Date: Wed, 5 Nov 2014 13:02:26 -0800
From: Sean R <seanr_13@yahoo.ca>
Subject: A Drink with a Stranger - 4

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

--
Chapter 4
--

The next day, Lane was working in the Hunter's office
during one of his spare periods, a glass of scotch keeping him
company.  He was working on a short story for the paper, though
the story had grown and was not going to fit in the paper.  Lane
was enjoying writing it, and was devoting more time to it than
he had initially planned.  He swore at the interruption when he
heard a knock on the door.

He opened it, ready to tell whoever it was to fuck right
off, when he saw a pair of eyes the colour of a fine scotch.
Lane's thirst increased exponentially as he looked into them.
The boy looked familiar, but Lane could not quite place him.

"Yes?" Lane said.

"Hey!  Are you Lane Conway?  Is this the paper?  The
Hunter?"

"Umm, yeah," Lane said.  "And you are?"

"I'm Ellis.  Ellis Walsh," Ellis said, holding out his
hand.

"Ellis Walsh ..." Lane said, ignoring the hand.  "Don't you
go to St. Thomas Prep?  What are you doing here?  How did you
even make it past the front doors?"

"I came to see you."

"Right," Lane said.

"No, really.  Can I come in?"  Lane stared at him for a few
moments, and decided it would not hurt.

"I guess," Lane said, stepping away from the door.  Ellis
came in and presumptuously shut the door behind him.

"I transferred here, umm, pretty recently," Ellis said.

"Ah," Lane said.  "So that's what everybody's been on
about.  Well listen, I don't know what you've been told, but I
have absolutely nothing to do with soccer.  The pitch is
actually on the other side of campus."

"I know where it is," Ellis said.  "I came here to sign
up."

"Sign up for what?  I just told you I have nothing to do
with soccer."

"I want to sign up to work on the paper."

"You don't have to sign up," Lane said.  "You can just
submit whatever you want.  There's an email address for it."
Lane pointed to a sheet stuck to a corkboard.  Ellis squinted to
read the small writing.

"That's good to know, but I wanted to actually work on the
paper as a full extracurricular.  I'm a good writer.  I can help
go through submissions, help with the editing—"

"You don't want to do that," Lane said.  The last thing
Lane needed was some dim witted jock making stupid suggestions
about Lane's paper just to beef up a college application.

"Why not?"  Ellis was asking a lot of questions, and his
eyes were making Lane thirsty.  Ellis was standing straight and
still, one hand in his pocket.  His uniform fit too well.  Lane
needed to figure out a reason, so he opened one of the lockable
desk drawers and poured a second glass of scotch.  He handed it
to Ellis, who put it down in front of him.

"It really isn't any fun," Lane said, sipping his own
drink.  "If you want to write, write.  Why bother with doing all
this other stuff?"

"It will look good on my college applications.  And from
what I've been told, you do this whole thing alone, so maybe—"

"And you don't have soccer anymore," Lane said.

"What do you mean?"

"Well you just transferred here.  You can't have gotten on
the team.  It's a few weeks into the season already."

"They made an exception.  I am on the team."

"Great!" Lane said.  "Well there you go.  Doesn't playing
soccer cover college?"

"It helps a lot," Ellis said, "but I'd like to show that I
can do other things."  Lane took another sip.  He was out of
arguments, and technically he did not own the paper—at least not
to the extent where he could deny people entry based on them
being jocks.

"Well, alright then," Lane said.  "If you're sure."  Lane
put down his glass.  "You'll have to fill out a signup sheet."
If anything was going to nip this in the bud, it would be making
Ellis do some work.

"No problem," Ellis said.  He helped himself to a seat and
picked up the glass.  He closed his eyes and gently brought the
glass to his nose, taking a small whiff of the drink.  He did
not taste it.  He put it back down on the desk, then reached
into his blazer and pulled out a pen.

Lane was looking through the files for the sheets.  He knew
they were around there somewhere, he had definitely seen them at
some point.  When he finally found them, he put one down in
front of Ellis.  He watched Ellis unscrew the cap of his pen,
revealing his Montblanc's gold nib.  Lane cleared his throat.

"Nice pen," Lane said, reaching into his own pocket and
pulling out a similar pen.  Ellis looked into Lane's eyes and
smiled.  He leaned forwards and filled out the sheet, not
looking up until he was done.

"Here you go," he said, pushing the sheet across the desk
towards Lane.

"Great," Lane said.  "There are mandatory meetings every
Monday and Wednesday after school.  Meet me next Monday and we
can get started."

"Oh," Ellis said with a fading smile.  "See, the thing is,
that's when I've got soccer practice."

"Well those are the rules," Lane said, impressed with
himself that he found an irrefutable way to keep Ellis from
encroaching on his paper.  Lane picked up his glass and took
another sip.

"Right.  Well, I guess this was a bad idea then," Ellis
said.  He slowly screwed the cap back onto his pen and replaced
it inside his blazer.  He stood up and held out his hand.  "It
was nice to meet you Lane.  I'm sorry I wasted your time."  Lane
took his hand, but quickly pulled it back for a spark of
electricity.

Ellis left.  Lane smiled to himself; another dumb jock put
in his place.  Lane finished off his glass and picked up Ellis'
untouched glass.  He glanced at his watch.  Fuck.  It was not
even eleven in the morning and he was drunk.  He had classes to
attend and a paper to write.  For some reason, the toy between
his legs also started to demand attention as he sat there, his
list of tasks exploding in his mind.

Lane, generally, was a stellar student, and his teachers
never paid much attention if he missed a class or two.  This was
good, because he woke up at 4:00 p.m. with a headache, a dry
throat and a hardon.  Fucking jocks.  He chugged from a water
fountain and went to find Taylor.

--

Lane decided to watch the practice instead of going home
and coming back to pick up his brother.  He sat low in the
bleachers, close to the pitch.  Taylor saw him, smiled and
waved.  Lane laughed a bit when he saw that everyone on the team
was wearing shorts and t-shirts except for Ellis, who wore his
uniform from St. Thomas Prep.  He was just begging to have the
crap beat out of him.

The coach assigned the drills, then announced that he would
be back in a few minutes.  No doubt he had his own bottle of
something back in his office.  They started to do as they were
told, until Richard interrupted the practice.

"What's the deal Walsh?  What's with the fuck you uniform?"
From where Lane was sitting, he could hear everything.  He was
smiling to himself, waiting to see where this was going.
Everybody stopped to look.

"My Deer Creek uniform hasn't arrived yet," Ellis said.

"So why didn't you wear something else?  Why that?  After
weaseling your way onto our team, you wear that fucking uniform
to practice?"

"I like to practice in uniform," Ellis said.  "It's
important to get used to wearing it.  This is why you guys don't
win matches.  Matthew over there has been slacking off this
whole time, and you can barely kick the ball with what you're
wearing.  You should be happy that I weaseled my way onto your
team."  Lane smiled, thinking he may have underestimated Ellis
when he met him yesterday.  It took guts talking to the team
like this just after joining from a rival school.

"Okay guys, do you want to play some more or are we done
for the day?" Finn said.  Richard rushed Ellis and delivered a
right hook, sending Ellis flying backwards.  Lane stopped
smiling.  Finn and Taylor ran over and grabbed Richard, who had
thrown himself towards Ellis to hit him some more.  Richard
elbowed backwards, knocking Taylor back away from him.  Lane saw
red.

Lane ran onto the pitch.  The other team members were
standing around laughing.  Lane grabbed Richard's arm, and with
Finn's help, pulled Richard off of Ellis.  They let Richard go,
and Lane immediately punched him as hard as he could.  Lane was
pretty sure he got hurt more than Richard, but he followed it up
with a kick to Richard' stomach, knocking the wind out of him.
He ran over to Taylor.

"Are you okay?" Lane said.  Taylor nodded.

"Oh shit," Lane heard someone say from behind him.  The
coach was running back towards the pitch.

"What on earth do you think you're doing?" Coach shouted.
"And you!" he said, pointing at Lane.  "You're not even on the
team.  Every single one of you, get over to Mrs. Jackson's
classroom!" he shouted.  His voice boomed and felt like it was
shaking the stadium.  He ran over to Ellis, who had not stood
up.  Nobody moved—they were all staring back at the coach as he
leaned over Ellis.

"Now!" Coach bellowed, turning back.  Everyone ran.  They
walked through the school into the English classroom—it was the
closest room to the locker rooms.

"What the fuck is wrong with you?" Finn yelled at Lane once
they had gotten to the classroom.  "Why would you—"

"He hit my brother," Lane said pointing at Richard.  "What
did you expect me to do?"

"He didn't hit me!" Taylor said.  "He just knocked me back
because he was—"

"Because he was beating the hell out of Ellis Walsh," Lane
said to Taylor.  Finn shook his head.  Everybody was sitting
except for him.  He moved to the center of the classroom.

"Well Ellis is a faggot," Richard said.

"Enough!" Finn shouted.  Everybody had been sitting except
Finn, who stood in the front of the classroom.  "Richard, you're
an idiot, you know that?  Ellis may be an asshole but now we're
all in trouble because you started a fight."

"You heard what Ellis said about us, what did you expect—"

"I expect you to shut up and listen to him.  He knows how
to play soccer.  And I was about to shut him up anyway.  I'm the
captain, you've got to let me deal with things like this."

"Fine, deal with it.  What are we going to do?"  Richard
said.  Everybody turned to Finn.

"'Fess up and get yourself expelled," Lane said, smiling.
Richard stood up quickly, slamming his desk.  Lane did the same.

"For fuck's sake," Finn said.  The coach walked into the
room.  He sent everyone away except for the ones involved in the
fight.  Ellis came into the room, accompanied by Principal
Vance, holding a pack of ice to his face.

"Richard hit my brother," Lane said immediately.  Finn
buried his face into his hands.  "I want him expelled."

"You don't get to make those kinds of decisions Conway,"
Principal Vance said.  He looked tired; Lane could not blame
him, having to deal with this lot.  He looked over at Richard,
who had a very small smile on his face.  "I'm calling your
parents in so we can get this sorted out," Principal Vance said.
Richard's face fell.  "I'm thoroughly disappointed.  In the
meantime, I want all of you to sit here and be quiet."
Principal Vance left with the coach.

"My dad's going to kill me," Richard said quietly.  "Fuck."
His voice sent a chill down Lane's spine.  They were all
watching him.  He was looking down, defeated.  His hands were
trembling slightly.

"Lane," Finn said firmly.  "I need to talk to you."  They
stepped out into the hallway.  "Lane, I have no right to ask you
this, but I need you to stop Principal Vance from calling
Richard's parents.  I don't give a shit what you tell him, just
don't let him do it."

"Why me?  And why would I even do that Finn?  He hit
Taylor.  You saw him.  Not to mention what he did to Ellis."

"Fuck Taylor!" Finn said.  "He's not a little kid anymore.
You don't need to worry about him all the time."

"I don't worry—"

"Lane, you only have a couple minutes to stop him.  Listen,
Vance loves you; he thinks you're responsible and shit, running
that paper all by yourself.  It has to be you.  Please.  I'll do
anything."  Finn was not shying away like he had in previous
encounters with Lane.  He was standing straight; his voice
confident, looking right into Lane's eyes.  He was sweating
though, and he looked worried.  And desperate.  Lane sighed.

--

Lane usually packed a lunch so he could avoid the
cafeteria, but the next day he had not done so.  He sat in the
office for five minutes, deciding to skip lunch, before coming
to the realization that he could not.  He ventured down into the
cafeteria to buy something.  He looked around and saw Taylor
sitting with the jocks.  Ellis was at a different table, eating
alone, his face all bruised up.  Lane pretended not to see him
as he walked past to buy his food.