Date: Sat, 12 Jun 2010 22:19:33 -0600
From: Roy <roynm@mac.com>
Subject: Owen, chapters 38, 39 - Gay college section

Owen

Chapter thirty-eight

By Roy Reinikainen


	Lucas turned from the simmering pot on the stove as Owen burst into
the apartment, his eyes alight.  "The fireflies are here!" he announced.
He made a hurry-up motion with a hand.  "C'mon, slowpoke, I've been waitin'
a year to see 'em again and you've been waiting a lifetime!"  Owen looked
around the apartment with lowered brows.  "What is that smell?" he asked,
before suspiciously turning his full attention on Lucas, who stood
defensively in front of a steaming pot on the range.

	"Dinner." Lucas quipped, knowing as he said it that he would not
foist his latest creation on anyone.  He plunged a spoon into the large
stew pot, momentarily wondering if the liquid might take the finish off.
He gave the spoon barely a glance as he held the steaming liquid at arm's
length for Owen to taste.  "Here," he urged, with a grin.  "Tell me what
you think."

	Owen gave him an incredulous look, then turned toward the
apartment's front door, suddenly very anxious to leave.  "Maybe later,
huh?" he temporized.  "Um, what's it supposed to be?" he ventured, standing
as far away from the kitchen as possible.

	Lucas cast a doubtful glance at his latest culinary . . . effort
. . . and decided that perhaps it would be better if the bubbling liquid
. . . aged . . . or . . .  something.  Perhaps . . . disappeared.
Hopefully!  'How in the world did it take on that disgusting gray color?'
he wondered.  "It's supposed to be beef stew!" he shouted over his
shoulder.  "I'm afraid to taste it though," he added.  "I wouldn't have let
you sample it," he added.  "Really!"

	If he hadn't known better, he would have suspected sour Maxine, at
the small grocery store, of sabotaging his efforts.  She certainly had let
him know that she wouldn't serve him, the one time he'd try to buy things
from her, making it clear that he needed to go elsewhere to shop.  He
smiled, another piece of his plan falling into place.  "With pleasure,
ma'am," he'd answered, pleased to see that he was messing with her head by
being nice.  'I'll be messing with more than her head before I'm through
with her,' he vowed, as he left the store, her poisonous gaze burning into
his back.  'You don't mess with a Horton man,' he silently told her.

	"C'mon Lucas!" Owen urged, breaking into his thoughts.  Lucas waved
a hand in front of his face, giving another glance to the . . . lethal
looking concoction on the stove.  'And the . . . odor!'  No one, no matter
how charitable, could call the smell appetizing.  Even perpetually hungry
Owen seemed reluctant to approach the kitchen, choosing instead to remain
in the slightly cleaner air of the living room, bouncing excitedly on the
balls of his feet.

	Lucas gave in to the hurry-up motions, while the stew bubbled and
burped, causing him to grimace.  He turned off the heat, slapped a tight
fitting lid on the stew pot, then hurried towards the apartment's front
door, anxious to make his escape.  He followed Owen down the stairway, then
through the building's vestibule, its terrazzo floors and brass fixtures
once again shining, and out onto the twilit sidewalk.

	The heat of the day had given way to a balmy evening.  The last of
the day's sunlight painted the horizon a blue-purple above a black horizon
of silhouetted trees.  In the nearby park, children were laughing.  A dog
barked, and a few birds chattered, preparing for the evening.  As he and
Owen passed, the old sign in the window of Sally's Restaurant
intermittently buzzed and clicked in time with the flickering neon glow,
which illuminated the sidewalk and bench adjacent to the building.  'She
really should get that fixed,' Lucas couldn't help thinking, as he hurried
to keep up with Owen.

	"Where're we going?" he managed, as they turned off the main
street, and walked past the building that Bailey was having renovated.
Lucas hadn't a clue what Bailey intended to do with the building, and he
doubted that Sam, who was handling the renovation for Bailey, did either.
If he did, he wasn't talking.  Of course, he hadn't been talking much since
Jonah had left.  He claimed he was staying home to tend to his father and
help out his mother, but Lucas doubted that was the case.  Both he and Owen
had tried to get Sam to stay with them, after that first night, but he
declined, giving each of them a lengthy hug, and mumbling something about
intruding, before leaving.

	"I thought you said the fireflies were mostly in the trees along
the river," Lucas huffed, breaking into a slow jog to remain at Owen's
side.  He looked over his shoulder.  "The river's back there."

	"They are by the river." Owen glanced over his shoulder and smiled,
not the slightest bit winded by the effort of running.  "We're heading over
to collect Sam.  This is a special evening and I'd like for him to enjoy it
with us.  He needs to get out of the house for some fun."

	"Good thinking," Lucas smiled, catching up with Owen, their steps
echoing hollowly on the dry dirt road.  "I miss seeing him."

	A few minutes later, the two men rounded the bend, bringing Sam's
folks' house into view.  The yellow lights made the house glow, in the
darkened clearing.  As they approached, Dog barked a happy greeting and ran
towards them, his tail wagging, as he greeted his friends.

	"Sam!" Owen called, as they neared the house.  The floor boards of
the porch made a hollow, thudding sound as Owen bypassed the steps, happily
waving at Sam's mother as she pushed the screen door open with a look of
alarm.  "The fireflies are here!" Owen breathlessly announced, before Sara
Bridgers could ask why he was shouting.  "Sam's here, isn't he?" he nodded
in answer to his own question.

	"Hey, Sammy!" Owen called over Sara Bridgers' shoulder, as Sam
hurried into the living room, drawn by the sound of Owen's voice.  The
expression he wore was almost embarrassing, in the depth of emotions it
conveyed.  "Get your rear moving, the fireflies are here!" Owen announced.
"We need to show Lucas!  You'd better bring a shirt and get some shoes on;
we may be a while," Owen concluded, smiling at Sam's mother, while Lucas
knelt and petted Dog.

	Sam made a 'wait a moment' gesture and trotted back to his bedroom.

	"Is he doin' okay?" Owen asked, in a low voice.  "Lucas n' I have
been worried."

	Sam's mother glanced over her shoulder.  "He keeps sayin'
everything's okay, but it's not.  He mopes around, eats three meals a day,
and otherwise pretty much stays in his room."

	Owen briefly rested a hand on Sara Bridgers' shoulder.  "We're here
to change that."

	"Got that right," Lucas added, standing up as Dog, finally
realizing that no one was going to offer him food, abandoned the attention
he was receiving, and wandered off.

	"And, how's Mister Bridgers?" Owen asked.  "It's great to have you
both home.  Now, if we could breathe a little life into Sam, things would
be close to perfect."

	"Thank you for trying, Owen," Sara murmured, then added, "you too,
Lucas.  If anyone can bring him out of his depression, you two can."

	Owen changed the direction of his conversation, as Sam hurried back
into the room.  "He and I have always loved fireflies, y'know," Owen
explained, as if continuing a conversation, "and Lucas has never seen 'em,
so tonight's special."  Sara Bridgers made a face and shuddered.

	"They're just bugs, as far as I'm concerned."  She laughed.  "Tell
me, would you boys get so excited if a cockroach lit up?"  Owen laughed and
dismissed her question with a wave of his hand as Sam approached, grinning
at his mother and carrying a couple of blankets.  While he'd been away,
he'd slipped on a t-shirt, but hadn't spent the time to tie the laces of
his tennis shoes.

	"Knowing Owen, we'll be sitting on the ground someplace, taking in
the view," he explained to his mother's raised eyebrow expression and nod
toward the blankets.  "These firefly expeditions often turn out to be all
night affairs."  Sam knelt to tie his shoes, then draped one blanket over
his shoulders and kissed his mother's cheek.  "Bye, Dad!" he called, to his
father, who was sitting in an armchair resting.  The older man raised a
hand in farewell.

	"Don't do anything I wouldn't do," Henry Bridgers called, then
chuckled.

	"Yeah, well," Sam murmured, as Owen rolled his eyes.  Sam tossed
the second blanket in Owen's direction, as the three men headed away from
the house, followed by Sara's call of, "have fun."

	As they walked out onto the darkened stretch of road, Owen slowed
to a stop and touched Sam's arm.  "The meadow?" he asked, communicating a
world of meaning in the two words.  "This is a special night, and I'd like
for all of us to be in a special place."

	"Of course!"  Sam stopped walking.  "Thanks guys," he said, "for
includin' me.  Your thinking of me means a lot."

	Lucas pulled Sam close, with an arm over his shoulder.  "I'm
thinking that there's more being said than what you two are saying with
words, but," he turned to Sam, "we couldn't let a special night like this
go by and leave you sitting home alone.  I still think you should be living
with Owen and me, no matter what you say," he added, holding out a hand to
prevent Sam from protesting.  "Owen's always told me how much the two of
you enjoyed sitting on the grass by the river's edge, watching the
fireflies.  If you weren't with us, it wouldn't be the same.  You're
important to us, Sam.  There is no reason for you to be alone, tonight, or
any night."

	Lucas took Sam's left hand while Owen took his right.  "Now," Lucas
said, as they walked down the lane, hand-in-hand-in-hand, leaving the glow
of the Bridgers' house behind.  "Where's this meadow you guys were talking
about?  Is it private?  The night's a little hot, and I want to get out of
some of these clothes."

	"Uuuuu," Sam laughed.  "Lucas wants to get nekkid.  Sounds like
he's askin' for some attention."

	"Then let's hurry," Owen urged.  "Fireflies always did look better
when we're bare assed nekkid."

	"You've done this before, I take it?" Lucas asked, with a laugh,
not at all sure how everyone in Riverton seemed to have no trouble finding
their way in total darkness.

	"Of course; why'd you think I brought the blankets?" Sam asked, as
if it were obvious.


----------


	"Damn, I can hardly see a freaking thing," Lucas said, in good
natured complaint, as he accepted Owen's hand to clamber up the grassy
slope, the slowly moving river at his back.  "If you guys weren't with me,
I'd be lost for sure.  Hey!" he jumped in surprise, as Sam pushed him from
behind in a final effort to urge Lucas up the slope.  "Watch where you're
putting your hands.  At least wait till I've gotten out of these clothes."
He slipped to his knees and grabbed at the nearest thing . . .  "Sam!" he
called, his voice rising, as he slipped on the wet grass.  At the top of
the hill, Owen laughed, a grey shape in the darkness.

	"Hey, handsome," Sam murmured, as Lucas clung to him.  "Wanna
dance?"  Lucas began to laugh so hard at the ludicrousness of it all that
he feared he might slip further, and slide into the river, taking Sam with
him.  "I tell 'ya," Sam chuckled.  "Some people will do anything to get a
hug."

	Lucas took a couple deep breaths and returned Sam's embrace.
"Thanks," he murmured.  "If you hadn't stopped me, I'd have been going for
a swim."  He quickly kissed Sam's cheek.  "Having you hug me is way better
than that."

	"Grab him, Owen," Sam urged, heaving and pushing Lucas up the
embankment.

	Behind him, Sam climbed the grassy slope with seemingly no effort.
"C'mon, City Boy," Owen laughed, tugging Lucas to his feet.  "We've gotta
move away from the water a bit, 'cause the gators come out at night.  I
don't like the idea of anyone chewin' on one of my favorite men."

	"What?" Lucas almost screeched, Sam's snort of amusement barely
registering.  "Alligators?"  When Sam and Owen could contain themselves no
longer, Lucas realized he was being teased.  "Not funny, men," he grumbled.
"Alligators, indeed!"  Still, he couldn't keep himself from looking over
his shoulder, wondering if alligators were night hunters, and cursing the
fact that it was so dark he wouldn't be able to tell if something was
indeed stalking him.  'I don't suppose alligators live this far inland,' he
mused, then almost snorted.  'Hell, I'm beginning to sound like Bailey.'

	"Be nice, guys," he said, in warning.  "Otherwise, you're going to
have to eat some of my beef stew."

	Owen gulped.  "No way am I touching that," he complained, barely
more than a voice in the darkness.  "By the time we get back home, it'll
probably have solidified into bad smelling, lumpy concrete, or something.
Be nice, Sam," he added.  "Lucas can't even make toast and scrambled eggs."

	"Well, I'm trying," Lucas responded, with a good natured laugh.
"All great chefs have to learn somehow."

	"Sam can cook," Owen added.

	"Y'see?" Lucas answered, quickly.  "Another reason for you to come
to live with us.  You can cook, clean house, wash the windows, vacuum the
floors, do the laundry, and things like that, all naked, I might add, and
Owen and I will be very kind to you each night, in the bedroom."

	"Sounds like a plan to me," Owen chuckled, as the three men moved
away from the riverside to the grassy, and dry, meadow.  Away from the
canopy of trees, the crescent moon provided the barest of light to see by.
Around them, the trees seemed to sparkle as the fireflies, they'd come to
see, danced.

	"Yeah, right," Sam laughed, as he walked shoulder-to-shoulder with
Lucas.  "For me to do all that, you guys are going to have to be very, very
nice.  In fact, once a day might not be enough."

	"I can do that," Lucas' laugh was followed closely by Owen's, "me,
too."

	"So," Lucas, said, as he felt Sam move closer on one side, and Owen
on the other.  "Didn't someone mention something about losing the clothes."
He paused.  "You guys really were joking about the alligators, weren't
you?" he asked, still not totally sure.

	Owen laughed, as he pulled Lucas into a tight embrace, accompanied
by a fierce kiss.  "Yeah, there hasn't been an alligator attack in years,"
he chuckled.

	"Owen . . ." Sam warned.

	"Okay, there hasn't ever been one," Owen surrendered.  "But y'never
know . . ." he added, surrendering Lucas to Sam's embrace.

	"I'm really glad you're with us," Lucas murmured, as Sam nuzzled
the crook of his neck, then kissed a trail up to his jaw, his cheek, and,
finally, his mouth, as Owen joined them.

	"This is the way things should be," Owen murmured, after a
three-way kiss.  "This is what I've been wanting ever since coming back
home."

	"He always did talk too much," Sam murmured, amusement coloring the
voice which had been dull grey for months.

	"I've noticed that," Lucas chuckled, joining Sam in stripping the
unresisting Owen.  Sam tugged the tight t-shirt over Owen's head, and they
began to kiss, while Lucas worked Owen's shorts and underwear down his
legs, then dropped to his knees and began to suck on Owen's stiffening
cock.  When Owen began slowly fucking his mouth, Lucas turned toward Sam,
and unzipped his shorts, and tugged them down his legs The moment Sam
stepped out of his shorts, Lucas engulfed his cock with his mouth.  He
swallowed the penis, burying his face in Sam's wiry black pubes.
"Fuuuuck," he sighed, as he gasped for breath.  "You smell so good."  He
snaked his hand between Sam's legs and roughly pulled him closer.  'Damn,'
he thought.  'I'm in heaven!'

	"Your turn," Owen murmured, a voice in the darkness.  He pulled
Lucas to his feet and hurriedly stripped off his shirt, then fumbled with
the zipper on Lucas' jeans, while, above him, Sam and Lucas kissed.  It was
as if the floodgates of passion had suddenly opened for all three men.
Owen knelt and was madly sucking both men, first Lucas, then Sam.  He
nuzzled Sam's balls, expertly rolling one, then the other over his tongue,
just as he knew Sam loved. Then he worked on Lucas' cock, kneading his butt
cheeks, squeezing tightly, just as Lucas always asked him to do.

	Above him, both Sam and Lucas kissed, sighed, then moaned, as Owen
worked on them.  "Fuuuck, men," Sam finally said, pulling away.  "My legs
have gone all rubbery.  I've gotta lay down."  He and Lucas pulled Owen to
his feet.  They both gave him a brief kiss, then, hand-in-hand-in-hand,
walked to the center of the meadow, and into the silvery moonlight.  The
fragrance of night-blooming flowers hung on the still air, while, overhead,
the arch of the Milky Way hung suspended from horizon to horizon, the
pinpricks of millions of distant suns adding their brilliance to the
dancing of the fireflies.

	Lucas took one step away from the two other men.  "Guys, just a
second.  I have something to say."

	"Awww," Owen groaned.  "He's gonna talk."

	"Shhh."  There was a sound of a playful swat and a yelp of
surprise.

	"Just wait, Sammy.  I'm gonna have my way with you."

	"Ooooh," Sam teased.  "I hope that's a promise?"

	"Guys!" Lucas's exasperated voice rose slightly in the stillness of
the meadow.  "I've been thinking about this for quite a while, and now
seems the appropriate time to talk about it."

	"Tonight's not about talking," Owen murmured, reaching out for
Lucas, who grabbed his wrist.

	"About this, it is.  It'll only take a moment."

	"Let 'im talk Owen; he sounds serious.  But, only for a moment," he
added.  "If he goes on too long, we'll tackle him and show 'im what's
what."

	"He's already seen your what's what," Owen snickered.

	"Owennnn," Lucas groaned.

	"Okay, okay."

	"I'm serious."  Lucas reached out and drew the other two men into
an embrace.  "I haven't talked this over with either of you, but . . . "
Lucas huffed a laugh.  "I guess this is something like a proposal, and I'm
deadly serious about it."  He paused, noting how both men he was holding
had stopped their horseplay.  "Sam," he began, "would you consider being
partners with Owen and me?  I've already asked if you would live with us.
This is different.  Would you live with us so we can share your life at the
same time you share ours?"  The only sound to be heard was the soft murmur
of the river.  Even the nighttime insects had become silent, as if they too
were waiting for Sam's response.

	"Thank you, Lucas," Owen murmured.  "Thank you, so much.  I've been
sayin' all along that the perfect way for things to play out would be for
the three of us to be together.  But, I have to ask something first."

	Lucas made a slight noise of permission.  "Do you love Sam like I
do?" Owen asked.

	Lucas took a deep breath, intensely aware of Sam's arm over his
shoulder.  "No," he began, "not yet.  Those are the key words guys, 'not
yet.'  You may remember me telling Daniel that I do not give my affections
away easily.  I like you, Sam, a great deal.  I love how you took Jonah in
and showed him his first kindness at the hands of someone outside his
family.  I love how you defended him, when describing how he asked that the
two of you end your relationship.  I love the dedication you've shown to
your folks during your father's illness.  The list could go on.  But, I've
not been around you enough to say that I love you.

	"I did love the couple times we spent in bed together, with Owen,
during Christmas vacation," Lucas went on.  "I love how you've not
exhibited any jealousy about me being with Owen."  He leaned close and
kissed Sam on the cheek.  "I could very easily come to love you.  As I've
already told you once, you are an easy man to love."

	"Sam?" Owen asked.

	"Um," he temporized, searching for the correct words.  "Whatever I
say won't sound as good as when Lucas says it," he laughed, "but if you're
asking if I love Lucas, I would have to give the same answer.  Everything
I've learned about you, Lucas, or have personally seen, tells me that you
are a wonderful person.  You've been so kind to Owen, and, if for no other
reason than that, I could love you.  I . . . I would like to be given the
chance to . . . to . . . feel about you, as I do about Owen."  There was a
grin in his voice.  "It won't take much, I assure you."

	"Then, will you come live with Owen and me?"

	"Sammy," Owen murmured. "Together, forever . . ."

	"And, always," Sam concluded, in a voice barely more than a
whisper.  "Yes, Lucas, I would be . . . honored."  There was a slight pause
while he audibly swallowed.  "Thank you."

	"Are we done talkin' now?" Owen chuckled.  "Someone spread out the
blankets."

	"Is he always this bossy?" Sam murmured, patting Lucas' back a
final time in thanks.  "He wasn't always this way."

	"He's just horny."

	"Isn't he always?  Besides, he likes to pretend to be macho, once
in a while." Sam chuckled, as he helped Lucas spread one of the blankets on
the grassy floor of the meadow.  "I think we should let him pretend, since
we both know that, deep down, he loves to have someone on top of him."

	"Damn right," Owen murmured, "and I can still be macho, even with
two guys on top of me.  Wanna try me out?"  Owen dropped to his knees in
the center of the blanket,s then lay on his back, a light spot on the dark
blanket, lit only by the fading moonlight, the stars of the Milky Way, and
the flickering of the fireflies.


----------


	Corey rolled on top of him, a welcome weight in the darkness.  He
could feel Corey's warm breath against his neck, as well as his thick cock
which pressed against his own.  "Are you happy, lover?" he murmured, as he
began to slowly thrust himself against the man beneath him.

	"Oh, yes," Jonah murmured.  It wouldn't take much of this before
he'd shoot.  That was always the case, when he and Corey had sex.  He
pulled Corey's face to his for a deep and lingering kiss.

	"Jonah!"  He jerked awake at the sound of his young sister's voice,
his dream dissipating like so much smoke.  "Jonah!" Opie repeated, along
with another insistent knock.  "Mama says to tell you breakfast is ready,
so get up, or I'll eat yours."

	He shook his head, and answered.  "Yeah, I'm awake, okay?"  He sat
up and rubbed his eyes.  He heard Opie run down the hallway and shout to
their mother.  "Alright, I got him up.  Is the food ready yet?"

	Jonah flopped onto his back, his bare legs hanging over the edge of
the oversized bed, his erection stretching for the ceiling.  It was like
this every morning . . . hard and frustrated.  He already knew that not
even an ice cold shower would cause him to lose his erection.  "There's
only one way to handle this," he said, aloud.  He swung off the bed, padded
across the room, and opened the bedroom door, making sure neither Opie nor
Abigail were nearby.  "I'll be a few minutes," he shouted, to his mother,
hoping to prevent another door-pounding visit from his youngest sister,
then turned back to the bed, locking the door behind him.

	He fell back against the white bed sheets, feeling their crisp
clean-ness against his back and buttocks.  He placed his heels on the edge
of the bed, and spread his legs wide, imagining he was giving a show to
Corey, who would be sitting nearby, watching as he fingered his hole and
slowly stimulated himself to an orgasm.

	"C'mon, lover," Jonah imagined Corey saying, as the man who had
become dear to him, even though they barely knew one another, began using
his bare feet to toy with Jonah's balls.  Jonah removed his finger from his
hole, as, in his imagination, Corey pressed against the bulge of his
exposed perineum, then against the darkened skin of his pucker.  "You're
wanting me to fuck you, aren't you, handsome?" he imagined Corey murmuring,
barely loud enough to be heard.  He pressed against Jonah's sphincter with
his toe, and chuckled low in his throat.  "You wish it was my dick, getting
ready to push into you . . . don't you?" he asked, pushing harder,
stimulating Jonah's prostate into producing more lubricating pre-cum,
creating a wet sound as Jonah stimulated himself.

	"Oh yes," he mumbled, rolling his head from side to side,
completely caught up in his imaginary lovemaking.  "Push it into me," he
begged.  "Shoot in me, Corey," he whimpered, as he imagined Corey dragging
the head of his cock over his hole, leaving behind a slimy trail.  A moment
later, he would have sworn he felt Corey slowly penetrate his hole, his
cock stretching the muscular opening as it slid in, until the coarse hair
of Corey's pubes pressed against the skin of his buttocks.

	"I'm coming back to Riverton," Corey said.  "I'm coming back to
you.  Then. . . ," the pressure against his prostate prevented Jonah from
drawing his dream out.  "Then," Corey repeated, "we're gonna do this for
real."  Jonah whimpered, curled his toes at the edge of the bed, arched his
back, and shot.  He flinched, as the first of his sperm splashed against
his cheek, then gasped for breath, as the second shot left a wet line over
his chest, and the third ran down his fingers, to puddle in his own pubic
hair.

	"I'm here, Corey," he murmured to himself, as he used a finger to
scrape the sperm off of his cheek, then sucking his finger clean.  "I'm
yours."


----------


	Lucas lay on his back, with Owen snuggled against him on one side,
and Sam on the other, laying on his stomach, one leg thrown over Lucas'.

	'Dear God,' he thought to himself, as a meteorite streaked across
the sky, its brief flash mimicking those of the fireflies dancing in the
darkened trees.  'I hope I've done the right thing.'  His thoughts returned
to the two men at his side, as Owen snuggled closer and draped an arm over
Lucas' chest, in an unconscious effort to touch his boyhood love at Lucas'
other side.  'There was no other way to end the stalemate the three of us
had reached.  I can no more give up Owen than I can stop breathing, and, at
the same time, I believe that Owen really does love me as he claims
. . . but . . . he's also in love with Sam.  He always has been.'

	Lucas briefly closed his eyes, memories of him and Owen flickering
against his closed eyelids, like an old-time movie, or like the fireflies
in the trees, flickering, then fading, only to reappear.  It was as if his
life had started on that fateful evening when he and Owen had met.  Before
that meeting with Owen, he'd been an entirely different person.  The change
had started the moment Owen had stepped into his apartment, and Lucas had
realized that his past, and all of his possessions, meant nothing.  He'd
been the quintessential spoiled rich boy, only marginally better than
Bailey.  In minutes, Owen had begun the change in him, as surely as he'd
started the change in Bailey, and now Corey.

	Lucas could never have imagined that, by Owen giving him his
affections, Sam, would be injured.  'Would I have done anything
differently, if I had known what would happen to Sam?  Would such a course
have even been possible?' Lucas asked himself.  He hated to admit that he
probably would not have.

	'Now though,' he thought to himself, as Sam mumbled something in
his sleep, 'now, I have done all I could to make things right . . . for the
three of us.'  If he'd had any doubts about whether what he had planned was
the right thing to do, they evaporated after he . . . proposed that the
three of them live with one another . . . as partners.  Sam's mood,
reserved and withdrawn, ever since Lucas and Owen had arrived in Riverton,
had changed, as the three of them shared one another on the grassy meadow,
until he'd finally become the man Owen had always described . . . laughing
and teasing, loving and tender.  'If for no other reason than that, I think
I've done the right thing.  I've made the man I love happy, and the man he
loves, happy.  Because of that, I am happy.'

	Owen, always a restless sleeper, shifted in his sleep, this time
tenderly kissing Lucas' neck.  "Love you, Lucas," he murmured, half in a
dream state, before returning to deep sleep, his breath soft against Lucas'
neck.

	'And I love you,' Lucas thought.  'Owen claims to love Sam and me,
equally.'  Lucas compressed his lips.  'Can I love both him and Sam
. . . equally?  And, is it possible for Sam to love me as much as he does
Owen?'


----------


	"Mama!" Opie shouted, running into the living room, as Bea and the
doctor walked into the house, holding hands, walking shoulder-to-shoulder.
Opie came to a skidding stop on the polished wood floor, the rug bunching
up in front of her.

	"You're holding hands!" she exclaimed, her eyes wide, and a smile
blossoming on her face.  In the next move, she ran to the doctor and threw
her arms around his waist and pulled him to her.  "You gonna make my mama
happy, Doctor?" she asked, with her face buried against him.  "She needs to
be happy."  Opie reluctantly released her grip on the doctor, and took his
free hand.

	"You guys gonna get married, or something?" she asked, looking from
the doctor to her mother, then back to the doctor.  "You could come and
live here," she cried, spreading her arms wide.  "We've got lots and lots
of room for all your stuff."  She ran to the home's entry closet, throwing
the door open wide, in an attempt to display exactly how much room.  When
she turned to look into the closet and realized how full it was, she
slammed the door shut, wearing a sheepish expression.  "We've got lots of
junk we can throw out," she added, brushing her hands together, as if all
the arrangements had been completed.

	"Hey, Abigail!" she shouted, her short legs carrying her from the
room at top speed.  "Abigail!  Mama and the doctor are gonna get married,
or something!  We've just figured out that we need to clean a couple
closets to hold all his junk.  Let's get busy!"

	In the distance, the astonished adults looked at one another, as
Abigail's bedroom door opened to an exclamation of, "what!?"

	"Well . . ." Daniel said, turning to Bea.  "I'd hate to let Opie
down."  The corner's of Bea's mouth twitched.  "Would you marry me, Bea?"
he asked.  "Please."

	Bea melted into the doctor's embrace.  "Oh, yes, Daniel," she
murmured, close to his ear.  "I would love to marry the man who has watched
out for me for so many years.  My white knight," she murmured. As their
lips met, both Abigail and Opie came careening into the room.

	"See!  I told 'ya!" Opie screamed in her sister's direction,
pointing to the kissing couple, as she began running around the living room
waving her hands in the air.  "Mama's gettin' married!" she chanted, over
and over.  On her third circuit around the room, she abruptly stopped in
front of the smiling adults.

	"Does this man I'm gonna be a big sister any time soon?  I'd really
like to be a big sister, 'ya know."

	"Opie!" Bea laughed, astonished by her daughter's question.
"Daniel's only just asked me to marry him.  Other . . . things will have to
wait."

	Opie rested her fists on her hips.  "Well . . . hurry up!  We've
waited long enough."  She turned to her older sister. "Huh, old girl?" she
laughed, jumping out of Abigail's reach, with a childish screech of
excitement.

	"Oh, oh, oh!" Opie continued, jumping up and down.  "I've gotta go
tell everyone!"  She ran out of the house, leaving the screen door to slam
behind her.  "I'm gonna tell the whole world!" she continued shouting, as
her voice faded into the distance.


----------


	"Bailey?"  George Wilkins stuck his head into his study, where his
son had thrown himself across one of the overstuffed leather chairs.  One
of Bailey's legs was draped over an arm of the chair, and he rested his
head against the chair back.  At his father's questioning tone, he looked
up.

	"Please . . . come in," he invited.  He looked around the wood
paneled room, smelling of leather and old books, as his father closed the
door behind him and lowered himself into a chair adjoining his son's.
Bailey smiled.  "I've always loved the quiet of this room.  It always was
so conducive to thinking."  He rested his head against the back of the
chair.

	"Your mother and I have noticed that you've been more quiet than
usual, since returning from your visit to your friend, Owen."

	"Indeed," Bailey murmured.  "Father, I'm at one of those turning
points in my life.  Meeting Owen was one.  Now, I'm at another, and it's no
less daunting."

	"And this troubles you?"

	Bailey nodded, not opening his eyes.  "It's one of the first times
I've had to make a decision which will have an impact, not only on me, but
a person I care about."

	"Owen?"

	This time, Bailey shook his head.  "No, Corey."  Bailey shifted
position, turning to face his father.  "Corey wants . . . no . . . needs to
leave the city.  He's been able to exist here, while going to school, but
it is not a place where he can live.  Owen's hometown, Riverton, is such a
place.  But," Bailey sighed, "is Riverton a place where I can exist?  One
minute I tell myself that it's not possible.  The next, I'm almost able to
convince myself that such a move would work.  In neither instance, though,
do I get the same feeling of being thrilled with the prospect of moving
that Corey does.  So, if I trust my gut feelings, I would say that Riverton
is not the place where I can be happy, in the long term.

	"That, however, means that Corey and I will have to go our own
ways, and that will hurt him."  He shook his head.  "At one time, that
prospect would not have troubled me at all.  Now though . . ."  He
shrugged.  "I am greatly troubled."  He smiled.

	"On the other hand, I am pleased that I have fundamentally changed,
to the extent that the prospect of hurting Corey hurts me."


----------


	"Daniel!" Art called, from across the street, as the doctor rounded
the corner to his office.  "I just heard the good news!  Congratulations!"

	The doctor crossed the street to where Art, the barber, waited, and
shook the large man's hand, as Millie came out of her shop next door to add
her own congratulations.  "Thank you, both.  The news sure spreads fast,"
he laughed.

	"Only as fast as Opie can run," Millie chuckled.  "She came running
into the store, all smiles, and told me you and Bea were gonna get married,
and that there'd be lots of candy at the wedding, and that she's gonna get
to be a big sister soon."  Millie looked at the doctor, as if looking over
a pair of glasses.

	"Millie, Opie, hopes to be a big sister, someday.  She is unaware
how expressing her hopes might sound to others.  I can assure you both, Bea
and I have been very proper, in all respects.  I would also like for Opie
to be a big sister, but those things must wait.  She's a little
over-enthusiastic, and tends to distort things without knowing she's doing
it.  Bea's going to speak with her."

	Millie shivered with excitement.  "I just love weddings," she
smiled.  "Especially if there's lots of cake."  She grinned unrepentantly.
"Of course, it's nice when the bride and groom love one another, too," she
added.  "Uuuuu, cake for me, candy for little Opie!  This is gonna be so
much fun!"


----------


	The lights of Lucas', Owen's, and Sam's second floor home shone in
the twilight.  Next door, the second floor of another of Lucas' buildings
was being renovated into another apartment; while the third building was
awaiting remodeling as a bed and breakfast, Riverton's first.  'Apartment?'
Jonah shook his head, thinking of Lucas' and Owen's home.  'The place is
more like a palace, if you ask me.  I've never seen anything like it!'

	"Lucas' house has rock countertops!" Opie shouted, the first time
the entire Carver family, and Doctor Johnson had toured the completed
apartment.  She'd lovingly ran her hand over the polished granite, wonder
written on her face.  She wasn't the only person who looked at the home
with amazement.  Everyone who saw it came away talking about the apartment,
and the changes Lucas had already begun bringing to Riverton.

	'The place not only has stone countertops,' Jonah thought,
recalling his own wonder at a home unlike any he'd even imagined.  Its dark
wood floors were polished to a near-mirror sheen; fancy stainless steel
appliances seemed to fill the kitchen; and furniture he'd only seen in
magazines, during his visits to the barber, when he'd grudgingly let Art
'give him a trim', was scattered around the large open space.  'Sheer
luxury!'

	Lucas had joked with those who were exclaiming over the
state-of-the-art kitchen.  "Maybe all this stuff will help me make a meal
that's edible."  Owen had silently shaken his head, and whispered to his
mother.

	"We're becoming regulars at Sally's restaurant, and at your house."
Bea had smiled benignly, and had patted his arm before making a low
shushing sound.  Owen had told her that Lucas and his family had money, but
somehow she'd never imagined that someone only a year older than her son
would be able to afford something like this.  She smiled to herself, noting
how none of those visiting commented on the single, enormous bed, for the
three men.

	'What a wonderful change for Owen,' she thought to herself.  'Now
that he's with guys he loves, in a beautiful home, he's hopefully going to
be able to put all the suffering of his childhood behind him.  Now,' she
frowned slightly, 'if only he could find something to do which would please
him.  Lucas has created a place for both himself and Jonah.  Sam seems to
be keeping busy with Bailey's construction project, and with the
greenhouses . . . but . . . Owen?'  She shook her head.

	"Makes my place look pretty dowdy," Sam's mother, Sara, had
murmured to Bea, as she lovingly ran her fingers over the nubbly upholstery
fabric of a large sofa facing a beautifully restored cast iron fireplace.
Nearby, two large leather chairs fronted a huge painting of a pink sunset,
made dramatic by large indigo clouds releasing their burden of rain, in the
distance.  "I'm so pleased Lucas and Owen were able to break Sam out of his
melancholy," Sara Bridgers continued.  "His separation from Jonah wasn't
the only reason for his mood, was it?" she'd asked Bea.  "I'm thinking, he
would never have been happy until he was with Owen."

	Jonah had overheard his mother's low-voiced response, telling Sara
Bridgers of his own case of the blahs.  "I think there's more to it than
the separation . . . for either of them," she'd said.  "Like Sam, Jonah's
always been a quiet boy.  Owen's told me that his brother's in love.  But,"
Bea added, her voice showing her displeasure at being told only half of a
revelation, "But," she added, "he wouldn't tell me with whom I am to begin
bonding."

	Jonah had turned away, grinning.  'So, Owen thinks I'm in love,
does he?' he'd asked himself, then was forced to admit that if he wasn't
already in love, he surely would be, should Corey ever return.  Owen had
told him that Corey had recently graduated from college, just as he had
just graduated from high school.  'He's four years older n'me,' Jonah
thought to himself.  'I barely even know the guy, yet . . . but I get all
tingly just thinking about him.  All I have to do is imagine what it'd be
like to be with him, naked and hard, and I have to jerk off.  But, does
that mean I'm in love, or am I in lust?'  He'd thought a moment, and
grinned, 'lust, for sure.  Sayin' I love him will have to wait, though.'

	He opened the door to the building lobby, then climbed the flight
of stairs leading to the two apartments, Lucas' and the one under
construction.  "Geez," he said aloud.  "From the sound of it, the guys must
be having a party!"  He smiled, finished climbing the last few steps, and
knocked on the heavy wooden door.  Instantly, the laughing stopped, and was
followed by some low conversation.  A moment later, Sam answered the door.
His hair was mussed, his face flushed, and his clothing hung slightly
askew.  Behind him, in front of the fireplace, sprawled on the large
brightly hued rug, Owen and Lucas lay on their backs, each breathing
heavily.

	"Jonah!" Sam smiled.  "Come in, come in," he urged, giving Jonah a
quick kiss, as the bewildered young man entered the apartment.

	"Oops," Owen laughed, as he got to his feet and realized the zipper
of his shorts was unfastened.  "Caught me with my pants down," he joked.

	"If he'd shown up a minute later," Lucas quipped, "we'd have had
'em off and he would have caught you bare-ass nekkid."  He teasingly
reached out toward Owen, intent on tickling him.  Owen jumped away, with a
yelp.

	Lucas turned his attention to the visitor.  "Hey, Jonah, what's
happening?  Did you come by to talk about the greenhouses, or can we all
relax?"

	"I wanna get nekkid," Owen playfully moaned.  "Can I take my
clothes off?"

	Sam had returned to Owen's side, and swatted him on the butt.  "Be
nice, your brother's here."

	"So?  What's the big deal?  He's seen me naked, lots of times."

	"Everyone has," Sam murmured, behind his hand, turning to Lucas,
who snorted.

	"Guys," Jonah said, holding up a hand to prevent some sort of
comedy routine ensuing, as Sam jumped away from Owen.  "I just came by to
tell you that Mama and the doc are gonna get married.  They would have told
you, but you've been out galavanting around, someplace, and didn't take
your cell phone," he added, frowning in Lucas' direction.  "Mama's talkin'
about wanting some more kids."

	"Married?" Sam said, abandoning his playfulness for a minute.

	'What an amazing change,' Jonah thought to himself.  'If I ever
doubted that setting him free was the right thing to do, I have no doubts
now.  He looks as happy as I've ever seen him.  In fact, all three guys
do.'

	"Kids?" Owen murmured, appearing stunned, not by the news of the
planned marriage, but by the idea of having some half-brothers or sisters.

	"Wonderful!" Lucas added, on the heels of Owen's comment.  "The
doctor doesn't move as slowly as I thought he might."


~ to be continued ~


	Thank you for taking the time to read my work.  I always welcome
your email and enjoy hearing your thoughts.  If you would like me to send
you a pic of the character(s), please ask.