"So, do they have classes in lighthouses here?"
I looked up from where I was scanning the brochure for a lighthouse off the coast at the mouth of Plymouth Bay where one could vacation for a night or more. But I had photos and layouts of other lighthouses surrounding me at the library table, as well. He looked vaguely familiar, like I'd seen him around the college once or twice earlier—but just recently. And I think I noted him following me with his eyes before out on the campus. I was an architect student at MassArt—the Massachusetts College of Art and Design—in Boston.
"Part of a class," I answered. "I'm in architecture. We're studying lighthouses now, and there's one over by Plymouth Bay where I can stay for a week and study a lighthouse up close."
"Neat," he said and sat down across the table from me. He'd already taken a laptop out of a case and set it down on the table. He looked too old to be a student. He looked more like a lawyer, and he looked like he was something beyond thirty and must have had a good job because his clothes, sports jacket, tailored slacks, and a well-cut dress shirt looked like money. He wasn't overly muscular; he was slim. But he looked like he spent time keeping in shape. He probably had his hair trimmed every week.
I was drawn to older men, usually older than he was, but, like I did with all men these days, I assessed him as a sex partner and found him attractive. Not that I was looking for anyone. I was all set up—maybe more than I had intended to be. Bob was possessive, and he could be intense. He certainly was secretive about me, although I could readily understand why.
In fact, I wasn't looking at the lighthouse brochure just because my class was studying them at the moment. Bob had suggested—sort of more than suggested—that he wanted me to disappear for a while because the press was nosing around too much and it was a touchy time. The election was coming up.
The lighthouse idea had occurred to me because it would be so isolated. Or maybe Bob had suggested that as well. I couldn't remember which. The Duxbury Lighthouse wasn't in Plymouth Bay—it was off the mouth of the bay. It was barely within sight of the coast, and it was out there, isolated, in the water. I'd be dropped there, on my own, for however long it was rented for me. I could call into the coast if I needed something or wanted to get off, but I'd otherwise be as good as disappeared. Bob had said he'd be happy to cover the cost. He obviously wanted me out of the way for a while.
I thought the guy who sat down across from me might say something else, but he got busy staring into his laptop and furiously keying away from time to time in spurts. It was like he was having a conversation with someone somewhere other than here. We were in the college library and I was studying for a class on lighthouse design. I suppose I'd have been irritated if he'd said more initially, but since he didn't, I wanted him to. I was about to go for lunch but thought it would be rude if I packed up just as he sat down. And, besides, he was good to look at.
"I guess I look a little old to be taking classes here," he said, giving me a smile, when he looked up from his laptop and saw that I was looking at him. "I'm a lawyer," he said.
Called it, I thought.
"And my Boston firm has gotten into a series of cases concerning dynamic media. None of us knew what that was, and MassArt has an introductory class in it, so I'm auditing that."
"Makes sense," I said, shuffling round in the papers I had spread out on the tabletop. I didn't want to seem too eager to talk to him.
"You know anything about dynamic media?" he asked. "I'm lost with it at the moment," he continued. "Your lighthouse there looks more interesting. Can I look at that brochure?"
"Sure," I said, handing it over. "Well, I took that introductory course."
"Which one?"
"The introductory course here on dynamic media."
"Oh, right. And you understood it all?"
"Well, most of it."
We both heard the "Shush" and looked around at the same time to see the admonishing librarian. I looked at him and he looked at me and we smiled conspiratorially. It was sort of an ice breaker. We both were naughty boys—together. I can't say I would mind being really naughty with him—together—if I didn't already have a man to be naughty with, which I did. Although my man came with complications.
"I'm Scott. Scott Pawley," he said in a voice "shushed" enough that the librarian didn't look up again. He gave me a sunny smile. He gave the brochure a scan and typed something into his laptop. Then he handed it back and mouthed a "Thanks."
"I'm Drew," I said.
"I'm about to knock off for lunch," he said, again in sotto voce, "I'd pay for yours if you'd answer some question on the dynamic media thing. My firm would pick up the tab. They didn't tell me how I could get the information they need."
"Sure, why not? I'm hungry too," I said as I started gathering up my papers.
* * * *
An hour and a half later, lawyer Scott from the library and I were standing in an embrace beside the bed in his Columbus Avenue apartment near the Boston Back Bay Metro Station. We'd gotten each other naked. His body was harder and more in shape than I had thought it would be, and his erection was arresting. He was holding our cocks together and frotting them as we kissed and I dug my fingers into his shoulder blades.
It hadn't been hard for him to get me into this position. I'd liked the look of him from the start and I was a randy guy. I was a little pissed at Bob at that moment too, of him vacillating between being possessive and not wanting me to be seen with him in public. I made my way by selling my body. I was owned at the moment by a man in his fifties who was busy, busy, busy and took me for granted. Scott had said he lived near enough to MassArt that we could buy something and take it back to his apartment to discuss dynamic media in private.
When he'd taken out his wallet to dig out a credit card to pay the bill for lunch, he had two fifties out and put them in front of me on the table. "Will that cover it?" he asked, and by then we both knew what he was asking.
He didn't really want to discuss dynamic media, and neither did I. He had smooth moves and was a good kisser. His apartment spoke as much of money as his clothes had done. I like nice things. I liked him. I liked his money. I liked his kisses, and I liked his hands gliding on my naked body.
He turned me to the bed and I got the hint that he wanted me kneeling on his bed, so I went down on my knees on the edge of the bed and, with a moan, lowered my chest to the bedspread. I turned my face toward the solid wall of glass overlooking the South End urban scape and extended my arms out from my body in a submissive "take me" stance.
"Be good to me," I begged.
I moaned as he tongued my hole and sucked my cock and balls, and then I cried out and clutched up bunches of the bedspread with my fists as, after I'd heard the snap of the condom being smoothed out, he mounted and entered and entered and entered me and began to pump. He reached under me and brushed the hand away I'd wrapped around my cock as he doggie fucked me, and I sighed my satisfaction as he handed my cock himself and did the honors for me. He paid attention to me in ways that Bob didn't anymore. He took me all the way.