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Perfect Pic by CDavis
This is a birthday story
written especially for Sergeeva - so it contains plenty of Walter-worship!
Huge thanks to Phoebe for
helping with so many great details
Big thanks to Gaby for beta
reading help
Posted 29th January, 2001
Scarred
By
Xanthe
I would know Walter’s body by touch alone. Even if I were blindfolded,
I know that I could single him out using only my fingertips. In the dark, as he
lies sleeping, and I lie awake as usual, I can trace my fingers along the lines
that tell the story of his life without moving my head from the comfortable
pillow of his broad chest. My Walter is like a map. My fingertips follow the
tributaries of the several long scars on his shoulder as they curve and flow
into the river that is the deep, slightly ridged scar beneath his left armpit.
It trails down into a valley just below his ribcage, and comes to a sudden stop
in a circular lake of shiny flesh just above his left hip. In the light it’s
hard to see the scars – they’re very old, and faded to the palest of faint
white lines, but in the dark they’re old familiar friends, easily accessible
to the touch of my idly questing fingers.
It’s late…or maybe I should say early.
I can see the moon making its steady journey across the sky outside
through the cabin window. Walter always wears his watch – and only his watch
– in bed, and the illuminated face tells me that two o’ clock has turned
into three o’ clock – so daylight is still a long way off. I’m content
though, even in my insomniac state. I always did have trouble sleeping, but now
it’s much worse. It doesn’t matter; I’m content to just lie on my warm,
comforting, human pillow, and trace my fingers over his sleeping body. I used to
be more restless, but now I can spend hours just staring into space. Sometimes
the moon moves from one side of the window to the other in the time it takes for
me to blink.
I move my fingers, leaping over the
landmarks that form the topography of his body. From his ribcage, across the
furry forest of hair on his chest, down to the next major landmark – the
small, round, slightly splayed scar on his lower belly. In the dark it reminds
me of a cloud, or a nebula, with an intense, dense centre, and a swirling outer
mass. This is where he took a bullet because he refused to give up looking for
the man who murdered Scully’s sister. I remember sitting outside his hospital
room all night, just watching him sleep, and he never knew. We weren’t lovers
then. It strikes me suddenly, that he doesn’t know that I watched him that
night. He, who knows more about me than anybody else in this world – he
doesn’t know that. I’m intrigued by that thought for a moment, and consider
it, my fingers still resting on the healed bullet wound on his belly. Every
blemish on his body tells a story. He is the sum of each and every one of them
because they are all a part of him, and, in some way, helped to form him, and
make him the man he is – and yet there are some parts of him I do not know,
some stories as yet untold. What, for instance, is the story of the star-shaped
scar on his right arm? Or the long jagged tear on his inner thigh?
“Fox, what are you thinking?”
His voice startles me. I had no idea
he was awake. I move his wrist and glance at his watch again. 4 a.m. I don’t
know where the last hour went.
“I was thinking about your scars.”
I move my lips to caress the blemished skin on his shoulder, and his hand
moves down my back to cup my buttocks.
“Uh-huh.” So Walter - wary,
amused, and encouraging, all in one tone of voice.
“I was thinking that there were
stories here – parts of you that I don’t know,” I whisper. “I know the
story of this…” My fingers find the bullet wound on his belly unerringly
in the dark, and he gives what might be a groan, or a chuckle, or maybe a
whimper of arousal bearing in mind the proximity of my fingers to his groin.
“…But not of this.” I move my hand down even further, to caress the jagged
tear on his inner thigh, and now there’s no doubt about his arousal. I can
feel it rise up and bump against my arm.
“How long have you been awake,
Fox?” His hand is warm and comforting on my ass. I slide my fingers
along his hardening shaft, and stroke it firmly, loving the way it becomes even
harder under my caress.
“A few hours I think.” I tighten
my fingers around his cock, squeezing hard and rubbing up and down, and he gives
a little gasp. His thumb slips easily into the cleft between my ass cheeks. My
own cock is hard now. His other hand finds it easily, and wraps around it. For a
few moments we are incoherent, my mouth working his lips with my own as
purposefully as our two hands are working in tandem on each other’s cocks. I
think I come first, and he follows a little while later, but I might be
mistaken. I reach across his body and find the washcloth we keep on the
nightstand for just these kinds of night-time occurrences, and clean us both up.
As I return the cloth to the nightstand, I slide across his body until I am
almost lying on top of him, and gaze down into those dark, knowing eyes. I shift
away from that searching look, and trace one finger over his scarred shoulder,
musing out loud.
“It puzzles me, Walter…all these
untold stories written on your skin.” I don’t meet his gaze again - he knows
what is in my eyes in any case. He understands. I dip my face to his golden
body, and gently nuzzle at the unmarked skin where his neck meets his shoulder.
This is the part of him I love the most. This particular place on his body is so
sensitive, and very soft. I drink in the smell of him, and his arms wrap
themselves around my torso, holding me very gently. I don’t like to be held
too tightly these days. I don’t like to feel immobilised or tied down. I have no idea
why - I used to be fine with it.
“A whole lifetime written in your
flesh…like a book, if only we could read the words.” I move my head, and
kiss his right arm, finding the star-shaped scar just above his elbow. “This
one here for example - this one is a mystery. I don’t know this one’s
story.” Some I can guess, but not this one. I think it's quite old because it
has a weathered, faded feel to it. It isn't very big - about the size of my thumbnail, maybe.
“All this talk of stories when you
should be asleep,” he grunts, but he takes pity on me all the same. He always
does. He always did, even before we were lovers. So many times in his office he
told me “no” but did the exact opposite of his words. So many times he
warned me against a course of action for being too dangerous but then took it
upon himself, dangerous or not. My man’s bark is, and always has been, much
worse than his bite…although I like those too! His white teeth shine in the
moonlight, fascinating me, as he smiles at me. I smile back, teasingly, and he
swats me lightly on the rump.
“All right, my insomniac friend,
I’ll tell you the story of the scar on my arm.” He puts one hand behind his
head, and muses for a moment. I like the way his pectorals bunch beneath his
skin, and the mixture of shadow and light painted on his features by the
moonbeams shining through the window. His
wide jaw is covered in a fine layer of dark stubble, and the planes of his face
are flatter, and more angular in the dim light.
“Once upon a time…” he begins
and I laugh out loud, and pinch the fleshy part of his underarm. “All the best
stories start like this,” he says reprovingly. I subside, and, with one last
grin at him, rest my head on his chest once more, allowing the sound of his
voice to lull and soothe me. “Once upon a time, there was a boy who grew up on
a farm in Iowa,” he says, and I close my eyes. I know that he spent his
childhood in extreme poverty on a farm. He doesn’t talk about it very often but I
know those years weren’t the happiest of his life. “One day, the boy went
out on a cold night in midwinter and…”
“Stop!” I raise my head and frown
at him. “That’s way too fast. How old was the boy? And what was he wearing
on this cold night? Was there a moon, and why was he going out at all if it was
so cold?”
He sighs and fixes me with his
patented Walter glare – the one I long since stopped being remotely scared of.
“Details are important, Walter,” I
tell him, and I suppose that I can’t keep the despair out of my voice, because
a sadness that we both understand far too well to talk about flits into his
eyes, and his expression softens. He nods.
“All right. Details.” He takes a
deep breath and I go with his chest as it rises beneath me. “The boy was about
8. He was dressed in jeans and two thick sweaters that his grandmother knitted
for him out of mismatched balls of wool – she didn’t have enough of the same
colour. So they were…imaginative.” He winces, expressively, and I laugh.
“Blues and oranges and yellows and reds all jumbled up next to each other. The
boy looked like a beacon - which wasn’t a good idea, because he was going out
poaching.”
That brings me up short. I lift my
head again. “Poaching? You? Walter Skinner? Assistant Director of the biggest
law enforcement agency in the world. You went poaching?”
“I was eight,” he growls,
poking his finger into my thigh reprovingly. “Now, do you want to hear the
story or not?”
“I wouldn’t miss it for anything.
Poaching…”I shake my head and then replace it on his body. He chuckles, and
the sound reverberates through the deep cavity of his chest, making my ear
tickle.
“Okay. The pantry was empty, and the
boy’s mother had spent the evening crying because they had no food – and the
boy’s belly was so hungry that it gnawed and gnawed at him until he couldn’t
bear either the sound of it or his mother’s tears any more.” He says all
this very quickly, and I don’t think he’d have said it at all if I hadn’t
made the crack about him going out poaching. I stroke his chest gently, and he
continues in a less strained tone of voice. “The boy crept out of the house,
because he knew his mother wouldn’t approve. His father was in town drinking
away what little money they had which was why the boy was having to go out
poaching in the first place.”
“How was the boy going to explain
several dead animals to his mother the next day without giving away that he’d
gone out poaching?” I interrupt again.
“He was a boy,” Walter explains,
with an infinitely patient sigh. “He didn’t think about the consequences of
his actions – like some other people we could mention,” he growls, and I
laugh, and bestow a quick kiss on his nipple.
“Anyway, the boy set off. It was
dark, and he was cold, and lonely. In Iowa, in the countryside, away from the
big towns, it gets darker than you can ever imagine. The sky seems so near, and
the stars far brighter and more numerous than you’d ever know they could be if
you live in the city.” He pauses for breath and I close my eyes and snuggle
against his furry chest hair. I can see him quite vividly – 8 years old, a
little skinny, wearing those ludicrous, brightly- coloured sweaters, his brown
eyes big within a pale face, framed by dark black curls.
“Did you have curly hair?” I
glance up, and he frowns, exasperated, and then rolls his eyes, giving in.
“It’s true that my hair wasn’t
exactly straight,” he admits, making it clear that’s all he’s going to say
on the subject.
“Curls.” I nod, satisfied, and put
my head back down on his chest. I can hear a distinct ‘hmph’ from deep
inside his chest, and grin.
“Anyway,” he says,
stressing the word loudly to get us back on track, “this boy went out in the
dark, in the cold, taking his father’s shotgun with him. He walked for about a
mile through the snow…”
“Snow? You didn’t mention snow
before. Were you dressed warmly enough in the sweaters? Shouldn’t you have
worn a coat?”
“Yes, of course I should,” he
sighs. “But the coats were kept downstairs by the door, and my mother was
waiting in the front room for my father to come home, so I let myself out by
shinning down the tree outside my bedroom window.”
“Ah-ha. I see. What about mittens?
Or a hat?”
“I did have some mittens which I
found in my closet, along with an old toboggan hat which my grandmother had
knitted for me – it was red and blue and had a little bobble on top as I
recall. Are there any other questions of a sartorial nature before I
continue?”
“Yes.” I take my life into my
hands, grinning at him cheekily. “What kind of mittens please?”
“The kind on a string that little
kids wear so they don’t lose them – only I had to string them through the
sleeves of my top sweater rather than inside the sleeves of my coat because, as
we’ve already established, I wasn’t wearing a coat,” he tells me and I
sigh dreamily, thoroughly enjoying the mental image of my lover as a small boy,
all dressed up for his night-time adventure.
“Is it safe to continue?” He asks.
I nod, and he gives a little grunt. “Okay…so, to recap - he’s borrowed one
of his father’s guns, which, before you ask, was kept upstairs in his
father’s den, and he’s climbed out of the house and walked through the snow
- and now we pick the story up again.” He takes a deep breath and then
launches into the next part of the story at top speed, clearly labouring under
the misapprehension that I won’t interrupt if he talks really fast. “The boy
came to a neighbouring farm, which he knew to be well stocked with fat
pheasants. So, he snuck in over the barbed wire fence, tearing one of his
sweaters in the process, and…”
“He snuck?” I raise my head again,
catching him in mid-flow. “You snuck somewhere, Walter? Boy, does that change
my worldview. I never would have imagined that you’d sneak anywhere.”
“I’ll have you know that I’ve
snuck with the best in my time,” he tells me, grinning.
“So, you snuck into this farm
looking to poach some hapless pheasants, and what? An irate farmer shot you? You
tripped over your own feet and shot yourself with your father’s gun?” I
press my lips against the faded, star-shaped scar on his right arm.
“Nope.” He shakes his head,
looking a bit shame-faced. “You see, it isn’t actually a good idea to try
and hunt pheasants without a dog to flush them out of the undergrowth, but the
boy was just a boy, and he didn’t have the whole plan figured out. He just
thought he could go in there, shoot a couple of birds, and take them back home
to his mother to stop her crying.” I kiss his scar again, and he wraps his
arms around me, and squeezes for a second before releasing me, and continuing.
“So, he found himself in a dark wood, and he knew there were plenty of
pheasants there somewhere but he couldn’t see them – which is why he
needed a dog. As he was tiptoeing
through some trees, he felt sure that someone was following him…or something.”
He pauses for dramatic effect.
“Something? What? Like
Bigfoot? Oh boy!” I can’t help laughing again.
“I was an imaginative child.” He
shrugs. “My head was full of monsters and werewolves.”
“Ah! So that’s why you signed off
my reports for all those years!” I grin insanely, and he grins back, those
white teeth of his shining in the moonlight. “You already believed in
monsters!”
“It’s true.” He sighs. “I want
to believe.”
I roll my eyes and pinch him soundly
for that comment.
“So there was the boy, walking through a
forest on a cold night in winter, his breath steaming the air in front of him,
and he was so sure that something was following him that he started to run…and
as he ran, it began to run too…the boy could hear it panting behind him, could
feel its warm breath on the back of his neck…and he started screaming but he
didn’t dare look behind him because he was too scared of what he might
see…and he was running so fast that he was out of breath, and it was getting
closer, and closer…so close that he knew that all it had to do was to reach
out one wizened, gnarled, seven-fingered hairy hand, and then he would be
dead…and that was when he fell down a slope, and got tangled up in the bushes
at the bottom.” He stops, and I look at him, enthralled.
“You missed your vocation. Someone
should have hired you to make horror movies,” I comment, and I can see he’s
rather flattered by this. “Well, what happened next?” I prod him with my
index finger. “How did you get the scar? Did the monster sink his long, curved
fangs into your arm?”
“No… the ‘monster’ turned out
to be the owner of the farm. His dog had heard me when I cut my sweater on the
wire fence and started barking, so the farmer had come out to investigate.
He’d tried calling to me but I was running so fast I didn’t hear him.”
“Was he angry?”
“No…” Walter shakes his head,
ruefully. “I think he felt rather sorry for me actually. I must have looked
pretty bad – wearing all those threadbare sweaters, my face as white as a
sheet…and with a great big thorn sticking out of my arm – I’d fallen onto a
thicket of prickly ash, and been speared straight through. I’d also twisted my
ankle, and grazed the side of my face. Now, Iowa farmers are a surly,
self-sufficient breed, but that steely façade usually hides the kindest of
hearts, so…”
“You don’t say,” I murmur,
smiling into the chest of my own former denizen of Iowa.
“…so he just picked me up and
carried me back to his house, while I told him an unconvincing story about
having been sleepwalking.”
“You lied? Walter! I’m shocked.”
“I did indeed lie.” He nods
gravely. “Anyway, he sat me in a chair by the fire, gave me a glass of
homemade apple brandy to warm me, and called his wife. She clucked over me, and
brought a bowl of warm water to bathe my grazes, while he explained to me, man
to man, that he’d have to pull that thorn out of my arm and that it would hurt.
He told me to be brave, and explained that when he was in the army in World War
Two, he’d once had a bullet lodged in his leg. They had been miles away from
medical help, so his buddy had stuck a bullet between my farmer’s teeth for
him to bite down on so he wouldn’t scream and alert the enemy to their
whereabouts, and then he’d dug into my farmer’s leg with his knife to get
the bullet out. My farmer told me that I had to be similarly brave while he
pulled that sharp spear out of my arm. I very solemnly asked him for a bullet to
bite on to help me be as brave as him, and he laughed and gave me a wad of cloth
instead. So I closed my eyes, bit down hard, and he removed that sharp thorn
from my arm – and his wife bathed it and wrapped it in a bandage.”
I can see him so clearly in my
mind’s eye: eight years old, eyes wide, still wearing those
absurd mittens on a string, his sweater stained with blood, being as brave and
stoic then as he is now.
“And what did the farmer do about
the poaching?” I ask, and a gentle smile plays across his warm, sensual lips.
“Well, like I said, the farmers of
Iowa are a kind-hearted breed beneath the gruff, no-nonsense exterior. He gave
me a little lecture about stealing, but he obviously knew a bit about my family,
and how poor we were. He and his wife didn’t have any kids, and were
relatively well off, so he told me that if I came and worked for him after
school for a couple of hours each day, he’d pay me for my labour. He was a
good man. I spent some of the happiest times of my life on his farm, listening
to his stories about the war. I think it was because him that I decided to enlist for Vietnam on my 18th
birthday…well, that and a desire to get as far away from home as I could.”
He gives a little shrug, and my fingers go, unbidden, to the ridged mass of
scars down the left hand side of his body, and I caress them gently.
“Vietnam.” I kiss the long snaking
scars on his shoulder, and he strokes my hair. He is quite still beneath me, and
I know that this memory is one that he might find too hard to share.
“Yes. Vietnam.” He puts his
fingers over mine, and stills their ceaseless exploration. “But that’s
another story, Fox.”
“Is it one I’ll ever hear?” I
glance up at him hopefully, and he smiles, his eyes sad.
“Yes, but not tonight. It’s late.
Let’s save it for the next night you can’t sleep.”
“Tomorrow night then,” I predict
and he sighs, and kisses my nose.
“Tomorrow,” he agrees. “Now
sleep.” He wraps his arms around my body, and I close my eyes, and find, much
to my surprise, that sleep comes quickly.
I’m not sure how many long, lazy
days we’ve spent in Walter’s cabin out here in the woods. I just know it’s
been peaceful, and the sun always seems to shine, and the sky always seems to be
blue, although there’s a definite chill in the air. It’s late fall and
winter will be upon us soon. I’m not sure how long we’ll stay here – I
don’t think Walter intends for us to spend the winter here, because it gets
pretty cold up here in the mountains, and it will inevitably snow, but I’m
happy enough to do whatever Walter thinks is best. That’s another thing
that’s changed about me but I figure that as long as I’m happy and he’s
happy, nothing else matters. Walter seems to be pretty much in agreement with me
on that. I worry a lot less about the future these days. I know that I used to
want to be out there, chasing the truth, but now I guess I’m more preoccupied with
the past. Walter says that’s fine, and we should just take it one day at a
time, and he’s right of course, as always.
I sit and watch him while he chops the
wood for the fire. I started reading a new book this morning and it’s so good
that I’m about half way through already, but to be honest, no matter how good
the book is, it’s much more interesting watching him. It’s kind of a
ritual. First of all, he strips off his thick, red and black plaid shirt, and
hangs it on a nail on the side of the cabin, and then he picks up his axe.
It’s heavy – I can’t lift it but then I’m not as strong as I used to be.
He strides out into the clearing behind the cabin, puts some wood on the block,
and then concentrates for a second, before swinging that axe high and fast over
his head. All the muscles in his arms and torso move under his skin, rippling
effortlessly as he demolishes the firewood with his axe. He’s got such a
smooth style, all fluid grace, that taut golden skin glowing in the sunlight.
After a little while he starts to work up a sweat, and that’s when he becomes
particularly mesmerizing. I give up any pretence of reading, put my book aside,
and just watch. The sun is anointing him in its balmy, yellow glow, and the
small fringe of hair at the back of his head is wet with sweat, making it seem
darker than the steel grey colour I know it to be. His chest hair sparkles with
little droplets of moisture, as if it has been laced with hidden diamonds that
catch the light periodically, and his lean waist is accentuated all the more by
the sheer width of his magnificent shoulders. His naked upper body forms a
perfect triangle from shoulder to waist, and then he tapers down to endlessly
long legs clad in faded denim jeans, and finishes at the soft, mustard-yellow
leather timberlands that grace his feet. I’m fond of those jeans of his –
they hug his ass tightly, revealing that rounded, biteable butt in all its
glory. Somehow this seems to be Walter’s natural environment. It’s strange,
because for most of the time I’ve known him, I’ve only ever seen him in his
office uniform of white shirt and exquisitely tailored suits, and he always
looked perfectly at home in them so I would never have guessed that those suits
were hiding this backwoodsman that he is at heart.
“You okay?” He asks, pausing for a
moment, and leaning on the axe, sweat dripping down his wide forehead, and
splattering on the ground.
“Oh, I’m fine. Just enjoying the
view.” I wink lasciviously, and he snorts.
“Do you ever think about anything
other than sex?” he growls, picking up the axe again.
“No - is that a problem?” I grin,
and he laughs out loud. I like making him laugh. It didn’t take me long to
learn how to do it, and now I can’t stop because it’s such a good sound.
“No.” He grins back at me. “But
first I have to finish chopping this wood – sex will only keep us warm for so
long.”
"Spoilsport." I make a face at him, and pick up my book again, but maybe I'm tired because the words seem
jumbled and meaningless, and anyway I'm finding it hard to concentrate with this half-naked vision of masculine
perfection standing in front of me, grunting with effort as he heaves the axe over his shoulder again. It's late
afternoon now, and Walter is dappled in the shadow of the nearby trees. It settles over him like camouflage,
obscuring some parts of his body and revealing others. It's tantalising, almost like a striptease – but then, as he
so rightly pointed out, I do have sex on the brain. I can barely see those scars that I caressed last night.
I know them intimately, each curve and dip, but in the blend of sunlight and shadow shading his body
they're virtually invisible.
“Would you like a beer?” He’s
been sweating steadily for ages, and has piled up an impressive amount of
chopped wood.
“Yeah.” He pauses again, and wipes
his hand over his forehead, then pulls a luridly checked handkerchief from his
back pocket, and ties it, bandana-style, around his head to soak up the sweat.
“Mmm - that looks good. Maybe we can
play pirates later,” I tease and he rolls his eyes.
“Where’s my beer?” he demands,
that good-humoured smile never leaving his face.
I put my book aside and wander into
the cabin. The fridge contains an entire section devoted entirely to beer,
because we’re the kind of guys who have our priorities straight in life. I
grab a couple of cans, open one, take a long gulp of the cool nectar inside, and then leave them both on
the kitchen table because I need to take a leak. After I’ve peed, I wash my
hands, gazing absently at myself in the mirror, lost in thought. Outside, Walter
is grunting as he chops firewood. I open the bathroom window, and poke my head
through it.
“Hey, you must thirsty – want a
beer?” I ask him.
He stops what he’s doing, and smiles
at me, gently, maybe even a little sadly. “That would be great,” he says
softly. “But I’m about ready to finish up out here. Why don’t I come in
and wash up, and then we can read for a while?”
“Sounds good to me – I need to
start a new book. I finished mine last night.” I close the bathroom window,
and
wash my hands. When I wander back into the living room, Walter’s just
coming in from outside, where he’s been chopping wood. He’s wearing this
sexy bandana and looks like some kind of pirate captain. I feel a need to be
ravished coming on…
“I like the pirate look,” I leer
at him. He chuckles, but his brown eyes are looking at me keenly. “Have you
finished already?” I watch him button up his shirt. “Or did you just stop
for a beer? Want me to get you one?”
He looks at me with that same
searching, dark-eyed gaze.
“Sure.” He nods, a tight little
smile on his lips. I go into the kitchen, and open the fridge – and then I see
that there are a couple of beers on the table, one of them already opened.
They’re cold to the touch, so maybe he snuck in for a drink when I was in the
bathroom. I grab them and wander back into the living room where’s he lying on
the couch. He beckons me over.
“I’m tired. Want to take a nap
with me?” I know this is Walter-speak for “you’re tired, I want you to
take a nap, Fox,” but I indulge him anyway, and climb between his legs, lying
with my back on his chest. He covers us both with a blanket, and I relax against
his warm body. This feels good. He smells of a combination of sweat and fresh
air, and I love that smell.
I don’t know why he worries about my
sleeping habits – even after napping half the afternoon I’m about done in
when bedtime comes. I blame the fresh mountain air – it knocks us both out.
I’m wide wake at 2 a.m. as usual though. The moon is just peeping through the
window – Walter doesn’t bother with drapes up here in the mountain, and
I’m glad about that because I love looking out, my head arranged on his chest,
my fingers idly playing with his body. The mass of scar tissue on the left hand
side of his body is thick, and furrowed beneath his armpit, and I can’t even
begin to think how such injuries were caused. He told me once that his wounds
were so bad that the VC stripped his uniform and left him for dead, and even the
corpsmen clearing up the next day were going to stick him in a body bag. There
had to be tangible evidence of that on his body, and I know, without him ever
saying as much, that it’s this scarring on his left shoulder, reaching all the
way down to his hip, that is a legacy of Vietnam. There are other scars too,
which I suspect also date back to that time, but this is the main one.
“Awake again?” His voice rouses me
from my reverie.
“Yes. You owe me a story, big
guy.”
“So I do.” He sits up a little way
and rearranges his pillow, and I wait until he’s done and then settle down on
his chest, where I belong. I like listening to his voice, distilled through the
cavities of his body, part vibration, part speech. “Okay. Let me tell you how
this scar was formed.” He covers my hand with his own, and we linger for a
moment over the scar in question. “It was January 1971…” he begins, and I
have to interrupt him straight away.
“What happened to ‘Once Upon A
Time’?”
“Once Upon A Time is for fairy
tales…kid’s stuff,” he says with a little smile. “This is a different
kind of story – a war story.”
“Okay.” I look up at him, suddenly
worried. “Are you sure you’re okay with this? We don’t have to do this. We
could start with this one instead.” My hand wanders down to between his
thighs, and finds the long, jagged tear there. He gives a little moan.
“Keep your hand there much longer
and there won’t be any kind of storytelling going on in this bed tonight,”
he says through gritted teeth. “There will be a different kind of activity
entirely.” I laugh, and remove my hand, placing it back on his scarred chest.
“Seriously though – are you sure
you’re okay with this?”
In the moonlight, and without his glasses, his eyes
seem larger and darker than ever. He nods thoughtfully.
“It was a long time ago, Fox. It
happened. I’ve lived with it for a long time. Talking about it doesn’t
change anything – it’s always here, with me, marked on my body, reminding
me, every day of my life. I should have told you a long time ago, anyway.”
“No ‘shoulds’,” I shrug. “I
hate shoulds – they take all the fun out of life.” I settle back down on his
chest and he strokes my hair for a long time before starting again.
“Okay. It was January 1971. I was
out on patrol – we were officially on a recon mission… Reconnaissance,” he
amends, seeing me raise my head, unfamiliar with the military jargon. “It was
cold – I know people think it was sweltering hot all the time in the jungle in
‘Nam but let me tell you that out in the highlands, in the middle of winter,
it got pretty chilly as well as wet. Hmm, no interruptions to ask me what I was
wearing?”
He nudges me playfully, and I shake my
head solemnly. “Nope. I figure this is one story
that you have to tell your own way…and anyway, I kind of guessed you’d be
wearing a green uniform.” I grin cheekily, and he swats the side of my butt
lightly in retaliation.
“Well I was wearing a
uniform of course. I was
also carrying an M-60 machine gun, and I had a sawn off shotgun strapped over my
back as well, to say nothing of the 45-caliber pistol I had stuffed in my
shoulder holster.”
“Was it usual to carry that much
weaponry?” I wonder how he could even lift it. I have a different mental image
of him now than I had last night. This time he’s grown a few feet, but he’s
still skinny. I can see the beginnings of the raw musculature that will become
the honed body I’m cushioned on now, but he isn’t quite as bulked up back
then. He has a buzz cut, his dark hair barely more than stubble on top of his
head, but his deep dark eyes haven’t changed – only they’re a bit younger,
a bit wider, and more naive.
“No it wasn’t usual,” he says
softly. “You see, Fox, the thing is that I had become the kind of guy that the
rest of the platoon kept well clear of. I was one of the ones who’d lost it
– gone kamikaze was how my friend Jason used to refer to it. When I started my
tour of duty I was such an innocent. I was just a farm boy from Iowa – I’d never
even been to a different state before I joined the marines, let alone another
country. I was full of high ideals about patriotism, and serving my people. I
came crashing down to earth on the day, two months into my tour, when I shot
that 10 year old Vietnamese kid who wandered into our camp covered in
grenades.”
I remember, vividly, every detail of
that conversation he had with me, years ago, long before we became lovers, when
he was trying to stop me resigning over Scully’s abduction. I hated myself
then, and he understood those feelings of hate and self-punishment all too well.
“When I told you I shot that boy’s
head off, I’m wasn’t lying,” he says softly, and I look up. “You do
recall me telling you that?” he asks, and I nod.
“Of course. Eidetic memory
remember?” I point my index finger at my forehead, and then our eyes meet and
I realise what I’ve just said. “Well, you know.” I shrug. “I do remember
it, Walter. I can’t imagine what it must have been like but you had to do it
– if you hadn’t shot him then even more people could have been hurt.”
“I know. Rationally speaking I know
that, but like I said, I meant it literally – that boy’s head came off his
shoulders. It burst in front of me like a watermelon smashed to pieces by the
wheel of a car.” He takes a deep breath, and I sit up, suddenly ashamed of
myself.
“No more, Walter. I’m sorry. I
didn’t mean to make you re-live bad memories.”
“No…you see, I’ve never told
anyone exactly what happened, not even Sharon. I used to think it was because I
was protecting her, but I was just shutting her out, as usual. I’d like to
tell you the story, if you think you can stand to hear it. I think that, after
all these years, I’d like to tell someone, and I’d very much like it to be
you.”
He wraps his arms around his body, as
if hugging himself, and I unwrap them, and wrap my own arms around his body
instead, angling my face so that it rests just under his chin, my body draped
over his. He isn’t alone, and I can take as good care of him as he takes of
me. His hands settle on my back, stroking absently, and I hold him tight until
his heartbeat has slowed back to normal.
“Go on, Walter. It’s okay,” I
whisper, and he nods, his chin tapping the top of my head.
“After that I changed. I started
taking drugs – hell, most of us did, but I took more than my fair share. I
stopped being that clean-cut, innocent little farm boy from Iowa, and I became a
disillusioned, desperate junkie. I volunteered for every dangerous mission
going because I knew - I just felt in my bones - that I was going to die out there. It
was like a premonition – and it came true.”
He pauses for a while, and the fingers
stroking my back are shaking slightly.
“I was 18 years old, full of fire,
and I decided that when I died I was damn
well going to take as many VCs with me as I could. So, I made sure I was fully
armoured up for every mission, and I went at each and every engagement like a
man possessed. I was a damn good fighter – a killing machine my commander
called me, and he liked that about me. You see, there were some commanders back
then who used to send out patrols not to gather information, or to perform a
search and destroy mission. No, they used to send us out deliberately to be the
target for enemy ambushes.”
I look up, startled by this
information. “They deliberately sent you into traps?” I ask him. “Why?”
“Because their goal was to get a
fight going, and they didn’t care how it was done. We were bait, canon
fodder, but we weren’t stupid, we knew what was going on – and I volunteered
for each and every one of those missions because if I was going to die I damn
well wanted to meet my death head on – I didn’t want to skulk around the
camp trying to avoid it.”
“Sounds like you,” I comment,
kissing his collarbone.
“Really? I thought I’d lost that
kamikaze tendency during all those years spent sitting behind a desk,” he
retorts.
“Nah, it just became more covert. It
usually came out to play every time I got myself up shit creek without a paddle
as I recall.”
He grins, and I’m delighted to have
won a smile from him at this time of all times.
“Maybe you’re right. Although I
like to think that death changed me,” he murmurs.
I lie on his chest, still holding him
tight, waiting for what must, inevitably, come next. Finally, he clears his
throat.
“It was a well planned ambush. They
had laid claymore mines at a bottleneck point on one of our regular patrol
paths. The mines were operated by remote – the first thing I knew about them
was when bits of my buddy in front of me were suddenly plastered all over my
uniform. There was a terrible roaring noise…took me a while to figure out that
it came from my own throat. I was screaming my head off as I ran, ducking and
firing my M-60 crazily into the bushes. Half my squad was killed outright by the
shrapnel from the mines, and they picked the rest of us off from behind with
grenades and gunfire. I remember leaving my body…”
His voice falters, and I tighten my
grasp around his chest, keeping him warm, and safe. I know he isn’t
comfortable with his near death experience, but I also know that it fascinates
him as well. That 8-year-old boy with the vivid imagination is still there,
inside him, painting even more monsters and demons when enough exist already in
what he suffered.
“What’s strange is how calm and
peaceful I felt,” he whispers. “I was surrounded by the most intense,
healing white light, and I felt so good. I watched the VCs strip my body, and
take my gun…and then, because they wanted to make sure we were all dead, or
maybe just for the hell of it, one of them stabbed his bayonet into my side. I
didn’t feel a thing, because, I guess, I wasn’t even there – I wasn’t in
my body - I was dead.”
My fingers spider down his side, and
find the deep, circular indentation just above his hip. This was where that
bayonet went into him.
“I might not have felt it then, but
I sure as hell felt it two weeks later when I woke up in a hospital in
Saigon,” he says, with a wry chuckle. “My injuries were mainly shrapnel
wounds, but…” He takes a deep breath, then grabs my hand, and traces it all
over the dense network of scar tissue on the left hand side of his body,
“…some of them were caused by my buddies bones and bits of their gear being
blown into me from the force of the mine explosions.”
Oh shit. I had no idea.
“Oh, Walter.” I sit up, take his
face between my hands, and kiss him gently on the lips. “I’m sorry. I’m so
sorry.” I’m kneeling with my legs on either side of his thighs, holding his
face, and his intense, dark-eyed gaze meets mine.
“Like I said, it was a long time
ago,” he murmurs. “And I’ve learned that I have nothing to fear from
memories. They’re part of me and I’m lucky that I know how and why they
shaped me.” He presses his lips to mine, and I open my mouth to accept his
questing tongue. He understands. Of course he understands.
“There are times to remember and
times when it’s fine to forget,” I whisper when we draw back from the kiss.
I hold his face in my hands again, and look deep into those dark, expressive
eyes. “I’d like to make love to you,” I tell him, feeling his cock
hardening beneath me.
“I’d like that.” He smiles, and
I kiss him again, then move my lips down to his neck, and hold him there, pinned
against the pillows, while I suck urgently at his skin. My lips continue
travelling down, licking over a collarbone and then settling on a nipple. He
groans, and twists under me, bucking slightly, but I hold him down. He likes it
when I take charge, and make him accept my caresses. He’s a man more used to
pushing comfort aside, but one of the things he loves about me is that I don’t
let him. I make him take it, and he can’t put up all those walls, and hide
behind those stony buttresses of silent strength with me. I make him take the
journey, make him take my love, and he has a chance to rest awhile, away from
the memories – inside my strong arms for a change.
He whimpers as I push him down, my
hands, lips, and tongue devouring his golden- skinned, tautly muscled body. I
grab some lube from the nightstand, and he lies completely open and uninhibited,
as I push his thighs apart, and position myself in his entrance. He always looks
beautiful to me, but never more so than in this moment, when he has shared so
much of himself, and is lying, legs akimbo, waiting for me. He trusts me - with
his memories, with his body, with his heart and soul, and that is a trust that I
would never betray. I love him you see, and while I think that he has much the
worse part of the bargain, I know that he loves me too. I prepare him with my
fingers and he moans and writhes underneath me. He's very open, and it doesn't
take long before he's ready for me. I smile down at him and he smiles back as I snub my cock into his
anus. He gasps and pushes up under me, trying to take as much of me as he
can into his body. I guide myself into him, until I’m lodged to the hilt, and
then take hold of his cock in my hand. It’s hard, and responsive under me –
just like him – and we lock gazes as I begin to move slowly, in and out of
him, stroking his cock in time to my thrusts. The sadness of the past will
always be in his eyes, but so is the joy of the present. He is whole, one, the
living sum of all that has happened to him, and a better, nobler soul I never
knew or could ever hope to. I make sure that he comes first, and follow on
after, before withdrawing. I clean us both up and then fall, sated, on top of
him, my head on his shoulder, which is where I always seem to come to rest.
He nuzzles at my hair with his lips,
and strokes me idly, languidly, lost in a post-coital haze.
“It’s four a.m.,” he murmurs.
“Will you be able to sleep now?”
“Probably.” I rest my hands on his
chest and prop my chin on them, gazing up at him. “Now that I’ve heard my
bedtime story. Thank you for that, Walter.”
His fingers trace their way down the
three circular scars on each of my cheeks, and then to the top of the long, thin
line of puckered flesh on my chest. He picks up each of my hands and gently
presses a kiss to the deep scars that disfigure my wrists.
“You’re welcome, Fox,” he
murmurs.
I'm feeling tired now. I turn onto my
side, and lie, still draped over him, gazing into the darkness outside the
cabin. Walter brought me here after I begged him not to let them run any more of
their damn tests on me in the hospital. Despite all those tests, the truth
remains that they don’t know what happened to me during my abduction, and I
can’t tell them because I don’t know either. It’s strange sometimes, to
look into the mirror and see these scars on my face, and not know how they got
there. Did I suffer much, I wonder? Was I in pain? Sometimes I think I remember
little details, like a light shining in my eyes, and a man leaning over me, his
features morphing into a different face as he spoke to me, but they’re few and
far between.
The doctors say I’m unlikely to ever
recover the memory of those six missing months, and to be honest that scares me
a little. Six months missing. Six whole months gone from my mind, leaving only
these scars behind to show that I was even alive during that time. Six months.
How can time just disappear like that? My short-term memory is still shot to
pieces, sometimes jumbled, sometimes lucid, although, strangely, my memories of
my life up to my abduction are crystal clear. I can remember specific incidents
from my childhood as if they happened yesterday, but yesterday itself is often
hazy to me. It’s usually worse when I’m tired – then everything can get
mixed up in my mind. I’m getting better though, with Walter’s help. We’ve
been lovers for two years - ever since I watched him almost die after being
poisoned because of his involvement with me, and my work. That was the second
time I sat in a hospital corridor all night, watching over him and worrying
about him. His beautiful body was covered in ugly dark veins, and he was having
trouble breathing. I would have done anything to save his life, and I vowed then
and there that if he lived I would tell him how I felt. The memory of the first
night we spent together is still as sharp as ever in my mind, thank god. I’m
grateful that I have that much at least – they’re
the most important memories, after all. I'm hoping my condition will improve
enough for me to return to work - and to give Walter back that old Fox, the one
he fell in love with, but in the meantime he never complains. Being out here in
his cabin in the mountains has made me
calmer, and helped me recover physically from what was done to me. I’m getting
stronger every day. Some days, like today, I don’t forget anything at all.
As I lie here, tracing Walter’s
Vietnam scar, I wonder whether some memories might be better off lost. Maybe
what they did to me during those six months is too horrible to ever be
remembered. Maybe it’s a merciful blessing that I don’t remember, but
I do so hate mysteries. I’m too curious. It pisses me off big time that I bear
these marks on my body but don’t have any recollection of how they were made.
Walter understands – that’s why he indulges me in this storytelling. I
nuzzle my way over his chest to his right arm, and find the star-shaped scar
just above his elbow. It’s clearly pretty old, and is about the size of my
thumbnail. It looks as if he was stabbed with something pointed.
“Maybe tomorrow night you’ll tell
me the story behind this scar,” I whisper, kissing the star-shaped
scar, and he smiles, a little sadly, and nods.
“Maybe I will, Fox,” he murmurs.
“Maybe I will.”
I smile contentedly, and snuggle up
against his shoulder, closing my eyes. Perhaps it doesn’t matter that I can’t
remember after all; Walter has stories enough for both of us.
The
End
Friendly feedback to
Xanthe@xanthe.org
Inspiring
Woodsman!Walter pic courtesy of Sergeeva
herself! <swoon!>
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