Date: Fri, 10 Mar 2006 20:02:54 -0800 (PST)
From: Ocean Lover <ocean_lover_guy@yahoo.com>
Subject: The Littlest Lifeguard, Parts 3 and 4 (adult/youth)

The Littlest Lifeguard -- Part 3
By Ocean Lover Guy


"Get the fuck away from me," Tim said as he kicked out his foot in the
kitchen of the writer's house.  "Fucking pervert."

The kick knocked Trance's breath from him.  He fell down and stayed down
on the stone floor.

Tim looked down at what he was wearing.  He was stuck here, really, and
without warm clothes.  His cell phone was locked in the bastard's car --
he'd probably intended that as an insurance policy.  Tim decided to walk
back to the pool house and start opening clothes bags until he found a
phone and some warmer clothes.  He had his license, so maybe if he found
some keys he'd borrow one of the cars and get himself the hell out of
this place.  He'd never seen anything like it.

He should have known when he drug out the mats.  He should have known
what they were for.  They had a lot of them here, like it was a regular
thing to do in the pool house.

Tim felt dirty.  He wanted a shower as soon as he got back to his
parents' place.  He moved toward the door when he felt Trance grab his
ankle.

"We're not done yet, lifeguard.  I'll have my money's worth."

Trance yanked hard on Tim's ankle.  Tim lost his balance and came
crashing to the floor.  Trance was on top of the kid in a second.  It
only took two punches before Tim lost consciousness.

****

Preston put the last box in his car.  He pulled the diseased keys off the
key ring and threw them on the ground.  He was thoroughly done with the
place.

He needed to get out of this place before the kid woke up.  When he'd
gone down like that, Preston had freaked.  The fact that the kid stopped
moving and kept bleeding sent Preston out of the house triple fast.  His
ever-hard dick wouldn't be rising to the occasion anytime soon.  Fear
did a great job diluting excess lust.

Bert's plane would be landing in half an hour.  Without his customary
pickup, he'd waste a lot of time figuring out what to do.  Preston took
out the cell phone Bert had given him, threw it on the ground, and
stomped on it.

By the time Bert got here and saw what had happened, Preston would be in
another state.  He had his whole life ahead of him.

****

Herbert Tate was pissed.  His soon-to-be-ex-assistant wasn't answering
his phone and it had taken half an hour to find a cab in the busy
regional airport.  Herbert hated traveling with a passion, as he got air
sickness more often than not, so this was the last straw.  The kid had
inserted himself into Bert's bed more times than he cared to admit, but
he was unreliable and an asshole most of the time.  Talent wasn't enough
in this business; you had to be a good person, too.

When the taxi made the final turn, Herbert told the driver to stop.
There were easily twenty cars parked in front of his poolhouse.  Herbert
paid the fare and absently gave the man an excessive tip.

"What the hell," he said.  He was eyeing the cars perched on his grass
and trying to figure out why they were there.  In every writerly scenario
that percolated up through his head, Herbert could only think of one
name: Preston King.

"Kid threw another orgy and didn't clean up the mess this time."
Herbert was definitely muttering to himself now.  Preston had insisted on
buying the mats; he'd insisted on having a key for the pool house even
though he didn't swim.  Herbert felt powerless around the kid after the
he climbed off his well-fucked ass.  That had been Preston's idea, too.
Herbert loved the big guy's technique in bed, but the kid was an
asshole.

Herbert pulled his phone out of his pocket and pulled up the number for
the sheriff's office.  Living pretty far out in the styx was great, but
it took a more proactive person to make sure everything stayed safe and
normal.  A few people had wandered onto Herbert's land in the past, some
fans looking to meet the author, others perhaps with less flattering
intentions.  Herbert Tate made it a point to stay in the good graces of
the local law enforcement community.  He'd even put a brief literary
portrait of one of the former sheriffs into his books.

"This is Bert Tate at the Tate Farm," he said into the phone.  "I've
had a break in at my place.  And it looks like they're still here."

After going through some questions, the lady on the other end of the line
instructed him to stay put.  A deputy or two were on their way out to his
place.

Herbert passed the time by walking over to the cabin that Preston had
lived in for two years.  The door was flapping in the wind.  Herbert
walked inside and saw it was a shambles, messy as all hell.  But, all of
Preston's things -- his clothes, his computer, and all his manuscript
drafts -- were gone.  The kid had left for good.

What a nice parting message.  Herbert would have preferred a `Dear
John' letter.  What he saw around him was a kind of violation, all too
personal and bent on cruelty.

Herbert suddenly felt older than his thirty-seven years.  He felt like a
dry, dead animal, a faggot without an ounce of vitality left.  He'd been
chasing the young, hung things and had now, finally, got his whiskers
burned off from the excess heat.

This wasn't who Herbert was.  He didn't have sex with his assistants.
He didn't let people into his private life to ruin things.   He was a
widower of sorts and he should have let the memories of the past keep him
satisfied.  Henry James, the novelist, the screwiest man in Boston, never
touched a single person in his life.  But Herbert Tate wasn't Henry
James and his cock would still light up when an appropriately tight ass
made its presence known.

Herbert plunked his body down outside the cabin.  He sat on the
landscaping ties until the two cars pulled into his yard.  His mind was a
blank.  The hatred and self-recrimination would wait until later.
Herbert would remember all about his beloved, all about what his beloved
would say if he were still around today.

"Thanks for coming out," Herbert said once the deputies had walked over
to him.  He guided them to the pool house.  He poked his head inside and
surveyed the scene.  It looked like the aftermath of a cheesy porn
video.  Everyone inside was still naked.  Most of them were still asleep
and everyone looked crusty.  It looked like a gay version of hell,
something not even Hieronymus Bosch could have conceived for his "Last
Judgment."

Herbert didn't stand around to see the deputies start waking everyone
up.  The two male deputies were either going to find the whole thing
really embarrassing or titillating as hell.  If Preston had organized
this thing, most of the guys had been putting out for each other.  The
boy knew where all the talented players were.

Herbert walked up to his house to see what the damage there was.  He
expected that the place was as trashed as the pool house.  Would the
urchins be fucking on his white living room rug?  Would they have mounted
up on his granite countertops?  How many would he find in his bed?

As he was walking to his house, Herbert decided he'd never hire another
male assistant/researcher.  He'd had good luck with all the
post-college-age kids he'd had to do the job.  He had let Paul pick out
the best candidate back then.  Paul had a better sense for people than
Herbert ever had.  The only thing Herbert had done right was not push
Paul Brewster away when he attached himself like a limpet to his writing
teacher in college, just before Herbert started to make some bucks with
the schlock he was writing then.

The door to the house was not only unlocked, it was open in the breeze.
Herbert's heart sank.  This was his special place.  It was built small,
just for him and Paul.  When he entertained, when his editor came to
visit or his few remaining family members were here, all of that happened
in a cabin or at the pool house.  People weren't invited into his house
very often.  Herbert was beginning to wonder how he could manage to track
Preston King down and repay him for all his tricks.

He pulled the door all the way open and poked his head inside.  He
expected to see piles of young flesh littered everywhere.  He didn't see
anything unusual.  He walked into the house and started down the
hallway.  The bathrooms had no vomiting teenagers.  His sanctum had no
uninvited visitors.  Preston had been in here, but probably just to tweak
Herbert's anger.  Preston himself had only been inside rarely and he'd
worked for Herbert for two years.

Herbert walked back down the hall and turned into his kitchen.  If
Preston was in here, he came for the booze, then.  Herbert wanted to see
if he'd been cleaned out.

As his eyes grazed the floor, he let out a shout.  There was a kid, lying
in blood, on his floor.  Herbert dropped to a knee in front of the kid.
He reached out with his fingers and felt the kid's warm skin.  His blood
was circulating.  The kid was breathing, but not moving or cognizant of
the world around him.

Herbert stood up and ran outside his home.  He kept up the pace, huffing
most of the way, until he reached the pool house.  A pile of the invaders
were now up, moving around, scrambling to get some clothes on their naked
bodies.

"An ambulance," Herbert blurted out.  "Call an ambulance."

An incredulous deputy moved toward him and Herbert, still breathing hard,
explained in a few phrases what was happening.  The deputy reached for
his radio, got the dispatcher to send out an ambulance and more deputies,
and ran up to the house.  Herbert trailed along behind him, falling
further and further behind.

His mind was full now.  Anger, confusion, fear.  He saw the kid in his
head.  He saw Preston and all the naked people he'd corrupted last
night.  He saw a dead Paul lying in their bed, never ever to whisper
again.  He started shaking and wanted to vomit.

What the fuck had Preston done?


The Littlest Lifeguard -- Part 4
By Ocean Lover Guy


Tim Spencer's body felt the jab and he came to life quickly.  "Wha..."

"You were attacked, kid.  Don't move," a guy Tim couldn't see said to
him.  The pain moved further into his body.  The longer Tim was awake,
the more he began to feel the other pain radiating through his body.  Why
he was here -- or where -- he didn't know any of it.

"Where am I," Tim asked.

The question went unanswered.

Suddenly Tim's body began to shiver and the memories of the last night
came back at him.

"Trance," he squeaked.  "He's gone, right?"

Another voice, deeper this time, asked him about Trance.  "Bleach
blonde, 5'10", 170 lbs?"

"That's him," Tim moaned.  "He did this."

"His name's Preston King, kid, and he's gone."

Tim's shivers started to abate and his breathing returned to normal.
"Thanks."

Tim fell unconscious again and gave the paramedics a scare.

****

When Tim woke up next, his father was looking down at him from the side
of the bed.

"Dad..."

"Tim, hold on."  His father walked to the door of a strange room, an
antiseptic-smelling one, and gestured with his fingers.

"You're in the hospital.  Someone cracked your skull pretty good."

Tim started to cry.  He could see the pain in his father's eyes.
"Where's mom," he asked.

"I'm here," she said.  She walked into the room.  "When you weren't
home this morning, I didn't know what to think.  Then we got a call from
the sheriff's office.  God, Tim."

She was crying now.

"I'm sorry," Tim said.  He felt dirty right now.  He could see the
tubes flowing into his body and wondered what the hell he was doing here.

"You're in the hospital," Tim's father said, "because the doctors
thought you might have intracranial swelling.  We couldn't keep you
awake."

Tim blinked but didn't know what to say.

"What do you remember, Tim," his mother asked.

"I was at a house, to lifeguard, cash.  The guy found me at the pool
yesterday when he couldn't find his friend, another of the lifeguards
there.  He made a couple passes at me last night," Tim said, while his
mother strangled a scream, "but then he really laid into me.  I kicked
him, I think, but he did me a lot worse."

"We didn't know where you were," his father said.  "Did you tell
anyone?"

"Yeah, I called Kyle."

"Did you tell him exactly where you were going?  And who you were going
with?"

Tim swallowed.  His throat felt even drier in that moment.  "No."

His father sighed.  Tim knew his dad wanted to lecture.  He wanted to
beat safety into his head.  `You're a little guy, Tim, a natural
target.  You've got to take extra precautions.  You've got to be
safe.'  Tim saw that his dad would save those thoughts for later.

"We love you, Tim," his mother said.

Tim started crying again.  "I love both of you," he said.  "Did you
tell Jessie or Ryan yet?"

His father shook his head.  "Tell Ryan he can't come back from college
just to see me."

"He already tried that," Tim's father said.

Tim laughed in between his tears.  Hearing his older brother's name had
driven home the point.  Ryan had always been the protector in the
family.  Tim had only started getting tough in middle school after Ryan
had put the smack down on a couple of really persistent idiots.  Tim knew
that Ryan wouldn't always be lurking just out of sight waiting to save
his scrawny hide.

Tim loved his parents, but he'd always loved his brother Ryan more than
anyone else.  First among equals, he'd thought.

"I was stupid," Tim said.  "The guy offered a lot of money to
lifeguard a pool party."

"Why did you want money," his father asked.

"I'm saving up."

"A car?"

"Yeah, mom.  I want a car."

Tim's father looked sick at the moment.  His emphasis on self-reliance,
on not looking for handouts -- it had taken hold in his middle child, but
with vast unintended consequences.

"You didn't have to work a strange guy's pool party to get yourself a
car.  I helped Ryan get his," Tim's father said.

"He never told me that," Tim said.

"We don't talk enough, I think," his mother said.  "Not enough by
half."

"Are you okay, Tim," his father asked.

"Everything hurts," Tim said.  He could tell he hadn't answered his
father's oblique question.  Still, his father nodded.

"I'm not like that, Dad.  I didn't want that guy touching me," Tim
said, his voice quiet and cold as a frozen day.

His father nodded.  His mother looked away, embarrassed that the question
and answer were even put into words.  They didn't talk enough in that
family, not enough by half.

"Where's Jessie," Tim asked.  He wanted words to fill in the deadly
silence.

His mother and father ran with the chatter, glad for the reprieve from a
moment of honesty.

****

Bert Tate had put a list of things together.  He'd call a cleaning
service to take care of the pool house and the cabin Preston had left.
He'd take care of the blood in his kitchen.  That seemed like the least
he could do.

He had a life to put back together, a cracked and now-bitter life.  He'd
put the bitterness in remission, like a deadly cancer, when he thought
he'd  found someone to care for in Preston.  Wild horses can't easily
be tamed, though, and they're more likely to trample you than thank you.

He'd have to find someone to keep him organized, a woman this time,
older, a real administrative assistant and researcher.  Herbert wouldn't
be letting the selection process get overruled by his hormones this
time.  It had been so much easier when Paul had looked at the candidates
and picked out the right one.  Herbert had joked that Paul would have a
role in the Last Judgment: he'd be the one running the scales, weighing
the worthiness of each candidate's heart, as if the whole thing were out
of an Egyptian fantasia.

Herbert kept most of Paul's things in boxes stored next to the house's
mechanicals.  He couldn't bear to look at the few pieces of clothing
he'd kept or the photos they'd taken of each other.  Each of Herbert's
books -- all of the best ones dedicated back in one way or another to
Paul -- were inscribed back to Herbert in Paul's neatnik scrawl.

Herbert looked down at his list again.  His life had fractured several
times during his life.  He'd used a list to help pull it back together.
Every time, he'd lost some of himself, but he'd had someone to help
pull him back together.  When his father killed his mother and then
himself, leaving behind a fucked up homosexual son in his third year of
college, leaving behind more debentures than memories of love, Herbert
had nearly cracked.  Only a lawyer, one of his father's buddies, had the
courage to help out.  All his dad's other friends had dropped the family
like a diseased carcass, worried about guilt by association, but Mr.
Richard Thompson, Jr., Esq. had taken on the estate, the banks, and the
estate taxes.  Most of the land was sold to pay the bank for the massive
debt load; another chunk was sold to pay the estate taxes.  Herbert Tate
had been left with barely two hundred acres of a three thousand acre
farm.  His only request in all this was that the house where he'd grown
up, where his father had killed his mother, was sold off or at least
knocked down.  The land Herbert got was the worst of it.  The only really
arable land was where some of the apple and cherry orchards had stood.
Herbert still got fresh apples every year -- the cherry trees had been
killed off years ago.

Paul had gotten Herbert to use some of his money to repurchase chunks of
the old Tate Farm when they came available.  Herbert now had about seven
hundred acres.  He leased most of it out to people who actually wanted to
use it for agriculture, but he owned it, like he always should have.

Then his life had crumbled when Paul left it.  His agent, probably out of
compassion and not-a-little self-interest, had kicked Herbert's ass
every time he seemed to drop off in production of pages.  That had kept
Herbert going for a couple years, but today it seemed like the scab had
fallen off and the wound underneath was the same gushing killer of life
it had always been.

Herbert wrote more on his list.  The sheriff when called hadn't been too
forthcoming about the chances of apprehending Preston King.  Herbert
thought he might call some of his acquaintances and see if anyone could
recommend a good detective or bounty hunter.

In all his years writing gruesome stories, Herbert had never seen
anything like the scene on his property today.  The orgy down at the pool
house; the glare of the blood on the light colored stone in his kitchen.
Herbert had attended an autopsy once so he could write about it; he'd
been in police stations and FBI offices to get the smell and the realism
down.  But he'd never seen a kid beaten down and bleeding in his own
house.

Herbert knew he couldn't work on his current book.  He knew he didn't
want to write it any more.  His agent, and then the editor who'd agreed
to buy it, would have strong feelings about that, but Herbert Tate
didn't care right now.  He wondered if he was now a retired writer.

Herbert wrote a last item on his list.  Visit the kid.  He'd meet the
guy, offer his apologies.  Maybe that would be enough to excise these
current demons, maybe enough to get Herbert's life back into a sane
place.  Preston had done everything he knew how to destroy Herbert; that
was the problem with trusting people, they knew all too well what hurt
the most.

Maybe a quick visit to the kid would be a bandage to stop the psychic
bleeding.  He'd talked to the kid, the one who Preston assaulted.  He'd
confirmed, through description, that Preston, calling himself Trance, had
done all this.

Herbert hadn't seen the kid, though.  Herbert hadn't apologized for
what Preston had done.  From the size of the body, the kid was young,
maybe twelve.  Preston was a monster.