Something Beautiful Read online




  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental and beyond the intent of either the author or the publisher.

  Something Beautiful

  TOP SHELF

  An imprint of Torquere Press Publishers

  PO Box 2545

  Round Rock, TX 78680

  Copyright 2008 by Jenna Jones

  Cover illustration by Alessia Brio

  Published with permission

  ISBN: 978-1-60370-410-6, 1-60370-410-8

  www.torquerepress.com

  All rights reserved, which includes the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form whatsoever except as provided by the U.S. Copyright Law. For information address Torquere Press. Inc., PO Box 2545, Round Rock, TX 78680.

  First Torquere Press Printing: June 2008

  Printed in the USA

  Chapter One

  Micah Ferguson had counted three vineyards, two herds of sheep, a Roman aqueduct and five churches as the train sped from Calais to Paris when his boyfriend said, "We have to talk."

  That was never a good way to start a conversation, particularly when Lucas was looking earnest and serious like he was now. Micah turned away from the French countryside to face the train compartment. None of their fellow passengers were paying attention to two scruffy, young American tourists. As far as private conversations went, this place was as good as any. "Okay. What's on your mind?"

  Lucas said, "When we go back to England, let's get married."

  "What?" Micah's voice rose above the noises of the train. The woman across the aisle glanced up from her novel at them. He smiled at her uncomfortably as Lucas leaned closer, their denim-covered knees touching.

  "I want to marry you," Lucas said. "Let's get married, and if it's ever legal in the States we'll already have the rings and the certificate and everything. And if it never is, we'll know we're married." His blue eyes were wide and pleading. "Don't you want to marry me, Micah?"

  Micah stammered, "I -- I -- I've never thought about it."

  Lucas sat back in the seat. "Oh."

  "I mean, we just graduated from college," Micah said hastily. "We haven't even been dating a year. Don't you think you're rushing things a little?"

  "Yeah," Lucas said and looked out the window at the passing countryside. "I guess I am."

  "I mean, jeez," Micah said, trying to keep his voice light, "this is only our first vacation together. It's a big leap from this to picking out wedding china."

  "Yeah," Lucas said.

  This was Micah's dream vacation, something he'd planned to do since he was a freshman: that once he graduated from college he would see Europe. At the time, he'd planned to bring his boyfriend Jamie, and then his boyfriend Ryan, and then whoever he was dating at the time. Then for a while he'd thought he would just go alone, but was saved from that when he fell in love with Lucas. Lucas fit him so perfectly that when Micah had asked Lucas to come to Europe with him they agreed on every museum and club and landmark.

  In the last month they'd seen London, Dublin, Edinburgh and Dover. Now they were on their way to Paris, a city Micah had been looking forward to their entire trip. He intended to do every tourist cliché they could: climbing the Eiffel Tower, exploring the catacombs, visiting the Louvre, and it wouldn't be any fun if Lucas was mad at him.

  Micah played with the zipper of his computer satchel. "Let's see how we handle kissing on top of the Eiffel Tower first. I want to kiss you there, you know."

  "Right."

  "That's about as much commitment as I can handle. Ask me about marriage again in about five years."

  "Do you think in five years you'll finally have the courage to tell your parents that I'm your boyfriend?"

  Micah felt his mouth drop open at the bitterness in Lucas’ voice and snapped it shut. He swallowed. "Is that what this is about?"

  "If we got married, you'd have to tell them. You'll have to tell them eventually, and all the praying they can do isn't changing that the fact that you're gay."

  "I know I'll to have to tell them," Micah muttered, and ran the zipper to his satchel pocket up and down its track a few times. "I just don't want to tell them yet."

  "How long have you known you're gay?" Lucas said in a reasonable tone. "Since you were nineteen, right? Since you met Jamie? Don't you think any time in the last three years would have been the right time?"

  "If it had been time I would have told them."

  "You're scared to tell them," Lucas said, and Micah sighed heavily.

  "Yes, I am! You've met my dad -- you know how he is, you've heard him yelling about the homosexual agenda," he said in exasperation. "And I can't be without my family. I just can't."

  Lucas frowned and looked out the window again. "You love your family more than me."

  "You think it should be any other way?" Micah retorted and frowned out the window, too. Lucas, Micah often thought, had it easy. Not as easy as some people -- Micah's best friend, Dune Bellamy, had two moms and two dads and was the most centered person Micah had ever met -- but much easier than Micah did. Lucas’ family had accepted his coming out without too much drama. He didn't have to worry about his family disowning him for being gay and having his father's entire congregation praying for his soul.

  He picked at a hole in his jeans and looked at Lucas, whose emotive face plainly said how unhappy he was. It wasn't that he didn't love Lucas. He did. After the heartbreak of his first boyfriend and the weirdness of his second, Lucas just made sense. But getting married was too much. They were too young and it was too early in the relationship, and Micah didn't know any gay couples who were married except for Dune's moms.

  Still, he hated seeing Lucas unhappy. Micah took the ear buds from his ears and put his hand on Lucas’ knee. "Hey," he said quietly, and Lucas’ eyes flicked to him. "I love you," Micah said, rubbing his knee.

  Lucas smiled, but still shook his head. "That's not going to make it all better, Micah."

  Micah sighed and sat back. "Then what is?"

  "Marry me," Lucas said again. "Come out to your family. Admit what you are."

  Micah wrapped the cord to the iPod's earphones around his fingers. "I'm not ready to tell them, and they're really not ready to hear it. I know my father is a fire-and-brimstone preacher who thinks all gays are going to hell. But he's also my dad and I love him."

  "Not all pastors out there think we're going to hell," Lucas said. "And why would you want to go to a church that doesn't want you?"

  "My dad is a good man. He does so many good things for the community and for people in trouble. The church helps runaways and there's a women's shelter and a drug rehab program. It's not all gay-bashing and hate." He took a breath -- trying to explain his faith was always so difficult. He felt he didn't have the words. "And because it's what I believe."

  "Yeah," Lucas muttered. "You believe in a God who doesn't want you, either." Before Micah could answer, Lucas said, "You know what? Forget I mentioned it. Just a weird idea I had. You're right: it's too soon and we're too young. It's okay." He squeezed Micah's hand. "And I can't wait until we get to Paris."

  "We're going to have so much fun," Micah said, squeezing back. "I want to kiss you in front of the Mona Lisa, too."

  Lucas laughed and Micah relaxed. Crisis averted, he hoped.

  ***

  In the hotel room the next morning, Micah woke up alone. He sat up and rubbed his hands over his face, put on his glasses and looked around the white and blue room uneasily. He climbed out of bed, calling, "Lucas?" as he peeked into the tiny bathroom in case Lucas had fallen asleep in the bathtu
b.

  No Lucas in the bathroom. No Lucas’ backpack against the wall.

  Micah inhaled slowly and went to the desk, where there was a folded piece of hotel stationary, his name written on the outside. He unfolded the note; with a sinking feeling, he already knew what it would say.

  The note was brief.

  Micah,

  I'm going home. I can't do this. I can't be with you knowing I'm not the most important person in your life. When you're ready to stop living for your family, look me up.

  Lucas.

  Micah stared at the note and then crushed it in his hand. He grabbed the phone and dialed Lucas’ cell, slipping on jeans and boots as it rang, but there was no answer. Lucas must have turned it off. Micah hung up, pulled on a T-shirt, and ran down the stairs to the concierge desk.

  Once he got there, though, he wasn't sure what to do next. There were lots of airports in Paris, or Lucas might have taken the train back to England. He clutched the cell phone in one hand and bit the nail of his forefinger as he waited for the concierge to finish helping a middle-aged couple find a train to Versailles.

  When the concierge finished with them and the couple ambled away, chattering about authentic Louis Quinze furniture, Micah said, "The guy I checked in with last night -- the tall guy. He's left."

  "Yes, sir," the concierge said patiently.

  "I need to find him."

  "He did not tell you where he was going?"

  Micah shook his head vigorously. "He left a note. He didn't say where he was going, just that he was going. Did he stop here to ask for directions or help finding a train or -- or -- or anything?"

  "No, sir." The other man's expression was mild, almost pitying, and Micah wondered how many times he'd had conversations like this. "It sounds like a lover's quarrel to me, sir."

  "Yeah, it is, and that's why I need to find him!"

  The concierge looked at him patiently.

  Micah sighed. "Okay. You're right. If he didn't tell you and didn't tell me, then there's nothing to be done about it, is there?"

  "I'm afraid there isn't, sir." He paused. "If it's any consolation, sir, this is Paris."

  Micah thought about it for a moment and shook his head. "No. It's not any comfort at all." He started to walk away, and then turned back to the desk. "I was going to kiss him on the Eiffel Tower."

  "You may yet get your chance, sir," the concierge said, but Micah could only shake his head and trudge back up the stairs to his room.

  Micah sat on the edge of the bed and thought, Don't you dare cry, you wimp. If the concierge couldn't help him, maybe -- he took off his glasses and wiped his face, picked up his cell phone and dialed another phone number.

  This one also rang and rang: it was still the middle of the night in California, and Dune wasn't answering. Micah said to the voice mail, "Hi, Dunie, it's me. Things have happened here and --" His voice was decidedly wobbly. "I just really need to talk to you," he said quickly and hung up.

  Okay. No Lucas. No Dune to talk to. He couldn't talk to his parents about it: they thought Lucas was just a friend. His sister Shiloh didn't know he was gay, either, and his friends -- well, they'd mean well, but they'd mostly just pat him on the head and tell him he'd get over it.

  Should I go home? he thought. Should I stay and finish the trip? Should I call his family to ask them to talk to him for me? He scowled at that one -- Lucas’ parents were nice enough, but they still found the concept of their son having a boyfriend baffling.

  He flopped onto his back, feeling nearly buried in the deep mattress. It felt safe here -- it felt cozy. He wanted to stay curled up here until all his problems sorted themselves out, until somebody told him what he should do, until Lucas came to his senses.

  No one would tell him what to do -- and if they did, it wasn't anything he wanted to hear. They'd tell him this trip was too much to handle on his own and he should come home.

  Except … he didn't want to go home. Going home now would be like admitting defeat -- it would be like admitting he was the kid everybody thought he was. Little Micah, too scared to travel on his own.

  He wasn't a kid. His parents, his friends -- he wasn't the same Micah they thought he was. It was time they all realized that.

  "I'm staying," he decided.

  He picked up the cell phone again and once more dialed Dune. "Hey, Dunie, it's me again. Um, never mind about that last call. I'm fine. I was overreacting, but I'm fine now. I'll tell you about it later. No need to call me. I'll send you a postcard soon. I miss you! Bye."

  Micah hung up and leaned his chin on his knee, then jumped off the bed and stripped off his clothes to get into the shower. If he was staying -- and he was staying -- he should get out and see the city, take pictures, experience Paris.

  He'd just have to get used to doing it without Lucas.

  ***

  Dune Bellamy leaned his chin on his hand and turned away from the table just enough to watch rain spatter on the restaurant's back windows. Odd how he could be in the midst of his friends, eating good food and listening to interesting talk, and still feel like something was missing.

  Not something, he thought. Someone.

  He surveyed his friends fondly. Jamie Makepeace, small, blond and excitable; Jamie's boyfriend, Ben Gallagher, tall, dark and amused; Tristan Marcus, pretty as a doll with her crooked smile and big, brown eyes; and Aidan Reznik, a recent addition to their group that Jamie had known from an old job three years before. He fit in well, though, and didn't mind being the token straight guy when Tristan's husband was away.

  So who's not here? Dune thought, and knew the answer. There were plenty of other people who would be welcome and loved at this table today; but the only one that would make this gathering complete was five thousand miles away and wouldn't be back until September.

  Tristan leaned over and touched his hand. "You're quiet today," she said, pitching her voice low to carry under Jamie's conversation with Aidan about a magazine interview he'd given earlier that day. "Are you okay?"

  "Yeah, of course," Dune said. "I'm fine. I got a puzzling phone call this morning, though -- two phone calls, actually. Both from Micah."

  "Oh? How is he?"

  "I can't tell," Dune said. "In the first message he sounded like he was about to cry and he said he really needed to talk to me. And then in the second he said never mind, he'd overreacted, everything was fine."

  "That sounds like Micah," said Ben from across the table. "Changing his mind every five minutes and expecting Dune to clean it up for him."

  "Don't be unkind, Benjie," Tristan said, and he grinned at her.

  "I don't mind him calling me," Dune said. "I like knowing that he's okay. I'm sure he and Lucas had a spat of some kind and it blew over."

  "I'm sure you're right," Tristan soothed him as Aidan and Jamie finished laughing over the interview. Aidan started sipping his drink, then put his glass down and stood.

  "There's my girl. I'll be right back." He went to the front of the restaurant.

  The rest of them watched him go. As Aidan took the coat of a slim, brunette girl and walked back to their table with his arm around her shoulders, Ben said, "Isn't that --"

  "That's Shiloh. That's Micah's little sister," Jamie said, looking shocked, and the three of them all had to look again while Tristan sipped her water.

  "You knew about this," Dune said to her, and Tristan smiled.

  "She's not exactly the type to confide in her boss, so all I know for certain is they met at the store." Micah had arranged the job: when Shiloh started school she'd wanted a job in the city so she could help with expenses, and Tristan's parents had adored her when she interviewed for their bookstore.

  "She's just a kid," Ben said.

  Dune said, "She's been attending UCSF for two years now."

  "Smarter than Aidan's usual type," Jamie remarked, and by then Aidan and Shiloh had joined them.

  "Jamie!" she exclaimed and hugged him when he stood. "I haven't seen you in forever. How are you?"


  "I'm good," he said with genuine pleasure. "I'm really good. You remember Ben, my boyfriend?"

  "Of course, hi," Shiloh said, shaking Ben's hand, and he smiled at her with more warmth than he'd ever shown her brother.

  "And you know Tristan and Dune, of course," Aidan said, his hand on her back.

  "I do. Hi, Dune. Hi, Tris." The resemblance between herself and Micah was almost spooky: they had the same generous mouths, big blue eyes, and surprisingly strong jaws for people with features so fine.

  "Hi, sweetie," Dune said, and there was some shuffling of chairs so Shiloh could sit next to Aidan, who looked proud and pleased to have her there.

  The last time Dune had seen Shiloh had been just before Micah left for Europe and Shiloh had been mousy and quiet, her eyes hidden behind black-framed glasses and her body under long-sleeved shirts and loose-fitting jeans. Something -- Dune suspected it was Tristan's influence -- had inspired Shiloh to get her hair cut short to show off her pixie-like face, to get contacts, to dress in a way to showcase her small, slender body.