The Golden Goose 
Chapter 1
 
Chapter 1
Jared
 was late. He glanced at his watch and cursed silently. He didn’t have 
time for this meeting. He was the generation that the newspaper 
columnists and bloggers waxed so elegantly about, a man burdened with 
caring for two generations of his family. No, he refused to think of it 
as a burden. It was a joy that he could keep his parents out of a 
nursing home, and his sister did try to help, or at least when her 
medications were at the right levels. He had family; they might be 
difficult family, but he had family. Even in this country, it hadn’t 
been all that long ago that people like him were left without family. 
Hell, just across the southern border he could be arrested or forced 
into psychiatric care.
Jared
 rubbed his eyes with his fist. God, he was tired! He hoped his mother 
with her early stage dementia hadn’t unplugged the crock pot or confused
 the oven with the refrigerator. He was looking forward to the stew he’d
 started this morning. He could taste the soft and mellow flavor of the 
meat and the near buttery smoothness of the potatoes.
A
 sharp blare of a car horn shook him from his reverie. The light had 
changed, and a quick glance in the rearview mirror told him the drivers 
behind him were becoming increasingly irate. He eased his vintage 
hatchback into gear and sputtered through the intersection. Charlotte, 
his coworker, had nicknamed his car Vintage Valentina. It was a lot 
nicer name than what he called the spluttering wreck. It had been a good
 car twenty years ago, not fancy but good with its AM/FM radio and 
manual four speed transmission. Its lack of air conditioning hadn’t 
seemed like a big deal when he bought it used for a few bucks, but in 
the oppressive humidity of August, Jared wished his bank account hadn’t 
been so anemic. He could have taken the train to work; they were air 
conditioned, but he had this blasted meeting. 
Shit!
 He’d made another wrong turn. He never came to this part of town with 
its swank high rises and streets full of sleek European sedans heading 
to the suburbs. Charlotte did most of the begging work or more correctly
 grant writing. She’d grown up in one of those impossibly rich suburbs 
in Connecticut where everybody belonged to two golf clubs and a yacht 
club. Jared was the son of an auto worker and a grocery cashier. His 
parents had provided well for him, but this was not his element. He’d 
never seen a three hundred dollar tie, let alone worn one, and private 
jets were something seen in the movies, no more real than the action 
hero who dodged unscathed through a hail of bullets. He was meeting 
someone who had a private jet, more than one from the company portfolio 
Charlotte had desperately shoved in his face at lunch.
“Make
 a good impression on this Graves guy. He could make our budget for the 
next five years, and it would be no more strain than us buying a cup of 
coffee. Have you seen what these people own and what they give away? 
Their philanthropy budget is bigger than some African countries’ gross 
domestic product. How did you ever get this meeting?”
Jared
 had made up some feeble excuse. He didn’t really know. They were too 
small a fish for a company that funded programs from the eradication of 
polio to the national symphony. Somehow Jim knew this Mr. Graves, 
actually knew him and not merely as a distant guest at some benefit 
luncheon. Jim was the coordinator of the state’s funding for education 
and housing of special needs adults. Jared’s small workshop fell under 
Jim’s umbrella. Jim for some reason had taken a liking to Jared, 
actually invited him to dinner with that insane young man he called his 
partner. Aaron might be funny at a high school reunion, but when he’d 
pitched his piece of pie at the waiter, Jared thought he was going to 
die of embarrassment. The waiter had been an ass, but throwing food in a
 restaurant... Jared blushed just thinking about it. Jim had been 
unruffled. Well, not quite. The glare he’d shot his partner would have 
frozen molten lava, but he’d paid the bill and left a hefty tip without a
 word. Aaron had called Jared the next morning, sounding almost tearful,
 and apologized. They’d gone out several more times, but they’d wisely 
stuck to burger joints. Tossed food in restaurants catering to teenage 
hormones and screaming children wouldn’t be noteworthy, but Aaron had 
refrained from any unorthodox sports and was actually charming and 
engaging. Both Jim and Aaron were well read and well traveled and could 
carry an interesting dinner conversation when they were leaving the food
 on the table.
Jared
 jerked his steering wheel hard, earning a sharp blare from a driver 
behind him, as he spotted the building. He’d been told to park in the 
garage under the massive tower of steel and glass. Jared remembered that
 it was one of those new green buildings that had won some prize for 
environmental friendliness. He couldn’t say it look any different than 
any other office building. 
A uniformed parking attendant ran to his car as he pulled down the steep ramp. “Can I help you, sir?”
“I have an appointment with Landon Graves.”
“And your name, sir?”
“Jared Ruston.”
“Ah,
 Mr. Ruston. Mr. Graves just called down checking on your arrival. He 
was worried that you might have been inexplicably delayed.”
“No,
 I got lost,” Jared said, feeling flustered and totally out of place 
chatting with this impeccably polite young man as he sat sweating in 
Vintage Valentina.
“You
 should have called. I could have come and collected you. Mr. Graves 
drove one of his really cool sports cars today.” A big grin broke out 
over the parking attendant’s face, and he suddenly looked no different 
than Jared remembered his high school friends, all acne, freckles and 
fascination with loud music and fast cars. “I’ve been dying to drive it,
 and it had air conditioning. This thing looks like a sweat box.”
Jared
 nodded and felt a flush beyond the redness caused by the ambient 
temperature rise in his face. His shirt was sticking to his back, and 
sweat was trickling down his brow. Here he was coming with hat in hand 
to ask for money, and even the parking attendant noticed his state of 
dishevelment, and from the car window, the milk stain on his pants 
wasn’t even visible. Two of the residents had a minor altercation at 
lunch, and Jared had ended up wearing part of their meal, and he’d 
stupidly forgotten to bring any extra clothes.
“This
 way, sir,” the parking attendant said, opening the door. “I’ll park 
your car for you, sir. Take the elevator to the top floor. Mr. Graves’s 
secretary will meet you.”
Jared stuffed the papers on the passenger seat into a worn satchel and climbed out of the car.
“You
 definitely should have had me drive you, sir,” the parking attendant 
said with a cheeky grin as he gingerly slipped behind the wheel. “Are 
you sure this vehicle actually runs on gasoline and not elephant dung or
 something?” The boy laughed. “I’ll take good care of her. I’m sure 
she’s one of a kind.”
Jared
 laughed as he watched his car splutter off. All he could do was laugh. 
The kid wasn’t trying to be mean, but damn he was right. Jared was out 
of place here. He should just walk up the exit ramp and take the nearest
 train home. He could tell Charlotte that their little workshop hadn’t 
been right for the G&L Foundation. She wouldn’t question him. No, he
 told himself. He could at least show up; he’d come this far. He could 
survive five minutes before being shown politely but firmly to the exit.
 How painful could that be?
Jared
 stepped out of the elevator on the top floor. Even the elevator had 
been fancy with a mechanical voice announcing the floors. The hallway 
was spotless. A sign pointed him toward reception in English and several
 languages he didn’t recognize. Jared knew the art work lining the walls
 had to be real; there were several Impressionist paintings; the value 
of which probably exceeded every cent he would make in his lifetime. He 
turned the next corner and was surprised to see sheets of paper tacked 
on the wall, splotched with color and spilled glue. They looked like 
they belonged in an elementary school. Jared bent closer to read the 
title. “The New School, Boston” He’d seen the school in the paper 
somewhere. He couldn’t quite remember.
“Jared Ruston.”
Jared
 turned to see a man of average height standing in the corridor and 
smiling. The man must have been in his sixties, but he looked fit with a
 slight tan showing on his face and arms.
“Yes,” Jared stumbled. This must be Mr. Graves, but he’d expected a suit, not this easy friendliness.
“I’m
 Landon Graves. I was about ready to send out a search party. I didn’t 
think you could be kidnapped between the parking garage and my office, 
but you never know.”
“I’m
 sorry; I was looking at your pictures. I know I’m already late, I’m 
sorry; I shouldn’t be wasting your time,” Jared said hurriedly.
“I put them here for people to look at, not rush by. The children like color, and I detest neutral cream walls.”
“Does your foundation sponsor this?”
“Yes,
 we finance art projects in elementary schools throughout the nation. 
Our charitable activities are wide ranging. Our goal is to try to spread
 the greatest good with the money we have available. Even our foundation
 doesn’t have unlimited funds.  Do you want some dinner while we discuss
 our proposal?”
“No,
 I have to get home,” Jared said. He already knew his proposal was 
rejected when Graves mentioned limited funds. He was surprised to see 
Graves look taken aback. The man should want Jared out of here. This was
 just a waste of everybody’s time. Jared scrambled for a polite 
explanation as Graves continued to calmly watch him. “I’d love to take 
you up on your offer, but I have to prepare dinner for my parents and 
sister. They can’t do it alone.” And why spend a torturous evening being
 politely told no?
“How much time do you have?” Landon Graves asked.
Jared glanced at his watch. “Thirty minutes.”
“Well, come into my office at least and have a glass of lemonade. You look frazzled.” 
“It’s
 hot,” Jared said, feeling a flush rising in his face. “My car’s not air
 conditioned.” Jared wished he’d brought fresh clothes. He looked like 
he’d been working garbage collection and sleeping under a bridge.
“Next time I’ll send young Angus to pick you up. My car has proper heating and cooling.”
Next
 time? He was going to be rejected. This Graves guy was just more polite
 than most. “I’m more than capable of getting myself around.”
“I’m
 sure you are,” Landon said easily. “But why use an ox cart when you can
 use the latest in modern, motorized travel? There’s nothing heroic 
about doing without because of obstinacy or misplaced pride.”
Jared
 kept his eyes on the paintings. He wasn’t going to react to this man’s 
words. They needed the money. Since this guy hadn’t thrown him out, 
maybe they were going to get a few scraps along with a lecture on 
managing their pennies more wisely. He could put up with the misplaced 
moralizing or whatever.
“My
 apologies,” Landon said, his voice still easy. “This is professional 
meeting; I didn’t have the right to say that, not in this context. Come 
in my office. We’ll talk about the work I need done.”
Now
 Jared couldn’t hide the faint blush. He was frazzled and had been rude 
to a man who was trying to be pleasant and maybe hadn’t rejected the 
proposal out of hand. “No--” Jared fumbled for the words. “I’m hot and 
tired.”  He ran his hand through his already mussed hair before jamming 
it into his pocket. He didn’t need to show this man that he was any more
 of a wreck than he already was. “Sorry,” he started again. “My parents 
aren’t well.”
“Mr.
 Ruston, Jared if I may. I was making a joke, a misplaced joke. Perhaps 
it would be better if we rescheduled this meeting for another time?”
“No,” Jared said quickly. He didn’t want to risk losing this contact. Jim had worked hard to make the arrangements. 
The
 office was spacious with broad windows that opened to the city below. 
Landon grinned. “It’s one of the few perks of getting older, the big 
office with the best views. No more toiling in the corner with only a 
single lump of coal to heat the room. Sit down. I’ll get that lemonade I
 promised.”
Jared
 perched on the edge of the bright red leather sofa. It was spotless, 
and he was sure shockingly expensive, not like the second hand furniture
 in his house with ghastly chintz and sharp springs. Landon handed him a
 tall glass filled with ice and topped with a fresh rounds of lemon. 
“There’s
 plenty more. It’s one of the best parts of summer.” Landon took a long 
swig from his own glass. “Did Jim tell you at all what we had in mind?” 
“He
 said you needed a few leaflets printed,” Jared said, half choking on 
his lemonade in his haste to answer. It didn’t sound like a big job, but
 even an extra few thousand would help. Budgets were always tight, and 
with the roof needing repaired, a few thousand was desperately needed. 
“We have a full service print shop.”
“So I read in your information. Do you have any restriction on the materials your workshop will handle?”
“No.” Jared shook his head. Jared couldn’t imagine the reason for that question. 
“These pamphlets are considered subversive in some parts of the world.”
“Most
 of our clients who work in the print shop have minimal literacy 
skills.” He wasn’t talking about pornography or something, was he? No, 
Jim would never have recommended them for anything that would put their 
other funding in jeopardy.
“It’s
 not pornographic, but it is political,” Landon said with another one of
 his broad smiles that seemed to light up the room. “Our politics are 
more radical than some. We are actively working to destabilize the 
government of Texas and to provide a safe haven for refugees seeking 
protection from their discriminatory laws. This material is targeted to 
Texas’s repressed gay and lesbian population. Will that be a problem?”
“No,
 I don’t think so.” Jared didn’t really follow international politics, 
but even he knew of their southern neighbor’s draconian morality laws. 
Periodically on the news, some new asylum seeker would describe 
unimaginable horrors that caused him or her to flee. 
“Fine.”
 Landon smiled again, the wrinkles around his eyes deepening. “I had my 
people draw up a tentative proposal. Why don’t you review it as your 
leisure? Perhaps next weekend come up to Vermont, and we can hammer out 
the details. You could consider it a working holiday.” Landon smiled 
again
“I
 don’t see how I can,” Jared said, desperately trying to think of some 
solution. He wanted this contract. A contract with G&L for his 
little workshop would be an unbelievable prize, but he couldn’t get 
away. Everybody depended on him. 
“You have next weekend off. I’ve already checked. Jim told me. It’s nothing nefarious. He seems to know your schedule.”
Jim
 would. He was a good guy, but he could be prying, and he’d taken to 
insisting on lunch at their biweekly meetings and taking up way too much
 of Jared’s time. Jared liked Jim, but God, he was a busybody. Who was 
he to suggest that Jared could take a weekend off? He didn’t have senile
 parents leaving the gas on and storing their shoes in the oven.
“I
 have responsibilities at home,” Jared said, trying to sound both 
grateful and resolute at the same time. “I don’t think I can get away.”
Landon
 smiled again, this one kindly and much too knowing for Jared’s comfort.
 “Angus, our young friend from the parking garage, is in his second year
 of medical school and has a special interest in geriatrics. He’d be 
happy to assist with your parents and sister for a short weekend. I’ve 
already taken the liberty of putting it on his schedule. We of course 
will pay him as it is I who am forcing you to need his services.”
“I
 can’t be away,” Jared said reflexively, raking his fingers through his 
hair. He had responsibilities. He couldn’t just jet off for the weekend 
on some harebrained scheme.
“Despite Angus’s affinity for fast cars, he’s very responsible. When is the last time you’ve been away for a weekend?”
Jared
 couldn’t remember. It had been several years, before his parents got 
sick. He’d still been with Wes then. That had always been Wes’s 
complaint that Jared was wed to his job. At first they had shouted; 
later it was like they were shadows passing each other, and then one day
 Jared had come home to an empty house and a note. He had 
responsibilities he couldn’t just run around to beach houses, ski 
resorts, or whatever.
“We
 are talking a significant grant for your workshop, maybe a million or 
more,” Landon said, reaching for his folders. “Take these home and 
review them. Let me know by the middle of next week if you’re 
interested.”
A
 million! Jared had thought in the low thousands if he got lucky. A 
single grant in the millions would be life changing for so many. They 
could add more beds. They always needed more room. Jared took the 
folders. He’d have to make this work. He tried not to clutch them 
desperately as he rose and made his polite farewells. A million dollar 
grant, it was beyond his imagination.
******
Landon
 watched the expressions race over Jared’s face. Shock and disbelief 
followed by a desperate effort to look professional. Landon’s people had
 investigated Jared’s group home and attached workshop. It was well run,
 but in desperate need of cash. Landon didn’t waste foundation money, 
but this was a good project and would impact lives both locally and in 
the Republic of Texas. The Foundation’s board had authorized up to five 
million from the paperwork alone. The meeting at the lodge wasn’t 
necessary; further discussions could be handled by conference call or 
here in this office, but the Foundation’s board didn’t know that Jared 
was a submissive, a boy in the Green Mountain tradition. Jim had hinted 
about Jared’s status, but he was much too reserved and professional to 
bring up private matters. Landon was skilled at reading the unspoken 
message, and Jim’s hints that Jared was a personal friend hadn’t gone 
unnoticed.
Landon
 poured himself another glass of lemonade. Jared had practically 
screamed submissive in the brat tradition: late, disorganized, frazzled,
 and still charming with his untouched innocence. The poor kid had no 
idea he was a submissive, all the more appealing when they didn’t know. 
Landon was going to have to beat the unattached tops off with a stick. 
Jared would hit all the right buttons with them, and the poor kid would 
be scared to death. It was all Landon could do to stop himself from 
bundling the poor boy off tonight, and if Jared hadn’t had family at 
home, all bets would have been off about Jared spending one more 
stressed filled weekend, galloping here and there in stained trousers, a
 shirt worn beyond the threadbare stage, and circles under his eyes to 
rival Saturn’s rings. That boy needed someone to look after him.
Landon
 would have to warn Gordon to tone it down. A lecture about Jared’s 
state of dishevelment would send that boy high tailing it for the train 
station. Gordon tended to be intense about the need to take pride in 
one’s appearance. Some of the younger boys called it perhaps more 
appropriately ‘ape shit crazy’. Of course, they didn’t use those words 
when Gordon and Landon were in earshot. They’d faint if they knew the 
bosses knew, but young submissives were naive if only they knew how few 
secrets they really had.
Landon
 laughed at the memory of Justin when Milton had caught him in those 
tattered, ridiculously tight jeans and no shirt at six in the morning. 
The excuse that he’d been out gardening had hit the ground like a brick.
 Milton had stood silently in the hallway, looking entirely too 
formidable, until the whole story had come tumbling out of Justin’s 
mouth in ragged gulps. Justin was a classic bratty boy, all brash and 
impulsive, a submissive who responded to Milton, and he’d been flat out 
terrified at looming Milton. Looming Milton was terrifying. He could 
make Landon swallow hard, and few tops intimidated Landon. He found most
 of them laughable and enjoyed their bumbling uncertainty at how to 
approach him, the man who straddled both sides. 
Milton
 of course knew. He’d raise one eyebrow in a sardonic fashion as if to 
say brat at me at your own peril. Landon did occasionally, and Milton 
was damn good. He caught everything. Having Sheldon made Milton hyper 
aware. That boy could spin out faster than any boy Landon had ever seen.
 No, that wasn’t right. Blade was worse and more emotionally fragile. 
Landon himself had been pulled into several conferences on how to manage
 that boy when Milton was beyond threatening to strangle him. The poor 
kid. Until Ryan, every top they tried had fled in unmitigated terror. 
Milton had even talked of tentatively keeping Blade despite his 
reservations about a threesome with Sheldon and the added complications 
of the third party being Sheldon’s brother. Tops with that strength just
 didn’t grow on trees. Ryan had been a gift from heaven. Without him, it
 would have been Milton and his two Zaths.
Poor
 Jared. The two Zaths and their partners were scheduled to be up at the 
lodge next weekend. Now that Milton was officially the head of the Green
 Mountain Boys he tried to make regular appearances in Vermont. Gordon 
still ran the day to day part of the operation which was becoming 
increasingly time consuming as Milton’s campaign to increase membership,
 especially among young people, was in full swing. Milton attracted 
submissives like flies. The top recruitment was tougher, but right now 
there were a half dozen or so young tops in contact with the 
organization, and a few more mature guys who’d been one round with a 
vanilla partner and figured out they needed something else.
Atticus
 was one of these retreads as Sheldon liked to call them. He’d worked 
for the G&L Foundation since his graduation from college at various 
capacities and completely under the radar that he was a top until he 
started to manage the Texas program. Landon had met Atticus’s first 
partner at several of their social engagements. He was never so glad to 
see someone ride off into the sunset. The guy was a prick, and the 
corner of the desk had more of a sense of humor. Even Gordon had trouble
 hiding his disdain behind formal politeness. Landon hadn’t been quite 
so polite, but fortunately Gordon didn’t know half. He’d been furious 
enough about the adulterated drinks, with every word about Landon’s age 
and responsibility punctuated with the cane. That had been bad and worse
 when Gordon had brutally grounded him for two weeks. Landon, in the 
right mood, could enjoy a good caning, and even in the wrong mood, it 
was cathartic. Being within arm’s reach of Gordon or Milton for two 
weeks had been plain awful. Sheldon liked that kind of thing; it made 
Landon furious. Milton had said it was the top side of Landon, but had 
offered him no reprieve, only muttering that it was deserved and that he
 should have known better.
Jared
 would be perfect for Atticus. Jared was a quiet boy who needed 
nurturing and organizing. He wasn’t going to throw a wine glass at a 
waiter in public. Atticus gave those boys a wary eye and begged for 
assistance from Gordon or Milton. Wayne and Braxton had pitched a fit at
 each other which resulted in books flying across the room like 
intercontinental missiles. Atticus had managed to separate them, even 
had them cornered when help arrived, but he’d made it very clear that he
 didn’t find it fun before lunch entertainment. 
Now
 Jared, with his state of harried confusion and exhaustion, would be 
perfect. Atticus could organize; the man loved to organize. It made him a
 stunningly good employee, but it drove Landon up the wall. He has lists
 and notebooks and protocols for everything. He’d probably never heard 
of the word spontaneity, or maybe he had a protocol for responding to 
it. He was calming, reassuring and not bad looking. Blade even stopped 
moving for five seconds in his presence. Yes, he would be perfect. 
Landon would make sure he was at the lodge. The Texas campaign was his 
baby; he should be there anyway. There was no need for Gordon to find 
out Landon was matchmaking. Gordon took a dim view of blatantly 
interfering with a top’s life without his permission, especially if 
Landon did it and especially if it were Atticus. Atticus had strongly 
signaled that he was more than content to live alone, and while he was 
fully aware of the Green Mountain Boys’ activities and his designation 
as a top, he was not a member. He was an employee of the G&L 
Foundation, and according to Gordon’s law that made interfering in his 
private life off limits. Gordon would call it a set up or something 
worse, and it would have unpleasant consequences.
 
I love it when Landon meddles! Hilarity always ensues!
ReplyDeleteLandon does love to meddle.
DeleteThank you,