Date: Fri, 23 Jul 1999 10:14:59 +0900
From: Andrej Koymasky <andrejkoymasky@geocities.com>
Subject: Snot-boy-13

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SNOT BOY
by Andrej Koymasky (C) 1999
written on May 1st 1990
translated by the author
English text kindly revised by
J.O. Dickingson (authorsix@hotmail.com)

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USUAL DISCLAIMER

"SNOT BOY" is a gay story, with some parts containing graphic scenes of
sex between males. So, if in your land, religion, family, opinion and so
on this is not good for you, it will be better not to read this story.
But if you really want, or because YOU don't care, or because you think
you really want to read it, please be my welcomed guest.

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Epilogue

The coffee-shop of the Teissier Brothers remained for tenths of years
the elegant meeting point of Bruxelles, especially when the same Crown
Prince started to attend it. Now elderly and wealthy, the "Teissier
Brothers" left their shop to a manager and retired to a small villa they
had built in the new outskirts of the town, with a waiter, a Belgian
young man named Robert. Marc Teissier died at seventy-one, attended by
his Luc, who just one year later followed him to the grave, sixty-nine
years old, lovingly assisted by the faithful Robert. The two brothers
continued to love each other and to make love until a few months before
Marc's death. Robert, when Luc died, found out he had been made
universal heir of the two brothers, together with his lover Ad, a Dutch
boy who was serving in a nearby villa. Robert and Ad never suspected
that the two "brothers" (they didn't even know that they were really
lovers) knew about their love, and therefore it was a big, and pleasant
surprise to them to be heirs. They decided to manage the coffee-shop
personally, without changing its name, in memory of their benefactors.
The coffee-shop ceased to exist in 1878 when the building where it was
located was demolished to build a bank.

Jambville castle, not claimed by any member of the family (now
extinguished) during Napoleon's period, became property of the State
demesne, then was sold passing through several hands and experiencing a
slow decadence. At last it was bought by the Scouts de France who still
have it and who, after restoring it, use it as a meeting center and for
their leaders' school.

About the other personages of our story:

The Blade, who changed his name several times, and after taking care to
help escape, or to sell, several aristocrats of the late monarchy, did
the same with the personages of the various factions of the Revolution
alternating in power during those turbulent years. At last, with the
name of Serge Machon, he became an official of Napoleon's regime --
almost an irony of fate -- responsible for the Office of Emigration and
Immigration. He married Félicie, as in the new Regime the singles were
not seen with favour. They had three children, two sons and a daughter,
and the Blade didn't have designs on them. But Félicie, even if she
pretended not to be aware of it, knew that from time to time her man
granted himself some adventures at times with a girl, at times with a
boy. As she confided once to a friend of hers, they didn't love each
other, but they were no more able to be without the other. As for
Félicie, even as the wife of an important official, she didn't lose her
habit of making disappear, unsuspected, bags or jewels of the guests at
the parties where she was invited... that amused her too much to stop.
The Blade died in 1827 and Félicie, now widowed but wealthy, settled in
a convenient way her three children with good marriages before leaving
this world in 1841.

The Commissar Sévion of the espionage, when the Girondists faction fell,
was imprisoned and sentenced to the guillotine, simply because he was a
Girondist. Or more likely because, being a man hard and cut all in one
piece, incorruptible and devoted to the Cause, he had gotten too many
enemies...

The judge Charles Maximilien got wind of the changing of the Regime in
time and before it was too late, retired to private life in a small
estate he had in Piccardie. This caused his separation from Alexandre
who didn't intend to leave Paris. In Piccardie, after a short,
passionate and tormented relationship with an eighteen-year-old gypsy,
he met a former seminarist called Hervé. After a long and unrelenting
courting, he succeeded in making him surrender and in bringing him in
his bed made him discover the pleasures of the love between men. He fell
in love and little by little he got also the young man's love and they
became lovers. A little after the coming to power of Napoleon, he was
called back to service as a judge, and he became an important magistrate
and was assigned to preside over the Bordeaux tribunal. Hervé followed
him as his secretary. With Napoleon's fall, they went back together to
Piccardie, where Maximilien died, aged eighty.

Alexandre de Varennes, having left his lover Maximilien, for a while
went from one bed to the other of influential personages of the
Republic, being able to be uninvolved and unable to fall in disgrace
with them -- three were guillotined and one escaped abroad. Then in the
worst period of his life, having no money left, he happened to be one
evening in a coffee-shop where were also some very young officers of the
Republic Army. All seemed to gravitate around one of their colleagues, a
man rather small and not so handsome named Napoleon, coming from Corse,
who seemed to fascinate all of them with his talk. But Alexandre was at
once attracted by another young soldier, whom his friends called Joseph.
The young officer looked at him and a spark shot between them. The
others, at a certain time, went out all together to go back home and
Alexandre sighed, thinking it was a pity that Joseph was in company, or
else he would have hooked him... He also went out to go back to his
small dreary room and... found in front of him Joseph who was running
back, out of breath. They said not even one word. Joseph simply took him
by the arm and took him to his house. They made love all night long and
only in the morning, finally, they introduced each other. Joseph had
little money, but Alexandre didn't care this time, as he was too fond of
him. Their relationship had highs and lows, especially because Joseph
had often to leave for war operations, and then Alexandre resumed his
carefree life. They lost sight of each other. Napoleon became Emperor
and Alexandre slowly and through stealth, succeeded in becoming a member
of the new Imperial Court where he became master of ceremonies, and he
was reinstalled in his title and in the possession of Varennes. At Court
he met again Joseph who meanwhile had become a general in the Army. The
old spark was not extinguished and they became again lovers. Alexandre
was now matured and so he tied himself exclusively to Joseph. However,
this died at Waterloo. So, Alexandre retired to his de Varennes' estate
to private life. When he was forty-nine, he adopted the
twenty-four-year-old son of a poor cousin, Simon, whom he discovered was
gay like him, and made him his lover. He made Simon marry so that the
family name could continue, but Simon continued to slip into Alexandre's
bed, going to carry out his marital duties just once each week, but
being able anyway to sire seven children. Alexandre died at sixty-four.

Martin and Réné enrolled in Napoleon's Army. Fate put them in the same
platoon and at last they became lovers. At times they allowed themselves
some small adventure, but always together, taking a third man in their
bed. Veterans, with a fair separation allowance, they bought a small
hotel very close to Paris, to make some more money. They hired all the
personnel from youths loving the same gender, and from time to time they
invited one of them to their bed until they hired a boy with whom they
both fell in love. Jerome, the boy, in his turn fell in love with both
of them, even though he had a slight preference for Martin, but he never
made that shown, so they became a steady threesome. Martin died at
forty-nine. This pained Réné greatly and he decided he would never again
make love. He pushed Jerome to find a young lover. At the third attempt
Jerome found the right companion who in his turn, even though loving
Jerome, was fascinated by Réné. So, little by little, the two youths
persuaded Réné to make love with them and so they formed again a steady
threesome, until, aged fifty-six, Réné parted from this world, leaving
the hotel in heritage to Jerome.

And thus concludes the tale of the young orphan named Snot, and so was
the fate of the other personages of our tale.

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THE END

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In my home page I've put some of my stories. If someone wants to read
them, the URL is

http://www.geocities.com/~andrejkoymasky/

If you want to send me feed-back, please e-mail at

andrejkoymasky@geocities.com

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