Date: Sat, 21 Aug 2004 18:38:21 -0400
From: carl5de@netscape.net
Subject: OUT OF THE RUBBLE - 14

OUT OF THE RUBBLE - 14

Copyright 2004 by Carl Mason

All rights reserved.  Other than downloading one copy for strictly personal
enjoyment, no part of this story may be reproduced or transmitted in any
form or by any means electronic or mechanical, except for reviews, without
the written permission of the author.  Comments on the story are
appreciated and may be addressed to the author at carl5de@netscape.net.

This story contains descriptions of sexual contact between a young adult
male and young male teenagers.  Nevertheless, "Out of the Rubble" is
neither a strictly "suck and fuck" exercise nor is it a story that focuses
on the "love of adults for the young"...often without sex or with the mere
suggestion of sex.  If you are looking for these types of erotic fiction,
there are fine examples of each on Nifty.  Something slightly different is
required here.

However based on real events and places, "Out of the Rubble" is strictly
fictional.  Any resemblance to actual events, or locales, or persons,
living or dead, is entirely coincidental.  Further, this is homoerotic
fiction designed for the personal enjoyment of legal, hopefully mature,
adults.  If you are not of legal age to read such material, if those in
power and/or those whom you trust treat it as illegal, or if it would
create unresolvable moral dilemmas in your life, please leave.  Finally,
remember that maturity generally demands that anything other than safe sex
is sheer insanity!

----------------------------------------------------------------------------
I am deeply grateful to my friend, Ed C, who has proved to be an absolute
gold mine of ideas, in addition to serving as a bulwark of support during
the trials - and joys - of writing.  Thank you, Ed!  /cm
----------------------------------------------------------------------------

PART 14

(Revisiting the End of Part 13)

Two additional notes must be added to the telling of this happy event:
First, before he left for Frankfurt, Rolf affectionately hugged his best
friend, Andreas, asking him if he would be at all interested in a future
dual photo shoot "up at his home."  The long dark limousine pulled away
from DAS HAUS with a happy young man.  Finally, on the next morning, the
radiant couple was asked jokingly how they had enjoyed their wedding night.
"Well," purred a smiling Gretchen, "if it hadn't been for those crazy boys
ringing bells all night in front of our door, I think I might have gotten
some sleep!"  (Ehrhardt's look did all but shout that sleep had NOT been on
his menu!)

(Continuing Our Story : Dance Fantasy)

Following Ehrhardt and Gretchen's wedding, Andreas felt...disturbed.  (Even
a great Christmas party failed to raise his spirits.)  Worse, he felt
guilty for feeling that way!  After all, Ehrhardt, and now Gretchen, were
friends.  Clearly, he WANTED them to be happy.  The truth remained that he
felt somewhat sour...almost cheated...and irritable as a stag in rut!  Did
you have to be straight to have your friends gather 'round and say, "Yeah,
that's great!" and "Yeah, that's RIGHT!"?  Was there anything that could
top the love that Sam and he felt for each other?  Why, then, were all of
his friends silent?  Slamming his fist against the door in frustration, he
snarled, "SCHEISSE!"  and strode angrily out of The House.

Aimlessly, he trudged towards town until the cold wind started to freeze
the anger out of him.  Damn!  He should have pulled on a sweater underneath
his coat.  Suddenly, he found himself in front of the "Teen Club" that had
been established by some of the local churches with the support of City
Council.  Not paying particular heed to anything special, he eyed the
posters announcing "Coming Attractions" - and the cute guys and their girls
arriving for the evening dance.  Everyone seemed so excited...so happy!
Feeling his anger beginning to return, he aggressively stomped up the steps
and into the hall.

Oh, man, the place was packed!  It had to have been an old beer hall - the
atmosphere was so fuckin' perfect!  A good smell, dim lights, a band whose
music was shaking the walls...  And how about that big rotating glass ball
that seemed to flicker and cast moving, multi-colored lights onto the
center of the room where kids were dancing?  Wow!  While delivering a
message for Sam over at the Base, he had once looked through a barracks
window and watched soldiers doing those same steps.  He accepted a soft
drink from one of the church ladies and wandered over to an open table in
the far corner of the room.  (It was really just flavored water, but it
tasted good...different.  It cost 5 pfennigs [100 pfennigs = 1 Mark], but
it was Germany in the late autumn of 1946.  Who was complaining?)  Hey!
There's Kurt a few tables over!  Man, oh man, who's that chick with him?
Oh, yeah, that's Heidi from school.  Way to go, Kurt!  Nothing like showing
up with the prettiest and nicest girl in the whole damned school!  Seeing
that Kurt had spotted him, he waved - and received a wave (and, as the boy
put his arm around Heidi's shoulders, a possessive smirk) in return.
Heinrich, sitting at Kurt's table with his girl, also waved and received a
friendly half-salute in return.

Andreas knew he should have felt good - this was normal...this was the way
it was supposed to be - but he didn't.  Intensifying his mood, the music
began to fade as if caught in a cut from an impressionistic movie, the
swirling colored lights began to dim, the movement of the gyrating bodies
began to slow, and the bright, friendly faces began turning into something
entirely ugly and repulsive.  Andreas shook his head violently and the
scene returned to some semblance of the expected.  Hitching himself back in
the chair and sipping on his soft drink, he watched the dancing crowd...and
began to fantasize that he was right in there with them - but gettin' HIS
fair share.  Oh, yeah!

It wasn't that Andreas wanted so much!  Was it a crime to want a respectful
acceptance by his straight friends?  Did he have to fake it as Heinrich was
doing over there at Kurt's table?  Did stealing a kiss from a girl certify
him as a "Real Man"?  Did he have to be straight to get a bunch of jocks to
put up with the indignities involved in making paper flowers for a House
event?  My God, he was an top-notch athlete and a fine student, not unlike
Ulrich!  Ok, so he wasn't the goalie that Dieter#1 was, a towering German
oak who could block any ball from anywhere in the stadium, but hadn't he
scored more goals than all but two men on the team?  And wasn't he one hell
of a lot better looking than Horse Face who sat there mooning over Heidi?
What was it about him as a homosexual that could lead a City councilman to
scream "Schwein-Scheisse!  Stinkender Abfall des Teufels!  Homosexuelles
Ungeziefer!" [Pig Shit!  Foul Offal of the Devil!  Homosexual Vermin!]?  If
he had brought Georg or Rolf to the Teen Club as his date - as Kurt had
brought Heidi - would he have received the same easy acceptance?

Was it a crime to want as much respect from Sam as that he so easily gave
to Ehrhardt?  Hadn't he been Sam's "Official Assistant" since he'd arrived
in Tieferwald?  Ok, so he did a lot of go-fer work, but hadn't he received
a scroll from the Council that referred to him as one of the "Heroic German
Youths Who Saved Thousands of Their Fellow Citizens"?  Even though he
didn't have an Iron Cross, wasn't his loyalty to Sam - love aside -
undisputed?  GOD, HE'D DIE FOR HIM!

Was it a crime to want to jitter-bug with HIS love out on that damned dance
floor...under that damned light...to that damned music?  Why was it so
wrong for him to feel Sam up just as Ulrich was feeling up that blonde?
Why was it so sinful for him to reach down and hook the fingers of both
hands under Sam's buttocks, drawing him closer...and closer......and
closer?  Only Ungeziefer [Vermin] nibbled on a nipple?  And if the beat
really made them horny, why couldn't they dance in the nude?  (Why couldn't
ANYONE dance in the nude...at least in a slow dance?)  He could imagine his
arms around his lover's broad back, his chin rubbing lightly against Sam's
traps, the feeling of thigh against thigh, the way in which their cocks
would become trapped between them...maybe even standing vertically, swollen
hard against each other, pressing into the taut flesh of their lower
stomachs!  That image seemed to shake Andreas out of his trance-like state.
In fact, he almost fell out of the chair he had originally tilted slightly
against the wall.

Andreas wasn't alone.  Another man - short, with weathered skin, bearded,
shabbily dressed - sat at the table directly across from him.  He seemed to
be finishing a drawing, a painting...or something like that.  The lad had
seen him around town before.  He was an old Italian who had been in Germany
forever!  The Nazis had never put him into a concentration camp - even
though he had adamantly refused to conform to the Party's artistic line.
(The rumor had been that he had known the wife of an important member of Il
Duce's [The Leader, Benito Mussolini's] consular staff in Germany.)  He
just moved from town to town, club to club, picking up a Mark here and a
Mark there.

"Ah, young man," Carlo said in an accent as thick as on the day he had left
Sorrento, "perhaps you will like this."  The small canvas was amazing!  It
sure wasn't in the representational/heroic style of painting favored by
Hitler, but, damn!, it was Andreas!  Or, at least, it was the SOUL of
Andreas.  And it was an impression of Andreas's face so erotic that even
Andreas went hard!  He must have been sitting there when Sam's Official
Assistant had been fantasizing about thighs against thighs...and swollen
lovers' cocks standing hard against each other!  Blushing slightly, Andreas
gave him a few coins and took the scrap of canvas back to Sam.  He would
give it to him just before bedtime!

"Whew!" Sam had whistled on inspecting the painting.  Then he simply stood
up, collared Andreas, and pushed his young lover directly towards their
bedroom!  Later, still feeling the tingle of Sam's teeth on his foreskin
and still enjoying the slightest taste of cum towards the very back of his
mouth, Andreas grinned slightly to himself, murmuring, "Wow!  Maybe we
Vermin have something going for us after all!"

(Enter the White Monster)

All things considered, 1946 had been a pretty good year.  True, the
reconstruction of buildings hadn't begun, but nearly 75% of the streets in
the city were reasonably cleared.  Thanks to the massive relief drive, the
Relocation Camp's barracks and other facilities had been significantly
improved.  Citizens had worked long hours to plant small family gardens
that yielded goodly amounts of produce from the late spring well into the
early fall.  As in 1945, the countryside had been scoured for food with
full support from the U.S. Army.  Thus, the supply of preserved food
available in Tieferwald and environs was not insignificant.  Added to the
slowly increasing supply of relief shipments arriving from America, the
food supply appeared to at least be holding its own.  Thanks to the
Truemmerfrauen [women who removed rubble and reclaimed building materials
for salvage] plus the efforts of countless teams of adolescents and
children who worked after school in the afternoons, there were also
important stores of wood and other substitutes for the region's major fuel,
coal.  Above all, the morale of the people had gradually risen during the
year.  Yes, with food shortages, the condition of housing, and the tragic
lack of jobs throughout Germany, it was still a very hard life - but there
were glimmers of hope.

Unfortunately, the winter of 1946-47 turned out to be one of the most
vicious in memory.  It began with a mammoth blizzard in late December and
early January, and just kept coming.  The snow lay in great blankets upon
the land; frigid cold - far beyond the usual...or expected - held northern
and central Europe in a vise.  Even getting to Frankfurt, a trip of only
modest proportions, became nearly impossible - as Andreas found out when he
had to refuse the Baron's January invitation to come up for the promised
joint photo shoot with Rolf.  (It was promised that another invitation
would be issued as soon as practicable.)  As snow and ice clogged roads and
rail equipment, transportation staggered and then gradually came to a near
halt.  Through long spells of the winter, trucks and trains simply didn't
move.  Given the problems in production, exacerbated by the crisis in
transportation, coal became very scarce.  For most Germans of that time,
coal was the most common fuel, not only for industrial purposes but also
for heating homes, cooking, and the like. Unfortunately, it was a very
cumbersome commodity - and its transportation demanded the heaviest
equipment.  Securing a minimal supply became a battle that was simply being
lost.  Before the weather moderated, the beleaguered City Council
discovered it had to order that no more than one apartment room be
heated...and that only to the low forties Fahrenheit.  Permission
eventually had to be given to tear out all but load-bearing wood in
buildings - public and private - throughout the city.  Not a tree was left
standing, not even the lonely tree in back of Sam's House.

Much of the momentum that the citizens of Tieferwald had achieved during
the past year disappeared.  As supplies decreased precipitously, they had
to use the hard-won (but totally inadequate) stores of food and fuel that
they had accumulated during the months past.  Machinery that had received
only passing care during the years when all German industry was devoted to
preparing for and waging war broke down with increasing frequency.  As
military governments had to use their funds to procure these necessities
abroad, moneys needed for reconstruction were even further depleted.  A
vicious cycle was developing that prophesied dire straits for the German
people.

Death became a frequent visitor to Tieferwald am Main.  In both the city
and camp, tens of Germans perished each day from cold and malnutrition,
especially from the cold.  No one, however concerned, dedicated, or
powerful, seemed to be able to halt the downward spiral.

(Epidemic!)

'Tis said that Death never rides alone.  Never was that saying more
accurate than on the mid Main during January of 1947.  The dreaded
influenza - the world-wide scourge that accompanied World War I - probably
broke out on farms surrounding the city.  Nevertheless, it quickly spread
to both city and camp and throughout the area as if it were a freezing
wildfire.

Never had an area been less prepared for a major epidemic than was
Tieferwald.  The one remaining civilian hospital and the smaller military
facility were completely inadequate to the hordes of people who came in to
be checked by a physician.  When complications, e.g., bacterial pneumonia,
resulted from the highly contagious infection, there was neither room in
the medical facilities to admit the severely ill, nor did the weather
usually allow them to be transported to Frankfurt or even beyond.  Rather,
they lay in beds - often the only bed - in bitterly cold rooms that often
held from 6-8 other children, teens, and adults.  Had it not been for the
Military and for the URA that airlifted an emergency shipment including
blankets, aspirin and other supplies, many more would have died.

Medical doctors were assembled from as far away as Munich and Cologne.
Once they had arrived in Tieferwald - which often proved difficult - they
headed teams comprised of civilian adults, soldiers, and teenagers.  It was
these individuals who carried supplies and medicine (rarely more than
aspirin!) to the beds of the sick and, when necessary, helped with their
care.  The team doctor, supported as professionally as possible by
technicians at Tieferwald's medical facilities, handled diagnoses,

Under such primitive conditions, the chances of spreading the infection
were very high.  All patients commonly suffered from shaking chills,
moderate or severe muscle and joint aches and pains, sweating, a dry cough,
nasal congestion, sore throat, and headache. In addition, victims commonly
complained of moderate or severe malaise and fatigue.  Temperatures often
reached 104 degrees Fahrenheit (40 degrees Celsius). As infectious
respiratory secretions were spread through coughing and sneezing, more and
more people fell ill, including care- givers.

The official report stated that of the 47 people who developed severe
complications, 46 died.  It also stated that a total of 214 people died
from causes directly attributable to the flu.  (This, of course, didn't
include those who died daily from, cold, malnutrition, and other diseases.)

Every boy in DAS HAUS served on a medical team.  It was inevitable that not
every one would be spared.  Several of the boys became quite ill, notably
young Horst.  Thank God for the way in which Frau Luisa and Gretchen
ministered to them.  Sadly, the oak-hearted Dieter#1 - the finest goalie in
all of Central Germany - gave his life in service to his fellow human
beings.

Not long after Dieter#1 lost his battle for life, Sam remembered going into
the "hospital room" (his and Andreas's converted bedroom) where Horst lay
unconscious, sweating profusely and restlessly tossing to and fro.  The
young American couldn't stand the pain and his own sense of helplessness.
Dammit, it didn't matter whether he caught the flu or not!  He loved that
kid - and he just wasn't going to be added to the mounds of dead bodies
that were doused in kerosene and then cremated!  It had already happened
once to one of his; it just wasn't going to happen again!  Wrapping Horst
tightly in blankets, he sat down in his big chair, holding his boy in his
arms the whole night through...occasionally drying the sweat off his young
forehead with a cool cloth, occasionally humming a sweet New England
melody, occasionally brushing the tears from his own eyes.  He was such a
little guy, a little colt fleeing from the Sudetenland, when Andreas found
him in the Steinerwald over a year ago.  Gosh, he had grown.  Look at his
thickening body and those even longer legs that stuck out far beyond the
armrest.  Look at that hair, as wild and red as ever!  The light was
showing in the East before he returned the boy to his bed.  As he left the
room, he thought - oh, Dear God, he HOPED! - that he heard a little mew and
a couple of weak squeaks.

Horst recovered.  As a matter of fact, on the day of the House's memorial
service - for all the victims of this terrible winter, but especially for
Dieter#1 - he insisted on being carried downstairs to join his friends.
Strangely, it was Kurt who insisted on doing the honors.

The simple service was led jointly by Sam and Ehrhardt.  After Sam's
benediction, Ehrhardt stood up and asked the boys to remain for just a
moment.  "I've been hearing some sad things about life in DAS HAUS," he
began.  "I've been hearing that it matters whether a boy comes from
Tieferwald or from Danzig.  I've been hearing that it matters whether he
has blond hair or brown.  I've been hearing that it matters whether he
likes girls...or kinda likes boys.  I've been hearing that it matters
whether he plays football or likes to play the piano.  And that's sad.
HAVEN'T YOU FIGURED OUT YET THAT WE'RE ALL BROTHERS?!  DON'T YOU KNOW YET
THAT IT'S NOT ENOUGH JUST TO LIVE AND LET LIVE?  WON'T YOU HONOR DIETER BY
LOVING AND SUPPORTING EACH OTHER...  ALL OF THE TIME...NO MATTER WHAT?"
Wiping the tears from his eyes, Ehrhardt abruptly sat down.


(To Be Continued)