
This story has been nominated in
The Jeds annual West Wing
Fanfic Awards in the following category:
Outstanding story featuring a group of 3 or more.
Title: City Boy -
A Friday Night Club
universe story
Author: Xanthe
Summary:
The President is doing his best bratty James
Dean impression, Josh is beating himself up over a mistake he made, CJ is
spoiling for a fight and the entire West Wing staff are on edge as they
decamp to the country to plan their re-election campaign. It falls to Leo
to somehow make everything all right...
Rating: NC17 for graphic M/M sex and
spanking.
Fandom: The West Wing
Feedback: Yes please!!! The friendly
variety is always welcomed at
xanthe@xanthe.org
Category: BDSM Slash.
Keywords: Jed/Leo/Josh threesome. BDSM slash.
Spoilers: Manchester
Warning: ****Spanking and
domination****
Length: 154 KB. Also available as a plain text file.
Author's Notes: This story hasn't been beta'd so all mistakes and Briticisms
are mine. I really wrote it as a bit of spanky relief from the huge long
epic that was Old Friends and
didn't realise it would turn out so long in its own right <g> It just seemed to me that Jed was doing a very good James Dean
impression at the end of the episode Manchester (see pic from the ep
above) and was particularly surly and in need of a good spanking <g> And
poor Josh meanwhile just couldn't give himself a break over the mistake he
made on the tobacco issue. So, Leo *really* needed to step in and sort
them both out...<g>
Posted: 12th February, 2003
City Boy
By Xanthe
It had been a long,
exhausting and logistically complex operation trans-locating half the
staff from the West Wing out to the middle of nowhere – or, more
specifically, Manchester, New Hampshire - along with a horde of
journalists and other associated hangers on. That, coming on top of a
whirlwind few weeks since the President had held the press conference
announcing both that he had concealed the fact that he had multiple
sclerosis from the nation and that he was running for re-election, meant
that Leo was pretty tired before he even arrived at the hotel in
Manchester where he was staying with the rest of the West Wing staff just
up the road from the President's farm – and somehow he had the feeling
that he was going to be wearier still by the time he left.
Leo slung his case
onto the bed, and threw himself down next to it. They had decamped to
Manchester to work on the President's re-election campaign, which they
would open on Monday with a big, important speech at a local school – a
speech that the West Wing staff had been working on for days and which
still wasn't anywhere near ready.
Leo glanced around
the little room - which was considerably smaller and more homespun than
the hotel room he occupied in Washington - and then, with a sigh, he
forced his tired body off the bed and got on the phone to make several
important calls before hitting the hotel bar to check on his staff.
They were grabbing
something to eat and while they looked relaxed, Leo easily picked up on
the tense atmosphere. They didn't like the Bruno, Doug and Connie – the
people Leo had brought in to work on the campaign with them - and they
were all stressed out from the pace of the past few weeks, just as he was.
In addition, he knew they felt personally betrayed by the President's
multiple sclerosis revelation – Leo had felt that way himself when he'd
first found out. They still believed in Jed Bartlet, but they were wounded
right now and Leo wasn't sure what would make everything all right again.
He suspected an apology would go a long way to helping, but thus far Jed
hadn't shown himself to be in any mood to apologise.
Leo spent a few
minutes with them, just checking in. He didn't expect to work miracles and
knew that it would take some time before the current tension played itself
out. He knew he had to be on top of his game right now – what they needed
was for him to be a firm, decisive presence in their midst, generating a
feeling of certainty and calm. He couldn't change anything and he couldn't
wave a magic wand and make the past few weeks disappear – all he could do
was be a steady compass for them to take their bearings from when they
were feeling as if they were all over the place. It would be so easy right
now for morale to sink to an all time low, and for them to feel as if they
were on a sinking ship. Leo needed to remind them that there was a firm
hand still on the rudder – and that hand was his. Now wasn’t a time to
give into panic – now was a time to stand resolute and to make it clear
that he expected them to perform to their best ability and not get mired
in self-doubt and uncertainty. That was one of the reasons why he'd
decided to stay in the hotel and not at the President's farm – the staff
needed someone on hand to steady them right now. The President probably
needed that too, but Leo figured there was only so much of him to go
around and he'd deal with the President tomorrow. He had a meeting
scheduled with his old friend first thing in the morning.
Leo retired to bed
to work on campaign papers, before finally getting some much needed sleep.
He woke the next morning feeling more refreshed but still apprehensive
about his meeting with the President. As he walked down the hotel hallway
he could hear Josh and Donna arguing companionably as always, while CJ was
giving Toby a hard time about something. They were familiar sounds, but
edged with an underlying tautness and Leo got into the car with a sigh,
wondering when everything would calm down and get back to at least some
semblance of normality.
The last few weeks
had been so hectic that he'd had no time at all to touch base with the
President – and they hadn't been able to squeeze in any of their usual
Friday night sessions either, which, as Leo knew all too well, was a
recipe for disaster. It was at times like this, when he was stressed and
enduring some savage personal criticism from the media, that Jed needed
the comfort and closeness he found in his sessions with Leo, however hard
it could be bringing him down to the level where he could accept that
comfort. Normally it wouldn't matter so much because Abbey had always been
able to take care of Jed so magnificently, but things weren't so good
between the President and the First Lady right now, so Jed was hanging in
the wind just at the time when he most needed support. It bothered Leo
that he wasn't sure where the President was mentally at the moment - that
was always a concern with someone as mercurial as Jed Bartlet. Leo had the
nagging suspicion that if he didn't get to talk to Jed alone soon, he
might be in for some nasty surprises.
The President's
ranch was a beautiful property but Leo was a city boy so its rustic charm
largely passed him by. The security officer at the gate advised Leo's
driver that Jed was out on the farm and Leo sighed inwardly as the driver
took him there. This wasn't a good sign. He wanted a focused, committed
Jed, and instead he was getting a distinctly ambivalent vibe off the
President. Jed had known Leo was due, but instead of meeting him in the
house he seemed to have deliberately taken himself off to the great
outdoors. It didn't bode well.
The car drew up by
a barn, and Leo got out. He spied the President, perched on the back of a
truck and Leo's heart did a little flip – Jed was dressed in faded blue
jeans and a polo shirt; his hair was tousled and he was puffing on a
cigarette. He didn't look like the President of the United States – he
looked like a rebellious aging teenager, doing his best to shock a
reaction out of whoever was around. He also looked utterly beguiling. Leo
was used to the way he felt around Jed – he'd lived with his emotions for
a very long time, and he was adept at handling them - but even so, nothing
prepared him for the spark of attraction that he felt for *this* Jed,
standing moodily by the truck, looking for someone to snap at. Leo
suspected that person was going to be him, but he wasn't overly concerned
about it. Jed was clearly in a state of conflict right now and it was
better that Leo witnessed that and dealt with it than that someone else
did. As for *how* he'd deal with it – Leo wasn't sure. He knew what
generally worked with the President but he'd never seen Jed looking quite
this moody before, and he suspected it might take a little while for
whatever was troubling Jed to rise to the surface.
"You live in the
middle of nowhere, you know that?" Leo grumbled amiably, opting for a
harmless opening gambit to test the waters.
Jed responded with
one of the many pieces of trivia for which he was famed and Leo headed him
off at the pass, to avoid it getting out of hand – Jed could regale you
with trivia for hours if you didn't step in there and wrest control of the
conversation away from him. They talked for a couple of minutes and then
Jed threw his cigarette into his coffee mug, and got up, still glowering
at the world in general: Leo decided that he was going to have to tread
very carefully around his friend during this meeting. Jed was clearly in a
combative mood – Leo hadn't seen him smile once since he'd arrived and
even his mildest enquiries were met by snapped or growled responses. They
went to stand by the paddock, looking out over the acres of the Manchester
farm.
"I'm going to stand
for re-election, Leo, and I'm going to win," Jed told him, his eyes
flaring fiercely as he declared his intent. Leo glanced at his friend
surreptitiously as Jed gazed out over the farm, trying to gauge the
President's mood. Jed was all fired up and he sounded so sure of himself,
so confident – only Leo could see all the doubts and uncertainties his
friend was struggling with right now. He wondered if Jed was even aware of
what was causing his edgy mood – in his experience, Jed was someone who
felt with his heart whereas Leo felt more with his head and as a result he
could often interpret Jed's moods in a way that Jed was utterly unable to
do. They stood there for a long time, looking out across the beautiful
scenery in companionable silence. If Jed needed to talk then Leo was here,
but he suspected that Jed wasn't yet able to formulate exactly what was
troubling him.
Finally, after
several long minutes, Jed grunted and shifted slightly.
"I found something
you might be interested in, Leo," he said.
"Yeah?" Leo glanced
at his friend.
"Yeah," Jed
drawled, still doing his best impression of a surly teenager. Leo was
suddenly reminded of James Dean in 'Rebel Without A Cause'. Jed was all
pent-up anger with no real target to take it out on and no understanding
of why he was in such a foul mood either. Leo thought he knew but until
Jed made a move he wasn't about to offer an opinion on the subject. Jed
pushed himself away from the fence and walked towards the barn and Leo
followed him, frowning, wondering what the hell Jed had in the barn that
he thought Leo would be interested in. He hoped it wasn't some form of
local wildlife; Leo was most definitely *not* a country boy, unlike his
friend. He didn't even own a pair of jeans – and his city-casual uniform
of chinos, cotton shirt and blazer seemed out of place next to Jed in full
James Dean mode.
Jed turned on the
light in the barn and took Leo over to a large tarpaulin sheet covering a
bulky object.
"What is it?" Leo frowned.
"It's this." Jed
whisked the sheet away to reveal a gleaming, if rather ancient, motorbike.
Leo stared at it, genuinely speechless, for several seconds. Of all the
things he'd come out here expecting to discuss today, a motorbike hadn't
even factored into the equation. "Isn't she beautiful, Leo?" Jed said,
running his hands over the shining metallic body of the machine.
"It's a motorbike,"
Leo replied blankly, utterly nonplussed.
"Oh hell, Leo –
were you *born* old?" Jed groused, clearly annoyed that Leo wasn't more
impressed. "Didn't you ever drive a motorbike in your youth, Leo? Did the
60's pass you by completely?"
"I was flying
planes in Vietnam the 1960's, sir," Leo pointed out quietly. Jed had the
grace to look a little guilty for forgetting that important fact about his
friend's past but it didn't last very long.
"Well then you must know how exhilarating it is to ride a motorbike!" Jed
exclaimed. "It must be a similar feeling!"
"I don't know – do
people try and shoot you down when you're riding a motorbike?" Leo
commented, still unsure where this was going. Jed's mouth formed a hard
line – he was clearly annoyed that Leo wasn't giving him the response he
had been looking for. "Sir, it's a bike, and as I recall you aren't
especially adept at riding bikes so I hope you weren't thinking of riding
it around the ranch," Leo said pragmatically. "I think we all remember the
last time you got on a bike – I know I do but then it was my $3000 bike
that you borrowed and then rode into a tree."
"That was a pedal
bike, Leo!" Jed snapped angrily. "That's a completely different thing! I
was a good motorcyclist in my youth. I can still remember the way it felt;
the smell of the leathers, the feel of the wind in my hair…" His features
relaxed into an expression of nostalgia.
"You didn’t wear a
helmet?" Leo raised an eyebrow.
"It was the 60's,
Leo!" Jed protested. "Nobody wore a goddamn helmet. I'm just saying –
she's beautiful, isn't she? She was a bit of a mess when we found her, but
I got her cleaned up, and she purrs like a beauty now."
"Please tell me you
haven't taken her out for a test drive," Leo said despairingly.
Jed glared at him.
"I can ride my own damn motorbike if I choose to, Leo!" He growled.
"With all that's
been going on lately? The last thing we need is for our already sick
President to get admitted to the hospital with a broken leg – or worse,"
Leo remonstrated.
"I'm not sick!" Jed
snapped.
"I know. You have
multiple sclerosis which we've spent the past few weeks educating the
entire nation about – how it isn't fatal, how it won't affect your
performance as President – so I can see how you driving your motorbike
into a tree would really help convince people that your judgment hasn't
been impaired by your illness at all," Leo commented grumpily.
"Thank you, Leo.
I'm really glad I showed this to you now," Jed snarled, with a savage
glare in Leo's direction. Leo took a deep breath and decided to take
another approach before Jed took the teenage rebellion act a stage further
and stormed off in a huff.
"I'm sorry. She
*is* beautiful, sir. Did you clean her up yourself?" Leo ran a hand over
the motorbike's gleaming body.
"Yes I did." Jed's
chest puffed out in an almost comical fashion and his mood changed
immediately now that Leo was showing an interest in the machine. He bent
down and pointed at something deep within the bowels of the bike. Leo
peered at it in the dimly lit barn, not entirely sure what he was looking
at. "See here – these are original parts. They don't make them any more so
I had Charlie track me some down on Ebay."
"It's good to see
that you keep Charlie gainfully employed, sir," Leo commented.
"Don't you want to
ride her, Leo? Doesn't just looking at her make you want to go speeding
down country roads?" Jed asked, running a hand through his hair, his eyes
gleaming with excitement.
NO! Leo thought to
himself, alarmed by the fact that this was clearly what Jed wanted to do
with the damn bike. They had just announced the President had a
degenerative disease, he was being investigated by a Grand Jury for
deception, he was running for re-election - and all he could think about
right now was taking his motorbike out for a spin. Leo was not at all
surprised – this was Jed all over. The truth was that although Jed had
decided to run for re-election, he hadn't yet come to terms with his
decision emotionally – or all the ramifications that came with it. Factor
in an extremely pissed off First Lady, angry with her husband for making
this decision without asking her and thereby breaking the 'one term only'
deal they'd made and you had an extremely volatile Jed on your hands.
"You've done a
great job on her, sir," Leo said carefully, gazing at Jed intently. "But
you do know she has to stay in the barn, right?"
Jed started to
bristle; Leo put a gentle hand on the President's arm, and gazed at him
steadily. "Right, Josiah?" He said again, in a firm tone. Jed's expression
wavered for a moment and then he gave a tragic sigh and slowly pulled the
tarpaulin back over the machine.
"I guess you're
right, Leo," he muttered. Leo put his hand on Jed's back and stroked
comfortingly for a few seconds, trying to convey his empathy but Jed's
muscles remained taut under his hand and didn't relax. Leo sighed – it
looked as if Jed's rebel-without-a-cause phase wasn't over yet. He just
hoped that Jed would have the big explosion he was brewing before long; he
had a big speech to give on Monday, and a campaign strategy to work on. He
wouldn't be able to do either while he was struggling with his emotions
like this.
"I've missed you,
Leo," Jed muttered, glancing at Leo sideways. "How many Fridays has it
been since we…?"
"Too many." Leo
shrugged. "There's been too much going on. When things calm down…when we
get back to Washington…"
"I told you that
you could stay at the house. I don't like the idea of you in that hotel,"
Jed grumbled.
"I know." Leo
smiled and rubbed Jed's back some more. "But I'm fine in the hotel. I'm
used to hotels and I should be with the staff. If I'm not there to keep an
eye on them who knows what they'll get up to." He grinned.
"You can't take
responsibility for everyone, Leo," Jed groused.
No, Leo thought to
himself – Jed wanted him all to himself right now, and understandably so,
but they were both grown men and they both knew it wasn't possible.
"Which room are you
in?" Jed asked. "Did they put you in the one with the memorial civil war
quilt on the wall?"
"I have no idea. I
didn't look," Leo said with a shrug. "Although now you come to mention it
I think there *was* something hanging on the wall."
"I thought so.
That's the best room. They gave you the best room, Leo." Jed rocked back
on his heels triumphantly.
"You told them to
put me in that room didn't you?" Leo sighed.
Jed grinned. "You
*should* have the best room, Leo!" He exclaimed, clapping Leo on the arm.
"It's a kind
thought, sir," Leo said quietly. It *was*, and it was typical of Jed to
think of it, although Leo doubted he'd be spending long enough in the room
to appreciate the sentiment.
Jed scuffed the
floor idly with his shoe and glanced up at Leo from beneath his thick,
dark eyelashes.
"Josh is at the
hotel," he murmured.
"Everyone is at the
hotel, sir," Leo replied firmly. "Don't do this, Josiah."
"Do what?! I'm just
saying, you have Josh," Jed said heatedly.
"And you have
Abbey," Leo pointed out.
"Not right now I
don't," Jed muttered moodily.
"Sir?" Leo raised
an eyebrow.
"Oh she isn't
talking to me and you know it!" Jed snapped.
"Then you should
talk to her," Leo said pragmatically. "As for Josh – he has his own room
and I'm damn sure he'll be using it every single night."
"It's Friday at the
end of the week, Leo," Jed pointed out.
"It's Friday at the
end of *every* week, sir," Leo reminded him.
"Yeah, but you and
Josh can have Friday in your hotel while I'm stuck up here with a dozen
secret service agents and a wife who can't stand me right now," Jed
snapped.
"We're not talking
about this, Josiah," Leo told him with a stern look. "I warned you when we
started this thing with Josh that there could be some jealousy issues but
you assured me it wasn't going to be a problem."
"It isn't. I'm just
saying…" Jed shrugged. "I'm just saying. That's all. Why do you have to be
such a hard ass about this, Leo? I'm just damn well saying…oh I can't talk
to you right now!" And with that he stalked out of the barn.
Leo watched him go,
his eyes drawn to the President's jean-clad ass, wanting nothing more than
to chase out of the barn, up-end the President over the paddock fence, and
deliver a few firm swats to said ass. Then, finally, he gave a sigh, and
with one last glance at the tarpaulin-covered motorbike, he left the barn.
Somehow, he had the feeling that things were going to get worse before
they got any better.
It was late by the
time Leo returned to the hotel. Josh and Donna were still bickering away
amiably about something or other. CJ had finished with Toby and was now
having a go at Sam – Leo thought that maybe he would be next. One thing
was for sure – he had to stop CJ exploding at the President when she was
in this mood. With the President's current surliness, the combination
could be explosive – and neither CJ nor Jed was renowned for being able to
hold back once roused.
Leo ate alone in
his room, still mulling over the President's strange mood as he worked his
way through the re-election strategy papers Bruno had drawn up. He was
interrupted half way through by a knock on the door and Josh stuck his
head into the room.
"Leo…sorry to…"
Josh's hair was standing on end and he looked agitated. Leo sighed and put
his papers to one side. He knew what *this* was about.
"Come in, Josh," he said, beckoning his deputy into the room.
"Leo - about what I
said earlier. I know you think I want to get the FDA to move the
announcement because I screwed up over tobacco but…"
"Josh. Let me stop
you right there," Leo said, holding up his hand. "We've talked about the
way you screwed up over the tobacco thing and we agreed to let it go –
yes?"
"Yes." Josh shook
his head – his body language at odds with his speech. Leo sighed. He got
up, walked across the room, and shut the door behind Josh.
"We can deal with
it. Do you want to deal with it?" He said softly directly into Josh's ear.
Josh jumped.
"What…you mean…?"
He flushed.
"I can punish you.
Will that help?" Leo asked pragmatically.
Josh swallowed
hard. "What, here?" He managed to squeak. "Now? With Donna in the building
and CJ roaming the hallways looking for people's heads to bite off?"
"I'll lock the
door. I have a paddle in my bag and we can always stuff a handkerchief in
your mouth to keep you quiet," Leo said, rocking back on his heels and
gazing at Josh steadily. He suspected that, like Jed, Josh's angst wasn't
yet sufficiently simmered to be dealt with in this way but he thought Josh
needed the option. He knew that he was going to have to spank Josh for the
tobacco screw-up sooner or later because he could tell that it wasn't
going to go away until he did – but he thought that Josh probably needed
to beat himself up some more first.
"You have a paddle
in your bag?" Josh frowned, his forehead creasing up almost comically.
"You brought a paddle out here?"
"Sure." Leo
shrugged. "You never know when it might come in handy." He smiled. Josh
swallowed hard, gazing at him uncertainly, clearly trying to figure out
whether it was himself or the President that Leo had brought the paddle
along for. "So – what's it to be? You want me to spank you now?"
Josh's eyes looked
as if they were going to pop out of his head – he never could deal with
the fact that Leo could talk about this kind of stuff so easily and
calmly. Then, finally, he shook his head and straightened his shoulders.
"No, I can handle
this. You're right - we dealt with this. I'm over it. I'm telling you,
Leo, I've put it all behind me. I've moved on." He waved his hand
dramatically in the air. "I've SO moved on," he said, striding towards the
door.
"Okay then. If
you're sure." Leo sat back down at the table and picked up the papers he
had been working on. "I'll be here if you change your mind, Josh," he said
firmly. Josh gazed at him for a moment, an uncertain look in his eyes, and
then he nodded and exited the room. Leo sat back in his chair and exhaled
loudly, feeling as if all his skills were being mightily stretched at the
moment. On the one hand he had a President who was doing his best James
Dean impression – which was rather surreal of and by itself in a man of
his age and position - clearly bottling up some huge storm that he was
going to unleash at the most inopportune moment; and on the other he had
his Deputy, unable to handle a serious mistake he'd made, and brooding on
it endlessly as a result. Factor in CJ, still smarting from the stupid
comment she'd made during the press briefing on Haiti, and an entire staff
on edge, and you had a powder keg just waiting to go up in smoke. Between
them, Leo thought they'd be the death of him – and, one way or another, he
suspected that his right arm was going to be getting one hell of a work
out before he left Manchester.
The week passed in
a miasma of tension; little quarrels flared up everywhere. Every time Leo
turned around he found Bruno sparring with Josh, or Doug with Toby and
Sam; even Connie had had the occasional run in with Donna while CJ and the
First Lady – never the two most placid women on the planet at the best of
times - had already had at least one contretemps. Abbey had won that one
but then CJ had been hampered by having to pull her punches because Abbey
was the President's wife. Otherwise Leo suspected it might have been
closer to a draw. The President had been at the centre of it, generating
that feeling of imminent combustion that was keeping them all on edge –
not that it took much as they were all pretty much on edge anyway. Leo had
taken to sitting in the breakfast room at Jed's farmhouse, working his way
through the campaign speeches and strategies, one ear permanently
monitoring the endless quarrelling taking place in the next door room. He
chose not to step in – not yet anyway. These guys had to figure out how to
get along all by themselves. No, Leo's priority was the President. Josh
was a smaller problem – he knew what Josh needed and suspected it wouldn't
be long before they could resolve that issue, but the President was his
real worry - and he had no idea how that one was going to play out.
By Friday morning
Jed was practically incandescent. Leo watched him go off like a firework,
burning anyone who came within a 10 feet radius. He wished they were back
in Washington so he could take Jed aside and deliver a thorough spanking
to the President's rebellious ass, but they weren't and it wasn't possible
to deliver that kind of corrective measure right now, however much Jed
needed it.
By Friday evening
Leo was happy to escape back to the hotel and barricade himself in his
room. He emerged only briefly to break up a sparring match between CJ and
Josh in the hotel bar and then declared, in an extremely terse voice that
he was retiring to bed for the night. Josh gazed after him mournfully and
Leo was halfway down the hallway when his deputy caught up with him,
grabbing at his sleeve.
"Leo – uh, you want
to be alone tonight?" He asked timorously.
Leo gazed at him
steadily. "Yes, Josh, I do," he replied. Josh's eyes flickered.
"Only, it is
Friday," he muttered.
"Yes, Josh, it is,"
Leo replied. "Funnily enough the President keeps reminding me of that fact
as well. I’ll tell you the same thing as I told him – no."
Josh gave a wistful
little sigh but nodded anyway, his face set in a glum pout.
"If you want me to
take care of that thing I will – but it'll just be that, nothing more,"
Leo told him. "You'll leave straight after we're done."
"What? You mean the
tobacco thing?" Josh stuffed his hands into his pockets and gazed moodily
into the distance. "No," he said finally. "I told you - I'm over that,
Leo."
"Okay then. Well,
anything else can wait until we get home," Leo told him firmly. Josh
clearly wasn't over the tobacco thing as was evident by the amount of
times he kept mentioning it by mistake when talking about something
completely different, but Leo wouldn't force the pace on that issue. Josh
needed to come to him and ask for a spanking or agree to accept one when
it was offered – he was completely different from Jed who often needed to
be pushed a little first and who would go through hell and high water
before asking Leo to give him a spanking – verbally at least. He made it
clear in a hundred other ways that he needed a spanking, even if he wasn’t
aware of it.
"Yeah. Okay." Josh
made a little face and then turned and went back to the bar, like a little
lost puppy with his tail between his legs. Only then did Leo allow himself
a wry smile. He loved both his subs deeply, but they relied on him to be
the sane one, the one setting the boundaries and the limits, and he was
doing just that. When they got back to DC he'd ensure they both got more
than enough of his attention to make up for the long weeks without any
Friday night sessions.
Leo worked for
several hours, before finally dropping off to sleep some time around 1am.
He was, therefore, in a deep slumber when the sound woke him. He lay
there, gazing blearily at the window for several long minutes wondering
what noise had woken him, and then he heard it again. It sounded very much
like a stone being thrown at his window – although at 2.30 am he couldn't
quite fathom why anyone would be throwing stones anywhere, least of all at
his window. Leo got up with a frown, shouldered himself into his robe, and
walked over to the window. He twitched the drapes aside and gazed out. It
took a few moments before his eyes adjusted to the dim light enough for
him to make out the figure of a man standing below his window, leaning
against a motorbike, but when he did his heart did an anxious flip and he
grabbed onto the window sill for dear life.
"Leo!" A familiar voice hissed from several feet below. His hand shaking
with a combination of anxiety and anger, Leo opened the window and gazed
down on his recalcitrant sub, who just happened to also be the President
of the United States.
"Sir, I swear there
had better be a good reason for…" he began.
"Ssh!" Jed hissed.
"You'll wake everyone up."
"What are you
doing?" Leo hissed back. "Where is your security detail?" Jed gazed up at
him with a grin of pure, seraphic triumph on his face.
"I ditched them,
Leo!" He exclaimed. Leo shook his head wordlessly, struggling with his
anger for a moment.
"Are you insane?"
He hissed finally.
"Very probably!"
Jed replied cheerfully. "Don't be such a spoilsport, Leo. Come down here
and come for a ride with me."
"What?" Leo could
hardly believe what he was hearing.
"I said, come on
down. I'll show you what this beauty can do!" Jed said.
"Are you crazy?
You've ditched your security detail, you're out riding that ancient
machine around in the middle of the night without, as far as I can see, a
helmet, and you want me to join you in this
lunacy?" Leo growled. Jed gazed up at him for a moment and then grinned
even wider.
"Yeah!" He replied.
"Of course, if you don't want to, I'll go on my own. I just thought you
might want to join me, that's all." He stepped astride the bike and Leo
realized, in a panic, that the President of the United States might well
decide to drive off into the night on his own with nobody to keep him safe
and nobody knowing where he was.
"Wait!" He called.
Jed glanced back up at him. "I'm coming, damnit," Leo hissed. "Wait
there."
He got dressed
hurriedly, then grabbed his cell phone and put in a call to the
President's secret service chief as he walked down the stairs.
"Ron," he told the sleepy agent. "The President has escaped and is sitting
outside my hotel room on a motorbike."
"Is this a joke?"
Ron replied blearily.
"No it isn't. It's
the god's honest truth," Leo snapped. "Now, you and I will have a serious
discussion about the performance of your agents at a later date, but for
now, I am going to go out there and try and persuade him to come home."
"You want me to
send some agents out to escort you…" Ron began.
"No I do not!" Leo
snapped. "Not until I can see what kind of mood he's in anyway. I don't
want to freak him out into driving off into the great unknown. God knows
what kind of trouble, I mean, uh, danger he could get into. I'm going to
talk him into coming back. You have my cellphone number: give me an hour
and if I haven't called you'd better come looking for us."
"Leo, I'm not
sure…" Ron began but Leo cut the connection and stuffed the phone into his
jacket pocket. Well, he thought to himself as he went outside, he had been
waiting for the President to explode all week and he guessed the moment
had come. There was only one thing to be done now and that was to give Jed
his head and try and bring him safely back down to earth again when he was
done.
Jed was smiling
cheerfully as Leo emerged into the moonlit night.
"I'm sorry, Leo.
Did I drag you away from Josh?" he enquired with overdone politeness. "It
*is* Friday night after all."
Why did things like
this always happen to him, Leo thought? What the hell had he done to
deserve a hotel full of bickering staff and a President who seemed to have
regressed 40 years?
"Josh is fast
asleep in his own room," Leo growled back. "I told you – Friday night
doesn't apply out here in this godforsaken place in the middle of
nowhere."
"Oh." Jed bit on
his lip, having the grace to look slightly abashed. Then he looked up
again, and this time his eyes were gleaming. "You ready to go for a ride,
Leo?" he said, barely able to contain his evident excitement at the
adventure he was embarked upon.
"If I must," Leo
muttered under his breath as he approached the
bike in question.
"Hop on behind then
– I'm going to show you what this beauty can do!" Jed said, turning on the
engine. It sounded impossibly loud to Leo and he gave a startled gasp as
the motorcycle jerked forwards. "You're gonna need to hold on tight, Leo!"
Jed laughed, as he began revving the machine up. Leo slid his arms around
Jed's body and realized, with some surprise, that Jed was encased in black
leather. "Like it?" Jed purred like his bike. "I found them in an old
closet."
"You didn’t happen
to find a helmet or two there too, did you?" Leo asked.
"Leo – I told you,
I used to feel the wind in my hair when I was driving this baby!" Jed
shouted over his shoulder, heading the bike out onto the open road.
"That was years ago
though, right?" Leo yelled back, holding onto Jed for dear life. "I mean,
aren't there laws about this now? If there aren't then there should be and
I'll be happy to pass them the moment we get back to civilisation."
"I can't hear you!"
Jed replied, which Leo was fairly certain was a lie. Leo knew he had no
choice but to relax and let Jed take them wherever it was he was planning
on going. In fact, once he got used to the sheer fear factor of being
driven around the countryside in almost total darkness on the back of a
motorbike by Jed Bartlet, a man for whom the word 'klutz' could have been
invented, Leo had to grudgingly admit that it was rather pleasant. Jed's
body was warm and his leathers smelled musky and rather erotic in the cool
night air. Leo liked the feel of his lover's hair pressed against his
cheek, and while he wasn't wearing any leathers himself, he kept himself
warm by imagining all the exercise his right arm was going to be getting
very, very soon. They didn't exactly go very fast so it wasn't as alarming
as it could have been – for a start the machine was too old to do more
than chunter along and Leo knew for a fact that Jed had never been a
daredevil even in his youth. In fact, Leo was fairly certain that Jed was
actually afraid of speed and he doubted that his friend had used the
motorbike much when he was younger, despite all his rose-tinted nostalgia
on the subject.
After about 15
minutes, Jed pulled up at a remote spot in what looked like the back of
beyond.
"Isn't it
beautiful, Leo?" he whispered, getting off the bike and turning back to
smile at his friend. He gazed up at the sky, where the stars twinkled like
a giant sparkling blanket above them.
"It is, yes," Leo
said, barely sparing the heavens a second glance. Jed leaned against a
tree at the side of the road and sighed heavily, a smile tugging at his
lips. Leo admired the sight for a moment. It wasn't often he got a chance
to witness his lover in full motorcycle leathers with wind-tousled hair
and he couldn't stop himself smiling in return.
"Sir?" Leo said
softly, coming to stand in front of him. "What's this about?"
"I don't know, Leo.
I just couldn't sleep and I was thinking about the bike and I wanted to
drive her. I guess I snuck out." He had the grace to look a little guilty.
"How?" Leo asked
conversationally.
"The bedroom
window." Jed shrugged. "Abbey has me relegated to the spare room right now
so I didn't have to slip past her at least."
"You didn't drive
the bike out of the front entrance though – there are guards all around,"
Leo pointed out.
"Yeah. I rode to a
gap in the fencing over by the North Paddock. The guards don't know about
that."
"They should," Leo
muttered darkly, thinking he'd give Ron an earful when he saw him. "Sir –
you didn't just sneak out. This was hard – you had to have sat down and
planned it," Leo chided. Jed shrugged and then grinned.
"Okay, Leo. I admit
that I planned it – it took me a couple of nights. I had to stay up and
watch the shift rotation patterns and where the guards walked at what
time…but I'm good at plans, Leo. The actual physical doing it was the hard
part but the planning was easy."
"Yeah, I can
believe that," Leo sighed. Jed was, after all, one of the brightest minds
of his generation. Figuring out a way past the guards would have been
nothing more than a crossword puzzle with a spin on it for Jed – although
Leo wasn't fooled by how deceptively easy Jed made it sound. It wasn't –
to slip out from under the noses of the most formidable security agents in
the world was a remarkable feat of and by itself – not that he was going
to let Jed know how impressed he was. "If you'd been seen they might have
shot you not knowing who you were," Leo said grimly.
"Don't be like
that, Leo," Jed said in an imploring tone. "I wasn't hurt. I just wanted
to…" He shrugged again.
"I know," Leo sighed.
"It all happened so
fast!" Jed told him heatedly. "First Mrs.
Landingham died which broke my heart, and then I was telling the nation
about the MS and the next thing I knew I was running for re-election."
"Yeah," Leo said softly, surveying his friend's troubled face intently.
"I was wrong," Jed
said, hunching his shoulders defensively.
"About what?" Leo
asked, reaching out a hand to caress his lover's shoulder. He hadn't yet
heard Jed say he was wrong about concealing his MS and he doubted he was
going to hear that right now either. He thought that maybe one day he
would, but not yet.
"About Abbey – and
about the kids. I shouldn't have made this decision without talking to
them. It affects them, Leo. If I win the election it means Zoey and Ellie
and Liz have to spend another 4 years with security agents and journalists
following them wherever they go."
"Yeah," Leo
murmured. "But they're proud of you, sir. They know you're only doing this
because you believe, fiercely, that you can make a difference. And you
can. You already have."
"Half the nation
thinks I'm a liar who can't be trusted," Jed said moodily.
"So we'll convince them otherwise." Leo shrugged.
"Hell, my own
family think I can't be trusted," Jed said, kicking his boots in the
earth.
"They don't think
that. They're just a little mad at your right now, that's all. It'll
pass," Leo told him. "They think the world of you. You've done a great job
as President – of course you want to continue."
"When I saw the
bike…it just reminded me that if I hadn't made that announcement about
running for re-election then I could be looking forward to a normal life
again, Leo," Jed said. Leo nodded slowly – this was the crux of it. "I'd
forgotten what a normal life was like until this evening. I wanted to
taste it, to feel it," Jed whispered fiercely. "I needed to remind myself
what I was missing before I go back and shoulder that great weight
again."
"Yes. I know." Leo
nodded sympathetically. "When you ran for President the first time you
spent the first few months being monumentally bad tempered to everyone on
the campaign team," he commented.
"Yeah." Jed
grimaced. "I remember."
"That was because
you needed to be ready, sir. You needed that 4 years ago and you need it
now. It's just a little process that needs to go on in your head.
Everything's happened so fast the past few weeks that you haven't had time
to make that adjustment."
Jed gave a tired
little smile and nodded, looking relieved to find that what he'd been
saying made sense and that Leo knew where he was coming from. "Yes, that's
it. Thanks, Leo," he whispered in a heartfelt tone.
"You're welcome."
Leo leaned forward and kissed Jed firmly on the mouth. Jed smelled of
leather and cigarettes and some indefinable sweet smell all of his own.
The President melted against him, and Leo wrapped his arms around him and
squeezed his lover's leather clad buttocks firmly. They kissed for a long
time and then Leo drew back regretfully. Jed gazed at him in the darkness,
his hands still resting on Leo's hips.
"I knew you'd
understand, Leo," he said.
"I do." Leo nodded,
his own hands still caressing Jed's leather-clad behind.
"You're still going
to spank me to hell and back for this though, right?" Jed asked wryly.
"You bet your ass!"
Leo replied.
"When?" Jed asked.
Leo raised an
eyebrow. "I'll let you know," he said, partly because he needed time to
think this through properly and partly because Jed had been setting the
agenda all evening and he thought it was time he reasserted his own
authority. Jed gave a little pout.
"Now?" He asked in
an anxious tone.
"Now would be great
except for the fact that I told Ron I'd get you home as soon as possible
and I intend to do just that," Leo replied amiably.
"Oh man! You called
Ron?" Jed glowered at him.
"Yes I did. I was
worried about your safety." Leo treated to Jed to his fiercest 'don't mess
with me' glare and his lover's expression faltered.
"Yeah. Of course
you were. I'm really sorry, Leo," he said in an abject tone.
"I know you are –
and you're going to apologise to Ron too, just as nicely, as soon as I get
you home."
"Do I have to?" Jed
grumbled as they walked back over to the motorbike.
"No." Leo shrugged.
Jed turned to him in surprise. "Well, not unless you wanted to sit down
again any time soon," Leo clarified. Jed shot him a wryly amused look.
"I guess I asked
for that. Okay, Leo. Let's go back and face the music," he sighed. "And I
promise to be my most humble and apologetic self."
"I don't think I've
ever seen that particular self," Leo commented as he got on the bike
behind his lover. "It'll be an education."
Jed elbowed him in
the ribs by way of rebuke, and then started the engine again. Leo pulled
out his cell phone and informed Ron they were on their way and then they
set off.
Jed was true to his
word; the moment they arrived back at the farm, he handed the bike over to
an aide with a wistful glance, and then strode purposefully into the
house. Ron met them in the breakfast room, the look on his face as stern
as Leo's was right now.
"Sir – you remember
that little chat we had when you first got elected – the one about us
working together," Ron began.
"Yeah." Jed shook his head. "And Ron I gotta tell you – I'm so sorry. I
did a stupid thing tonight. You have every right to lecture me into the
ground – although I would point out that Leo's done the exact same thing
already and I don't think he's finished with me yet so you might like to
save yourself the effort."
Ron cast a glance
in Leo's direction and their eyes met knowingly for a moment. Leo wasn't
sure what Ron's agents reported back about what they heard going on in the
Blue Bedroom on a Friday night but Ron certainly didn't seem at all
surprised that Leo had given the President a hard time about his nocturnal
adventure.
"I'll apologise to
the agents guarding me tonight," Jed continued. "I know they could have
got into real trouble and I promise this won't happen again."
"We can't protect
someone who doesn't want to be protected, sir," Ron said. "I know it
chafes at times, but it comes with the territory."
"I know." Jed
sighed. "I know that, Ron."
"I thought we
agreed – there are ways we can be more unobtrusive, if you want some
privacy…I thought we'd liased with you well on that."
"You did. You do a
great job, Ron. I'm really sorry," Jed said again.
"Okay. Then let's
leave it there." Ron nodded.
"Thanks, Ron. You
know – when I was 15 I stole my father's car and drove it to Vermont with
some friends. He shut me in the garage until Easter for that prank. Now I
feel the exact same way as I did back then." He gave a little grimace and
glanced uncomfortably at Ron, then over to Leo, and then back to Ron
again. Ron gazed at Jed for a long moment and then his serious face broke
into a little smile.
"How did the bike
handle, sir?" He asked. Jed looked up, an expression of sheer delight on
his face.
"Like a beauty,
Ron!" He exclaimed.
"I'm glad to hear
it, sir. Well, I think that's all. Good night." He nodded to Leo and then
to the President and exited the room.
Leo considered Jed
thoughtfully when they were alone, reflecting on the story he'd just told
– he'd heard the President tell this particular anecdote before and he
thought it might be important. Jed glanced over at him.
"You're looking
mighty serious, Leo. I'm guessing that doesn't bode well for my
backside."
Leo shook his head
wryly. "Sir – that story you just told about taking your father's car; you
always end it the same way – you always tell everyone that he locked you
in the garage until Easter but that wasn't how he punished you was it?"
Jed stiffened
slightly and Leo knew this was very delicate territory. Jed had told him
how his father regularly hit him as a kid, and he knew that in some way
their current disciplinary relationship was Jed's way of recreating that
relationship with his father in a non-abusive way. Where Mr. Bartlet had
been a cold, unforgiving figure, Leo gave Jed the boundaries he needed
with the love he also craved. When you were President of the United States
there wasn't anyone to tell you if you went too far, or screwed up, or did
something wrong – Leo knew that Jed needed him to be that person,
and that his friend trusted him to do whatever it took, with both
affection and responsibility.
"No, Leo, he
didn't," Jed said with a wince. "He gave me a lecture that I swear lasted
2 hours solid, with me standing in front of his desk the entire time
wondering just how long it was going to go on for, and all the time he had
that damn cane of his on the desk right in front of me. It was all I could
look at during that lecture, all I could think about."
He stared glumly
into space. Leo walked over to him and put a hand on his shoulder,
squeezing gently.
"How many did he
give you?" He asked.
"Twelve." Jed gave
a grimace.
"Sounds like a
lot," Leo commented neutrally. Twelve strokes of a heavy school cane from
a man like Jed's father had to be almost beyond endurance – but it was
giving him an idea.
"Yeah. Twelve was
pretty unheard of, even for my father. He was really pissed with me
though. I still remember it like it was yesterday," Jed winced. "I think
it was the sound that got to me – I heard it before I felt it – but when
the pain kicked in." He winced again. "I guess I deserved it though."
"I don't think
anyone deserves what you went through as a kid, sir," Leo said softly,
still squeezing his friend's shoulder.
"I stole his car
and took it out joyriding!" Jed protested. "I deserved it, Leo."
"Sure you deserved
a punishment – but you and I both know there are different kinds of
punishment and different ways in which they can be delivered," Leo told
him softly. Jed glanced at him sideways and then gave a little smile, his
expression softening.
"Yeah," he agreed.
"Yeah. On that subject, Leo, when…?"
"Don't worry about
it," Leo interrupted him. "It'll be fine."
"Are you going to
wait until we get back to DC?" Jed asked.
"No – there's no way you're going to be able to give this speech if we
don't deal with this first," Leo told him firmly. "That's partly what this
evening was about anyway."
"It is?" Jed looked
surprised.
"Yes. You wanted my
attention – and you got it." Leo smiled. "Otherwise why else would you
have come throwing stones at my window in the middle of the night, sir?"
He pointed out. "If this was just about you sneaking off for a trip down
memory lane you could have done that without taking me along for the
ride."
"I guess." Jed
looked confused.
"I said don't worry
about it," Leo told him again, in a gentle tone. "You got my attention,
Josiah, and you made it clear that you can't wait until we get back.
You're antsy, my friend, and you won't be able to start this campaign
until I deal with that so I will."
"And you still
aren't going to tell me when?" Jed asked with a mournful expression in
those deep blue eyes.
"No." Leo smiled.
"I need to sort something out first. In the meantime…" He pulled the
President around, held him in his arms, and gave his friend a deep,
soothing kiss. Jed sighed and some of the tension went out of his
incredibly taut shoulders. Leo released him and smiled at him tenderly for
a moment. "I love you, old friend," he murmured. "And everything is going
to be just fine."
Jed gave him an
uncertain smile in return and Leo brushed his cheek gently with the back
of his hand. "Trust me, Josiah," he said, and then he disengaged himself
reluctantly from the President's warm, leather-clad body, and left.
It was 5.30
am by the time he got back to the hotel. Leo paused
outside Josh's room for a second and then knocked – he figured that he was
up this early so there was no reason why his Deputy shouldn’t be up as
well. Josh opened the door, squinting sleepily. He was wearing pyjama
bottoms and nothing else and his unruly hair was standing up on end.
"Leo?" He said
blankly. "What time is it? Did I oversleep?"
"Morning, Josh!"
Leo said in a bright, cheery, utterly annoying tone. "It's 5.30." He
stepped past his deputy into the room, closing the door behind him.
"Okay. I think my
ears aren't working properly because I could have sworn you just said it
was…5.30?" Josh shot him an incredulous look. "I think we agreed a
breakfast meeting with Bruno for 7.30 so that gives me…" He paused for a
moment, his sleepy mind trying to do the math, "Uh…a whole 2 hours more of
sleeping time. Yes?" He frowned at Leo.
"No." Leo smiled at
him pleasantly. "Josh, something has come up and I need you to do
something for me."
"Okay." Josh nodded
and sat down on the bed, rubbing the sleep out of his eyes.
"I want you to buy
me a cane," Leo told him. Josh's hands stopped their rubbing and he sat
there for a moment, completely still.
"Okay, I think I
heard wrong again," he said finally. "Did you just say a cane?"
"Yes. A cane." Leo
nodded patiently.
"And you didn't
mean a walking cane right?" Josh checked.
"No. Definitely not a walking cane," Leo agreed. "Here's some cash…" He
got out his wallet and handed a wad of notes to Josh. "I have no idea how
much these things cost but I'm sure that'll cover it. Be discreet, Josh –
and make sure you get your job done as well. This isn't an excuse to
disappear for the rest of the day."
"No…because I'm
likely to be able to buy a cane in the drugstore down the road so it'll
only take a couple of minutes," Josh said sarcastically. "Leo…!"
"So it's a hard
assignment. That's why I pay you the big bucks," Leo told him calmly.
"Well, you don't
actually pay me, Leo, the government does, and if you could see my pay
check you'd realize the bucks aren't that big and I'm sure as hell that I
don't get paid for buying implements of…" He lowered his voice,
"discipline," he finished.
"That's why I woke
you early," Leo told him implacably. "So you can work on it in your own
time."
"A cane?" Josh
exploded. "You seriously want me to go out somewhere and buy a cane?"
"Yes I do." Leo
nodded. Josh's expression changed abruptly to one of panic.
"It's not…?" He
began. Leo shook his head and put a hand on Josh's shoulder.
"No, calm down -
it's not for use on your butt, Josh, although I might change my mind on
that if you say 'a cane?' in that tone of voice one more time."
"Thank god." Josh
sat back on the bed, and then looked up at Leo again, his eyes just as
alarmed as before. "But seriously – a cane…? Uh…I mean…what the hell did
he do, Leo?"
"I'm not talking to
you about that," Leo told him firmly.
"Okay." Josh nodded
thoughtfully. "What kind of cane?" He asked. Leo thought about it for a
moment.
"A heavy one – it
has to look as much like an old school cane as possible – you know the
kind that might have been used back in the 50's in one of those exclusive
private schools - and it has to look mean," he said. Josh shivered but Leo
noticed that his pupils were dilated and his expression one of
fascination.
"You know how much
damage one of those things can cause, Leo?" Josh asked softly. "I mean, I
know he's been difficult to work with lately but he does have a pretty
important speech to deliver on Monday."
"Did you think I'd
seriously hurt him?" Leo snapped. "The reason it has to look mean is
because he has to think it's much worse than it is – I have no intention
of giving him the kind of punishment he's got it into his head that he
deserves but I have to do something or he'll be useless on Monday."
Josh nodded, very
slowly, and then broke into a grin. "You are *so* good at this, Leo," he
commented.
"I know," Leo
replied without the faintest hint of modesty. "Now go find me a cane,
Josh." He gave his other sub a firm look and then left the room.
Leo spent the rest
of the day dealing with the usual 200 difficult things he had to deal with
in any one day, on top of pondering how to play out the scene with Jed. He
meant what he had said to Josh – he had no intention of giving his adored
friend the kind of treatment he had received at his father's hand as a kid
– but at the same time he knew that Jed had certain expectations of the
event that had to be fulfilled or he wouldn't feel he'd had the catharsis
he needed. Leo didn't mind being the bad guy or the hard ass when a
situation demanded it but he needed to think it through first to make sure
he did the right thing by his friend; Jed meant too much to him for him to
get this wrong. It didn't help that time was so tight – Leo decided in the
end that the only time to slot this in between everything else that was
going on was to schedule it for the following afternoon when the senior
staff would all be at the school preparing for the President's rehearsal
there later that evening. Leo wished he had more time to spend with his
friend, helping him come to terms with all the demons currently plaguing
him, but those few hours would have to do.
Josh reappeared and
disappeared at various intervals during the day and, late that evening, he
knocked on Leo's door and then entered the room, triumphantly bearing a
package neatly wrapped in stripy red and white paper.
"That's it?" Leo
asked.
"Yup." Josh looked
absurdly pleased with himself.
"I don't even want
to know where you got it or why it's wrapped up
like a giant piece of candy," Leo commented, taking the parcel from his
Deputy. He ripped into the paper, drew out the cane, and examined it
carefully. Josh had done well, he thought to himself as he slid his
fingers along the wood. This was a most exquisite implement – clearly it
had been lovingly hand-made and polished – there wasn't a single snag in
the wood that could give splinters and it had a springy feel. It also
looked the part and that was the main thing. It looked heavy but was
surprisingly light to hold and its very solidity gave it a threatening
air.
"Is it okay?" Josh
asked anxiously, his eyes never leaving the implement. Leo swung it
through the air a couple of times and Josh closed his eyes, moaning
slightly from between his parted lips. Leo grinned, shaking his head – if
he'd waved this cane around when Jed had been in the room he knew his
*other* sub would have reacted in a very different way. It amused him how
Josh and Jed, who had such similar needs, expressed them in such unique
and individual ways. Luckily he understood them both and was more than
able to give them what they needed.
"It's fine, Josh,"
Leo told him.
"Sounds…kind of
scary," Josh commented, opening his eyes and gazing at the cane again.
"Mmmm." Leo glanced
at him thoughtfully and then couldn't stop himself teasing his sub.
"Perhaps I should try it out first – get some practice," he commented.
Josh's eyes widened in alarm.
"On me?" He asked,
in a voice akin to a squeak.
Leo grinned at him,
and then burst out laughing. "Don't worry about it," he chided. "I was
messing with you. Any time you want to feel this beauty just ask – you
know I wouldn't whale into you with this unless you asked."
"Did Josiah ask?"
Josh asked softly, managing to wrest his gaze away from the cane for long
enough to give his top a searching look.
"Yes he did, Josh,"
Leo told him. "He might not have realized that was what he was doing, but
yes. He did."
Josh nodded. "He must really be in a bad way then, huh?" He said
softly.
"Yeah." Leo shook
his head. "But he'll be fine, Josh – and he'll be ready for this
re-election campaign - I can promise you that."
Leo set the scene
carefully the following day. He called Jed and instructed him not to go
anywhere later that afternoon, and then called Ron to clear a couple of
points with him, before setting off bearing the re-wrapped cane which he
also put in a large bag to conceal it. Instead of going to the President's
house, Leo went straight out to the barn where the motorbike was stowed.
He removed the tarpaulin and then retrieved the cane from his bag,
unwrapped it, and placed it on the motorbike. He glanced around the barn
and rearranged a couple of things, and then left, closing the door behind
him. He met Ron outside.
"Nobody goes in
there," he told the security agent. "And nobody follows us down here, Ron.
I need a couple of hours alone with the President – and I *mean* alone.
You can watch the place from the house or over by the paddock but nobody
comes in and nobody gets close. I don't care what happens or what you hear
- *nobody* comes close until the President walks out of that barn.
Understood?" He didn't think they'd overhear anything – they'd be too far
away and the barn door would be well and truly shut, but he wanted to be
safe.
Ron nodded, his
face thoughtful and serious. "Is this about what happened the other night
– or is to do with the speech tomorrow?" He asked.
Leo gave a wry
smile. "It's kind of a combination of both, Ron," he said and Ron nodded
again.
"Well, you know
best, Leo," he said.
"Yeah." Leo nodded
and began walking back to the house.
"Don't be too hard on him – but make sure he knows not to sneak off
again," Ron murmured as he went. Leo paused and glanced back, unsure if
he'd heard the agent correctly. Ron would have made a good poker player he
thought to himself – it was impossible to read his face correctly but Leo
wouldn't have been at all surprised to find that Ron knew exactly what was
going to take place in the barn.
Leo walked back to
the house and found Jed waiting for him on the porch. His old friend was
smoking a cigarette – clearly not his first of the day either judging by
the little pool of stubs on the floor around his chair. He got up when Leo
approached and gazed at him sullenly.
"Do we have to do this, Leo?" He asked, in a tetchy tone of voice. "I need
to run through the speech again and there's no time for this."
"We'll make time,"
Leo told him firmly. "And yes, we have to do this, sir." He knew that this
was precisely what Jed had been pushing to happen for the past few days,
but he also knew that now it was imminent Jed wanted to be anywhere but
here. That was Jed all over. "Come with me," Leo ordered.
He watched as Jed
strode down the steps, all jerky, edgy movements and sullen sighs. His
friend was wearing a pair of faded jeans and a polo shirt and was clearly
doing the full James Dean impersonation again. Leo wished that Jed's mood
would stay where he'd last left it sometimes. Yesterday morning Jed had
given Ron that charming apology and been conciliatory and regretful –
today he'd clearly regressed a few days.
"Where are we
going?" Jed asked testily as he fell into step beside Leo. "I really don't
see the need for all this cloak and dagger stuff, Leo. Why does it have to
be such a big production number?"
"I thought it would appeal to your sense of drama, sir," Leo said calmly,
taking no notice of all Jed's little complaints.
"Well it doesn't,"
Jed snapped." It just puts my teeth on edge."
"But your teeth
would be on edge anyway, right?" Leo pointed out. Jed gave him a bitter
little sideways look and Leo put a soothing hand on his friend's shoulder
as he guided him down the path towards the barn. Jed jumped as Leo's hand
made contact with him but Leo left his hand on his friend's shoulder,
keeping the touch firm and resolute. He knew that Jed needed to know that
Leo was in charge right now and that Jed didn't have any choice about what
was going to happen.
"This feels
suspiciously like the traditional trip to the woodshed," Jed commented.
"It *is* a bit like
that," Leo agreed easily.
"It's not a good
thought, Leo!" Jed snapped. "There's no reason to agree so cheerfully!"
"Hunker down,
Josiah. You're in enough trouble as it is," Leo warned him in a low voice.
Jed glared at him – but Leo took no notice whatsoever. He reached the
barn, opened the door, and pushed Jed inside, still keeping a firm hand on
his sub's shoulder. He shut the door behind them and escorted Jed to the
centre of the barn, and then waited while Jed got his bearings. Jed
glanced around, clearly not entirely sure what he was looking for or what
was going to happen, and then his eyes lit on the motorbike – and the cane
that was perched on the saddle.
"Oh shit, Leo," he
hissed. "I don't believe you! Where the hell did you get a thing like that
out here?"
"I'm a man of many
talents," Leo said modestly. "Or at least Josh is. I told him to go buy it
and he did. I didn't ask too many questions as to where he got it from."
"You told him about
what happened the other night?" Jed asked, in an angry tone.
"Of course not,"
Leo reprimanded sharply. "I told him to go buy a cane. He obviously
figured out that you're going to be on the receiving end but he doesn’t
know why or any other detail and he sure as hell won't hear it from
*me*."
Jed glared at him,
obviously still wanting to stay angry about something in the face of what
was about to all too imminently take place.
"I don't like him
knowing even that much," he growled.
"I don't care," Leo replied firmly. "All this complaining is simply a
distraction from the main event and you know it. Get your jeans and
underwear off please and arrange yourself over that hay bale over there."
He pointed to the stack of hay that he had already covered in a blanket.
This might be uncomfortable for Jed but he didn't want to make it worse
than it had to be.
"You're really
taking the whole woodshed thing way too far, Leo," Jed groused. "I think
you're getting off on this. You're on some kind of weird power trip. I
mean a cane for god's sake!" His eyes flickered over to the cane again and
then back to Leo. Leo crossed his arms over his chest.
"Do as you're told,
Josiah, and do I need to remind you of the rules about how you address
me?" Leo asked firmly.
"It isn't Friday
night, Leo," Jed snapped. "The rules don't apply."
"Sure they do," Leo said.
"Why?" Jed growled.
Leo shrugged.
"Because I say so," he replied with a sweet smile. "Pants DOWN, Josiah,
and get into position, or after I've finished with the cane I'll use my
paddle as well."
"You brought that
damn paddle with you from Washington?" Jed asked incredulously.
"Sure. I knew I'd
be out in the middle of nowhere with you. I thought the paddle might come
in useful – I didn't realize we'd need a cane too but she's a beauty so
I'm pleased to add her to my collection." He picked up the cane and
handled it thoughtfully.
"It's not a 'she', Leo," Jed argued. "It's an inanimate object. It's an
'it'."
"Yup – in the same
way as this bike is an 'it' and not a 'she', Josiah," Leo replied, tapping
the motorbike.
"The bike is an
entirely different thing! You can't even compare the two!" Jed protested
noisily. "The bike is definitely a 'she'."
"I'm standing here
thinking you still aren't over that hay bale minus your pants," Leo
commented smoothly.
"Leo, I don't like
the look of that cane," Jed said warily, still prevaricating. "Hell, Leo,
this is all because I told you that thing about my father isn't it? If I'd
known you were going to do *this* as a result I wouldn't have told you.
I'll know better than to tell you anything in future. I'm not going to say
a word to you from now on in case it gives you ideas. You're clearly not
to be trusted. I'm going to know in fut…"
Leo swiped the cane
through the air, cutting through Jed's tirade with an elegant swish. Jed
stopped in mid-sentence, his eyes radiating both panic and uncertainty.
"I'm waiting," Leo
told him firmly.
"It's a cane, Leo,"
Jed muttered miserably. "I don't…" He trailed off with a look of abject
misery that would, under other circumstances, have melted Leo's heart.
"Please," he whispered softly.
"There's only one
way this ends, Josiah. Over the hay bale please," Leo said, standing
steadfast because Jed needed that from him right now. Jed gave him one
more mournful look and then his hands went to his jeans. He undid them,
and stepped out of them unsteadily.
"Couldn't you use
the paddle, Leo?" Jed asked softly. "The cane scares me."
Good, Leo
thought to himself, swishing it through the air again. He needed Jed to be
scared of the cane if this was going to work.
"I'm still
waiting," Leo said.
"What about the
speech…?" Jed said hoarsely. "Leo – sir - you don't understand…I have to
give the speech tomorrow. I can't…you don't know what it feels like…that
time I told you about…I didn't sit down for days afterwards. I couldn't
even walk properly."
Leo felt his gut
clench at that news. He hated what Mr. Bartlet had done to his son and the
manner in which he'd done it. If Jed came to him tomorrow and told him he
didn't need to be spanked ever again, Leo would happily give up the entire
discipline element of their relationship without missing it in the
slightest, but he knew that wouldn't happen. He knew Jed needed this kind
of catharsis – it wasn't possible to undo the part of Jed's psyche that
craved this - and all he could do was provide it in a completely different
way to how his father had gone about it and hopefully heal a few old
wounds in the process.
"Josiah, you
premeditatedly devised a plan to deceive your security detail. You snuck
out on this ancient piece of metal when you hadn't driven a motorbike for
years, and you caused everyone, including myself, a lot of worry."
"I know." Jed shook
his head and scuffed his feet on the floor. "I know that, sir."
"You will be
punished," Leo said softly but firmly, "but not for any of those reasons."
Jed's head jerked
up sharply. "Why then?" He asked in a hoarse tone.
Leo went up very
close to his friend, invading his personal space, and looked into Jed's
wide blue eyes. "Because you could have been killed," he said quietly.
"And *that* is unacceptable, my friend. It's unacceptable because too many
people love you and too many people need you – and I'm one of them." He
caressed the side of Jed's face gently and then leaned in for a soft,
sweet kiss. Jed clung to him and Leo could feel all the resistance leave
his body.
"Leo…" he whispered
when Leo released him.
"Go on. It'll be
okay," Leo reassured him. Jed thought about it for a moment and then he
turned, with a sigh, and walked over to the hay bale. He paused when he
got there, removed his briefs, and bent over the bale.
Leo let him wait
for a long time, giving his friend a chance to get used to the position he
was in and prepare mentally for what was going to happen to him, before
finally going over and taking up his own position. He rested the cane
against Jed's buttocks for an equally long time, until he could see Jed
working himself up into a frenzy of anticipation, and then he tapped Jed
lightly with the cane. Jed almost jumped out of his skin and it took him a
moment to settle down again.
"Please, sir, just
get on with it. I can't bear the wait," he said.
"We don't begin
properly until you're warmed up, Josiah. You know that," Leo reminded him
gently. Jed nodded and swallowed hard, his knuckles turning white from
where he was gripping the hay bale so tightly. Leo swung the cane again –
tapping the President's ass just hard enough to warm it. He continued
doing this for several minutes, gradually building up into a tempo until
Jed's butt was glowing a rosy pink, and then, finally, he judged that Jed
was ready.
"How many, Josiah?"
He asked. Jed was silent for a moment and then he sighed.
"Twelve, sir," he
said.
"Very well. Count
them please," Leo ordered. He raised the cane and swung it forward – hard,
but with nothing like full force. He'd practiced on the pillows in his
hotel room and he thought he had gotten used to the feel and swing of the
cane. It made a satisfying swishing sound and connected with Jed's
buttocks with a snapping noise. A split second later Jed gave a little
gasp of pain. "That was an easy one to start with – it's going to get much
tougher," Leo warned and Jed nodded and his hands grasped at the hay bale
even more desperately. Leo had no intention of going much harder, but he
needed Jed to think that he would. He paused,
and tapped his friend's bottom. "The count please," he instructed.
"One, sir," Jed
said softly.
Leo raised the cane
again and brought it down once more – with more bite this time. He figured
that three strokes that meant business would be enough to fool Jed into
believing that every single stroke was of the same intensity, when in
reality most of them would be nothing more than sharply stinging. It would
still *hurt* but Leo was damn sure that Jed would be able to walk out of
here without any trouble at all. He might find sitting a bit uncomfortable
for the next few days but Leo would have taken his own life rather than
inflict the kind of pain on Jed that his father had. Having felt the way
the cane swung and sliced through the air, he shuddered to think how much
damage a thing this solid could do when applied with as much brute force
as a man had in his shoulders.
"Two, sir," Jed
said, his voice sounding slightly choked. Leo examined his handiwork
carefully – there was a faint red line across Jed's buttocks but he
suspected that would disappear relatively quickly. Judging that he was
walking the tightrope between giving Jed what he needed and not going so
far to inflict a real injury on him, Leo continued. He kept the next two
strokes hard but after that he eased up considerably – although Jed
clearly wasn't aware of that as his hands clutched at the bale and his
entire body was shaking. "Four," he whispered, his voice barely audible.
Leo upped the tempo from there on in – going faster but not nearly as
hard, although he was pretty sure that Jed hadn't realized he'd reigned
back the force of the strokes as they fell so fast his friend barely had
time to give the count before the next one fell. Jed was as uninhibited as
ever during the caning – he growled and mewled to start with and then
finally gave huge bellowing cries. Leo didn't let up until all 12 strokes
were delivered though, and then he put the cane down and helped Jed to
stand. His friend turned and buried his face in Leo's shirt, sobbing
gently. Leo stroked his back comfortingly, and kissed his hair and face
until Jed was calmer.
"I never let him
see me cry," Jed told him.
"I know. I know
that," Leo replied, smoothing Jed's damp hair away from his eyes.
"I didn't make a
sound when he caned me – not even that time, when it was so bad. I gnawed
on my knuckles rather than let him know he'd hurt me so bad," Jed
whispered.
"You don't have to
keep quiet any more. It's safe to holler all you like now," Leo told him,
knowing that Jed already knew that.
"I'm so sorry,
Leo." Jed hung on tight and Leo just held him, rocking him back and forth
gently.
"What are you sorry for, Josiah?" He asked softly.
"For not telling the staff about my MS sooner. For getting us all into
this mess," Jed sighed.
"It's not me you
should be telling," Leo said. "You already apologized to me a long time
ago and I punished you for the deception back then. I've had a long time
to get used to the idea. The staff hasn't."
"And I haven't apologized to them – right? Isn't that what you're saying?"
Jed sighed.
"Yeah." Leo
continued rocking him. Jed was a proud man and this was something he
really didn't want to do – and Leo wouldn't make him in this instance.
This was Jed's call, but he thought that maybe his friend would feel
better if he did.
"You think I
should?" Jed asked.
"I think you're the
only one who knows the answer to that," Leo said gently. Jed sighed, again
and then looked up, nuzzling at Leo's face, searching for his lips. Leo
gave him the kiss he so badly needed and Jed melted into him, needing and
craving the warmth, affection and comfort that he would only accept so
completely after a spanking.
"Do you forgive me,
Leo?" Jed asked when their lips parted.
"Always," Leo told
him firmly. "You've been punished, Josiah. The slate is clean."
"Yeah." Jed nuzzled
into him happily, utterly relaxed in his arms. "Yeah," he whispered."My
father never forgave me anything," he murmured.
"I know. That's why
you're never able to forgive yourself," Leo told him. He suspected that
was why Jed always needed to be spanked before he'd accept any kind of
absolution. It was an absolution he had never got from his father, but Leo
made sure that he gave it as an absolute condition of these sessions. It
was the only way he could justify spanking Jed at all, however much his
friend wanted and needed to be spanked.
"The last few
weeks…" Jed began.
"They've been tough on you," Leo interrupted, drawing Jed down onto the
blanket and holding him tight in his arms. "First with telling the staff,
and then with Mrs. Landingham's death, and the MS announcement and the
re-election campaign and Bruno's people…I know it's been tough. I wish you
could ask for my help sometimes before it gets this bad, but I guess you
always did like to do things the hard way." He grinned and kissed Jed
again. Jed grinned back at him stupidly.
"Thank god you
always have me figured out, Leo," he said.
"Yeah – now d'you
want me to make love to you?" Leo asked softly. Jed usually liked that
after a spanking but he wasn't sure on this occasion as it was so far
outside the realm of their normal Friday night sessions.
"Here? In the barn?
Sounds…kinda kinky," Jed grinned.
"Because the caning
wasn't, right?" Leo quirked an eyebrow at him. Jed laughed out loud.
"No, that was kinky too! I can't believe you made Josh go out and buy that
damn thing!" He exclaimed. "Hell, Leo, yes I want you to make love to me.
Abbey's been giving me the cold shoulder for weeks and you and I haven't
taken a trip to the Blue Bedroom since god knows when, so yeah! I want
some action!"
He reached for
Leo's shirt and began unbuttoning it. Leo let him – he leaned back on the
hay bale and pulled Jed astride his body so that his friend was facing
him, gazing at him the entire time. Leo wasn't surprised Jed was so eager
– his friend was an incredibly tactile man who needed regular displays of
physical affection just as much as he needed, occasionally, to be spanked.
Jed finished unbuttoning Leo's shirt, smoothed it away from his shoulders
and lowered his head to flick his tongue at Leo's nipples. Leo put his
hands on Jed's buttocks and rested them there, enjoying the feeling of
heat coming off them. Jed squirmed, but his cock was now fully erect so
Leo guessed he was enjoying the sensation even if it hurt a little too.
"You sure you're
okay with this?" Leo asked. "Not too sore?"
"No…in fact…" Jed glanced over his shoulder at his glowing, slightly
striped buttocks. "That's not anywhere near as bad as I was expecting,
Leo!" He exclaimed after he'd examined the damage.
"I'm extremely
skilled," Leo replied with a grin.
"But that cane's
vicious!" Jed frowned, gazing at the item in question with a puzzled
expression on his face. "It should have left more of a mark than that."
"Maybe you just have a very tough hide," Leo said, pulling Jed back and
distracting him with a series of heart-melting kisses. He had no intention
of explaining his caning strategy to his friend – it wouldn’t be such a
good idea for Jed to know all his toppy secrets. Leo took lube and a
condom out of his pocket, and, pulling Jed closer, he inserted a lubed
finger in Jed's ass, while at the same time plundering his friend's mouth
in earnest. "Think you can ride me?" Leo asked when they parted. Jed
looked down on him thoughtfully. "It'd be something new," Leo said. "Might
go easier on your ass – you can decide the pace – although I'm still gonna
be in charge." He gave a quirky grin which Jed returned. Jed liked for him
to be in charge during these sessions and Leo enjoyed it too much to want
to relinquish control in any case.
Jed nodded eagerly,
and Leo put a condom on his ready cock, and gently parted Jed's buttocks.
Jed slid down on his hard cock, his hands resting on Leo's body, his legs
astride Leo's hips. Leo loved watching Jed during love making and he was
transfixed by the sight of his friend, his head slung back, his lips
slightly parted, going down on him like this. It excited him and he
grabbed Jed's hips and thrust up into him, making Jed moan. He took Jed's
cock in his hand and pumped it in time to Jed's movements on his own cock,
until they came, almost in unison, several minutes later. Jed sat there
for a moment, still impaled on Leo's cock, sweat dripping off his face,
looking utterly sated and at peace for the first time in several weeks.
Leo grinned up at him and Jed grinned down, lazily, and then lowered his
head to kiss his lover firmly on the lips. They sat like that for a long
time, Jed still astride Leo's body, Leo's hands resting comfortably on
Jed's ass.
"Well this is one
roll in the hay I don't think I'll ever forget," Jed murmured at long
last, breaking the mood. Leo laughed out loud and Jed got up with a groan.
Leo sighed – missing the warmth and closeness of Jed's body. He rearranged
his clothing, watching as Jed dressed, then packed up the cane in the bag
while Jed picked up the discarded tarpaulin. He gazed at the bike with a
long, regretful sigh.
"She'll still be here in 4 years time," Leo told him calmly.
"Yeah." Jed nodded.
"I'm going to win this election, Leo," he said firmly.
"I know. I'm going to be right there with you," Leo replied. Jed nodded,
and Leo helped him cover the bike in the tarpaulin once more. They walked
towards the barn door and Jed stopped Leo when they got there, and put a
hand on his shoulder.
"Leo," he said
softly.
"Mmm?" Leo glanced at his friend. Jed had a smile on his face that
stretched from ear to ear.
"I'm ready, Leo,"
Jed told him. Now it was Leo's turn to smile. He could remember the last
time Jed had said those words to him, back during his first election
campaign. It had marked a turning point for them all, and had led directly
to Jed's victory. Leo didn't need to do anything but smile by way of
reply. He opened the door for Jed and they walked out of the barn and back
to the house together, and this time it was Jed's turn to put his hand on
Leo's shoulder as they walked.
"I need to make a
couple of calls," Leo told his friend when they arrived back at the house.
"Why don't you go take a shower and get ready for this evening and then we
can go through the speech together."
Jed gave him a
grateful smile and scooted off upstairs, looking remarkably happy for a
man who'd just had his ass thoroughly caned. Leo wandered into the kitchen
– the comment about the calls had just been an excuse to get Jed out of
the way while he had a quiet word with Abbey. Leo didn't like to interfere
in the relationship between the President and the First Lady but this
current estrangement had gone on long enough. He knew they both loved each
other very much – but they were two of the most stubborn, mercurial people
he'd ever met so their relationship had never exactly been a placid one.
He found Abbey slamming doors noisily in the kitchen as she bottled some
cider. She was dressed, like Jed, in jeans, with a loose shirt over the
top. The entire Bartlet family seemed to have this whole country living
thing down really well, Leo thought admiringly, at the same time thanking
god that he got to spend most of his time in the city, where he belonged.
Country farms were full of alien sights and smells – there were horses,
and hay bales and snakes and old motorbikes lurking beneath tarpaulins.
The country was definitely a scary place.
"Hey Abbey." Leo
pressed a little kiss on the First Lady's cheek. He and Abbey got along
extremely well – they had an understanding about Jed that worked for both
of them and they were each secure in the knowledge that the other loved
and cared for Jed and that gave them a lot in common.
"Leo." Abbey
replied sharply, bustling around the kitchen and clanging a lot of pots
and pans around in the process. The First Lady had never exactly been a
particularly domestic creature – Leo knew for a fact that Jed had always
done most of the cooking in the family – but Abbey clearly needed to blow
off some steam right now and this was her way of doing it. "Did you spank
his ass?" She asked, glancing at Leo as she worked.
"Yeah." Leo leaned
against the kitchen table and gazed at her.
"Good!" She said, slamming down another pan. "When I heard that he'd snuck
off like that…" She slammed the pans around some more.
"Abbey, there's no
way either you or I could punish him more than he punishes himself. You
know that," he told her softly. She stopped throwing pans around and stood
there, her eyes bright with tears.
"He's a jackass,"
she said, in a choked tone.
"Yeah – but he's our jackass right?" Leo said with a little smile. "He's
really sorry, Abbey – there's just that damn stubborn pride of his getting
in the way of him telling you so himself. Give him an opening and he
will."
"He knew I'd never
agree to him going for a second term," she said, turning to face Leo. "He
knew it and that's why he didn't talk to me about it. He knew I'd talk him
out of it."
"He's a good
president, Abbey - no, he's a *great* president," Leo told her. "You know
what it feels like to do something you're great at and that you enjoy -
and in the process also to do some good in the world. If someone told you
that you couldn't be a doctor any more…" He trailed off with a shrug. She
gave a long sigh.
"Damn you, Leo for
always being the voice of reason," she said with a shaky laugh.
"I know. It's
annoying, isn't it?" He grinned. She shook her head.
"If I hadn't made him sleep in the spare bedroom he'd never have pulled
that stupid stunt with the motorbike," she
sighed.
"Oh he was cooking
up this storm way before that," Leo told her. "Don't beat yourself up
about it – if it hadn't been the motorbike thing it would have been
something else. The past few weeks have been rough on all of us but it's
been worse for him. He doesn't like to show it but it eats at him."
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