First Exposure by Alan Chin Is Now
Available
I’m very excited to be sharing this
story with readers because it is loosely based on my becoming the target of
homophobia while serving in the US Navy, when I took a second (off duty) job
delivering flowers at a gay-owned florist.
Blurb: Straight, married
Petty Officer Second Class Skyler Thompson battles homophobia from his Navy
buddies, the military, and his wife when he takes a second job creating flower
arrangements at a gay-owned florist. But rather than yield to pressure and
quit, he refuses to give up the joy of creating beautiful arrangements,
battling homophobia for artistic expression. His dream is to leave the navy and
open his own florist shop.
Ezra Dunphy—his shipmates all call him
Dumpy because of his obesity—is a gay sailor who likes to dress in drag. He is
shunned by his shipmates, tragically lonely, and uses drugs to cope with his
solitude. What he wants more than anything is someone to share his life with.
Can these two men, opposites in every
way, help each other achieve their dreams?
Excerpt:
The
majority of the ship’s three-thousand-man crew and twenty-five-hundred-man air
wing made their way to the flight deck to hear the president’s speech. Skylar,
however, hustled to the squadron’s enlisted lounge where he found a dozen of
his shipmates sipping beers and watching Bush’s speech on the television
attached to the bulkhead. The screen showed Bush on a podium below the “Mission
Accomplished” banner. “In the Battle of Iraq,” the president said, “the United
States and our allies have prevailed.”
The crew
on deck cheered; so did the men in the lounge, raising their beers in a salute.
A bottle of whiskey passed from man to man, and from the little fluid left in
the bottle, Skylar realized his shipmates were already halfway to shitfaced.
As Skylar
sauntered across the compartment, he nearly choked on the aroma of warm beer,
cigarette smoke, and human sweat. He snatched a beer and cranked off the cap,
then perched himself on a chair in a corner where he couldn’t see the damned
monitor. He removed a sketchpad and charcoal pencil he always kept beneath his
shirt, and began sketching the image of the Viking jet. He softened the lines
with his fingers, shading where needed. Skylar had a feel for drawing. He
considered himself an artist, albeit an untrained one. While aboard, it was the
only thing that gave him true pleasure.
“Why fly
him here anyway?” Skylar asked no one in particular. “We’re thirty miles from
San Diego, for christsakes.”
Shushes
echoed from the men.
Dunphy
wandered into the room holding a yellow writing tablet and ballpoint pen. He
studied the remaining empty seats with a troubled scowl, as if trying to find the
safest spot available. Skylar’s and Dunphy’s eyes met from across the room, and
Dunphy rambled toward him and squeezed his bulk into the next seat over.
Without a word, he bent his head over his tablet and began writing a letter. A
minute later, he glanced up at Skylar, as if noticing him for the first time,
and offered him a relieved grin.
Skylar
returned the gesture. He scanned the room again. Smitty played bridge at the
next table with Stokes, Kelso, and Nash. Hudson perched himself on a table in
the center of the group of spellbound crewmen, chewing on a half-burned cigar
and his eyes glued to the tube.
Skylar
and Dunphy worked side by side, Skylar sketching and Dunphy writing. The first
time Dunphy’s arm brushed Skylar’s, he hardly noticed. The second nudge was
longer, almost sensual. It caught Skylar’s attention. He glanced down, noticing
Dunphy’s hands for the first time, shapely and hairless, showing a particular
beauty. Skylar moved his arm, giving Dunphy an inch more room, and began to
draw those fingers wrapped around the pen.
The third
brush convinced him it was deliberate. He pulled his arm well away and turned
to stare into those liquid, unreadable eyes.
Before
Skylar could begin to fathom Dunphy’s intentions, the hatch slammed open and
Petty Officer Third Class Travis Bolton, the Brutus of the navy, charged into
the room. His crew cut was the color of scorched grain; skin shaded a creamed
coffee hue. Bruises adorned his face, and one of his muscular arms was bandaged
and supported by a sling. Travis was two years older than Skylar, but when they
hung together, Skylar felt like Travis was his little brother—someone who
needed looking after.
Their
shipmates had nicknamed them, the Evil Twins. They didn’t look alike, but
Travis loved practical jokes, regardless of who they offended, and Skylar
always backed him up when things went wrong, which was often. This bad boy role
gave them both a certain amount of capital in this tough, unforgiving
environment. It also awarded them a lot of solitude.
“It’s a
fuckin’ zoo on deck,” Travis drawled in his baritone, Baton Rouge accent. He
shook his head like a wet schnauzer. His black eyes blazed with restless
energy.
“Look who
they let out of the brig,” Smitty bellowed. “The mouth from the South walks
among us once again. They even let him keep a stripe.”
“Christ,
have you seen what’s going on up there?” Travis said, turning his back on
Smitty. “There’s more press on deck than fags at a West Hollywood Gucci sale.”
“You’d be
the one to know,” Hudson said. He let out a bark of laughter as he and Smitty
did a high five.
Travis
snatched a bottle of Jack Daniel’s from the crate and shoved his way toward
Skylar. He cracked open the bottle, took a hot swallow, and wiped his mouth on
his sleeve.
Skylar
sipped his beer while he watched Travis stampede through the room with the
lithe delicacy of a heavyweight prizefighter. Travis wore one of his
hand-tailored uniforms that he had bought in Honolulu and upon which the three
stripes of a petty officer first class had been hand-embroidered. Skylar
inspected the fresh pale lines on his friend’s sleeves where two other stripes
had accompanied the one there now. His eyes shifted to Travis’s damaged face.
“Owww, Trav. Fightin’ with your cellmate to see who bends over?” he said, and chuckled.
“Hope you boys used protection.”
“Don’t be
jealous, Skye; he doesn’t have your boyfriend’s puppy dog eyes and big, cushy
ass.” He nodded his head at Dunphy.
They
smiled, clinked their bottles, and both took another swallow. This competitive
banter became a delicate situation for Skylar, and he felt he had to restrain
himself. Even though Travis was his buddy, it seemed their conversations always
became delicate situations, both of them flirting with that invisible no man’s
land between amusing and affronting. Delicate situations irritated Skylar. Who was it that said that Hell is being locked in a room with
your best friend, forever? He thought of that moment of freedom he had
experienced on deck, his arms spread and his face into the wind, just him and
the horizon, and he wanted desperately to recapture that feeling.
“If
bullshit were money,” Skylar said, “we could buy our way out of this suck-ass
job and do something worthwhile.”
“Give up
slavin’ for minimum wage, bein’ away from home for months at a time,
brown-nosing the brass, and riskin’ our lives for God and country? Are you
nuts? What’s better than this?”
“Right,
what was I thinking?”
“So,
Skye, what’s it like to flag the president’s bird? Bet you peed your tighty
whities.”
Skylar
glanced at his sketch of the Viking. “Same as any other. He’s just cargo, only
dumber than most.”
“Yeah,
but I’ll bet you put some extra Tinker Bell flair into it for the cameras.”
Smitty
huffed at Travis, “Which makes you Captain Hook?”
“Naw,”
Hudson said, “with that big mouth, he’s got to be the crocodile. What’s his
name?”
“Tick
Tock,” Dunphy said. “Who doesn’t know that?”
“Shut
your piehole, fruitcake,” Travis said. “Nobody asked you shit.”
Skylar thought about all the enlisted men who,
almost to a man, were thin-skinned, loudmouthed, and shallow. More and more, he
felt out of place in their company. He wondered if the navy deliberately
allured individuals who were, well… crude, or if they became that way after
they joined as a defense mechanism to this testosterone enriched atmosphere.
The question was moot. There was no way to change them or the environment.
Whenever he thought about it, however, he felt an inkling of concern that their
loutish ways were rubbing off on him.
Dunphy
leaned closer, uncomfortably close, to peek at the sketchpad. “Hey, that’s
amazing. You went to art school?”
“Naw. Got
sidetracked.”
“Yeah,
didn’t we all. But, man, if I had your talent I wouldn’t be here shucking
orders and eatin’ runny eggs and burnt Spam.”
“Takes
more than talent.” Skylar knew how arduous the hardscrabble art world could be
for an unknown artist. He had friends that ate or starved on the whim of
reviews, art fairs, and group shows, and who only dreamed of sales to
collectors. Some had MFAs and adjunct teaching posts, but most produced
sketches for third-rate advertising firms. Not one of them made the kind of
money from painting that could support a family.
Skylar
lifted his beer toward Travis. “You organize this? Pretty risky considering
who’s aboard. You must really love brig time.”
“Aw,
shit, Skye, the brass’ll be on deck all day, listenin’ to that lying sack of
turds. By the time they finish lickin’ each other’s buttholes, there’ll be
nothing left but empty bottles in the trash chute.” He took another swallow and
nodded at Dunphy. “But wouldn’t you have wet your panties if the brass saw you
unloading this?”
Dunphy’s
face blushed the color of a ripe peach. He dropped his head, intent on his
letter once again.
“Hell,”
Travis continued, “Eighteen months at sea, we deserve some party time.” Travis
became more animated with each mouthful of Jack. He snatched the pad from
Dunphy’s hand.
“Hey,
give that back, you Neanderthal.”
“Lookie
here, boys,” Travis said, raising his voice, “Dumpy’s writing a love letter to
his sweetheart.”
Dunphy
stabbed for his pad. The wattle of fat under his chin shook.
Skylar
shot Travis a look. “Give it up, Trav.”
“Tommy,”
Travis read in a loud voice, “I got your letter, and I’m thrilled you’ll be in
Washington when we dock—”
Skylar
swiped the pad from his hand. “You’re such a dick,” he said, and handed the pad
back to Dunphy.
Travis
displayed a full set of dingy teeth. “Sounds like Dumpy has two BFs.” His voice
held no trace of humor this time.
Skylar’s
stomach spun a slow somersault. He laid his sketchpad aside and stood
eye-to-eye with Travis. “Say that again, asshole. I dare ya.” He used the
vehement tone that he always found startling, like thunder on a cloudless day,
and that he had intentionally developed for situations like this.
The room
fell silent.
Skylar
made his eyes go hard, enhancing the challenge. Travis bunched up a fist and
pulled his arm from the sling. Skylar bent his knees to lower his center of
gravity.
Before
Travis could make his move, Captain Jake Blake rambled through the hatchway,
looking stern, unflappable, and fit for his fifty-two years. Beneath his
salt-and-pepper crew cut and hiding behind his tortoiseshell glasses were his
piercing hazel eyes, which revealed his self-assured temperament. His dress
white uniform was crisply pressed and his shoes buffed, communicating respect
for his position and underlining his attention to detail. He smiled, but it
seemed more the result of a paralyzed face than a cheerful disposition.
Hudson
yelled, “Attention on deck!”
The men
snapped to attention. A bottle tipped over and rolled to Jake’s feet, leaving a
trail of beer in its wake. Jake stepped over it as if it were a landmine.
Travis
glanced at Skylar and mouthed a silent, “Fuck!”
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