Green Pastures
“Austin,” Sheldon shouted. Nothing. He wasn’t up here. He wasn’t over the garage. He was going
to kill that boy. Yeah, right, if there was anything left after Master found
out.
Sheldon had heard the conversation last week. Probably
the whole house had heard it. Austin was a sweet and wonderful boy ninety
percent of the time, but when he had a bee in his bonnet, he was a demon. Last
week he’d
been a demon. Sheldon got it, not that he hadn’t sympathized with Master’s wry look at the conclusion of
the conversation. He’d been looking like one of those poor newscasters tossed
out into a hurricane to show the viewer the power of the storm.
Austin had wanted to go out, a charity auction of some
sort, only the auction lots were willing serfs. Milton was the possessive sort.
Sheldon had known it was a no go at the first whiff of Austin’s plans, but the boy was
woefully optimistic and stubborn, and as spoiled as the little cub was maybe he
had a right to both his stubbornness and his optimism. Milton might have found
a way if he hadn’t been away for a conference. He could have gone and
bought his own boy, but it would be a cold day in hell before Milton would let
anyone buy Austin even if it was only to paint the kitchen or weed the flower
beds. His cub was owned, and his cub was staying home.
And that cub was going to be dead, and Sheldon wasn’t likely to survive the fires
unscathed either. He was head boy. He should have been able to keep track of
one cub, especially one cub who he knew had been tempted and sometimes had the
common sense of the average twenty year old college boy which meant zero, nada,
none. Undoubtedly Milton had somehow skipped the flights of temporary insanity,
but Sheldon hadn’t, and he’d more than known that sometimes
Austin was bit by the insanity bug. Those days were a doozy.
This was obviously one of them. Sheldon understood it,
not that extricating him without fangs of an irate dom chewing out his throat
was going to be possible. Sheldon was good, but he didn’t have a cape and he couldn’t stop speeding bullets. Both
Sheldon and Austin had already worn threadbare the argument that Austin needed
a chance to be an ordinary college kid without the shadow of his dominant
looming at every corner.
Milton was actually decent about it. Sheldon had to give
his master credit where credit was due. He ducked out of the way when Austin
invited friends over, no fire breathing roars or royal proclamations. He also
gave the kid a fair amount of rein to play with his friends. Get home at a
halfway decent time and do nothing illegal, and don’t lead your friends on. Master
was adamant about the last one. Austin was taken, and his friends needed to
know it. He didn’t need to tell them that he knelt for someone old enough
to be his dad, but he better not play the field. That law was written in stone
for all of them. Six was more than enough complications.
Master would see this as a violation of the last one.
Not good, not good in huge giant letters. Sheldon had heard enough of the
conversation to know where master stood.
“No, Austin, it is not yours to
give away or to sell. It is mine, and I don’t give permission.” End of conversation.
Austin had been fuming. “It’s for charity, and he acts like
I want to whore myself out.”
Sheldon had made sympathetic noises and tried to
explain. With 20-20 hindsight, he should have ratted Austin out. A few
preemptive strikes with the cane, and Austin would be cuddled up with Sheldon
watching television. Now Sheldon was frantically figuring out how to get him
back home before master knew.
Sheldon would have to tell master. Lying, dissembling,
or just plain dodging the truth was well out with a slave collar around his
neck. He’d
get Austin home, harder to be furious with a cute kid looking at you with
pleading eyes, but that was as far as Sheldon could go. Sheldon had signed the
contract. He knew exactly what the words meant, and he honored them. Sometimes
he might hate the impersonal black and white print, but Sheldon understood,
respected it even. He was in Milton’s power; there could be no
dishonesty between them, or they would both get hurt. He wasn’t the kid brat anymore. He
couldn’t
dance around the truth and hope Milton solved the puzzle. Even Austin couldn’t do that. Life was a lot more
complicated now. Sheldon had been the only one through his horrors. He’d been indulged; he knew it, and
he didn’t
envy Austin’s youth and the complications of polyamory. The kid was
a saint, except for the occasional disaster.
Sheldon rifled through Austin’s backpack. The cub had shown
Milton the invitation, all fancy with a gold foil envelope. It would be here;
the boy was a pack rat. He also knew he was doing something wrong, and he’d leave a trail of bread crumbs
to the scene of the crime. He always did. Disobeying but guilty as hell about
it and wanting to be caught out. That was Austin.
Sheldon found the invite, crumpled with some of Austin’s chicken scrawl on the back. It
wasn’t
far from Miles and Simon’s place. Sheldon knew the place, a respectable hangout
with a good coffee shop by day and a lively wine bar scene at night. Nothing
too horrible would happen there. Master was being fussy, but that was master’s prerogative.
Sheldon pulled out his phone. The text was short and to
the point, not that he expected an answer. Austin on a tear turned off his
phone. Otherwise he was a good boy and answered Milton’s text or calls. He was
pathologically obedient when he wasn’t totally off his rails.
No answer.
Time for plan B. Right, he hadn’t had a plan A. This was all off
the cuff. Miles was the best bet. Austin knew him and wouldn’t be outright disobedient with
him, not if Miles stayed in dominant mode and he would for this.
“Miles.”
“Sheldon, who flew the coop?”
“What?”
“You don’t call me at work for a social
call. I know you can hear the glasses clinking behind me, so if I was being
invited to one of Milton’s torturous evenings of entertainment with the five
course dinner to go with the five act lecture on some protocols I’ve shredded into ribbons, you
wouldn’t
call me here.”
“Have you been shredding protocol
to ribbons?”
“You know me,” Miles said in the same easy tone he said everything. Sheldon could
imagine him wagging his head and grinning and all his piercings waving in the
breeze. “I’m good at protocol shredding,
just ask Josh.”
“You get into it with him?”
“Does walking off the job when he’s helping replace the plumbing
in my own bathroom count as having it out with him?”
“Shit!” Sheldon groaned in sympathy. Josh and Miles had a relationship that
was as confusing as it was intricate. They clearly adored each other, but Miles
had this peculiar habit of poking Josh in all the places that led to
retribution. Josh was old-fashioned and not above doling out some pretty
draconian punishments. Sheldon preferred to leave him well enough alone.
“The welts gave Steve a pause,
but they’re
about healed, and I feel good, man.”
“You know there are other ways to
submit.”
Miles laughed, easily and happily. “Hello, Sheldon, I live with a
dom who’s hard pressed to go anywhere close to sadism, and we both dom a sweet
boy who turns sheet white at Blade’s or Mike’s games. I get stressed. Josh is
uncomplicated for that. I can go to Simon if I want nurtured or some really
good sex, and I’ve even gone to Milton once or twice, but I always end
up feeling like I’m getting a PhD lecture on power dynamics.” Miles must have been pouring drinks because Sheldon heard the clink
of ice and the sound of a glass sliding over a smooth surface. “Don’t take it wrong. Milton’s fantastic, but we just don’t click.”
“Miles, I know.” Sheldon kept his voice easy and deferential. With Miles he was never
sure who to be, but he didn’t want to argue about master.
Miles had a hang up about authority, but it wasn’t Sheldon’s job to fix it. Milton would be
irritated if he tried. He’d been told often enough not to pester Miles; almost as
often as he’d been told not to wind up Steve.
“What do you need, Sheldon?” Miles asked, steering the conversation back on track and sounding
far more like the confident dominant who stood flanking Steve at any Green
Mountain Boys’ event.
“Austin’s been an idiot. I need you to
get him.”
Sheldon explained rapidly and succinctly Austin’s adventure with the charity
auction and Milton’s displeasure.
“I’ll go buy him, but I can’t abandon Simon to close. Send
Josh up to take him home. He won’t do a runner from Josh.”
“Josh scares him.”
“All the better. He disobeyed his
dominant. He deserves that sort of scared, and Milton will approve.”
“Miles.”
“I do listen when Milton lectures
at me. He’s
not going to want to beat Austin senseless, but he’s going to want the kid to think
the world is coming down around his ears. You know as well as I do that
psychological trauma and manipulation are part of his arsenal.”
“He won’t hurt Austin.”
“Don’t you go flipping my words
around on me. Milton’s possessive and Austin wants to be possessed. He’ll remind the boy what that
means, not torture him. Sheldon, it’s not my dynamic, and I try to
take the piss out of Milton’s arrogance, but I respect the
guy. He hasn’t killed you yet, and if I thought Austin was in one
iota of danger, I’d never bring him home. I’m just saying he’s going to get roughed up a bit,
and you better brace yourself. You love your cub, and when he’s crying you get less rational.
Watch yourself, Sheldon. Trust Milton here the way you trust him with all of
you.”
“Yes, sir.” It was the only answer possible. Miles was the dom, and he was the
slave.
“Sheldon, I wish you wouldn’t go there. I’ll get Austin.”
The phone clicked off. Just as well, Sheldon didn’t know what he’d say to Miles. He liked Miles.
Why did all conversations always seem to end on the edge of a spat? Miles was a
good guy, and he made Sheldon itch to do all sorts of things that would have
master furious.
****
Austin stared up at the ceiling. He’d have to get up soon. He couldn’t hide here all morning. He’d heard Sheldon get up this
morning. Sheldon stayed on Milton’s schedule, up at six even when
Milton wasn’t here. It was almost eight now, and Sunday breakfast
was at nine. Milton wouldn’t be home until afternoon; maybe
running away was a good plan.
Austin groaned and buried his head under the pillows.
Who was he kidding? He’d lived through Milton’s teaching and enough lectures
from a barrel of dominants and submissives to know what he was and what he had.
He was a submissive in huge and giant capital letters, and he damn near lived
to hear Milton call him a good boy. Mike fought with dominants for sport, and
Sheldon could fight for real all spit and claws or the detached and perfect automaton,
but Austin just turned into a puddle of wimpy desperation.
Last night tears had been mighty close when Josh had
nodded toward his truck. Milton called Josh a good dominant. In real trouble
Austin was supposed to call him or Ryan. Ry was so much easier, always smiling
and teasing and strong enough to swing Austin up onto his shoulders. Josh was
genetically programmed to do nothing but glare and frown, and some supernatural
dom must charge him a nickel for every word he spoke. Had he said ten words
last night? Not to Austin. He might have said twenty to poor Joe.
It had been Joe’s fault that Austin had agreed
to the auction. Joe’s life was shit right now, and he’d wanted a little fun. A roaring
fight with his boyfriend had left him couch surfing with everyone he knew, and his
relationship with his family was no better. And last night he’d met the rampaging Josh, a
rhinoceros on the loose in a jewelry store would be more subtle.
It had taken Josh about two minutes to realize Joe had
nowhere to go, and he’d been bulldozed into one of the guest rooms. Austin had
seen his eyes: wide, frightened, and somehow terribly relieved that it was out
of his hands. Austin liked Joe, but the boy needed a keeper. He took disasters
to an art form.
“Austin, it’s morning.” Sheldon walked in and started rummaging in Austin’s drawers, doing the slave thing
and sorting the clothes.
“Yeah, I thought that big golden
thing was the sun.”
“Austin.” Sheldon flopped on the bed and patted Austin’s leg under the quilt. “Don’t go there. You really don’t do trouble well. Just suck it
up and get it over with.”
“Sheldon!”
Sheldon wrapped his arm around Austin and pulled him
into a tight hug. “You’re not exactly brand new at
this. Deliberately defying your dominant tends not to end with a ticker tape
parade. He won’t kill you.”
“Does he know?”
Sheldon gave Austin a crooked smile and kissed his
forehead. “I had to call Miles and Josh last night. Of course he
knows.”
“Bad?” Austin asked, hoping, but knowing he was being naive. Milton was
going to be royally pissed.
“Not happy is the kindest way to
put it,” Sheldon said, brushing the hair
off Austin’s face and touching his lips to Austin’s cheek. “He’s better this morning. You know
what he’s
like with you, cub.”
“Suffocating.”
“Hey.” Sheldon lifted Austin’s chin, his green eyes way too
close. “You
mean that?”
“God, no.” Austin blinked back his tears. He cried easily, a perfect
waterworks. “It’s just…” Austin struggled to keep his voice steady.
“Milton’s going to be all over your ass
in more ways than one, and after the initial horror, it feels good, and that’s a damn hard thing to admit.
Been there; done that. It’s safe, secure, and very loved when he decides that you
can’t
breathe without checking with him first. It’s OK to like it.” Sheldon reached up and fingered his collar. “You’re talking to the slave boy who
has to ask for a dollar to get a soda.”
“I don’t want caned.” Austin fingered the quilt, wishing he could just hide under it and
make the day go away. Milton angry was scary, and he was going to be angry.
“You have to take the good with
the bad.” Sheldon tousled Austin’s hair. “There are better ways to get
what you wanted, but you’re still a baby.”
“Sheldon!” Austin batted at Sheldon.
“The world looks a lot different
at thirty and even more different at thirty-five. There’s no hurry. We like you this
way.”
“I’m not a baby.”
Sheldon kissed Austin and nipped at his lip. “Don’t pout. Kiddo,” he said after a pause, “how much of this was about Joe?
You know you could ask, and Milton would have found a roof for him. He has it
tattooed on his soul that you don’t leave kids in trouble out
there alone.”
“Joe’s not going to—“
“He’s not going to like it, so you
dropped him in deep enough that all escape routes are closed,” Sheldon finished. “That’s the hard way to find out you’re submissive and that you need
a keeper because you’re still so young you haven’t figured out how to pay rent.
He’s
not going to be a happy camper, and you’re going to be the target of his
anger.”
“He was OK with Josh.”
“Josh was in bulldozer mode. No
one with two brain cells together would have made a peep last night with him.
Milton will make him spell out that he’s a submissive. It’s going to get much worse before
it gets better.”
“But—“
“Austin, I know. I’ve done this to people before.”
“I wasn’t. I wasn’t trying to set him up.”
Sheldon gave Austin a long look. “Do you really believe that? Be
damn sure that’s the truth before you tell Milton that story. Lying
will not make him any happier. Now up.” Sheldon hauled Austin from the bed and pushed him toward the
bathroom. “Shower and breakfast. Mace is making waffles. You don’t want to miss them.”
They knew. They all knew. Of course there was no way
they couldn’t know, but it was always fun to pretend that privacy
wasn’t
a foreign concept. Austin kept his head down and willed breakfast to be over.
Unfortunately it was Sunday, and Sunday breakfast was a long drawn out affair
that often morphed into more of a brunch than a breakfast, and he should be
grateful for it. Once breakfast was over, he had a list of chores, busy work to
keep him at home until Milton arrived and the massacre started.
“Ah, the baby feeling a little
green this morning,”
Mike teased. “Are you going to feel the kiss
of the cane?”
“Shut it, Mike.” Sheldon said from across the table.
“Yeah, right, and I’m going to listen to you.”
“Boys,” Tilden said softly. He wasn’t a dominant, but he was sane
and gentle and practiced being a civilized human or at least that was how
Austin thought of him. He always felt more adult, someone with authority no
matter that he bent his head to Milton. Tilden’s thumb grazed over Austin’s hand, a gentle reminder that
he was still here. “Are you all right?”
Austin looked up and studied those blue eyes that in the
right light were almost violet. He liked Tilden, but it was Milton who anchored
him in the house. Tilden was sweet, but he wasn’t why Austin lived here. He’d never hurt the man; Milton
loved him, but he was somehow in a more distant orbit.
“Milton will be home in a few
hours, and I know that’s who you need, but I’m here if you need anything.”
“Thanks,” Austin mumbled. It was a genuine offer, not mere empty words. Tilden
didn’t
do empty words, but a cup of tea and a chat about linguistic nuances wasn’t sufficient distraction. He
wasn’t
Luke who seemed to have a near orgasm talking about incomprehensible stuff.
“I don’t think he finds discussing
Russian participles entertaining.”
Oh, God, Mike was in one of his pissy moods. Austin wasn’t up to coping.
“Fuck!” Mike shouted and jumped up from the table.
Trent had hit him across the shoulders with his spatula
and hard if Mike’s reaction was genuine.
“I’d rather not play these games,
but I can,”
Trent said in the
lazy drawl that he’d picked up from Mace. He wasn’t a cowboy, but he could play
one on TV.
“That hurt.”
“Well?” Trent asked, spatula still in hand.
“I’ll eat my breakfast.”
“Thank you. I prefer not to give
our guest more of a show, and I have some books that need sorted and shelved at
the store.”
“Trent!”
“I’m serious, Mike.”
Mike groaned and flopped back down at the table. “That’s not even the fun side.”
“That’s Milton’s department. Being referee isn’t my idea of a good time either,
but you didn’t leave me much choice. You know as well as I do which
side of the fence I stand on.”
“You don’t do it much.”
“Don’t have to. Milton lives in this
house. Plus I don’t much like to, but you don’t get a free pass on rudeness.
You don’t
have to be a dominant to appreciate courtesy.”
“Yes, sir,” Mike said. He held
Trent’s
gaze for a second before going back to his breakfast.
“Thank you.” Trent slid another waffle onto Mike’s plate. “I have plenty more.”
“You’re stuffing me.”
Austin shoved his waffle into the syrup. He wasn’t hungry, yet he could feel the
decrease in tension. Trent wasn’t Milton or Ryan. Austin could
almost forget that he was a dominant, but even the shadowy threads were a
comfort. Milton would be home; he’d fix this.
“Austin, they’re your favorite,” Trent said, his eyes on Austin’s uneaten breakfast.
“Not hungry.”
“I know, but I have a need to
feed you.” Trent put this hand on Austin’s shoulder. “I do know what’s going on. Milton will ask if
you ate anything. I’m not going to be responsible for your starvation.”
“I’m not going to starve. I had
dinner.”
“You know Milton. Is he entirely
logical about that sort of thing?”
“No,” Austin said with a snort.
“Bingo. Eat a few bites then you
can tell him you had breakfast. OK?”
“OK.” Austin forced his fork toward his mouth. Mace and Trent’s waffles were always perfect,
but today it could have been a cardboard box. He chewed and forced himself to
swallow.
“Good boy.”
Austin lifted his eyes and stared at Trent.
“I don’t usually have to. Don’t look at me like I have two
heads. I can always call Josh.”
Austin shook his head.
“Figured that,” Trent said with an easy smile. “Call him to thank him for
getting you and Joe home.”
Austin nodded. He didn’t want to call Josh, but it was
the right thing to do. Milton would insist, and Josh had gone out of his way.
He deserved to be thanked, and Josh wouldn’t lecture, not that Austin
wouldn’t
know his displeasure. He could pin a submissive with one word.
****
Sheldon looked out the open front door at Austin who was
bent over the heavy planters that lined both sides of the stairs. It was still
too early for the geraniums which always filled them in the summer, but the
pansies would survive the unpredictable spring weather. After the heavy snows
of last winter, everyone was more than ready for spring and a color besides
white.
Austin hated gardening. Last year he’d threatened to buy plastic
flowers much to everyone’s amusement. Milton was an absolute purest about the
flowers and the garden, and Tilden was his consistent second lieutenant. They
would be real and they would be perfect. Sheldon might never admit it, but he
loved the flowers also. He was such a sap, but he could still remember sitting
out there drinking lemonade with Milton sitting so close that their knees were
touching. Milton had been all his then. God, he wasn’t going there. He’d accepted that Master had five
of them. It wasn’t even all that bad. Sheldon had wanted Austin, his
puppy fling Milton had called it. The other three… No, he didn’t go there. He loved them; only he wished that sometimes
the earth would open up and swallow them. God, he was a selfish bastard.
Sheldon crossed the porch, trying to chase his dark
thoughts away with the weak spring sun. He needed Master. He needed a reminder
that life being this hard was worth it.
“Austin.” Sheldon put his hands on the stiff shoulders and kissed the back of
the cub’s
neck. “He’ll be here soon.”
“Don’t I know. More fun to look
forward to.”
“Hey.”
“He’s going to cane me.” Austin turned around; all his youth and anguish clear on his face.
Sheldon brushed a stray piece of unruly hair off Austin’s forehead and traced his thumb
down Austin’s cheek. “And you want it and are scared
shitless at the same time. I know, kiddo.”
“You do it so easily.”
“Austin,” Sheldon said, letting his exasperation bleed into his voice. “I’ve got some years on you, and
you’re
being willfully blind and you know it. I fuck up too.”
“You’re not scared. Mike is never
scared.”
“Mike is psychotic, so leave him
out of this conversation.”
Sheldon smoothed
the dirt in the pot and pinched off the spent bloom. He needed to talk, and he
wished he could just run and hide. “I’m scared,” he stumbled over the words, unable to look up, unable to smile and
bounce, and reassure Austin. “I’m scared how much I need him. I
always am. You know he’s not really going to hurt you.”
“It will hurt.”
“And it’ll be a good hurt. You’re scared one day he’ll decide it’s too much, that he’s not going to bother anymore.
And you test and demand and push. I made him put this around my neck.” Sheldon grabbed the oiled leather of his collar. “I’d crawl on my belly and lick his
boots, and I hate that shtick.”
“You don’t—“
“He knows I hate it, and he
protects me from myself. He’d never ask.”
“I hate being caned.”
“No, you don’t,” Sheldon said, hearing his own voice take on a firmness and a
passion. “You’re not my brother or whack job
Mike, but you want him in charge in very tangible ways. You wanted his
attention, all of it, and you’ll get it. You also wanted Joe
off your shoulders, and he’ll bend over backwards to fix
the world for his precious cub, and you know it.” Sheldon looped his arm around Austin and pulled him close. “I figure you’re on about the same time frame
as I was. It will take you about a decade to think of asking before going for
the dramatic, and then you’ll still go for the dramatic
sometimes.”
“You never—“
“I was this close to decking Mike
this morning.”
Sheldon held his
thumb and finger together. “I wanted to. I even sort of
wanted the results of it, and Master would have been angry, furious, volcanic,
but his attention would have been all on me, and when he’s gone for an hour or a day I
want that attention.”
“Why didn’t you?”
Sheldon touched his lips to Austin’s forehead. “Because I love you. Because I
love Milton so much that it makes my chest hurt to think about it. He can be a
bastard, but he owns me. I gave him myself, and my desires are subject to his
will. Mike’s off limits.”
“You hate Mike.”
“No.” Sheldon shook his head. “I don’t hate him. We just get on each
other’s
nerves.”
“It didn’t seem different to me but for
you…”
“It’s been years. I’ve made my peace.”
“Sheldon.” Austin entwined his fingers in Sheldon’s. “I—“
“Shh. I really am OK with it. I
sometimes just regress into stupidity. Don’t mind me. It’s just my dumb ass blabbering.”
“Stop it!”
“Austin.” Sheldon stared into the determination on Austin’s face. He no longer looked like
the sweet baby of Sheldon’s dreams, but a determined man who wanted something.
“Milton doesn’t let you talk like that. Don’t do it when he’s not here.”
“Sorry,” Sheldon murmured.
“I won’t tell him,” Austin said, his face morphing back into the sweet and angelic boy.
“I’ll tell him. Perfect slave boy
has to fess up to his sins,” Sheldon said with a forced grin.
“You don’t have to.”
“Actually, I do. Austin,” Sheldon said in a soft, gentle voice, “you know how I live with Milton.
I’ve
given him total control. If I withhold from him, it can get ugly, not angry
dominant with rightful punishment, but real life ugly. I won’t do that.”
“What will he do to you?”
“Talk,” Sheldon said, making a face, “and talk some more. Sometimes it’s hell being all grown up, and
if I don’t
talk he might send me to Ryan for forced lessons in cheerfulness, and that
might be worse.”
“I thought you liked Ryan.”
“I do, and he’s perfect for my brother, but
sometimes that man drives me wild. He’s too cheerful by half. No one
should be that big and bounce around with a silly grin like a demented child’s toy. He also does the hovering
thing to the point I want to strangle him with his own smile. Sometimes I like
to grump and pout in peace, and dearest Ryan thinks the smallest frown is
reason to call 911. I’m not a leprechaun who’s always ecstatic about finding
the pot of gold. That’s Blade, skip through the world with a grin and a
twinkle in his eye.”
“Ryan’s always nice to me, but I think
he worries about my age.”
Austin sucked in
his lower lip and chewed on its edge.
“He teaches kids the age you were
when you ended up in our bed. It makes him nervous. It makes all sane people
nervous. You know that, and you also know he’d have had the cops on our
doorstep if he thought Milton had coerced you or corrupted you.”
“He didn’t.”
“We know that, sweetheart. If
anyone was doing any coercing or corrupting back then it was you. I was lost
the minute you unleashed that tirade of bratting.”
“I was kind of awful back then.”
Sheldon pulled Austin down onto the steps and dropped an
arm over his shoulders. “You were very young back then, not that you didn’t think you were all grown up,
and you wanted something very badly and no one would listen to you. You know it
was Gordon that got it done. You should send him a bouquet of flowers every
year on your anniversary.”
“He’s a grouch stuck in the last
century.”
“He also loves Milton and is a
damn good dom even in his dotage. He knew I’d fallen for you, and he knew
what would happen if you did something entirely too stupid for words.”
“I wouldn’t have.”
Sheldon shrugged. It was ancient history; he’d let it lie. He didn’t even want to imagine a
teenager as submissive as Austin without an anchor. He’d lived through it, and he’d had family around him.
“We preferred not to worry. We
loved you too much.”
Austin blushed a delightful shade of red which made
Sheldon want to do nothing more than drag Austin to bed, but he restrained
himself to a peck on the cheek. “Ah, yeah, we were smitten. Now
back to work or this slave boy will be in trouble for not properly supervising
our naughty cub.”
“You’re not mad?”
“Not now. I do get you, Austin.
Stop worrying; Milton will be decent. I gave him a decade of practice.” Sheldon kissed Austin’s forehead again. “I’ll tell Milton about my dreams
of murdering Mike. Don’t worry your pretty little head, and I’ll deal with the fallout with
Joe. I’m
actually pretty good with scared to death in denial submissives.”
“You’ve had practice.”
“Not with you. You were never in
denial. You knew the first time Milton stared at me and growled.”
“And he kept telling me I was too
young.”
“And you insisted otherwise,
brat, so no reason to complain. Now back to the flowers. I’ll rescue Joe from the mountain
of laundry folding. Do you have to wear three shirts in one day?”
“Of course, I don’t have to wash them.”
Sheldon laughed and smacked Austin’s thigh. “Just you see. You owe me for
last night. I see some laundry in your future.”
“You wouldn’t!”
“Oh, I so would. See who you make
worry next time.”
Sheldon pulled
Austin to his feet and pointed him at the half filled planter. “Garden. Next week you’ll be slaving over a hot iron.”