You’ve seen
him here late at night all week. He’s come up the rambles between the trees to
this knoll at the top of the garden. You thought he was looking for sex when he
first showed up on Sunday night, but he didn’t prowl like most of the men who
linger until they’re sure it’s safe and then offer to buy you for the night, or
for an hour, or for just a quick fuck behind the biggest, oldest olive tree. Or
else keep on looking for another man as hungry for sex as they are.
He just
leaned against what’s left of the stone hut that belonged to the gardener in
the old days. Aware of what was going on around him. Not horny and panicked at
his own desire and the danger of the place, like most newcomers. At peace,
saying yes to it all, but wanting none of it for himself.
You wear
just a linen sheet when you’re up here working the hill.
Tonight he’s
back with two friends, who for hours started at
the sound of every pebble that shifted
underfoot as men cruised the paths. His own face
showed more sadness than fright, until he finally went off alone to the side of
the garden, kneeling as he wept. You waved a john away, wondering if you should
go to him. Now his friends have drifted off to sleep.
Another john
comes up, and you’ve got to make enough to eat tomorrow. But then the man turns,
and your eyes lock. The john glares, shrugs, and walks off.
Without
thinking, you get up and walk over to him. He’s still weeping as he reaches out
to you, but by the time his arms are around you, you realize the comfort he’s
offering is beyond anything you can give back. For the next five minutes, you
exchange no words, only sobs, until the two of you fall into a slow, steady
rhythm, rocking back and forth, your breath matched to one another. His hand
burrows under your dreadlocks to stroke the back of your neck.
Down the
hill you hear the scuffle of men scattering as they do when the police barrel
through. You pull back in alarm. He smiles and says, “It’s O.K. Go, get out
of here.”
As you pitch
down the hill, a cop grabs for you, but you leave the sheet behind, clutched in
his hand, as you run on to safety.
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