This is an erotic story about male gay sex. It focuses on the development of a relationship and doesn't get to the sex right away. But - it does get there.
1.
The people of the town knew just about everyone around and had known their fellow citizens for their whole lives. So the presence of two new men from the city brightened everyone's lives. And the fact that both of them worked at the factory gave everyone a chance to observe the newcomers.
Diego, a skinny kid from New York, had moved here with his fiancΓ©, and lived in Kutztown. He hadn't been in town or at the factory long before he got into trouble with some of the men. The problem was over a game of black jack after work behind the building. Diego, goaded into joining by the guys, lost a moderate amount. Problem was he couldn't pay it back right away. He swore on his mother's life that he would pay the sum out of his wages in a matter of weeks. But until he did, the men were going to make life hard for him.
Tom Peters, a white man about 40 and the other new man in town, saw Juan crouched against the wall about 5 a.m. every morning before the gears began to rumble and the men took their places on the line. Juan was reading. Someone even saw the two of them exchange a smile. The white man liked the Hispanic, everyone said. "The white man": that was just about all they knew about him.
Tom lived at the top of the hill above town and rode a bicycle to work at 5 a.m. He didn't seem to own a pick-up, although there was a beat-up Nissan in front of the house he rented. One of the men had sent his wife to look in the car: nothing in their but books. There was a better source of information, though: Tom had a friend, a social worker called Mike who worked at the foster care agency. And Mike's wife had spilled a story. Back in New York Tom had been married to a bad woman. She had told her brothers that he beat her and they had come for him. You could see the marks on Tom's forearm where he had been cut with a knife and a slight limp when he walked. But, because he was so muscular, like an Olympic gymnast or weightlifter, other stories developed among the townspeople. He had beaten all four brothers and left them there, but then had to leave the city before all their friends came for him.
There was no proof of any of this, any more than there was proof that Tom knew the other stranger, Diego -- at least not until about a week before the Thanksgiving Holiday. Diego's girlfriend had gotten a job in Kutztown and, as a result, Diego had had to walk home for the last several weeks. Tom had seen the pretty-faced, slender young man kissing his girlfriend after getting in her car. The morning after the very first day that Diego walked home, he appeared at work with a bruise below his left eye. He was walking a bit bent, as if a broken rib forced him to favor one side. Tom, who had never spoken to this man, felt an abrupt burning sensation seeing the young man and approached him, drawing looks from everyone on the factory floor.
"What happened to you?"
The boy paused and motioned with his head to a group of men sitting and standing on nearby benches. "Them," he simply said.
"I'm Tom Peters."
Through his bruised face, the boy smiled. "I seen you," he said.
And he had. They had seen each other in the changing room. When Tom, whose shower at home didn't work, had emerged from the shower, Diego had seen his exceptional body naked. And he had seen that the older man had an erection which looked enormous. Diego turned away immediately but felt prickles all over. The moment passed, but Diego wondered why the white man was aroused. He thought he knew, though, if only instinctively. Tom was exceptionally virile and had no girlfriend. For his relentless libido he simply had no outlet.
About 4:30 p.m., when it was time to start for home, Tom found Diego again in the changing room. Both were fully dressed this time.
"I'll walk with you," Tom said.
"Okay."
The other men held back watching the two leave the factory. Crude and rough, German immigrants, drunk and God-fearing, they knew they had a situation on their hands. Walking fast, they caught up with Tom and Diego in no time, four of them, each physically larger than Tom.
One grabbed Diego's arm, pulling him off-balance.
"You two -- beautiful friendship, huh?"
"How come you're not friends like that to me?"
Tom stood still, with a look of weary resignation on his face.
"What about you?" one of them said to Tom.
"You guys should go wherever you're going."
They approached him like a wolf pack. "Don't tell me! You don't tell us what to do."
Tom sighed and sidestepped a fist at his belly, trapped the arm against his side, and spun halfway around, throwing the man bodily into the air. Diego, looking frail and delicate on the ground, stared in wonder as Tom aggressively battered his second attacker, no doubt breaking his jaw, while hooking his leg around the leg of a third man foolish enough to approach him from the side. He swept his leg towards himself, upending the man, then added a kick to the head to end the matter. He could have kicked harder -- Diego knew this -- and done real harm, but he didn't. The fourth man hesitated and Tom took him down like a linebacker, connecting his steel shoulders with his middle. The blow was hard, and the man lay breathless on the dirt. Looking bored and disappointed, Tom helped up his friend and they walked on.
Diego walked home alone the next night, and every night that week, but he remained unmolested. News of the fight had become the central preoccupation of the town with strong opinions reaching from the barber shop to the Town Hall about the stranger. While many versions of the story circulated, there was a general understanding that these men, known to be troublemakers, had attacked a defenseless young man.
A week after Thanksgiving, Diego's girlfriend, Marisol, came to pick him up from work. Her schedule had been changed at her job to nights and weekend. Wanting to get a look at her fiancΓ©'s savior, she walked into the factory. She attracted glances -- a woman in this man's environment. Tom was taking a break and reading. She took in his composed air and powerful body. As she walked with Diego back to the car she cursed in Spanish, and the two of them were heard fighting inside the car as they drove away.
2.
The second incident made the first fight look mild, even though it could not have lasted more than thirty seconds. It was a big deal indeed, because it involved the foreman's son Jack. Everyone knew that Jack liked to talk about the "spics" who worked as migrants in the mushroom plants and occasionally in the factories around the area. The jobs they took were "stolen" from "us," as Jack put it.
Maybe this was why Jack pulled a knife on Diego at the front entrance to the factory. Tall but with horn-rimmed glasses and a cruel, slit-like mouth, Jack was arrogant and showed it by making his move in plain sight, daring anyone to do anything about it. And Tom was walking up from behind. Who knew what Jack intended to do with the knife? Maybe he was only threatening Diego. But it didn't matter. Jack dropped to the ground like a house of cards collapsing after only a single blow from Tom, a bullwhip-strike with his left fist.
Everyone froze as Jack lay on the ground, actually weeping. They were partly shocked but also secretly pleased to see the foreman's son in this position.
"Why?" one of them asked. "Why you do this?"
Tom barely looked at him as he walked through the door. "I hate bullies," was all he said.
A week before this, the gifts had started. And, although everyone knew that Diego and Marisol had broken up -- Marisol had taken up with a bank manager, Diego seemed brighter, more diligent, happier than ever. He offered Tom a braided gold necklace. But Tom wouldn't accept it. He brought food: tacos and tres leches cake -- sponge cake in syrup. A pat on the shoulder and a smile was Tom's only response; he sent the food back with Diego. But Diego did not give up so easily.