When you grow up in a small town, you go to school with a very diverse population of students. There were 74 people in my graduating class and it was a big class compared to some years. You had the kids from wealthy families, kids from farming families, kids from poor families. And, of course, birds of a feather flocked together in their little cliques. Well, except for Bobby-Jack Moffat, who seemed to be in a clique of his own. The Moffats were a strange bunch to everyone in the county. Bobby-Jack himself was a red-headed menace.
He was always being sent to the principal's office. Most of his time seemed to be spent in detention or being suspended. He was always picking fights or playing weird pranks, like letting a mouse loose in the middle of our English class.
Most parents told their kids to avoid Bobby-Jack. However, my parents told me that maybe Bobby-Jack just needed a friend and asked me to put forth the effort to be kind and friendly to him. I made an effort and soon we had become pretty good friends. I discovered we liked some of the same things.
Eventually, we were hanging out together at break times during school. He had even started to drop by my house after school and we'd play video games or watch television. People had begun to wonder what was going on with Bobby-Jack. He was being nicer to people and better behaved in class. A teacher pulled me aside and thanked me for being a good influence on him. I insisted that Bobby-Jack was just a good guy deep down inside.
Unfortunately, Bobby-Jacks parents divorced for the third time; and Bobby-Jack, being very upset and lashing out, got into a fight at school with one of the snotty rich kids. Bobby-Jack broke the kid's nose and was quickly expelled. Of course, people started to say things like 'once a bad egg, always a bad egg'. I myself knew that he was a good guy deep down. His mother immediately moved away with some guy she met in a bar and took Bobby-Jack and his siblings with her. I figured I'd never see Bobby-Jack again.
Years later, I had moved back home after many years of living in the big city. I built a nice house out on my family's land. I had had enough of the pressurized rat race and had needed a drastic change before I ended up dying from the stress of it all.
One day, I was in the town's drugstore and heard someone call out my name.
"Clay Henry?" someone shouted behind me. "Clay, is that you?"
I turned around and suddenly I couldn't hold even a box of cold medicine. It flopped around in my hands like a just-caught fish, and then it fell to the floor. My mouth dropped open and my eyes followed the big handsome muscled dude, who had just gotten my attention, as he bent down, grabbed the box and handed it back to me.
"I didn't mean to startle you like that," the guy said with a thick Southern accent and a laugh. "You are Clay Henry, right?"
"Uhm, yeah. That's me. Yep, I'm Clay," I managed to say, stumbling over my words.
"Oh, man! I knew that was you! So great to see you!" the guy exclaimed. "I'm Bobby-Jack...Bobby-Jack Moffat. Well, I go by B.J or just Bobby now," he told me. "Great to see ya, Clay!"
I was completely stunned. Bobby-Jack had been a plump short kid with orange red hair and covered in freckles. But B.J. was well over six feet tall with muscles stretching the t-shirt he was wearing.
He had broad shoulders that tapered down to a thin waist in a v-shape you would never believe could actually exist until you saw it on him. His hair was dark red auburn, buzzed on the back and sides with a tousled, gelled mass on top. He was still freckled but they were not as prominent on his dark tanned skin. His eyes were still the most natural green I had ever seen on a person. He was beautiful.
"I never expected to see you again, Clay," he said to me. "How's it going?" he asked, extending his hand and giving me a big white smile.
"Pretty good, and great to see you too," I said, shaking his hand and feeling amazed by the firm grip. "I've been back here a couple years now."
"Just got out of the Marines myself," he told me. "Been staying with my sister at my grandmother's old place since I got back to town last week."
We chatted for a second, and he asked if I wanted to go for a drink and dinner later to get caught up. Of course, I agreed but invited him out to my house. He agreed and I gave him directions. Then he left. I watched as he climbed onto a very large motorcycle and took off. Damn, I wanted that red-headed hunk; and my hard-hard cock, hidden by my red shopping basket, was agreeing with me.