cool air, sweat began

to form on Joey’s brow.

"Ewww! Could this place get any grosser?" a girl’s voice asked.

"All that matter’s babe is that you’re here and I’m here, and we got

da rocks!", A boy’s voice said cheerfully.

Carefully Joey turned over onto his stomach and peered through the

small hole into the bedroom. A boy and girl, maybe sixteen for the

girl and seventeen for the boy, sat Indian style on the mattress.

They both had what looked like home rolled cigarettes in their mouth

and the boy flicked a lighter and lit them both.

After a few seconds the girl exclaimed, "Damn this is good fuckin’

shit!"

"Yea, good source. He treats me right.", the boy answered.

For five minutes they smoked the drug and the bitter acrid smell

filtered through the house even into the closet where Joey watched.

Then they stuffed the thin sliver of the roaches into a bottle of beer

they were carrying.

"God that’s a trip." The girl said. "To bad it doesn’t last. Got

any more?"

"Naw." The boy answered. "Won’t be any more until my Pa get’s paid

and I can lift some cash from his wallet. He don’t notice a twenty

missing, but if I try it with my Ma I’ll get the crap beat outta me."

She frowned. "I know something almost as good though." He said

slyly.

She laughed. "Me too." And then she hiked up her skirt to reveal

that she wasn’t wearing any panties. Joey’s breath hitched and though

he never would have thought it possible under these circumstances he

began to get an erection. The view wasn’t perfect, the angle was

wrong, but he could see enough. The boy dropped his hand down to the

girl’s pussy and began to work it as she threw back her head and

smiled.

"You like that huh?" The boy asked.

She moaned and answered, "Oh yea." And arched her hips as if to

prove it.

"Turn over." He said.

"Aw Mack you know I don’t like it like that, I almost never get off.",

she complained.

"Hey, who got you the rocks? You owe me babe. There’s plenty of

girls put up with lots worse shit for rocks."

She sighed and rolled over. "Just keep that thing away from my ass.

Boy’s who like girl’s asses are just this shy of being queer."

He slapped her, hard enough for the smack to echo through the house

and she gave a yelp. "I’ll take your ass if I want to bitch. It’s

only queer if you’re a guy and from where I’m standing you ain’t no

guy."

She was silent as he dropped his pants and scooted up behind her. He

grasped the base of his shaft and dipped it down to run it through her

pussy lips. "Here?" he asked. Then he brought it up higher and

leaned forward a little, "Or here?" Joey couldn’t see the girl’s

face and he held his breath. Finally the boy lowered his cock again

and pushed in. The girl sighed.

Mac dropped his hands to the girls hips and grasped her tightly,

pushing and pulling her as his needs dictated. It did not last long

at all. A minute of thrusting and then his face contorted and he

gasped.

"Not bad." He said as he pulled up his pants.

The girl rolled back over and stood up. "Friday? You’ll have more on

Friday?"

"Yea. I’ll have more on Friday. I think Friday I’ll choose your

ass."

The girl grimaced and then forced a smile. "For a good rock, I’ll

even let you."

The sounds of their footsteps faded away and Joey rolled back over and

tried to recapture sleep.

***

It was spring and Joey was fourteen. David had the chance to visit

his Aunt and Uncle on their farm for a week, and had invited Joey

along as well. Joey had agreed instantly, and his parents had agreed

as well after they had worked out the details with David’s parents.

Joey had never seen a farm before and thought it would be completely

radical. David, who had visited the place often, thought it was

rather boring and was glad Joey was coming along to break up the

monotony.

This was the same aunt and uncle who had visited David when he was

eleven, the parents of the cousin who had taught David and thus Joey

how to have a little fun now and again. Joey would never see the

mysterious cousin since he had headed off to college and had a full

time job to pay his way. But the cousin was not on Joey’s mind as

they drove out to the farm. The prospect of seeing real life horses

and cows and other exotic animals excited him to no end.

They were met at the door by a man and woman about the same age as

Joey’s parents. The adults smiled, shook hands, and generally just

greeted each other. Joey stood off uncomfortably to the side as they

renewed family ties. David’s parents soon introduced him though, and

Joey was gratified at the warm greeting they extended to him.

When the door opened again and a bright sandy-haired girl a year

older, maybe two years older than Joey himself, burst in he found

himself unable to take his eyes off her. She was wearing sandals and

short cutoffs like the girl he had seen at the mall that one day. Her

legs were kind of spindly, but golden bronze. She wore a plain white

T-shirt that did little to hide the orange sized mounds that served

as her breasts. Her face was gorgeous with sparkling blue eyes and

rich full lips. Though Joey looked on her with something close to

awe, her own gaze was not so kind. But she smiled and went through

the motions of a warm family greeting, even shaking Joey’s hand when

David’s Uncle introduced him to Cindy.

Joey was absolutely fascinated by the girl though he she kept a firm

distance between them. For the first few days the farm was an endless

treasure-trove of new discoveries, the barn especially. It was more

than possible to jump from the rafters into the thickly piled hay

below. And the barn held cows and the horses. Joey was sore from his

first horseback riding lesson, but he enjoyed it despite the pain.

There was something about riding on the back of a horse which spoke to

what it meant to be a man.

David and Joey were behind the barn, "relieving the pressure" as they

called it. They really didn’t get each other off all that often, but

every now and again both of them were just randy enough to be in the

mood. Usually it started by fingering each other for a few moments

before taking turns sucking each other off. As they had grown older
they had realized that what they were doing was a "Gay Thing", but

since they both liked girls it didn’t seem to be such a big deal and

they were definitely smart enough to be discrete.

Then the worst and best possible thing happened. Cindy stepped out

into view and was regarding them, her eyebrows arched, as David’s

mouth was wrapped with excruciatingly pleasure around Joey’s cock.

Joey could only stare at her in complete embarrassment and terror

forgetting even the pleasure of David’s mouth as his friend

unwittingly continued to suck.

"Well isn’t that just the cat’s meow." She said. "You two having

fun?"

David jerked away, his face now mirroring Joey’s. "Well, the damage

is done." Joey thought and answered. "As a matter of fact, yes." as

casually as he possibly could.

"You two queer?", she asked.

"Naw. Just having some fun." Joey answered, his mind racing, awed

that he was managing to sound so calm when he felt like he wanted to

run screaming the three hundred miles back home and go hide under his

bed.

"Oh." She said, considering him with those hard blue eyes of hers.

Then her eyes dropped to study his penis which in his terror had

shriveled up into near non-existence. It seemed like they sat and

stood there like that for an eternity, with Joey feeling her hot gaze

on his penis. And as the terror gave way he began to get excited

again.

She giggled as it started to grow. "That’s so funny."

"It has a mind of it’s own sometimes." Joey agreed. He looked over

at David who was staring at both of them white as a sheet.

"Tell you what." Cindy said. "I won’t tell anybody if you’ll let me

try a few things out."

Joey and David could only smile like complete idiots and nod their

heads in rapid agreement.

***

Joey woke up feeling like his Uncle had just worked him over but good.

He had slept, but the sleep had been light and often broken. Several

times he had woken up to brush a scurrying roach off him. He

staggered to the door in time to watch the sun rise. On occasion he

used to watch the sun come up with a sense of anticipation, enjoying

the similarities to a sunset, but with the promise of a new day ahead

of him. Today though the sun broke through the scattered clouds as a

curse, it’s rays shimmering in the cold mist a hollow, broken promise.

He sat on the back porch of the house, watching the sun rise and

considered for the first time his options. There really weren’t all

that many. He could try to find a shelter, even that couldn’t be

worse than days of walking or sleeping in that house again. But

looming in the back of his mind was the possibility that they would

send him back to his Uncle. The beatings had been violent but he

didn’t have any broken bones or scars, though that might change if

Uncle Bob took his running away personally. Social workers probably

saw a lot worse, they’d just think he was a silly kid.

He’d heard of runaways who ended up selling drugs or their bodies, but

he ruled that out as quickly as he thought of it. Chris had started

doing drugs at thirteen and he drifted father and farther away from

David and him when after the first joint they had begged off. Before

his parents died Joey had noted just how sickly Chris looked and when

he had tried to talk with him, it was like talking with a stranger.

And fooling around with David, well that was something that was just

between friends. The thought of doing it with somebody else repulsed

him to no end.

His stomach rumbled, reminding him he had not eaten in two days. Not

since the sandwich he had wolfed down that night he had run away. He

considered asking around for a soup kitchen but dismissed it almost as

quickly as he had dismissed the shelter. He still looked more like a

kid than a young adult, people would ask questions and those same

people might send him back home.

For a second he considered spending his last precious dollars on food

but stopped as he recalled a lesson from Sunday school. "Give a man a

fish and he eats for a day, teach a man to fish and he shall eat for

the rest of his life" or something like that. He need a job, an

honest job where he’d have the chance to earn more money. And he

smiled as he realized just what kind of job he needed. Someplace

where food was abundant, and no-one would miss anything. Then he took

stock of himself. His shoes and pants were decent if mired in mud.

His underwear though felt like they had become a part of him and he

shifted uncomfortably as he realized they probably smelled worse than

his shirt which was pretty rank. Not many people would hire him in

his current condition.

And though there was shelter here, this wasn’t his element. He was a

middle class boy and the only environment he really knew how to

survive in were the suburbs. It didn’t take to long to find the

corner store, a dingy, gloomy place that stocked more liquor than

food. Still he managed to find a halfway decent loaf of bread that

didn’t feel like a rock when he lifted it, though he winced at the

price. He also picked up a small carton of Orange Juice. All the

while the Indian clerk who was Indian Indian not American Indian

stared at him as one would stare at a large rat that had just walked

into the center of a restaurant. Joey felt very uncomfortable under

that gaze.

"Where’s the nearest highway?", Joey asked as the clerk rang up the

goods.

"Follow the street outside, turn left when you leave." He said in a

thick accent. "Four Ninety Five."

Joey winced and pushed over a twenty. The clerk lifted it up to the

light and studied it suspiciously before dropping it in the register

and counting out the change. When Joey asked for a bag, the clerk

grunted and pushed over a small plastic bag. He ate a few slices of

bread as he walked, feeling better now that his stomach wasn’t so

empty. The orange juice tasted better than anything he could remember

and he drank the pint quickly, careful not to let the juice dribble

down his chin.

When he reached the highway, rush hour was in full swing. Everyone

was heading in to work. Joey started following the highway away from

where the cars were heading. He knew that was where the suburbs

where. If not where home was, at least where he understood the rules

of the game. He was still walking as the cars began returning that

evening. He had passed through many areas, but he had not gone far

enough. He was looking for the fringe where the suburbs ended and

wilderness began.

That night he slept behind an abandoned gas station under the clear,

cool starry sky. On the soft grass behind the station he was more

comfortable than on the hard floor, and no roaches disturbed his

sleep, though it remained light and troubled. He walked again the

next day until he came to "Woodview", a sprawling community nestled in

the woods. There were many shops and restaurants but most important

to Joey, a large tract of undeveloped woods. That afternoon he

scouted the woods until he found a small pond. The water was a bit

murky but it would serve his needs.

He removed his coat and dove in, rising to the surface with a

"Whoop!". He knew the water would be cold, but was quite a different

thing to know something and to experience it. He disrobed in the

water, with each article of clothing squeezing and kneading it until

he figured it was as clean as it was going to get. He hung the cloths

on the tree limbs to dry. Finally done he stood naked on the shore

but for his coat, his teeth chattering as the cool fall wind whipped

across his flesh.

He laughed as he remembered an old book he had read, "The Hitchhiker’s

Guide to the Galaxy." The book had quite a bit of good advice, "Don’t

Panic" was a good one, another more relevant piece of advice was to

always carry a towel. Joey could definitely see the wisdom of that

now.

***

Joey laughed with glee as he swung on the old rope out over the lake,

folding into a cannonball as he let go and dropped into the water. He

was twelve and Chris, David and he were spending a warm summers day at

the lake. Someone had found this old tree many years ago and climbed

to the high stout branches to attach a rope. That one act of

generosity had brought smiles to the faces of hundreds of children

over the years, not the least of which being these three boys.

Joey spat water as he broke the surface and heaving his arm sent a

wall of water over to his two, previously dry, protesting friends.

"Ohhh! I’m gonna get you for that Joey!" David swore as he took the

rope. Joey paddled furiously as David swung out, looking for all the

world like he was trying to land exactly where Joey happened to be at

the moment.

***

"Let not him who is houseless pull down the house of another, but let

him work diligently and build one for himself, thus by example

assuring that his own shall be safe from violence when built." --

Abraham Lincoln

***

Joey woke with the dawn, feeling more rested than he had in the last

few miserable days. He couldn’t see the sunrise for the trees around

him, but he thought today that sunrise would hold the promise that had

been lacking before. A dim plan was forming in his mind now. He

wasn’t sure how he was going to pull it off, or even if it would work.

But at least it was a plan, a purpose. And at this point in his life,

he very much needed to feel like he wasn’t adrift.

His clothes were now passably clean, though his hair was still stringy

and unkempt. Still, there was not much he could do about that at

least right now. At least he didn’t smell like yesterday’s garbage

any longer. It took most of the morning to get back to civilization

and make it to the Wal-Mart. He had gone over his list carefully,

very carefully. He dropped five dollars at the store deli for a good

breakfast. He mentioned to the nice lady that he was rather hungry

and she obliged him by heaping so much food on the plate even as

hungry as he was he couldn’t finish it. Another fifty dollars later

and he walked out with a new pair of pants, shirt, soap, shampoo,

socks, underwear, a comb, deodorant, a small mirror, a lighter (which

had earned him a scolding glance from the clerk), and a large beach

towel. The clerk had stared at him strangely for a moment, and again

when he counted out fifty dollars, but she handed back the ninety-five

cents in change and he walked out the door without any problems.

He made his way back to the lake and took a proper bath, and when he

dried himself with the towel he finally felt almost normal again. He

put on his new clothes and set out to civilization once more. He

strolled through the row of restaurants noting the "Help Wanted" signs

in each of them. Finally he picked McDonalds because the employees

all wore uniforms. He only had one pair of clothing, and until he

could afford to buy more his limited clothing selection would be more

likely to go unnoticed under a uniform..

It was late afternoon and there was nobody in line when he asked the

clerk to speak to the manager. Soon a portly man of about forty, with

thick black glasses and a receding hairline stepped out.

"What can I do for you?" He asked in his best "The customer is

always right." tone.

"I’d like to apply for a job.", Joey answered.

The man considered him a moment. "You look a bit young."

"I’m sixteen." Joey lied quickly. "I’ll be seventeen in a few

months, I just look young for my age. It’s a curse really."

The man laughed. "Now it’s a curse. You’ll be grateful in twenty

years if it holds out. I’m Bill Green."

"Joey. Joey Vincent." Joey answered with a smile.

"Well Joey Joey Vincent, let me get you an application.", Bill said.

For the next fifteen minutes Joey filled in the application, creating

fictional addresses and telephone numbers. He was surprised he

remembered his social security number, he had learned it three years

ago when his parents bought some infomercial memory tape. It didn’t

help any, but he had used his social security number when he practiced

and it stuck.

Bill looked over the application briefly then said, "I’ll need a

drivers license and birth certificate for proof of citizenship. Other

than that, when can you start."

Joey’s heart fell. "I don’t have a drivers license. No car." He

said. "And I don’t have my birth certificate with me. But I can

start today."

"Well, I suggest you get your parents to swing you by the DMV and get

an ID made. You’ve got thirty days to get me the paperwork though.

You’ll start out at minimum wage, doing janitorial work at first. You

can deal with that?" Bill asked.

Hope returned and Joey reeled under the sudden reversal of fortune. A

month was an eternity, in a month he may have figured out what to do.

Joey nodded.

"Hours of five to eleven sound OK by you? If you have a lot of

homework it gets pretty quiet around nine thirty, I won’t mind if you

hit the books"

"That’s fine. Really." Joey said.

"I really need help on weekends, I know you kids like to have at least

one full day off but you’ll have to work at least on Saturday."

"I’ll take the full weekend. I’ll take as many hours as you can give

me.", Joey said.

"Oh ho!" Bill laughed. "Saving up for a car?"

It sounded reasonable. "Yea." Joey said. "Parents said if I want

one I gotta pay for it myself."

"Good for them!" Bill shot back. "And good for you weather you know

it or not. Sooner you learn the value of money the happier you’ll be.

Ok, I’ll schedule you for a full forty hours a week. You’ll have

Wednesday off. Make sure you’re here by four each day. If you’re

more than five minutes late I’ll dock you a half hour so you’ll learn

not to do it again. If you’re more than an hour late and you don’t

call, you might as well not even come in because you’ll have to be

laid up in a hospital for me to agree not to fire you. Kapish?"

"Got it." Joey said.

For the rest of the night he mopped floors and cleaned tables, feeling

better about himself and his future than he had since his parents had

died.

***

"Honestly!" His mother exclaimed. "I don’t know why you can’t learn

to keep up your room. This place is a disaster area."

"Sorry Mom." Joey replied sheepishly. "I’ll clean it tomorrow."

"You’ll clean it today.", She said in her "I’m your mother and

grunted for four hours on the deliver table to put you in this world

and you’d better remember that" tone.

"But." Joey began.

"No Buts!" She said cutting him off. "You’ve got to learn priorities

Joey. You put your own house in order first, THEN you have time for

the other stuff. "

***

The week had passed quickly and Joey actually did quite well. The

rain had passed and it had actually gotten a little warmer. It took

two hours to walk from his camp site to work and another two hours in

the dark to get back each day, and if Bill noticed a rather limited

clothing selection he didn’t say anything. The work was actually

pretty easy, if a bit mind numbing. And each night he managed to work

in a full meal of left over food that had to be pitched. There was

even a nearby library and Joey spent the better part of each morning

sitting in a comfortable chair reading until it was time to head off

to work.

At the end of the first week he hit the first major snag in his plan

when Bill handed him his first check. "What’s the matter Joey?" Bill

asked when he saw Joey’s face. "Not what you expected? The

deductions are real killers all right."

"No. It’s not that." Joey said. "The pay’s fine. I just don’t have

a way to cash it."

"Well give it to your parents.", Bill said. "I’m sure they’ll cash it

for you."

Joey thought fast and furious, in the week he had known him he had

come to like and respect Bill but that did not mean he was ready to

tell him his life’s story. "I can’t." Joey said. "Look I hate to

admit it, but my Dad drinks and he’s always broke. If I give him this

check I won’t see a dime."

Bill frowned. "Sign the back of the check and I’ll pay you out of

tonight’s drawer." He said finally. "I wouldn’t do this for just

anyone, but you’re a solid worker. You keep showing up on time, doing

your job right and I’ll make sure you get paid in cash. Deal?"

"Deal!" Joey said with a lopsided grin.

"And speaking of which, I still need your ID and Birth Certificate.",

Bill reminded.

"I’ll try to get my mom to drive me out to get the ID", Joey said

smoothly. "She’s rummaged around for the Birth Certificate and can’t

find it."

"Well I guess you’ll just have to order a new one." Bill said.

"Guess so." Joey replied.

That night he walked out with one hundred and eighty dollars in cash.

He swung around to the Wal-Mart and purchased a small dome tent, a

package of razors since his "peach fuzz was turning into a little more

than peach fuzz" as Bill had mentioned, a raincoat, sleeping bag and a

hat. Using almost all the funds from his first paycheck in the

process. That night, back at his camp, he slept deeper and sounder

than he had since he had first gotten off the bus.

***

He was poised in front of Cindy who was flat on her back in the tall

green grass behind the barn. "It’s supposed to go here." She said as

she peeled back her pussy lips to reveal an exquisitely formed

opening. "Go in real slow though, the girls at school said the first

time can be painful."

Joey frowned. "Are you sure you want to do this? I mean isn’t the

first time for a girl supposed to be special or something?"

She sighed and sat up. "Look, I’ve been going out with Todd for six

weeks and he’s starting to get really intense. I like him a lot. I

don’t want to spoil our first time together by being some sniveling,

crying virgin. At least with you I can get it over with and I’ll know

what to expect when I finally let Todd go all the way."

"What about babies?" David asked from the side.

"Really! I thought women were supposed to be the ones who found

excuses. Mom’s had me on the pill every since I turned sixteen. Part

of the little birds and bees speech she gave me. Now are you going to

do it or not?", Cindy said.

"Uh, sure." Joey said staring down as she leaned back and showed him

the way again. He set the angle and eased in slowly.

"Ohhh!" Cindy exclaimed. And Joey, with all his being echoed that

sentiment. Fully embedded he paused, relishing where he was and what

he was feeling. For the first time in his life he felt complete, at

peace, and right with the universe. Slowly he began to move.

Cindy giggled. "It doesn’t hurt at all! I guess I musta busted my

own cherry over the years."

Joey wasn’t paying attention. This might have been a new thing to

him, but thousands of years of biology guided him as he thrust and

thrust again. Cindy raised her legs and moved underneath him as she

sought better contact, the best position. "Oh yes, that’s the spot."

She moaned, finding the position of maximum contact between them. But

she had not found it soon enough. Joey erupted inside her as he

experienced one of the most intense orgasms of his life.

Cindy was disappointed when Joey rolled off her, but they still had

three days left on the farm. There would be time enough to learn how

to do it right, and in the mean time David sat off to the side and

from all the visual cues, he was more than able to pick up where Joey

had left off.

***

Joey woke up from the dream, wrapped in his sleeping bag, his towel as

his pillow. The erection in his pants was the first he could remember

since his parents death. He had masturbated a few times in his life,

but usually he had "relived himself" as he called it with David or for

those four magical days with Cindy. When he still had the erection

after walking outside he began to stroke himself calling up old
memories of friends now far away. Bitter sweet memories, fondly

remembered, and sadly missed.

***

"What we have found in this country, and maybe we’re more aware of it

now, is one problem that we’ve had, even in the best of times, and

that is the people who are sleeping on the grates, the homeless, you

might say, by choice." -- Ronald Reagan

***

The month passed and Bill forgot all about the paperwork, much to

Joey’s relief. He had thought he had been called in to produce the

papers but had instead been promoted to teller where he’d take and

deliver orders. It didn’t take very long to get the swing of things

and after a few days his cash drawer always balanced save for a few

pennies in either direction.

Each paycheck had gone to improve his life, first with the tent, then

a bike. Not a sporty, trendy bike, but a practical one that could

handle both roads and the woods, and one with two ugly, yet very

practical metal carryalls at the back. The first thing he did was

cart his growing collection of clothes to the laundromat and give them

a proper washing. When the weather turned chilly he purchased a good

coat and warmer clothes. When his shoes gave sign of wear he

purchased new ones.

Each day as he set out he stowed his gear in the bushes near the small

pond, each day giving a silent prayer that no one would find them

while he was gone. And each night he returned to find everything as

he had left it. He was happiest in the library or at work, home was

just a tent to sleep in, a place to store his possessions. For a

while he was actually happy. If one tried, it almost seemed like one

big camping trip. Compared to those first few nights in the heart of

the city, or even the first week in the woods he was enormously

comfortable.

He even found himself accumulating cash on his meager income. Once

the bare necessities were taken care of he found he had more than a

little money left over for a few luxuries such as a restaurant meal

now and again to break up the monotony of McFried Food. When he

realized he was carrying almost seven hundred dollars in cash around

with him, he lifted a coffee can out of the garbage and buried the

cash carefully back at the camp.

Material possessions tended to clutter his modest life, and the more

things he had the more things he had to hide at the start of each day.

So he never purchased anything without careful thought of how it would

fit into his routine. And he had indeed wrapped himself in that

routine, it was his security blanket It offered him sanctuary. As

long as he stuck with the routine he was safe.

At least one elderly librarian had asked him why he was not in school.

Joey had invented a story about how his father had died and his mother
was sickly so he had to leave school and work to support her, and that

he was older than he looked. The librarian had been very sympathetic,

mentioning what a shame it was that a bright, inquisitive, well read

boy such as himself could not finish his schooling and go on to

college. Indeed as the weeks passed, Joey had begun to go through

books at a furious pace finishing most within two days although the

longer ones usually took three or sometimes four. At first he had

stuck with fiction, but recently he had started reading some

non-fiction as well.

Finally Christmas season was in full bloom. Joey’s relative happiness

faded into gloomy silence as he went through his routine. All around

him people scurried about with brightly wrapped presents in hand.

Familiar Christmas carols wafted through the air hitting Joey like a

favorite song of two lovers now long separated. The closer the day

got, the lower his spirits fell. This Christmas there would be no

friends and family, no Christmas dinner, no presents under the tree.

When "Blue Christmas" started playing at the restaurant he had to

excuse himself and spent the next five minutes wiping tears from his

eyes on the toilet in the men’s room.

He did buy two presents though. A nice pen set for Bill and a fancy

bookmark for Alice the elderly librarian who had taken such an

interest in him. He had thought long and hard on the gifts and spent

over a week scouring the stores for the perfect items. They might not

be family, or even close friends but just knowing he had at least two

people to buy presents for helped him feel like he wasn’t completely

alone.

And that was indeed his problem, for he was terribly lonely. His

routine offered safety, Bill and Alice offered some companionship, but

he had no real friend he could call his own. He didn’t exactly

realize it as Christmas approached but he was indeed alone, more than

he had ever been in his life. Christmas just tended to highlight that

fact.

Bill returned his present with a Christmas bonus of two hundred

dollars. A tidy sum, a full weeks pay actually, but he already had a

sizable stash in the coffee can so while appreciated, it was hardly

needed. Alice made a huge fuss over the book mark, saying over and

over again how nice it was and how it was exactly what she needed.

Though he had not expected a gift in return Alice surprised him with a

wrapped package containing the latest Tom Clancey thriller. Alice had

obviously remembered Joey asking about the latest Tom Clancey novel

and when the Library would get a copy. He was so happy he kissed her

on the cheek.

All in all, under the conditions, it was the best Christmas eve he

could have hoped for. And on Christmas day he sat cozy in his tent as

he read his new book.

The new year came and went, and routine once again became the

watchword. It was broken in the middle of January when Bill informed

him that his tax statement had come back. Joey was puzzled until Bill

explained the intricacies of the tax laws. "Oh." Joey said. "We

moved to a new apartment, we’ve got a post office box now. I’ll get

you the new address, I can never remember it."

The next morning he had gone down to the post office and found much to

his surprise that there really wasn’t all that much to getting a box

as long as he paid for it and kept his account current. He gave his

new address to Bill. The next few days he managed to figure out his

taxes, right down to a sizable refund of a hundred and some odd

dollars. He also found out how to find and request his birth

certificate. He’d be turning sixteen in April and figured he really

ought to get that ID and maybe a PO box would be all he needed.

The postal box never collected anything but junk mail and one refund

check eventually, but it grounded Joey further. He was here, he

existed. His address was PO Box 315 and that was good enough for now

at least.

***

"Mine ear is much enamoured of thy note;

So is mine eye enthrallèd to thy shape;

And thy fair virtue’s force perforce doth move me

On the first view to say, to swear, I love thee." -- William

Shakespeare

***

Joey looked up from the register ready for his next customer when he

saw her for the first time. Standing at the counter was a girl his

own age with long sandy brown hair. She wore no makeup, but she

didn’t need to either, her face was utterly angelic. She wore a

fashionable sweater that revealed little of her frame, but Joey cared

little for that as he found his eyes drawn into her deep blue gaze.

"Uh, can I order now?" She asked.

Joey shook himself out of his haze and stammered. "Y-Yes. Please

do." Then scolded himself for sounding like a fool as she ordered.

Twice he had to pull himself alert during her order.

She had stopped to stare at him curiously at the last. "Are you all

right?" She asked.

Joey shook his head slightly again. "I think so. I just, well I just

can’t seem to stop thinking how beautiful you are. I’m sorry."

She blushed furiously and Joey found himself in the same condition as

well. "Thank you, I think. But if you don’t take my order, my

parents may get suspicious. I’d hate to get in trouble for flirting

with the hired help." She giggled.

Joey laughed and finished her order. As she took the tray she smiled

and said, "I’m Mary Jenson."

"Joey Vincent.", Joey answered somewhat dreamily.

"It was nice to meet you Joey. Maybe I’ll see you again sometime."

And then she walked over to a nearby table and sat down.

Joey sneaked glances over at her table but she sat with her back to

him. Her parents reminded him of his own after a fashion, more in the

way they laughed and talked than the way they looked. An older boy,

maybe eighteen sat with them and noticed his glances. He leaned over

and whispered something to Mary. She turned her head and glanced at

him and turned back with her hand muffling a giggle.

She wasn’t the most beautiful girl he had ever seen in his life. She

was pretty yes, but not glamorous. After she had left Joey was

distracted the rest of the day trying to figure out just what about

her had captured his attention, and just what about her had prompted

him to be so bold.

It was several weeks later before he saw her again. It was a Saturday

and he was in the library reading Steven Hawkings "A Brief History of

Time" when he heard her voice. "Very Intellectual." She said.

Joey dropped the book and his heart leapt as he gazed on her. "It’s

nothing." He said quickly. "Just a way to pass the time before I

have to get to work."

"Oh. For a minute it looked like you were enjoying it. I mean your

face was all scrunched up like you were really trying to puzzle

something out."

Joey scratched his head and broke into a lopsided grin that had the

unwitting effect of making him appear completely adorable to anyone

who happened to be looking at him "Well it’s his theory on how time

is like an arrow, it’s kinda hard to follow. It SEEMS to make sense

while I’m reading it, but the moment I put the book down it gets all

fuzzy."

"You really like this science stuff?" She asked.

Joey shrugged. "It passes the time. Looks like you’re doing some

science reading yourself." He said taking note of the books in her

arms.

She rolled her eyes. "I’ve got a science paper due on Monday about

the solar system. Of course I decide to wait until the very last

minute to write it."

"And Emilia’s Passion is for describing the exotic life forms on one

of the planets I suppose." Joey laughed.

Mary blushed. "Well, I like a good romance novel now and again."

"It’s not bad really." Joey admitted. "The plot’s a bit shallow, but

with all the heroics among other things, it doesn’t really need one."

"You’ve read it?" Mary said astonished as she lowered herself into

one of the chairs.

Joey laughed. "I must read about three books a week, I went through

Emillia’s Passion in a day. So that week I went through four."

"Wow." Mary said. "Do you know a lot about the solar system?" she

asked.

"A bit. I read a few magazine articles and books, and I suppose I

know how to find what I don’t know. You wouldn’t be needing any help

with your paper would you?"

Mary’s eyes lit up, "Would you?" She asked hopefully.

"I’d love to." Joey replied. Mary didn’t have a pen or pad since she

had planned to take the books home and do the report at home, but

Alice with a sly wink to Joey when Mary wasn’t looking managed to

produce the required tools. They spent the afternoon doing the paper.

In addition to basking in Mary’s presence Joey also relished the

research. At one time he had thought school work was a bore, even

though he was an A and B student, but working on the paper he realized

that it was another part of his life he was missing.

When three thirty rolled around and the written draft lay on the table

they stared at it in awe. "It’s wonderful." Mary said. "An A+ at

the very least. I don’t see how Mr. Jones could possibly find a

single fault with it."

"It was really fun." Joey admitted. "I’ve got to head on to work

now. Maybe next weekend when you return the Emelia’s Passion you

could let me know how it did."

"It’s a date!" She said with a little laugh that seemed to imply

maybe it really was.

Joey woke up later than normal that Sunday and it did not take long to

realize he was terribly sick. He felt unsteady on his feet, and the

stinging around his eyes made him think he had a very high fever. He

also felt nauseous and the feeling turned into reality as he threw up

the remains of last nights meal. The hardest thing he had ever done

in his life was to go into work that day. Bill took one look at him

and said, "Go Home. Stay there. Get well. I’ll work the schedule

around you for a few days to cover. Call me Tuesday and let me know

how you’re doing."

"No. Really." Joey protested. "I just took some medicine I’ll be

fine in a little bit."

"You’ll be fine after you’ve had some good bed rest and chicken

soup." Bill chided. "Besides you’ll only scare the customers away or

make them sick. Or worse, make my employees sick and not one of them

is nearly as dedicated as you are. Get outta here." Joey finally

relented and after stopping by the supermarket to pick up some

packaged rations made his way back to the camp.

***

"Hey Tiger", His dad said as he ruffled Joey’s hair. "Hear the ol’

flu bug’s got you in it’s evil clutches." Joey smiled weakly in

reply. "Well champ, it may not seem like it now but you’re going to

live. And with a batch of your mother’s grade A super premium chicken

soup you’ll be out and about in no time."

Joey drifted back off to seep and his father touched his forehead

briefly, frowning at the high temperature before straightening his

covers and kissing him lightly on the forehead.

***

He spent the next few days wishing he would just die and end it all.

The drugs helped a little, but being alone in the cold with the flu

was not conducive to a quick recovery. He almost didn’t make it out

of the woods on Tuesday to call Bill, he was that weak. The delirious

conversation that followed ended with Bill telling him to stay in bed

and call when he felt up to working again.

Worse than the virus which was ravaging his body was the solitude.

Alone with his thoughts he found them drifting often to Mary, the way

she looked, the way she smelled of flowers and spring, the way she

walked, the way dimples formed in her cheeks when she smiled. And

then he would stare at the canvas roof of his small tent and despair.

Here he was, just barely surviving in the world and fooling himself

into thinking he could interest a girl like Mary, a girl with a real

home, with real parents who loved her, a girl with a future beyond

working at McDonalds.

***

"First love is only a little foolishness and a lot of curiosity." --

George Bernard Shaw

***

Joey, having just turned fifteen was walking down the sidewalk with

Stacey McGuire, who would go down in history as the first girl he had

ever dated. On quiet reflection later in life he would chuckle at how

he had sex with a girl long before he ever dated one, but he had

decided he very much liked Stacey who sat next to him in history

class. He had spent a solid week working up the nerve to ask her to

go see a movie with him. He spent another day in a panicked frenzy

because she had said yes.

He had walked to her house that Saturday afternoon and they had walked

the short distance to the local theater. The movie had been enjoyable

in a sappy sort of way, though Joey was far to distracted to really

enjoy it. As they walked back in the dim twilight he reached out his

hand to take hers and she smiled at him as she accepted the advance.

When they stood in front of her house Joey leaned forward and kissed

her lightly, thanking the Gods above that Cindy had been a kind and

patient teacher. For that brief moment, their arms awkwardly entwined

about each other, their lips pressing against each other, Joey

thought he knew love.

***

On Friday the fever finally broke and Joey managed to make it into

work. Though he was still pale and a bit weak he managed to convince

Bill he really was OK. Mary met him at the library the next day and

was all smiles as she announced she had made a perfect A+ on the paper

and she waved the report in front of him so excitedly Joey could only

just make out the circled grade despite it being rather large.

"Thank you!" She said after she had calmed down. "I waited a whole

week to tell you. I just about burst waiting for today. I even came

down here during the week, but you weren’t here. Alice was very

worried for you. Said it wasn’t like you to be away for so long."

"Just a bit under the weather." Joey said. "All better now."

"Well next time you really should call her. She really was worried."

She paused and then added. "So was I."

The pause that followed was pregnant with anticipation. Joey had

decided earlier that he should end this here, today. But being so

close to her, feeling the charged tension between them like this,

seeing her mouth tighten as she waited for him to say something, he

found that he couldn’t. "I’ve got Wednesday off, and well, I was

kinda wondering if maybe you’d like to go see a movie?"

"I’d like that." Mary replied smiling broadly.

"So would I." Joey said, unable to understand why her crystal blue

eyes fascinated him so at the moment.

She giggled. "Meet you here then? Five o’clock sound OK?"

"That’s perfect." Joey answered as his head began to pound with the

realization of what he was doing.

The library was closed on Sundays and Joey usually spent the morning

and early afternoon in his tent reading. But he found himself unable

to concentrate this morning and had decided to ride around the

subdivision in the hopes that the physical exercise would take his

mind off his worries. All in all, it didn’t help much, he just made

himself tired and worried as opposed to well rested and worried.

Around noon the churches began to let out and Joey paused in front of

a quaint little church complete with a steeple. When he was younger

his parents had always told him if he was in trouble and they weren’t

around he should go to a policeman or a priest, although his father
had added a little joke that had made him laugh furiously but could no

longer remember. Not for the first time Joey felt he was getting in

over his head and maybe he did need some help. The stubborn

independence which had allowed him to survive resisted, but

confessions were supposed to be private. And in a way this would be a

confession. A priest couldn’t really do anything he didn’t want him

to, he hoped.

He loitered outside the building until the last of the crowds had

dwindled away. Several times while he was waiting he almost changed

his mind. But finally he entered the building and after walking a bit

found the office. He knocked on the door.

"Come in." A hoarse voice sounded. Joey pushed open the door and saw

a portly elderly man in priests garb. In many ways he reminded Joey

of a monk the way he was bald on top with short gray hair like a crown

around his head. If he had been wearing a robe and he very well could

be the classical image of a monk. "Well young man, what can I do for

you?"

"I wonder if you have time for a talk." Joey said cautiously.

The man laughed jovially. "I always have time for a talk."

"A confidential talk?" Joey asked. "As in just between you and me?"

The man grew serious and he motioned Joey to take a chair. "If that’s

what you want. I’ll listen, if you want I’ll offer advice. What you

say will be between us and God."

Joey took a deep breath. "I’m a runaway." He began. And for the

next hour he told his tail while the priest listened keenly.

When he was done the priest sat back in his chair and considered him

in silence for a full minute. "How old are you and when is your

birthday?" he asked.

"I’m fifteen. I’ll turn sixteen on the second of April." Joey

answered.

"Ordinarily, I would council you to go to social services and be

placed with a foster family. They really wouldn’t return you to an

abusive household like that. Compared to what can happen in some

homes it may have seemed tame to you, but any abuse especially when

the relationship is distant is a call to action. That course is open

to you still if you want it. But there’s another option when you turn

sixteen. You can appear before the court and petition to be

considered an adult with no guardian. Given your industriousness I

think the court would very well grant that request."

"Once that is done," he continued, "you can get settled in a modest

apartment even return to school though you’ll probably have to make up

for the year you’ve missed. You’ll have to work to support yourself

of course. It’s not really my favorite course of action because I

believe you should hold on to being young as long as you possibly can,

a foster family can give you the time you need to be young."

Joey shook his head. "No. I’ve lived in a home without love once,

I’ll never do it again." he said adamantly. "I didn’t know you could

be considered an adult at sixteen though and I like the thought of

going back to school. My dad always said I was cut out for college
and I’d probably go far if I stuck with it."

"You’re welcome to stay at my home until you can get before the

court." The priest said. "My wife wouldn’t mind I’m sure."

Joey smiled. "Thank you, but no. I’ve gone this long, I think I can

hang out a few more weeks. But if you could, I mean, would you mind

terribly helping me get ready for court?"

The priest smiled warmly. "Of course I’ll help you. I’ve got a few

friends and a few parishioners I can goad into doing all the real

dirty work. I must say though that I will not sleep easy thinking of

you alone in the woods like that."

"Really." Joey said. "I slept in a house that would put any

Halloween haunted house to shame. Believe me the woods are a million

times safer than the city. It’s really hard for me to put into words

why I need to be on my own."

"I think I understand." The priest said. "You’ve survived by

refusing to give in and you’re afraid that if you do give in, to trust

someone to look after you again that you’ll loose your edge maybe and

you’re probably also afraid of trusting someone in that position again

after what you went through with your Uncle."

Joey chewed on that a moment. "Yea. I think that’s exactly it.

Funny I couldn’t put it into words like that."

The priest smiled broadly. "Well sometimes it takes another person to

see the obvious, but I’ve a little background in psychology it’s part

of the job description. I do however have an offer that won’t

compromise your principals and it’s an offer you can’t refuse." He

leaned over, smiling as if he was placing a sure bet and said, "The

miss’s probably has a nice hot lunch ready for me at home, she always

cooks a big lunch after my sermon and she cooks far more than one man
could eat alone. If I were a betting man I’d have to say you’d not

pass up a good home cooked meal."

Joey returned the smile and replied, "if you were a betting man I’d

say you’d win your bet."

Over a good hot, incredibly delicious meal Joey learned the priest’s

name was Kyle Carter and his wife’s name was Lisa. They had only just

recently been transferred to this parish and were getting settled in.

Before the transfer Kyle had a parish in the inner city of Detroit

and spent most of his time there counseling troubled youth. As Kyle

related some of his stories Joey shuddered at how cruel life could

really be to a kid alone on the streets.

At the door as Joey left for work Kyle pulled him to the side and

said, "You’re a good man Joey. Your parents raised you right. When

you were thrown into the abyss you lifted yourself out on your own.

No matter what happens in this life you look back on this and feel

proud."

Joey blushed. "I got lucky." He said.

"I’d say you made your own luck." Kyle said pointedly. "Now you’d

better be off. Drop by the parish later this week and I’ll have some

information for you."

"Thanks." Joey said. "And I mean it. Thank you."

***

When he was ten Joey and his parents visited Florida to watch the

space shuttle take off. Even far away in the viewing gallery Joey was

impressed at the power of the engines, the smoke and the noise and the

giant ship lifted itself off the ground and into space.

"I hope I can be an astronaut one day." Joey said.

His father looked down and smiled. "Hope is knowing what you want.

After that it’s all up to you to see that you go get it."

Joey thought on that as the great ship began to roll in an awesome

dance of fire and beauty.

***

"The natural flights of the human mind are not from pleasure to

pleasure, but from hope to hope." -- Samuel Johnson

***

Joey forgot all about the movie after he put his arm around Mary and

she leaned over to him and rested her head on his shoulder. For the

next hour the only thing that existed was him with Mary leaning next

to him. After the movie they lingered outside the theater waiting for

her parents to come and pick her up.

"Thank you for the movie." She said.

"Thank you for sharing it with me." Joey answered as he held her

hand.

She leaned forward, hesitantly, a bit unsure of herself but Joey

understood the meaning and answered as he leaned forward and kissed

her, lingering a bit perhaps as she started to pull back just enough

to let him know the kiss was over. She smiled bashfully, a light

rose colored blush on her cheeks visible despite the dim light. When

a car pulled up in front of the theater Joey knew without looking it

would be her ride.

"Saturday." Joey said as she turned to leave. "Maybe Saturday we

could do something?"

"Eleven?", She asked.

"Eleven is perfect." Joey answered.

She gave him one last smile and jumped into the car.

The next day Joey stopped by the church and Kyle ushered him in.

"Good news! One of my parishioners, a lawyer, has agreed to take up

your case. He’d like to meet with you on Friday if you can arrange

it. We’ll meet here."

"I work you know." Joey reminded him. "Can we have the meeting

before three?"

"I remembered." Kyle answered with a wink. "The meeting is at one if

you can make it."

"I’ll be there!", Joey promised. The day only got better when Bill

pulled him aside and announced that he was being promoted to assistant

manager now that Harry was resigning to concentrate on his college
boards. "You close up all the time anyway now and that’s one of the

major duties of assistant managers openings and closings, this just

makes it official." He said with a wink.

Joey was so excited that night he could barely get to sleep, but sleep

did come, as did the dawn. Joey arrived at the church promptly at one

and stepped into the office to meet his new benefactor. He stopped

dead in mid-stride as the man turned to him.

"You!" Joey said, aghast

"I’m rather surprised myself." Mary’s father answered.

"You know each other?", Kyle asked confused..

"It seems my daughter is a bit infatuated with this young man." he

said. "We haven’t been formally introduced yet though."

"Uh, Joey Vincent." Joey said as he felt his knees grow weak.

"Here sit down lad, you look like you’ve just walked in to the lion’s

den. And I’m Greg Jenson, you can call me Greg."

Joey fell into the chair. Mary’s father was the last person in the

world he expected to see here, and of all the people in the world the

person he least wished to know about his situation other than Mary

herself.

"Well, Joey seems to have left out a tale or two in his recalling of

events." Kyle said. "But we only chatted a few hours and it probably

slipped his mind."

Greg laughed then noting Joey’s condition said "Common Joey, button

up. When you appear in court you have to look like a man ready to

tackle the world, and not a boy meeting his girlfriend’s father for

the first time." Joey clenched his jaw and sat up straight. "That’s

better."

"Now, Reverend Carter here has told me the most remarkable tale of a

boy who’s parents died and the boy was placed in the home of his Uncle

who was both abusive and an alcoholic. The boy ran away, as far as a

fifty dollar bus ticket could carry him in fact and then had the good

sense to flee the inner city back to the great suburban jungle..

There he managed by hook or crook to land a job and to live for almost

half a year and doing it so well that no one even suspected that

anything was out of the ordinary. Is this about the gist of things?"

Joey nodded.

Greg pulled out a legal pad and a pen and asked, "Did you file your

taxes this year?"

"Yes."

"How did you get the refund.", Greg shot back quickly.

"I have a Post Office Box."

"Do you have a checking account?"

"No."

"How did you cash your refund."

"I haven’t yet."

"Why did you get a Post Office Box?"

"So my boss could send me my 1099. So I could file my taxes. It also

gave me an address."

"Have you been punctual at your job?"

"Yes."

"Do you think you do a good job?"

"Yes."

"Do others think you do a good job?"

"I think so. I was just promoted to Assistant Night Manager."

"Do you consider this job a career?"

"Maybe. Franchise managers make a good living. But I think I’d like

to finish school and try college before I decide anything permanent."

"Have you been attending school?"

"No. I couldn’t see a way to do it without getting caught."

"So you knew what you were doing was wrong?"

Joey frowned. "Not wrong. I was scared I would be sent back to my

Uncle."

"Did you plan to live out in the woods forever?"

"No. Only until I was old enough to get a place of my own. I really

have enough saved up to get settled in now."

"How much have you managed to save?"

"Close to two thousand dollars."

"Two thousand dollars?" Greg asked astonished..

"Wasn’t much to spend it on." Joey answered.

"What was the address of your parents house and the address of your

Uncle’s house." Greg asked. Joey recited the addresses.

"If the court grants you your request how do you see yourself living

on your own?"

"Well I’d have to keep my job to pay the rent and all.", Joey said.

"I’d definitely re-enroll in school again even though I’ll be a year

behind everybody. I was an A & B student at my last school and my Dad

always said I was college material I really want to try that."

"And where does Mary fit in to this plan?", Greg asked.

Joey blushed furiously. "I’d like to see her. I’ve never met anyone

like her in my life. I thought I did once, but it wasn’t like this."

He sighed. "I don’t suppose there’s much chance of that now though."

"Well that’s up to her of course, and you." Greg said. "Mary’s last

boyfriend had the motivational drive of a slug. I put up with that, I

think I can put up with someone who’s got a level head and a good job

for a change." He smiled on the verge of a chuckle.

Hope roared though Joey like a hot fire "You mean..?", he started but

was unable to continue.

"I mean that so long as she’s happy and you’re happy, and you don’t do

anything we parental types strongly disprove of you’re more than

welcome to see Mary." Greg answered. "Now as to your case. I’m

taking it pro-bono which means I’ll get paid by writing it off my

taxes and not drawing down on your hard earned savings. I think also

that the court awarded the assets of your late parents to you and are

held in trust by your Uncle. If there are any assets and if you win

your case I’ll see that you get them. If your uncle has spent any of

that money I’ll see it comes out of his pocket even if I have to sell

his house from under him. And I see no reason why any judge with half

a brain would not grant your request."

"I feel like I’ve just won the lottery." Joey said falling back in

his chair.

"I don’t blame you." Greg said. "I’ll get the wheels of justice

moving now, if we’re lucky the decision should come down on the same

day as your birthday. It will take longer to get your inheritance

money but two thousand dollars will be more than enough to get you

started in your new life."

"Thank you." Joey said wiping the corner of his eye, feeling a relief

so strong he didn’t know how to deal with it. "Thank you." he said

again.

***

Joey met Mary at the library Saturday morning and they walked a short

ways to a nice restaurant. As they sat waiting for the food to arrive

Joey cleared his throat and said, "Mary, I think it’s time you knew a

little more about me." and Mary leaned forward, entranced as Joey

began to tell his story.

***

Time passes as time does, and April second saw Joey declared a man for

all legal purposes. That summer, Greg won a judgment against Joey’s

uncle and by the Fall when Joey had re-entered school the courts

managed to secure the inheritance and transfer the fifty thousand

dollars and change to Joey’s account. He used some of the money to

purchase a modest car, and the rest of the money was saved for the day

he would attend college. He need not have bothered, for he pursued

school with the same dogged determination he pursued his job and when

the day came to choose a college he found scholarships by the dozen

waiting for him.

He dated Mary for a full year, and to Mary’s frustration Joey

respected her father’s wish that he not do anything parental types

strongly disapproved of. When the frustration grew beyond both of

their capacity to endure, Joey In his seventeenth year asked Greg for

permission to marry his daughter, and Greg after some long

consideration agreed. Formally engaged, and no longer bound by his

obligations to Greg, Joey and Mary discovered much to their immense

pleasure that they were indeed as compatible as they thought they

were.

After a fashion they even managed to live happily ever after within

the gentle ups and downs of marriage of life in general. But that

dear reader is another story for another time.

***

"Life is essentially a cheat and its conditions are those of defeat …

the redeeming things are not "happiness and pleasure" but the deeper

satisfactions that come out of struggle." -- F. Scott Fitzgerald

***

--Sandman

Afterward: Sven noted, and rightly so that the story works out a

little to easily. This was intentional. The story followed a best

case outcome of running away, a bright suburban fifteen year old kid

could probably reason these things out. The worst case would have

drug the story down into the shadowy world of drugs, prostitution,

pedophillia and various states of mental and physical torture. The

best case is probably fictional. The worst case is unfortunately what

you would call docudrama. As I told Sven the story is not as

disturbing as it could have been and that is what is most disturbing.

I much prefer the story as it stands.