Thursday nights are slow at the Lighthouse Club outside of Mina, Nevada, on the lonely, desolate highway between Reno and Las Vegas, so I see him as soon as he walks in. He's limping. Pretty badly. But he has a cane, so it isn't something that just happened in the parking lot. He clumps up to a table just below the platform where Chrissy is doing his bump and grind on the pole.
I call him Chrissy. We all do because he's a sissy boy--one of the club's bottoms for men who like that sort of thing--a girly boy. I don't much like that myself. Chrissy is too giggly and limp-wristed and doe-eyed for me. Not that I dislike Chrissy, in particular, mind you. We get along fine--as coworkers. But this is the manly West, not gay Paree. I'm the club's power top. I haven't had Chrissy. Haven't been much interested in going there. Just too giggly and jiggly for me. We get along OK; Chrissy tries to get along with me too, certainly, because he wants me to fuck him. He's been pretty obvious about that.
Mina is a blip on the road on Highway 95. This part of the country was once famous for roadside necessities like gas stations and motels being made up like something interesting, like huge Donald Ducks or wigwams or something because nothing else in sight was interesting. Mina's "just-out-of-town" version of that is a diner and motel hooked together by a lighthouse. A lighthouse in the desert--our kind of a joke. Not too long ago this one was made into a gay club, with a showroom and covered garages to hide customers' identities added onto the back of the diner and most of the motel rooms assigned to guys working at the club to take their tricks to on hourly rates. As probably the only gay club between Reno and Las Vegas, it does OK. But just OK, and Thursday nights is not a good business night here.
The club has more craziness going for it than just the lighthouse. The guys working here dress to be noticed, and we all take a turn on the platform in our persona for a given night's performance schedule. Chrissy isn't dressed as anyone special this Thursday night because he isn't much dressed at all. He's come onstage in red spangles--Speedo-type shorts over a sock thong, a jacket-like shirt, and boots. At the end of his set, he'll just be in the thong and the boots and, if anyone watching him is enthusiastic enough, he'll come down to sit with them and maybe, if they put the fee up, take them to one of the motel rooms. On a Saturday night, when there's more of a crowd and it's more raucous and attentive, Chrissy will pull off the thong just as the spotlight is going off. Not on a Thursday night, though.
I'm dressed more flamboyantly this Thursday night than usual, as we've done a bump and grind to "YMCA" on the platform. I'm an Indian--what those not from the area insist on calling a Native American. I don't like it very much, but it's the job. I'm serving drinks, my three "YMCA" passes done with. I'm in a fringed deerskin loincloth, vest, and boots, my black hair down to my shoulders with a headband circling my brow, leather bands on my biceps, and a few painted strokes on my face. I don't like it, but I look good in it. I've got a muscular, cut torso. I've worked hard to achieve. I get mostly guys who want to be topped and to have muscles to worship while they're being fucked.
I work in my dad's gas station and garage in Mina--the only one in Mina--by day, and I have a workout room at our house--it's just me and my dad at the house--and I spend time honing my muscles. Dad works out with me, and he's honed for his age. It's something we enjoy doing together.
Chrissy is a seamstress, making sexy clothes for an adult store in Vegas. A lot of guys coming to the Lighthouse and wanting to come there want someone willowy, soft, and creamy, who will want to worship their muscles while they're fucking him. That's Chrissy.
The limper, who, I notice, is built real good on top and a good looker maybe in his early thirties but something going wrong from the waist down, looks just fine when he's seated at the table below the stage. He gives me a look at the door coming in, so I think maybe he was here for me, but once he'd seen Chrissy working the pole on the stage to the bump and grind music, that's where his eyes are plastered and they stay there when I come over to him.
"Can I get you anything? A drink?"
"Three beers, please," he says, not taking his eyes off Chrissy, who is now making eye contact with him too. There aren't many possibilities in the audience this late on a Thursday night, and Chrissy knows most of them and isn't excited about any of them who might be interested in him. This dude who just shuffled in on a cane is new meat to the club, and, as I said, once he's seated, he looks real good.
"Any preference, and all at once or in train?" I ask, thinking, look at me, be here because you want to pay someone to lay you. I saw you limp; I'll treat you right.
"Three at once. Whatever is on tap," he says. He sounds friendly enough, his voice is a low on with depth to it, but he's still looking at Chrissy.
Chrissy does his thing as I'm getting the beers. When he strips off the jacket with the red spangles that makes it shimmer in the spotlights, he tosses it out toward the table where the limper sits. The man puts his hand up, snags it, and rubs it against his cheek. Chrissy sees that. I see that too. So, it's obvious the man is here to lay, not to be laid. Or maybe just to wish he could. I don't know how debilitating that limp might be.
I get to his table in time to see him take three fifties out of his wallet and, seeing that Chrissy is watching, slip them into a pocket of the jacket.
This is when he surprises me, though. As I reach the table and set the three beers in front of him, he breaks eye contact with Chrissy and flashes me a smile. It wasn't a sunny smile; it was more of a wistful smile, as if there was pain behind it, a pain that was always there but that he was enduring it. But it was a smile and it was for me. He reaches out and takes my wrist to signal he wants me to remain there, standing by him. Despite the gimp, he's the best thing going in the room, and my mind is already spinning on what we can do with that leg. My brain is shuffling between position ideas. So, I stand pat.
Dropping my hand, he carefully moves two of the beers to sitting in front of the chairs on either side of his. His, of course, is facing the platform with the pole. Then he pulls a couple of twenties out and hands them to me, making clear they are for the beers and that he doesn't need change. And then, surprise of all surprises, he pulls three fifties out, puts them by the beer in front of the chair to his left, and gestures to the chair I'm standing behind.
"Can you sit and join me in a beer?" he asks.
We have extra guys shoveling drinks and riding the pole just for this. When a patron wants us to sit with him and he flashes some cash, we're always free to do so. If a john wants us to show him one of the motel rooms and he flashes a lot of cash, we are always free to do so. The Lighthouse Club makes most of its money from guys either lying on their backs in the motel rooms or doing pushups on some guy there. We'll even rent them a room if they want to do each other and not one of our guys on staff.
"Sure," I say, surprised, but not second guessing any of this. I know Chrissy will be florid, but Chrissy and I aren't that much friends that I'd bypass a big tip for him.