Date: Sat, 22 Nov 2014 02:04:11 +0000 (UTC)
From: Sean R <seanr_13@yahoo.ca>
Subject: A Drink with a Stranger 10 (Revised)

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-----
A Drink with a Stranger
By: Sean Roberts
-----

--
Chapter 10
--

Lane and Ellis were keeping their relationship a secret.
Neither of their families knew.  Finn was going to keep it to
himself—entirely—not even Ellis was to find out that Finn knew.
Ellis and Finn were friends, though.  At school, they were
together all the time.  By extension, he spent a lot of time
with Victoria Hamilton.  Of all the people to impersonate to try
to retrieve an essay, she was not the best choice.  Lane did not
make the mistake of underestimating Ellis.  But he first had to
deal with Finn, who approached him as soon as he parked.  Lane
knew he would have to have this conversation eventually, and he
was prepared.  Almost.  He was prepared for them both deciding
to keep their current significant others.

"I want you back," Finn said.  He said it directly, but his
eyes were pleading.  Those eyes that Lane could not ignore; the
ones that made every word Lane want to say catch in his throat.

"This isn't a good time, Finn," Lane said.  He walked away
before Finn could say anything.  He swore to himself, but he
pushed it out of his mind.  He had to find Victoria.  Locating
her was not at issue, but getting her to talk to him would have
been next to impossible.  They had never talked about anything
except for trying to one up each other in the grades department.
Lane knew what he could offer her.

He looked through his phone; he never had anybody's number
when he needed it.  He needed Finn again.  When he asked Finn to
meet him in the Hunter's office at lunch, Finn walked in, guns
blazing.  They were kissing, their hands intertwined, Lane
pushed up against the wall.

"I'm still with Ellis," he said.

"I don't care," Finn said.

They kissed again.  Lane took the opportunity to take
Finn's phone; Finn noticed Lane's hand and pushed his body
closer.  He did not notice exactly what Lane's hand was doing.
Lane slipped the phone into his own pocket.

"Finn," Lane said, gently pushing him away.  "I asked you
to come here because I needed to tell you about Ellis.  I'm not
breaking up with him.  I'm not—"

"Okay," Finn said.  "It's okay.  I understand.  No hard
feelings, okay?"  He was saying okay a lot.  He was breathing
heavily, and he looked disappointed, but seemed to understand it
had to be this way.   Finn had simply taken a last opportunity
to kiss him.  Lane felt like a prick.

"Thanks for understanding."  Finn left.  Lane frantically
sent a text message from Finn's phone.  Thankfully the reply
came quickly, so Lane could delete the messages.  He hoped that
Finn and Victoria were not going to talk before the end of the
school day.  He found Finn again to return the phone, saying he
had dropped it in the Hunter's office.

--

Victoria knocked on the Hunter's door just after last
period.

"Lane," she said, unimpressed.  "Finn asked me to meet him
here for some reason."

"No he didn't, I did.  Come in.  Please."  She looked
suspicious, but there was no way she was going to leave before
finding out what this was about.

"What's going on?" she said.

"It's my fault.  I didn't have your number, and I stole his
phone and used it to get you to meet me."

"Why?"

"I have something for you."

"Lane, I know your GPA is higher—I check too.  You don't
have to rub it in."  But that was half the fun.  For the first
time Lane looked at Victoria, really looked at her, past the
straight black hair and perfect skin and short skirt.  She
looked tired.  She almost looked defeated.

"That's not why you're here.  I need a favour."  She
laughed.  "No, listen.  It's actually more of a trade."

"What do you want Lane?"

"A truce."  She raised an eyebrow.

"It's because of Taylor.  He's on the team, and since
that's happened, I seem to run into Finn a lot.  So, I mean, we
should all be, well not friends, but you know ..."

"Gee Lane, what a wonderful offer.  I'd love to be not
friends with you.  And what do I get in return for this?"  Lane
cleared his throat.  This was not going as planned.

"If I end up with the higher GPA, I'll let you be
valedictorian."

"Even if I believed you, there's no way to do that.  The
rules around that are very strict.  They never break them—"

"There's always a backup.  And they never break them unless
the valedictorian doesn't show up.  I looked it up."

"Why would you not show up?  For your own graduation?  How
am I supposed to believe that?"

"You don't have to believe it.  I'm going to do it anyway.
And we don't have to have a truce.  We don't have to be friends,
I'm still going to do it.  I just thought it would be nice, you
know, for Finn."  She sighed.

"Yeah, I guess," she replied.

"Hey, great!" Lane said.  He smiled and he extended his
hand.  "By the way, do you drink?"  She cleared her throat.
Lane smiled even wider, and pulled out the bottle.  Alcohol
really did solve life's problems every once in a while.

"So what are you doing for your English essay?" he asked.

"Macbeth."

"Nice.  What specifically?"

"None of your business."

"Come on Victoria.  I'm doing Dickens.  Probably something
to do with A Christmas Carol."

"Oh alright.  I'm writing about Macbeth's increasing
insanity throughout the book."

"That sounds like a good one," Lane said.

"I thought so.  Ellis said it was good too."

"Ellis?"

"He asked me about my essay too.  He was asking for my help
coming up with ideas."

"Ah.  You know, I don't want to overstep my bounds here ..."
Lane took another sip of his drink, prompting Victoria to do the
same.  "But there's another good one.  Personal responsibility.
Think about—"

"Wow," she said.  She was quick.  "That is a good one."

"Don't tell Ellis, he might steal it," Lane said jokingly.

"Why would you be trying to help me, Lane?"

"Well, at this point, if your GPA is higher, at least I'll
get to go to graduation."

"Cheers," she said.  They clinked their glasses a second
time and drank.

Fucking Ellis.  Lane was ecstatic, even though he should
have been angry as well.  He felt a rush when he discovered the
truth, and an even bigger rush when opened up his laptop to reel
it in.  There was a reply.

I can't do a money transfer; my parents control the account.  I
can leave the cash for you tomorrow.  There's a ceiling panel in
the northwest corner of the chem lab.  I'll stick it up there.
You can pick it up from there any time after 6:00 p.m. tomorrow.

Lane wrote back, agreeing to the cash transaction and
requesting the assignment details.  He sent a text message to
Ellis asking him to have dinner the following day.  He sent a
text message to Finn asking to meet later that night.

--

It was obvious that someone would be watching the chem lab.
There was no way for anyone to enter without being seen.  That
is, assuming that Ellis had thought far enough ahead about that.
Lane was sure that he had.  He had filled Finn in over the phone
before picking him up.

Lane parked at the school; the parking lot was deserted.
The stars were out.  Lane and Finn were dressed in all black.
Lane handed him a black toque.

"You're kidding me with this, right?"

"Actually, kind of.  You have that gorgeous dark hair.
You'll be okay."  He had kissed him to steal his phone; a
compliment could not hurt.  He pulled his own toque over his
light brown hair.  He had spent a few hours that day in the
Hunter's office.  He had access to a lot of information about
the school, including some rough blueprints.  They were enough
to get him what he needed.

They climbed a tree growing close enough to the school to
get them onto the roof.  They entered through a door left
unlocked by a generously bribed janitor.  They followed the
passageway through the ducts until they came to the classroom
they needed.  They were looking down into the chem lab.  Today
was just practice.  They went back the way they came and ended
up back on the roof.

"This school doesn't have very good security, does it,"
Finn said.

"I don't know.  It seemed too easy.  But I'm not going to
fight it."  They were sitting atop the roof.  Finn was going to
come back the next night to retrieve the money while Lane was
out with Ellis.  If anybody was watching the lab, they would not
be anywhere near it.

"This was kind of fun actually," Finn said.  They let their
legs dangle over the side of the school.  They had moved to the
back, where they could overlook the soccer pitch.  "And it's
quiet up here."

"It is nice," Lane agreed.  "Thank you for agreeing to do
this.  I know that you and Ellis are friends.  And also—"

"I'm doing this for Ellis," Finn said.  "Well not really.
I'm doing it for you of course.  But really, Ellis should give
up.  He's just causing trouble for himself.  He should just
enjoy his senior year.  He has a great boyfriend, he's doing
well in soccer and he's getting good grades.  What more does he
want?"  Finn swayed his body to nudge Lane.  Finn turned to him.
"Especially the boyfriend thing."

Lane could not help himself.  Their adrenaline levels high
from breaking into the school, Finn went in for the kill,
kissing Lane, putting his hand on Lane's thigh.  He rubbed
Lane's thigh through his black jeans, silently ordering Lane to
get them the hell off.  They both pushed their jeans down to
their ankles.  Finn had grown, over the three years.  There was
a familiarity to his cock, but it was not the same size as when
they were fourteen.  They stopped kissing and stared out over
the field as they came.  They were breathing heavily, and they
sat for a long time together that night, holding hands but not
saying anything to each other.  There was nothing to say.  They
were on stolen time.  They could not keep this up but they could
not stop either, and they knew enough not to make it worse by
discussing what they had just done.  They climbed down with a
cold, wet feeling in their jeans.  The aftermath of a bad
decision.

--

Lane met Ellis before their dinner on Deer Creek's soccer
pitch.  It was late enough that the school was deserted; Lane
had made the mistake of telling Ellis that he did not really
care for soccer, and now he had to prove why.  Ellis, of course,
loved soccer.

"Really, what do you like about this so much?" Lane asked
him after they had been kicking the ball around for a while.

"It's incredible," Ellis said.  "When you're playing; your
concentration just on the ball and the other players.  The noise
from the crowd feels like it's somewhere else; bombarding
someone else's ears.  It feels as quiet as it is now while I'm
playing.  And then the adrenaline kicks in when you're running
across the pitch; trying not to fall; getting kicked by another
player and still scoring as you go down."

"I feel like that when I'm writing," Lane said.  Ellis
smiled at him.

"There.  So you do get it.  I'm glad, because I don't think
I could be with someone who doesn't.  I don't need you to like
soccer, but I'm glad you understand."  He walked up to Lane and
kissed him.  Lane felt very guilty for what he was about to do.