The Dance of the Wicked Boys 08
Greetings! This story marks my return to Nifty after a six year hiatus. I hope you enjoy it and will let me know by writing to freethinker1957 at gmail dot com_. This story will contain scenes of sexual activity between two adolescent boys. If it is illegal for you to read this or if you will be offended, please go no further. The author does not advocate the violation of any laws, but he does encourage the free expression of ideas and the exercise of a healthy imagination!_
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The Dance of the Wicked Boys
by FreeThinker
Chapter Eight
Supper in the McCoy house was quiet that evening. Hardly a word was spoken Benji offered thanks. Jimmy Dale seldom looked up from his plate. Aunt Jane nervously picked at her food. Jeremy ate and though the pork chops, spinach, and fried potatoes were good, he ate slowly.
“Me and Jeremy mowed the lawn, Daddy,” Benji said tentatively.
Jimmy Dale glanced up at his son and then turned his attention back to the pork chops. Jane softly said, “I think you two did a very nice job.”
Benji smiled nervously at his mother. Jeremy said nothing as he ate. He simply kept his eyes on his plate as he slid his fork into his fried potatoes. Jane glanced uncertainly at her husband and asked, “How’s Mrs. Harp?”
Jimmy Dale shrugged as he ate and then took a huge bite of spinach and potatoes before answering, “The same. I’m going to the hospital to see her after service tonight.”
Jeremy’s eyes rose at this and, for just a fraction of a second, he looked at his uncle before glancing over at his cousin. Benji frowned and took another bite.
“What hospital is she in?” Jane asked. “I like to go with you.”
“What is this? Twenty questions?” Jimmy Dale demanded, potato falling from his mouth and landing on his tie.
“No,” Jane responded quickly. “I just thought I could go with you. I baked a cake today and I thought, maybe I could take a piece to her.”
Jimmy Dale chewed for a moment and after swallowing, while cutting a bite of pork chop, said, “I don’t think, after today, Jane, that you’re in the proper Christian frame of mind. I don’t want you with me tonight.”
His wife bite her lower lip and Jeremy saw tears in her eyes, which she lowered as she took a small bite of spinach. Jeremy could see that Benji, too, was upset by the way he stopped chewing the bite in his mouth and simply stared at his plate.
Suddenly, Jimmy Dale pushed his plate back, picked up the pork chop with his fingers and declared as he walked from the kitchen, “I’m gonna go get ready for the service.”
He banged the back door as he left the house and Aunt Jane dabbed her eyes with her napkin.
“I’m so sorry for causing all this trouble, Aunt Jane,” Jeremy said quietly. “I didn’t mean for any of this to happen. I’ll... I’ll just accept what’s happened. I don’t want you and Benji to pay for me being so unhappy.”
Benji said nothing and kept his eyes on his plate. Aunt Jane smiled sadly at Jeremy and replied, “It’s not your fault, Jeremy. It’s just... I think the pressures of the church are getting to Jimmy Dale. There just isn’t enough money to cover all the expenses and all our expenses and... well, I think it’s just making everything hard for Jimmy Dale.”
Jeremy frowned as he asked, “But, aren’t y’all getting a check every month from Mr. Harrison from my parents’ estate? Doesn’t that help?”
“Oh, I’m sure it’s a big help, Jeremy,” Aunt Jane replied, “but Jimmy Dale handles all that. I don’t know how much it is, but I’m sure it’s a big help.”
Benji glanced over at Jeremy with a frown, but said nothing and resumed eating his supper. Jeremy nodded to himself, as if another piece of the puzzle had been found, and resumed eating, as well.
After supper, in their bedroom, before walking over to the church for the Wednesday evening service, Jeremy and Benji sat on their respective beds. Benji was distressed and he looked at Jeremy with a mix of fear and anger.
“Everything was okay here before you came, Jeremy,” he said quietly. “Momma and Daddy got along. I didn’t have no temptations, everything was okay. I wish you’d never have come.”
“I do, too,” Jeremy replied, “but, it’s not my fault my parents died. Besides, your dad’s lying. He’s lying to your mother and you and he lying to Rafael’s mother and Mr. Harrison.”
“Daddy doesn’t lie!” Benji replied angrily.
“He does and you know it,” Jeremy replied. “I saw it in your eyes at the table. You know he’s lying about going to see Mrs. Harp. You know it. And, he was lying to the Rafael’s mother when he said they couldn’t buy my soul. He told me in his office... he’s just using me to get money out of them.”
“You’re a liar!” Benji replied angrily.
Jeremy shook his head and said, “And, he hit me, Benji. He hit me twice in the hallway outside his office and he almost hit me again in the office. You watched him hit me in the garage yesterday, so you know I’m telling the truth. He said I’m already going to Hell, so he’s going to use me to get all the money he can from Rafael’s mother and from my parents’ estate. You know it’s true, Benji. Tell me. Where’s all the money going to he gets from Mr. Harrison every month for taking care of me? He’s getting hundreds of dollars a month. Where’s it going? I don’t cost y’all that much. Where is it going?”
Benji pressed his lips together. It was clear to Jeremy that Benji couldn’t answer. He wanted to, but he knew Jeremy was telling the truth.
“You know I’m not a liar, Benji,” Jeremy added. “You know that I don’t lie.”
Benji lowered his head and nodded. His eyes moist, he whispered, “Jeremy, he’s my Daddy. He’s my Daddy.”
“I know,” Jeremy said as he rose from the cot and sat down beside his cousin. He put his arms around Benji and hugged him tightly. “Sometimes, the people we love let us down. My brother hates me because he thinks I’m a fag because I’m a dancer. My parents hated that I was a dancer. They let me train and they paid for it and they were going to send me to New York, but they still hated that I was a dancer and they never really approved of it. No matter how good I was, it just didn’t matter to them. They never said to me they were proud of me. Never. Ever. I know it’s not the same, but I know it hurts, Benji. I know it hurts. But, I’m your cousin. I’m your blood brother. If anything happens, you can always talk to me. I promise you, Benji, I don’t want to cause trouble here. I really don’t. I just don’t know what to do. If I stay, it makes this rough. If I go, it’ll make things rough. I just don’t know what to do. I love you and Aunt Jane.”
“I know,” Benji replied as he leaned his head on Jeremy’s shoulder.
From behind them came a sniffle. Jeremy looked over Benji’s head and saw Aunt Jane in the doorway, dabbing the running mascara from her cheeks.
“You’re not causin’ trouble, Jeremy,” she said with a painful smile, “and we both love you, too. God loves you, too, Jeremy.”
Jeremy smiled at her and she added, “I have to go play the piano, now. You boys come along before the service starts. All right?”
“We’ll be along in a minute,” Jeremy replied.
“Yes, Momma,” Benji replied as he looked up at his mother with red eyes.
She stepped forward and kissed both boys on the cheeks before turning and leaving. When Jeremy heard the screen door in the living room close, he said, “Benji, you go on. I have to call Rafael, then I’ll be along, okay?”
Benji nodded and stood as he asked, “You aren’t gonna tell him Daddy hit you, are you?”
“It’s not about that,” Jeremy replied, not directly answering the question. “It’s about something else.”
Benji nodded and Jeremy accompanied him to the living room. He stood and watched his cousin leave with slumped shoulders and he felt heartbroken for the pain the boy was feeling. It had to be terrible, he thought to himself, to discover your father is a vicious liar and to witness discord between your parents. Only rarely had Jeremy seen his parents argue and he had never heard his father lie about anything except the usual ones about Santa Claus or the Easter Bunny. He couldn’t imagine what it must be like for Benji. Then again, Benji couldn’t imagine what it must be like to lose one’s parents, either.
He turned and walked to the kitchen, where he picked up the receiver from the wall-mounted telephone and dialed, Magnolia 3-1212. A Negro woman answered by saying, “Good Evening, this is the Hampton Residence.”
“Yes, ma’am, this is Jeremy Fenwick,” he replied. “May I please speak with Rafael?”
“Oh, course you can, honey. Just a minute,” the woman replied warmly. Jeremy realized that she must know about him. She sounded sweet and he felt a sudden rush of affection and longing for the Fenwicks’ housekeeper, Delores. He missed the way Delores hugged him and told him every so often, “You just keep dancin’, Jermy. The Lord gave you this gift to bring beauty to the world. You just keep dancin’.”
He sniffed as he was overcome by a rush of emotion, just as Rafael’s voice came on the phone.
“Hey, Jeremy! You okay?”
“Yeah. I’m fine,” Jeremy replied, though he quickly added, “Well, not really. Listen, I can’t talk but a minute. Everyone’s over at the church and I have to hurry over there. There’s something you need to know about Jimmy Dale.”
“Yeah?” Rafael replied suspiciously.
“He took me into his office after y’all left,” Jeremy said. “He... he hit me twice and he said the only reason he didn’t beat me with his belt was that he didn’t want to leave any welts and bruises.”
“That son-of-a-bitch!” Rafael replied furiously. “I’m on my way!”
“No! NO! That’s not why I called!” Jeremy said. “It’s this. Two things. First, he admitted to me that he just wants to use me to get money out of your mother and from Mr. Harrison. He’s going to hold out for lots of money.”
“Yeah, that’s what we figured,” Rafael replied, still angry. “We know. But, listen Jeremy. There may be something else I can do. Do you know when your uncle usually goes out at night?”
“Well, that’s the second thing I wanted to tell you,” Jeremy replied. “He’s going out tonight. He told Aunt Jane at dinner that he’s going to go see some lady named Mrs. Harp at the hospital, but when Aunt Jane asked which hospital and if she could come along, he got upset and wouldn’t tell her or let her come along.”
Jeremy could hear Rafael snort over the phone line. The older boy asked, “You know when he’s going?”
“Well, service starts at seven-thirty and it’ll be over like at eight-thirty or eight-forty-five. I guess he’ll leave after that.”
“Can you call me when he does?”
Jeremy thought for a moment and then said, “Maybe. Yeah. I don’t think Aunt Jane will mind. She’s on our side, so I don’t think she’ll mind if I call. I’ll tell her that I just want to talk. So what are you doing? Are y’all going to follow him?”
“Don’t worry about it,” Rafael replied. “It’s best if I don’t say anything to you so you won’t have to lie about it later.”
Jeremy felt a rush of excitement and danger. “I want to help!”
Rafael chuckled and replied, “You are, man. You’re my eyes and ears over there. You just keep me informed about everything. So, are you okay? Did he hurt you badly when he hit you? How did he hit you?”
“You had just left and he came out of the church and wanted to drag me in, but I jerked away and said I could walk in myself.”