Page 1 of Hot Licks


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Eleven Years Ago

Donnie had gotten real good at lying over the years, so faking a stomachache on county fair day wasn’t too terribly hard for him. Mama was all sympathy, while Pop looked at him like he was the laziest thing on the planet. His younger siblings didn’t care much, because they were still going to the fair to see Mama’s prize jams win ribbons like every year.

He listened from the bedroom he shared with his two little brothers as the family truck pulled away, kids tucked into the bed with a lot of hay to make it more comfortable.

He didn’t have a stomachache.

The county fair was one of the few things his parents went to every single year, like it was a religious holiday they couldn’t skip, and they’d gone his entire seventeen years. Kirby had left home a few months ago, so now as the oldest of six, Donnie had been expected to go and help wrangle the younger kids. But he had other plans that didn’t include six children who weren’t even blood.

His plans involved Brady Gibbons.

Just thinking the other teen’s name got him hard, and he rubbed himself through his worn jeans. They had all day and a real bed, and they’d finally get to do something they both wanted to try. Donnie had fantasized about it for months now, ever since Brady first kissed him in the hayloft after playing their guitars for hours. Pop thought the guitar was a useless hobby, but Donnie kept up with his chores and his schoolwork, so Mama stood up for him and said he could. He saved money to buy a used guitar when he was fifteen, taught himself by watching other people play on the TV, and he was darned good at it.

And then Brady’s family moved to town all the way from Austin at the start of this year—their senior year—and Donnie knew he’d found a kindred spirit in the tall, sandy-haired city boy. The working farm Donnie lived on fascinated Brady, and they’d become fast friends. Guitar buddies. Secret boyfriends.

Okay, so maybe they’d never used the b-word out loud, but that’s what Brady was to him.

Not that he’d ever tell anyone else. Brady either. It wasn’t safe to be gay where they lived. There wasn’t even a black person in their tiny town, much less anyone who flew a rainbow flag, but they both graduated in two months. Brady was already eighteen. Donnie would be eighteen in July.

The day after, they were gone. On the road. Together. Brady had some money saved up, and they’d play their guitars for street change until they got famous. Once they were famous, no one would care they were together.

Donnie could finally stop living a lie.

His adopted family left around nine in the morning for an hour drive north to the fair. Brady was supposed to come over around ten. Donnie dashed into the bathroom to wash up and get ready. He’d been real careful about researching this, because they both wanted to do it right. It was one thing for silly twelveyear-old boys to giggle in the dark about cornholing. It was a whole other thing to want to do it with your boyfriend.

He was pretty sure Vaseline would be okay, so he took the jar of yellow stuff into his room, along with an old work towel no one would wonder at being in the laundry. Didn’t want to risk getting his sheets messy, because Winnie did laundry this month and she was mouthy about weird stains.

The first time he’d beat off in bed and hadn’t cleaned it up good, she’d told Mama, who’d told Pop, and Pop beat the sin out of him with a leather belt.

“Touching yourself is of the devil,” Pop had said after every whap. Donnie hadn’t been able to sit properly for two days.

He went out to the yard to wait. The farm was far from the center of town, down a long dusty road. The west side of the farm was really hilly and rocky, with a lot of gorges and dry creek beds, and Brady’s house was a half-mile walk as the crow flies. It’d be too conspicuous to drive a car over, like he did when they had planned guitar time, so Brady insisted on walking.

It made the whole date even more exciting, because he was sneaking over. His parents were going to the fair too, but he didn’t have to make up a lie to stay home. The Gibbonses were cool like that. Not like Donnie’s parents, who weren’t even his real parents. Every one of his siblings was adopted like Donnie, because Mama and Pop couldn’t have kids, but they needed to keep the farm going. It had been in the family for three generations.

Donnie was convinced they weren’t legal adoptions, but it wasn’t his place to interfere. They were all fed, clothed, and sent to school. Church twice on Sunday. Seven God-fearing souls, and then there was Donnie. The only person he was scared of was Pop and his leather belt.

Only a few more months.

A head of familiar dark-blond hair appeared in the distance, followed by the rest of Brady—the handsomest boy Donnie had ever seen in his life. He’d been smitten from day one, and he’d nearly died when he realized Brady liked him back. Never had he imagined finding a boy to love in this stupid little town.

Donnie bounced on his toes as Brady approached, smiling broadly. “Hey, you,” Brady said with a drawl thicker than Donnie’s. “They bought the sick stomach?”

“Yup. We’ve got the place to ourselves for hours.”

Nervous now, Donnie turned and walked back to the house, desperate to touch Brady, but too scared until they were indoors. He didn’t think anyone was around to see them, but old fears died hard. The minute they were both inside of his bedroom with the door shut, they were kissing.

They’d done this so much that kissing Brady was a familiar dance. He let Brady control it and be the aggressive one, shoving his tongue in Donnie’s mouth, practically breathing for him. Donnie had lost some of his wood during his shower, but it was back in a flash, hard against Brady’s hip. Brady grabbed his ass and squeezed, and Donnie humped against him.

“Been dreaming of this,” Brady said during a brief break in the kissing. “I can’t wait.”

“Don’t have to. Been dreaming of it too.”

They broke apart in order to strip. Boots and jeans and undershirts landed in a pile on the floor, everything getting all mixed up in their haste. Donnie loved Brady’s body. Brady had played football at his school in Austin, so he had muscles on his arms and chest and legs, and all kinds of golden hair everywhere. He hadn’t made the team this year, because he’d transferred too late to make pre-season practice, but he worked out to maintain those muscles.

Next to him, Donnie was scrawny. He was almost as tall, but he was really thin all over from working on the farm and stingymeals, because money was always tight. But Brady said he was gorgeous, so that made it all okay. The girls at school thought he was good-looking, too, but he really believed it when Brady said it.