Date: Sat, 14 Dec 2013 13:03:12 -0800 (PST)
From: Macout Mann <macoutmann@yahoo.com>
Subject: IT STARTED IN A PARK 18

This story is completely fictional and any resemblance to actual persons or
events is purely coincidental.  The story also contains explicit sexual
acts between males, so be warned!

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Copyright 2013 by Macout Mann.  All rights reserved.



			   IT STARTED IN A PARK

			      by Macout Mann



				Chapter 18

				  Prints


Hunter Bronson welcomed Sammie as his new roommate, and they quickly agreed
that if either needed to use the room for private purposes they were free
to do so.  Just let the other guy know in advance or put a large red rubber
band on the doorknob, so that no embarrassing encounters occurred.  Hunter
was completely relaxed around Sammie and had no problem being nude when
roommates might normally be naked around each other.  He, like Sammie,
slept in the raw.

Sammie was a bit reticent to show himself to Hunter at first, but he
gradually relaxed, and they kidded each other about Sammie's frequent hard
ons.  "My brother is always lusting after me, so I'm used to seeing a hard
dick," Hunter grinned.

Hunter wouldn't admit it, but he was not a total stranger to male on male
sex.  But that was just the result of intellectual curiosity.  After all,
why wouldn't he want to know what his gay brother was experiencing?



In class, Sammie encountered Clarissa Estes for the first time.  She had
been the sole darling of the art department faculty until Sammie came
along.  Now a junior she was in Sammie's printmaking class.  Classic stuck
up bitch, very pretty, expecting everybody to grovel at her feet.
Obviously she and Sammie didn't get along.

He also got to know George Mason, a fellow sophomore art major, whom during
first year he'd just seen around.  In print class they really hit it off.
George had admired Sammie's portrait in last year's exhibit and was anxious
to get to know him.  George thought that Sam might also be gay and was
anxious to check him out.



There are various ways to make prints.  Stone lithography is the one being
taught at Sparta.  The process is based on the fact that oil and water
don't mix.

In simplest terms the artist uses an oily medium to paint his picture on a
flat limestone surface.  The stone is then immersed in water.  The water
adheres to everything but the oily image.  When the stone in pressed into a
sheet of paper, the image transfers to the paper.  Simple, eh?

Actually offset printing, the way most newspapers and magazines are printed
these days, is a form of lithography.  But art prints are much more
complicated to create, especially those in several colors, and that's the
reason they are real art and made in limited quantities, five hundred or
less.  The fewer there are, the more precious the print.  In a genuine
limited edition each print is signed in pencil by the artist together with
the print number and the quantity of the edition.  "Sam Caldwell 5/50"
would indicate that this is the fifth print in a total of fifty created by
Sam Caldwell.  If a print becomes valuable, the lower numbered prints
generally sell at a premium.

Sammie was obviously very excited by the prospect of selling his prints and
was looking forward to every class.  He also used some of his bank account
money to buy the stuff he needed to make prints back at the dorm.  He
intended to do a set of at least four for the Cleveland gallery, so he
could work on one at class and another in his and Hunter's room.  Hunter
was also enthusiastic.



Hunter was the first to employ the red rubber band.  He got with a very
attractive freshman girl.  Robbed the cradle, he did.

"Sam, you may not remember me from last year.  I'm George Mason.  Care to
have coffee?"

Sammie in a short year had gone from a Columbus Queer Punching Bag to at
least a Some-kind-o'-Man on Campus.  "Sure," he replied, "I don't have
another class for an hour."

George was not the hot s.o.b that Sammie was becoming, but he was not
unattractive.  He was about Sammie's height, had peach skin, auburn hair,
regular features, and a winning smile.

"Gosh, I wish I had your talent." George gushed, after they had been
served.

"Shit, I aint all that good," Sammie said.  He had learned that the
language he'd learned in the construction trade could serve him well on
campus.  Gave him an up-from-the-ghetto image.

The conversation continued.  "Small talk," they call it.  Finally George
asked, "What do you like to for fun?"

"Fuck around."

"What d'ya mean?"

"If you don't know, we've wasted a fucking half hour.  If you do, I'm at
Beauregard 315.  Come by about four."

At four o'clock Hunter was doing homework.  Sammie was putting together his
print rig.  There was a knock on the door.  Sammie was surprised to see
that George was on the other side.

"Hey man," Sammie called to Hunter, "I know what we'd agreed, but..."

"No sweat," Hunter laughed, "I'm off to the library."

"So you did know," Sammie said.

"I want your dick," George answered, "...down my throat or up my ass."

In the next half hour for the first time Sammie realized that he was really
a top.  He relished controlling the situation.  Sure he sucked George off,
but he commanded the situation.  He rammed his tool into George's anus and
was thrilled when George shrieked his joy at receiving Sammie's huge load
up his chute.  "Let's do it again...soon," George pleaded.



Over the year, Sammie and Hunter became the workout buddies.  Sure, he and
Vernon continued to get together, but Vernon's duties were a lot heavier
now that he was an Assistant Prof.  Sammie and Jim continued to get
together every weekend.  "Uncle Sam" became a favorite "uncle" of Jim's
boys.  Christian became prouder and prouder of his favorite advisee.
Sammie continued to excel academically.

Sammie's first print was stunning.  A worker, who could have been Jim, was
setting a stud in place assisted by a younger man, who could have been
Sammie himself.  In the background a third man observed.  All were bare
chested, the features of their bodies beautifully defined.  The sun beat
down upon the scene so realistically that you could almost feel the sweat
pouring from their bodies.  Their jeans all reflected manliness, yet the
whole scene reflected no hint of suggestiveness.  When it was revealed, the
class spontaneously applauded almost in unison.

"How did you get it to look so realistic, Sam?" one student asked.

"I do construction during the summer," Sammie proudly answered.

Clarissa's was an architectural study of University Tower.  George's a
tennis match.



Once again Sammie spent a week at home and a week with Merritt at
Christmastime.  He told his folks about the opportunity he had to sell his
prints.  His father couldn't understand how something Sammie drew could
possibly be worth money.  When he returned to Sparta he spent spare
time—what little he had—painting a portrait of his parents from a
photograph.  He thought they might appreciate his talent if he gave that to
them.

He did continue to make time for Vernon and Jim.  Although Jim's boys
called him "Uncle," he felt more and more like Jim was the father he wished
he had had.  Jim, like Sammie, was from the working class.  They understood
each other.  And they had developed a relationship that was much, much
deeper than a purely sexual liaison.

And Sammie and George developed a close friendship.  George was from
Chicago's North Shore, son of a banker, graduate of the fabled New Trier
High School.  His and Sammie's backgrounds could not have been more
different.  But both had been bullied as children, George not so severely
as Sammie had been; but George admired the way Sammie had overcome
adversity, he loved Sammie's earthiness, and above all he worshipped
Sammie's unbelievable talent.

When they were together, George relished the feeling of Sammie's prong
plunging in and out of his receptive ass.  They would first lie together,
each enjoying tracing his hands over the shapes of the other's body and
each tasting the leaking shaft of the other.  Then more often than not
Sammie would become the aggressor, giving George the pleasure that the
Midwest patrician most desired by ultimately filling him with Georgia-boy
cum.



By the time Spring Break came, Sammie had completed his set of four prints.
He was to go to Cleveland to show the first copies to Hyrum Gunther, the
gallery owner.  At the last minute, Christian decided to accompany him.
Christian didn't think Gunther would take advantage of Sammie, but he
wanted to make sure.  They flew to Cleveland Monday and stayed at
Christian's parents' home.  Christian's mother received Sam warmly and gave
him some good professional advice.

Gunther was overwhelmed by the quality of the prints.  He asked if Sammie
could produce a hundred sets.  Sammie assured him that he could.  Gunther
proposed to offer the first ten copies of each as sets.  The remainder
could be sold individually, but if the first ten sets were sold, then ten
more sets would be reserved.  And so on.

Sammie signed the prints that he had brought, designating each image as one
of one hundred.

Before Christian and Sammie could get back to Georgia, Gunther was on the
telephone to a friend of his at "Newsweek" magazine.  Before the next week
ended, a correspondent was in Sparta to interview Sammie and his faculty
advisor, Dr. Ballard.  Christian told the interviewer that Sam Caldwell was
a remarkable native talent.  That he and his colleagues had discovered Sam,
but had done little but refine the flair Sam already possessed.  Sammie was
appropriately depreciative.  He said that he just loved to draw and paint.

An edition of "Newsweek" in late Spring featured a picture of Sam Caldwell
and a picture of one of Sammie's prints in a "back of the book" section
along with an article on Hyrum Gunther's discovery of a remarkably talented
new American artist only nineteen year's old.  His prints would be offered
for sale beginning in June.  The article praised the "genuineness of the
depictions."

The "Newsweek" spread led to articles in the University Daily, the "Lambda"
(a name going back to the days when the university was a military school),
and the Atlanta "Constitution."  Sammie was a campus celebrity.  People he
had never known congratulated him.

Clarissa Estes was frosted.  She had chosen to do two university buildings
in hopes of selling her prints locally and thus enhancing her reputation
with the faculty.  Sam Caldwell now had a national following.

Actually, Sammie's entire output was sold before the end of summer.  Hyrum
Gunther had further consigned prints to friends who had galleries in New
York, Chicago, San Francisco, and Denver.  The newly opened Trinity Gallery
in Atlanta also requested sets and were sent ten, which sold almost
immediately.

Sammie was richer than he could have ever hoped to be.