My name is Alex. Ten years ago, when I left for college, I moved from Chicago to Boston and never came back. Until now. It wasn't intentional. It wasn't my plan. I wasn't running and hiding from anything. Not really.
My family thinks I left at 18 and never came back because the very last thing I did at home was come out as gay. I literally told them all the day before I left for college. I know...super brave, right? The thing is, I didn't know how they'd take it. I knew they loved me, but my family is very catholic. Like grace every night, mass every week and kids go to the catholic schools -- catholic. I figured my brothers would be cool, but I didn't know what having a gay son would mean to my conservative, religious parents.
It turned out; they were okay. Shocked, but okay. A little afraid of the tougher road I faced, but as accepting as I could have hoped for. So, I stayed in Boston for ten years, but not because of my family. Boston didn't seem to want to let go of me.
Before I even graduated, I was offered a summer internship with a new tech start-up company. The internship turned into a real job offer that I couldn't turn down. The money was great and I liked Boston enough, so I stayed.
I had no family in Boston, and no real friends either, so I threw myself into my work. I was rewarded with huge bonuses and equity in the company. The company that has now sold, leaving me with a sizable bank account the chance to do something new.
At age 28, I have the opportunity to go and do whatever I want in this next phase of my life. I could go to New York; I could go to Silicon Valley or anywhere in between. I decide on the in between. Back home to the suburbs of Chicago.
My parents offered me my old bedroom to stay in while I transition into my new life. I politely declined. I'd feel like a teenager again -- in a bad way. My kid brother offered me the couch in his one-bedroom apartment. I'll always love my kid brother, but I want to keep liking him too and living with him would not be the way to do that. Besides, he has a new girlfriend and I just know that half the time I'd come home to find his stinking sweat sock tied to the doorknob.
I accepted the offer to stay with my former best friend -- Mac. He has a two-bedroom apartment less than ten minutes away from my parents' house, less than ten minutes away from my brother's place...right where I want to start my new life.
Mac moved to town and started at my school at the beginning of sixth grade. Our school was 97% white, 97% heteronormative and 97% boring. Since I was in the closet until after high school graduation, I was assumed to be a part of that 97%. Mac was in the 3%. Mac is black. Multiethnic, actually. His dad is black and his mom is Italian. Our school was full of assholes and they all pretty much ignored Mac from day one. I was happy to befriend him. I was drawn to him from the moment I met him.
I was young when I figured out that I was gay. It was sort of surreal to make that discovery before even really knowing what being gay was. From whatever age you are when you first notice that you're enticed by the allure of another person; an awkward meeting of the eyes, a crooked smile, a stolen glimpse of a strip of bare skin, a brushing of incidental contact... Those little moments that send an electric jolt of excitement through you. Those attractions and exhilarations, for me, have always been brought on by other boys. At first, I didn't understand it and I tried to ignore it. I tried to manufacture the same feelings about girls. I really tried. I really failed. And then I just knew.
I was eleven years old on the first day of sixth grade when I saw Mac for the first time. He was cute. Really cute. He had jet black hair that was buzzed close on the sides and back, but was tufted in loose waves atop his head. He had dark caramel skin and these surprisingly striking blue eyes that seemed to see straight into me. Those eyes were like a superpower and whenever he held my gaze, I'd eventually have to look away.
He was assigned to sit next to me and when he got to within ten feet of me, the air in the room changed. He just had this energy all around him, though, at least in that room, I was the only one who felt it.
But none of that mattered. There were plenty of cute guys in my class. I didn't like those guys because they were cute, I hated them because they were assholes. I didn't like Mac either because he was cute. I liked him because he was kind, funny, smart and generous. The fact that he was so cute was a negative. A distraction. I needed a friend much more than I needed another empty, dead-end crush. Mac became my lab partner, my study partner, my friend and my best friend. I spent seven years trying my hardest to ignore his cuteness.
Then life separated us. We graduated high school, turned 18 and went off to college on different coasts. The difference is, Mac eventually came back home. I didn't. Until now.
We did stay connected through social media over the years, but knowing Mac in real life is a completely different experience. In my mind, he's still my best friend, despite not having seen him in a decade. I obviously could afford to rent or buy whatever I want, but when Mac got wind of my pending return, he invited me to use his spare bedroom while I figure things out. I saw it as an opportunity to reconnect with my old best friend. I figure I'll stay a few weeks, maybe a month.
As I ride up the elevator in his building to unit 6B on the sixth floor, I feel kind of nervous. And I know why. It wasn't just my family that I came out to on my last day before leaving Chicago and not coming back. I also dumped my true sexual identity on Mac that last day too. Mac, being Mac, was unphased. He hugged me, as usual, and basically said, "So what." I was still me and he was still him.
What do I know about Mac today? I know he works in the financial world and usually works from home. The money is good and his hours are flexible. I also know he's Mac...he's my friend.
The elevator deposits me at my destination and I find the door marked 6B. I take a deep breath and raise my hand to knock, but before I could, the door swings open. There he is...Mac. Live and in person. That Mac-energy practically assaults me in the hallway.
I don't know exactly when it happened, I wasn't here to witness it, but sometime over the last ten years, Mac stopped being cute. He's abso-fucking-lutely gorgeous. Devastatingly so. And those piercing eyes (natural, not lenses) are as sky-blue as ever. His haircut is the same as it was ten years ago, but it works on him. Oh, does it work.
Mac smiles at me and my heart flutters with butterflies. He says, "Alexander!" and wraps me in a bear hug. Mac is an affectionate, make-contact kind of a guy. He greets with hugs and he gives these little touches on the arm, the shoulder, the knee, the small of the back, wherever. Each touch always packed a buzz of electricity when we were friends as teenagers. Today's hug in his hallway surpasses buzz and lands on jolt.
Mac is the only person I have allowed to call me Alexander. Everyone else I immediately correct to "Alex", but when Mac does it, it feels right. It feels special.
I step inside and slip out of my Nikes, leaving them next to a pair of his well-worn VANS. I can see a fading, but still visible "11" in the heel. I wear a 10. Now that we're both shoeless, I can also see that Mac still has a good inch on me. I'm 5' 10". He must be just shy of six feet. He also appears to spend much more time working out with weights than I do. He's wearing shorts and a t-shirt, so his well-toned arms and legs are on display.
I am a runner, but I stop at cardio. The weights aren't my thing. I think I look okay; I'm just kind of average. At 150 pounds, I'm healthy and thin, but not toned. I have light brown hair, that lays flat on my head, and green eyes. I'm just kind of average.
Mac has a good 25 pounds on me, but none of it is flab. He should probably quit his job in the financial sector and just become a model.
We look each other up and down. He says to me, "It's so not fair. It's been 10 years but you still look like you're 18. You're that person who will still get carded for alcohol when you're 50!"
He's still smiling at me as his eyes move all over my body. Suddenly I'm blushing a crimson red.
Looking around, I say, "I love your place." I turn, face him and smile, "Okay, what are the house rules?"
"There are only two and you're already complying with both of them." He looks down at my shoeless feet in white Nike crew socks. "Rule #1, leave your shoes at the door." He puts his arm around my shoulders and guides me into his narrow galley kitchen. He opens the fridge and hands me a bottle of Fiji water.
I twist off the cap and ask, "Rule #2?" I take a long swig.
Mac says, "Wear pants."
I snort and almost spew water on my new roommate. I point out, "You're wearing shorts."
"Shorts are fine. They count. Shirtless is fine, barefoot is fine, just don't be bottomless." He grins, "Keep the mouse in the house."
I grin back, "Those are some easy rules."
"I'm an easygoing guy."
"Don't worry about me. And I can almost guarantee that you won't find me barefoot or shirtless either."
His eyes reexamine my body and he says something under his breath that I swear sounds like, "Too bad." I blush again.
I say, "I'll unpack later. Can I take you to lunch? Or rather, can you take me to take you out to lunch? Unless we walk. I need to buy a car like tomorrow."
Living in the heart of Boston for 10 years, I walked. And if I couldn't walk -- trains, buses, Lyfts... Public transportation in the Chicago suburbs is close to nonexistent.
At lunch, I start to tell him about my post-college professional endeavors but he stops me.
"Not that I'm a stalker or anything, but we've been connected on social media since high school. I know all of that stuff. I've watched. I've paid attention. You're actually quite amazing, but I've known that for 17 years now."