If anyone had asked six months ago, Autolycus would've said that he
knew all there was to know about living dangerously. He'd reigned as
the King of Thieves for nearly two decades now, stolen from royalty and
commoners alike, in broad daylight, in the midst of crowds. Nothing
scared him off, no security was strong or deadly enough, no guards were
fast enough, no trap brilliant enough; he wasn't caught unless he
wanted to be. He
thrived on
danger, and not just in his professional life.
When it came to sex, Autolycus had always been open to new
experiences. He’d done everything from plain vanilla
romance
complete with poetry and flowers, to role-playing and bondage. What was
life for, anyway, if not to squeeze every drop of excitement out of it
while you had the chance? He rarely passed on anything, regardless of
how weird or extreme it sounded, and at pushing forty, Autolycus had
though of himself as a worldly kind of guy. He figured he'd been around
the block enough to have the street named after him.
Until he'd hooked up with Joxer.
At first sight -- Tartarus, at third and fourth sight, Joxer didn't
bring to mind the image of a guy who liked to take serious risks.
Autolycus' general impressions of him had been more along the lines of,
"Idiot in need of a village." Annoying in small doses, enough to make a
good case for justifiable homicide at prolonged exposures. And yet,
somewhere, somehow, along about the fifth time they ran into each
other, Autolycus had gone from wanting to strangle Joxer to wanting him
to get closer and do that harder and get rid of that damn sorry excuse
for armor because he couldn't get enough of a grip and sweet Aphrodite
on silk sheets, where had he learned to do
that? Autolycus still couldn't
explain it and by this point, he was thinking that it was better for
his sanity if he didn't try.
Because Joxer was a...surprise, in ways that hurt Autolycus' brain if
he thought too much about it. It wasn't that Joxer's clumsy idiot
facade was hiding a suave genius; the guy still tripped over his own
feet and couldn't wrap his mind around the concept that two plus two
actually did add up to four every time. But what Autolycus thought he
had in experience, he had nothing on Joxer.
Joxer was a Kinky Bastard, capitalization required.
Autolycus supposed he should've bought a clue the night he'd pulled out
his best leather restraints and wooden paddles and Joxer had taken one
look and said, "That's, uh, nice, Auto, really. But don't you wanna do
something a little more...I don't know, exciting?"
That had probably been Autolycus' cue to run, far and fast. But the
King of Thieves didn't scare easily and besides, coming from
Joxer of all people it'd seemed so
harmless, kind of quaint, in a naive sort of way. Except, Joxer hadn't
been the naive one.
There were things Autolycus had never considered doing in his career,
or in a relationship -- and using that particular word in connection
with Joxer was yet another thing he didn't think too much about. It
wasn't that he wasn't up to any challenge, no job too hard, no position
too wild, after all, but there were some things he'd always dismissed
as being too much risk for too little payoff. It was a decision that
didn't hold up too well, or at all, with Joxer in the picture.
For a guy who had a habit of fainting at the sight of his own blood,
Joxer courted danger like he didn't know the meaning of fear. Or was
just insane. Autolycus was leaning strongly in favor of the latter.
"Exciting" in Joxer's world usually consisted of something along the
lines of pressing himself up against Autolycus and whispering, "Hey,
Auto; you know that violently homicidal, psychopathic warlord Ares just
elevated to his favorite? I heard he's got this nifty new dungeon in
his fortress. Let's go have sex in it! We can play Defiant Prisoner and
Evil Jailer. And then you can steal his life savings. All while he's at
home!"
Which was, of course, the stupidest idea in the history of stupid
ideas, but then Joxer would lick his ear or slide a hand down the front
of his pants, or both, depending on just how suicidal the idea was, and
suddenly it sounded like the most brilliant, well-thought out plan
Autolycus had ever heard.
It might not have been so bad if Autolycus at least got to keep the
loot he pulled out of those insane jobs, but Joxer always had plans for
that, too.
"Aww, come on, Auto, we don't need all of that," he'd say in a whiny
tone that should've been annoying, but somehow wasn't with Joxer's
hands busy pulling opening laces and sliding under clothes. "Why don't
you donate it to that orphanage in the next town?" Or a village/town
that was suffering drought/fire/war/whatever, random poor people,
random homeless people, whomever they came across that Joxer thought
was more "deserving" than the poor schmuck who'd actually done all the
work to get the goods. The poor schmuck being, of course,
Autolycus.
But any time Autolycus started to complain, he lost his train of
thought. It was hard to muster a coherent argument when Joxer was on
his knees, or his back, or stretched out over him, demonstrating to
Autolycus that thinking with the head on his shoulders was highly
overrated.
Mixing business with pleasure was nothing new to Autolycus; he'd
flirted with and picked up plenty of men and women while on the job.
He'd even fooled around a little with his ex-wife back in the early
days when they worked together, but this...this was so far beyond the
norm that normal had lost all meaning months ago. It was one thing to
chat up some pretty little bit of fluff while he cased a joint, it was
something else to let Joxer bend him over the glass case holding the
priceless antique jeweled sword he was there to steal, and then try not
to alert the nearby guards by making any loud noises.
This was excitement, danger on a level that Autolycus wouldn't have
dreamed of risking before. An existence where no job was too crazy and
beds were only used for sleeping. And he didn't know how he'd done
without it.
He spent the better part of his time in a state of sweat-inducing fear
mixed with mind-bending arousal and he'd never felt so
alive. He’d never been so
sore or
exhausted, either, but dear gods above and below, he couldn’t
imagine
life without it anymore. Not that he ever said that to Joxer. Joxer
wore enough smug looks as it was these days, no need to add to it.
Not every day could be spent in death-defying acts of thievery and
exhibitionism, at least not the thievery part. Autolycus did insist on
some planning for a job and thankfully Joxer was sane enough to agree.
It took days, weeks sometimes, but that didn't mean that they did
nothing. Joxer wasn't the type to sit around counting the clouds,
waiting patiently for Autolycus to come up with a good plan. He liked
to be right there with Autolycus, giving his input -- even if his ideas
were so deeply stupid that Autolycus rarely resisted the urge to smack
him. Which prompted Joxer to either glare at him or to give him a
considering look before offering to drop his pants so Autolycus could
give him a proper spanking. It was usually the latter if there were
people anywhere near them. Autolycus had taken to whacking him more
often these days.
And if it wasn't public propositions, it was Joxer pushing him up
against the side of the nearest building, kissing him until it was
painful to walk and passersbys were gawking openly. Or sitting right
next to him in a pub, close enough that Joxer could slide a hand into
his lap, unlace his pants easily; Autolycus was past caring when the
serving girls wandered by and gave them knowing smirks. Joxer always
grinned back and ordered something in that damn cheerful tone.
Sometimes he'd just drag Autolycus off the street into a barely
shadowed alley and drop to his knees, smiling brightly up at him as
though no one was passing them just feet away. Or, once, in a whisper,
"You see that well in the town square, Auto? You'd, um, you'd, you
know, look really good naked, holding onto the wall. It's...it's
raining; there's no people out there." His fingers had trailed up
inside of Autolycus' vest, grazing a nipple. "Well, maybe just one or
two."
That was taking it pretty far and Autolycus had opened his mouth to say
just that. "Okay," was what came out.
What was too much? Too far? He hadn't found it yet and any lines he
thought he'd drawn had long since been crossed. Joxer, clumsy, dorky,
frequently brainless Joxer made him go further, explore more than
Autolycus ever thought there was to discover about himself, his own
desires.
Joxer woke him from a dead sleep one morning with another of his ideas,
"Hey! Let's go steal that new golden goblet collection king
whatshisname tithed to Cupid's temple." Autolycus gave it all of half a
second's consideration before shrugging. "Sounds good."
Which was a definite sign that whatever insane world Joxer so happily
occupied, Autolycus was now a full time resident himself. Gods and
their temples were two of the few things Autolycus had second and even
third thoughts about stealing from. A warlord would just kill him; gods
could torture him for years, centuries if the notion took them. It had
to be something big --
huge</i>
before he’d consider it, and really, goblets? Those weren’t
high on
Autolycus’ list of things that were worth the considerable risk
he’d--
they’d be
taking.
Even with Joxer leading him around by his...ego, Autolycus couldn't
help but voice his concerns while they spent a day casing the temple.
Little things, like death, torture, souls being ripped from bodies,
kept occurring to him as they strolled through the palace, disguised as
temple guards.
"I don't think so," Joxer said when Autolycus finally ran out of dire
scenarios. "Cupid won't be angry at us. I mean, he
knows me, we're...we're friends!
Yeah, him and me and Gabby and Xena had a couple
great adventures together!" He
grinned brightly. His helmet, made for someone much larger, slid down
over his eyes.
Autolycus groaned softly, barely resisting the urge to smack his palm
against his forehead.
"Besides," Joxer went on, shoving his helmet back, "when you fence the
goblets and we give the money to that couple who wants to escape their
warlord fathers and elope, Cupid will forgive everything. Trust me!"
His grin widened.
This time, Autolycus didn't resist that urge.
And yet, just two days later, early in the morning to avoid the priests
and guards, there he was in the middle of the temple, Joxer "watching
his back" as Autolycus checked the altar for any signs of traps. The
goblets, a collection of five in different sizes, were displayed
prominently in the center of the altar, on top of a white silk cloth.
He'd studied the setup at a distance when they'd been there before, but
he wasn't satisfied. He always wanted a closer look at things; it never
paid to be careless, regardless of how closely Joxer was pressing up
against him.
"Hey now, what happened to watching my back?" Autolycus muttered
without looking away from the altar. Was that a wire just above the
cloth?
"I did watch it," Joxer breathed in his ear. "It's a nice...back."
Autolycus stifled a gasp as Joxer slid a hand between them and squeezed.
“Yeah, well keep watching and do it elsewhere; this is delicate
work
and I don’t need distractions, kid.” Like that would get
him anywhere,
but it never hurt to remind Joxer that Autolycus
was doing a job here. It
might’ve
been a wire, but the dim torchlight wasn’t enough to give him a
good
look.
Joxer chuckled, a soft brush of air against the back of
Autolycus’
neck. “You’re funny, Auto. ‘Kid.’”
Another amused chuckle and one of
Joxer’s arms slid around his waist. “So what’s that
make you? A dirty
old man?” The hand resting on his stomach slid lower and
Autolycus had
to stifle a loud groan.
“Love how noisy you are,” Joxer muttered, pressing a kiss
to the back
of Autolycus’ neck.
“Well that’s great, Joxer, I’m sure the nice guards
with the really
pointy weapons will agree with you,” Autolycus said, his voice
catching
on more than one word. And it wasn’t like it made a difference,
it
never had before. Joxer just made a little humming sound that
might’ve
been agreement, disagreement, or maybe just a comment on the way the
laces on Autolycus’ pants were holding their knots so tightly.
“I--I need some dust, ash, something like that,” Autolycus
said, his
voice sounding rough to his own ears.
“Huh? Why?” Joxer replied in a distracted tone, the sound
vibrating
against the side of Autolycus’ neck. “Ha!” a soft
exclamation half a
second later when the laces gave beneath his persistent fingers.
“And to think, I thought you’d been paying attention all
these months,”
Autolycus said sarcastically, although it had less of a bite when he
was starting to pant like that. “Look, it’s really simple:
if there’s
some sort of wire trap here, I can’t see it, but a little dust in
the
air and all will be revealed. Tricks of the trade, Joxer. You know,
it’s not often that the King of Thieves hands out valuable
advice, so
pay attention.” Which, again, would’ve sounded much better
if he hadn't
been leaning back against Joxer. That armor wasn’t as
uncomfortable as
it looked.
“I always pay attention to you, Auto,” Joxer murmured, lips
against his
ear now. Then his hand stilled, laces dropping away and Joxer drew back
just a little. “Hey! I think I’ve got it!”
“Well, don’t give it to me,” Autolycus muttered, a
little put out at
the sudden lack of touching.
“Cute, Auto,” Joxer said sarcastically, giving him a light
whack on his
arm. But his tone changed immediately, turning excited, and just a
shade too loud. “No, I mean, I see something you can use!”
“You wanna say that a little louder?” Autolycus whispered.
“Maybe we
can get the guards
and the
priests in here.”
The speculative look Joxer gave him while stepping away really
shouldn’t have been such a turn on.
“Now just hold it right there,” Autolycus said firmly.
“There’s no good
escape route here and I don’t want to end up in the local slammer
demonstrating my flexibility for our new best friends, Bubba and
Tiny.”
Joxer gasped sharply, pupils dilating and Autolycus’ response to
that was predictable enough. If he
weren’t certain it would’ve set off some sort of alarm, he
would’ve
started banging his head against the top of the altar. There was always
the off chance that he could knock something resembling sense back into
himself. But then, he supposed, Joxer would just take advantage of the
position.
Instead, he held up a hand, cutting off anything Joxer might’ve
said.
“I don’t wanna hear it,” he said with absolute
certainty, because if he
listened, there was a good chance he’d do whatever crazy thing
came out
of Joxer’s mouth.
Joxer sighed and gave him an exasperated look. “You don’t
even know
what I was gonna say.”
“I think I could make a good guess,” Autolycus said
sardonically.
“Oh really?” Joxer raised an eyebrow, crossing his arms.
“Yeah, really. Look, as fun as it would no doubt be, I’ve
got a job to
do here and--”
“
We have a job to
do,” Joxer
corrected.
“--and when I’m in the middle of knocking over a
god’s temple, I want
to concentrate,” Autolycus finished, ignoring Joxer’s
words. “Of
course, I’m more than good enough to work under any kind of
conditions;
after all, I
am--”
“The King of Thieves,” Joxer said in an exaggerated bored
tone, rolling
his eyes.
Hand frozen midway towards smoothing out his mustache, Autolycus glared
at him before moving on.
“That’s right,” he jabbed a finger in Joxer’s
direction, making the
point, “and it’s not just any old empty title, you know. I
have to back
it up with deeds worthy of the great legend my name has become.”
Well, at least Joxer was laughing quietly.
Autolycus gave up, dropping his hand with a roll of his eyes. There was
a reason he never put up more than a few token objections in these
situations anymore.
“Okay, fine, be that way,” Joxer somehow managed to sound
petulant
through another muffled snort of laughter. “I was just gonna show
you
something.” And he dropped to his knees.
Autolycus looked down at him. “You know, that’s really not
helping.” At
least not with anything job related.
That got him another eye roll. “And you say
I have a one track mind.
Here.”
Joxer scooped a handful of something off the floor, right next to the
altar, and held it up to Autolycus.
Autolycus automatically held out his hand and when Joxer opened his
fist, a fine white dust trickled out into Autolycus’ palm.
“Well, well, well,” he whispered, a grin slowly turning up
the corner
of his mouth. “What have we here?”
“It’ll work?” Joxer asked, wiping his hand off on his
pants, leaving a
stark white powdery smear on the brown leather.
“Yeah, you did good, kid.” Autolycus said distractedly,
ignoring the
glare that got him.
Someone hadn’t been cleaning up the temple the way they
should’ve. It
looked like the top of the altar had been abraded and polished before
it’d hosted the goblet collection, and no one had bothered to do
a
thorough cleaning afterwards. It was marble dust he held in his palm;
perfect.
Autolycus carefully blew the dust in a wide enough swath to cover the
top of the altar. A hazy white cloud filled the air and slowly began
settling over everything on the altar, including--
“Oh-
ho!” Autolycus
clenched
his fist, grinning widely in triumph.
“There’s something there?” Joxer asked excitedly.
“Ah, you bet there is. An entire lattice of wires stretched
across this
baby,” he nodded at the altar. “And touching any one of
them would
probably set off some sort of alarm -- bells, I’m thinking.
Hundreds of
bells, no doubt hidden somewhere in the walls.” He nodded
decisively,
giving the innocent looking frescos along the wall a close once-over --
and then quickly looking away, eyes wide. Frescos in Cupid’s
temple:
not so innocent. “And,” he cleared his throat, regaining
his mental
footing, “and this would be one Tartarus of a challenge,”
Autolycus
looked down at Joxer and gave him a wink, “if I
weren’t--”
“The King of Thieves,” they both said at once, but this
time Joxer was
grinning happily.
“So? How long?” Joxer asked, rising up on one knee.
“This? Oh, please. You wound me.” Autolycus dismissed it
with a snort
of contempt. “One minute, tops.”
Joxer licked his lips, slowly. “That long?” he challenged,
his grin
taking on an all-too familiar edge.
“Now, don’t start.” Autolycus pointed a warning
finger down at him.
Joxer’s grin only widened as he pulled his helmet off. At least
he was
careful to set it down quietly instead of just tossing it like he did
too many times. He ran a hand back through his hair, mussing it even
more than that ridiculous helmet had, giving him that debauched look
that never failed to get a response out of Autolycus.
“Twenty seconds,” he heard himself say, eyes caught by the
way Joxer
was biting his lower lip, leaving it red and swollen.
“Wow, Auto, that sounds really fast,” Joxer said, his tone
suddenly so
deep, soft.
“Yeah, uh...but the, um, the technique is still first
class,” Autolycus
managed to get out with only a slight waver in his voice as Joxer
placed a hand on his thigh.
“Okay, show me,” Joxer said in a perfectly reasonable tone.
Then dug
his fingers into the muscle of Autolycus’ thigh.
Autolycus couldn’t hold back a groan but had the presence of mind
to
slap a hand over his mouth before any nearby guards or priests started
wondering if the temple was haunted.
“Bastard,” he breathed, and even if it was muffled by his
hand, Joxer
snorted in response and slid his hand higher and--
The temple doors swung open.
Autolycus and Joxer had come in through a window in one of the back
rooms not only for secrecy, but because the main doors were too huge
for even the both of them to force one open enough to slip in. That
wasn’t a problem for the man currently pushing them open like
they were
made of feathers.
“Hercules,” Autolycus said with a resigned sigh, dropping
his hand and
trying, under the circumstances, to look normal. Or maybe the
circumstances were normal enough on their own. He was standing over one
Tartarus of a haul, after all.
Joxer, Autolycus was grateful to see when he glanced briefly down,
quickly yanked back his own hand and slid himself between Autolycus and
the altar, completely hidden. He pressed himself back against the
marble, looking equal parts worried and annoyed. Not the most common of
expressions, but it worked on him. It worked too well and Autolycus
quickly looked back up, pasting on his most ingratiating smile.
“Hey there, Hercules,” Autolycus greeted, crossing his
arms. “Fancy
meeting you here.”
Hercules sighed, a long, drawn out, overly patient sound as he strode
into the temple. “Autolycus. Why am I not surprised?”
Stopping just a
few feet from the altar, he regarded Autolycus with something close to
resignation. “I’d say I was disappointed, but really, you
never fail to
live down to my expectations.”
“Hercules, I’m shocked!” Autolycus clasped a hand
over his heart -- and
jerked involuntarily when another hand settled back on his thigh. He
couldn’t risk a glance down this time, so he opted to ignore it.
“You
always expect the worst of me,” he finished, giving Hercules his
best
wounded look.
Hercules just rolled his eyes. “And I wonder why that is?”
“Disappointing childhood?” Autolycus offered, gritting his
teeth when
fingers tugged the laces of his pants the rest of the way open. He
couldn’t ignore
that,
but
there wasn’t anything he could do about it, either, not without
giving
the game completely away. Having strangers know was one thing, but it
would be just a little too much on the humiliating side to have
Hercules of all people figure this out. Risking it, though...he wished
he could say it didn’t do anything for him.
“Look, Hercules, I can explain, really.” Autolycus tried
for honest,
but the way his voice rose a little at the end didn’t help, but
nor did
the large, warm hand currently working its way into his pants. At least
from where Hercules was standing, the altar was high enough to hide a
great many things, including the way Joxer’s other hand was
tugging
Autolycus’ pants down more.
Another roll of his eyes and Hercules crossed his arms. “As
fascinating
as I’m sure whatever explanation you’ll invent is--”
“Hey, Herc!” Iolaus’ call distracted Hercules, making
him glance behind
him -- which was fortunate because Autolycus doubted he could’ve
explained why his eyes crossed right at that moment or his sudden
inability to breathe. He would’ve kicked Joxer, but considering
where
Joxer’s
mouth was right
now,
Autolycus just braced his feet, dug his fingers into his arms and bit
back the loud, deep groan that wanted to work its way out of his throat.
Iolaus jogged into the temple a second later, looking a little out of
breath. “I said wait up! I--oh. He
is
here, huh?” Coming to a halt beside Hercules, taking deep
breaths,
Iolaus gave Autolycus a look of amusement touched with annoyance.
“Blondie,” Autolycus greeted him, impressed with how level
he managed
to keep his voice while trying to fight the urge to pant.
Iolaus didn’t rise to the bait, just rested his hands on his
hips. “I
knew it. The instant we heard about these goblets, I just knew
we’d
find you here.”
Autolycus tried to laugh, project the appropriate amount of fake
amusement and very real scorn, but he ended up coughing hard to cover
up Joxer’s name almost slipping out because Joxer was
humming. Not audibly, but merciful
Fates, could Autolycus
feel
it.
Hercules was frowning now, giving him a narrow-eyed, suspicious look.
Iolaus just rolled his eyes.
“Glad--glad to see you two have such concern for your
friends,”
Autolycus said his best snide tone before clearing his throat.
“What is this ‘friend’ thing he keeps talking
about?” Iolaus said,
raising an eyebrow.
“Got me,” Hercules replied with a shrug.
“Yeah, you two are a real...a real comedy d--duo.”
Autolycus swallowed
back the moan that tried to come out after the words. “Listen,
guys,
Big Guy,” he smiled condescendingly at Hercules.
“It’s really not what
it looks like.
Trust me on
that.” He dug his fingers even harder into his arms; sweat was
breaking
out all along his body.
“Trust him?” Iolaus chuckled. “Um, what d’you
think, Herc?”
Hercules looked at Iolaus and raised an eyebrow.
“Nah,” they both said at the same time.
Autolycus would’ve said something appropriately scathing, but
Joxer
suddenly decided that he’d been taking things too slowly;
Autolycus had
to lock his knees when they threatened to buckle.
“I--I’m not here for the gob--gob--those things.”
Autolycus nodded
shakily at the sparkling golden goblets and it was true enough. Right
at that very moment, that wasn’t what was on Autolycus’
mind in the
slightest.
“Oh, this should be good.” Iolaus gave Hercules a knowing
look.
“Yeah, laugh it up, Shorty.” That came out far breathier
than Autolycus
cared for, but it was the best he could do.
His shirt was beginning to stick to his back; a single bead of sweat
formed at his temple and began a slow slide down. He was starting to
feel lightheaded, all his blood rushing south, faster and faster it
seemed. And Joxer definitely had faster down to an art form. Autolycus
seriously hoped those wet slurping sounds weren’t as loud as they
seemed. Or maybe it was his own focus narrowing, heightening
everything, every deep, throbbing sensation.
He grabbed onto the first semi-plausible explanation his rapidly
overloading brain could come up with. “Is it really...so h--
hard to believe that I’m just
here
to--to worship?”
Okay, so semi-plausible was stretching it. Hercules and Iolaus’
twin
incredulous looks confirmed that, but Autolycus was coming up blank for
anything else. He was barely standing upright as it was and considering
his...position, he thought he deserved some sort of award for not being
sprawled on the ground, gripping handfuls of messy brown hair while he
profusely thanked various and sundry gods for Joxer’s ability to
overcome his gag reflex.
“So, um, Autolycus,” Hercules was the first one to speak
and he wasn’t
bothering to hide his smile or the deep amusement in his tone.
“You
just woke up this morning and decided to...get religion?”
“Oh, believe me,” Autolycus breathed the words out on a
trembling sigh,
“I’m a--all about the religion. Get--getting it right now,
in fact.”
“In
Cupid’s
temple?” Iolaus
was grinning widely. “You’re in love, Autolycus?”
Joxer’s other hand slid up between Autolycus’ legs, fingers
slick with
saliva and pushing and was he
totally
insane? Autolycus couldn’t handle--couldn’t stand--he
couldn’t-- Oh
gods; suddenly everything was so abruptly, brightly clear.
“Yes,” he said, and somehow his voice was steady.
Iolaus’ eyebrows flew up, Hercules frowned and -- and Joxer went
very,
very still.
It was suddenly so quiet in the temple; there was only the faint sound
of a horse and cart passing somewhere out beyond the walls and it did
nothing to break the weight of the silence inside.
Autolycus swallowed and unclenched his hands from his arms; he’d
have
bruises there soon. “Yeah,” he said, his voice rough,
“I am.” He met
both Iolaus and Hercules gazes without blinking, but wished so much
that he dared to look down at Joxer. He wanted to know what Joxer was
thinking; he’d see it all in those wide, expressive brown eyes.
“Oh.” It was Iolaus who finally spoke, frowning now. Then,
“Oh!” His
eyes widening before he looked pointedly at Hercules.
Hercules looked back at him shaking his head once. But then Iolaus
raised an eyebrow and inclined his head towards Autolycus.
“Oh,” Hercules said with a nod. Whatever that
“oh” meant, it had him
smiling slightly when he looked back at Autolycus.
“Well, congratulations, I guess,” he said. “And
we’ll...leave you to
it.” He started to turn away, but stopped mid-motion, looking
back at
Autolycus with a knowing expression.
“We’re here to help out a couple who wants to elope;
shouldn’t take
more than an hour. Those goblets better be here when we get back.”
“And you’d better be gone,” Iolaus added.
“No problem,” Autolycus said, and that was true enough.
With those guys
taking care of Joxer’s latest pet cause, then there was no reason
to
steal the goblets. Well, other than to say that he’d done it, but
it
wasn’t worth getting on Hercules’ bad side. Again.
“Uh-huh.” Hercules didn’t look like he quite believed
Autolycus, but he
turned anyway and walked back towards the doors, Iolaus at his side.
Autolycus’ attention was drawn from their retreating backs by a
firm
tap on his thigh, bringing his gaze downward.
Joxer’s mouth was a little too...occupied to manage a smile, but
his
eyes glittered with it. A grin big enough to draw an answering one from
Autolycus, to make something warm and bright grow in Autolycus’
chest,
and if he wanted to be honest about it, it had been there for a while,
unacknowledged.
Then the glitter in Joxer’s eyes turned to something more
approaching
mischievous and that was all the warning Autolycus got before Joxer
moved. Fingers and tongue and mouth
and all at once and it hit Autolycus like a speeding chariot and he
couldn’t stop it, couldn’t keep it bottled up--
“Gods!” It was loud enough to echo through the temple. More
than loud
enough to bring Hercules and Iolaus to an abrupt halt right on the
threshold. They stared at him.
“Uh...just...getting into the praying...thing,” he managed
to get out,
teeth clanking together as another wave rolled through him.
“Right.” Iolaus drew the word out.
When, too-long moments later, they turned and stepped out of the
temple, Autolycus finally let his muscles unlock and dropped to the
floor.
Joxer pulled away just in time, a hand clamped over his mouth to stifle
his laughter as Autolycus sprawled out in front of him.
“You--” Autolycus had to stop to take a deep breath; his
heart was
pounding so loud he could barely hear himself speak. “You are
going to
pay for that,”
he promised.
“Good,” Joxer replied, the word muffled by his hand but
still perfectly
audible.
Autolycus rolled his eyes and stretched out the leg that had twisted to
one side when he fell -- and kicked Joxer’s helmet. It went
clattering
across the floor, the metal spikes on the helmet ringing sharply
against the white stone.
Both of them froze, looking wide-eyed in the direction of the helmet.
Maybe the guards hadn’t heard that. They hadn’t seemed to
hear all the
talking, after all. Cupid really needed to invest in better
guards...not that Autolycus was going to be the one to tell him that.
“Okay, I give. How did you know, Iolaus?”
Autolycus shut his eyes and pinched the bridge of his nose. That was
worse than the guards.
Iolaus’ chuckle carried from the doorway. “Herc,
don’t tell me you
didn’t you hear that ‘armor’ squeaking?”
“Guess I’m not as attuned to that kind of thing as
you.”
“Or, here’s a thought, maybe you’re just getting
old.” Another chuckle.
“Hey, I’ll show you old.” And their voices faded,
Iolaus’ reply
inaudible.
Autolycus opened his eyes and turned his head to look at Joxer. Joxer
met his gaze with a shocked expression that Autolycus was certain
mirrored his own.
“You do know we’ll never be able to look them in the eye
again, right?”
Autolycus said dryly, recovering some of his composure.
Joxer nodded with a long sigh. Hand dropping, he shrugged. “Yeah,
but
it was worth it.” He smiled.
Autolycus snorted. “Only you, Joxer.”
“Only me what?” Joxer frowned, then reached up to wipe
something off
the corner of his mouth. He licked his finger clean.
Autolycus was certain that sound he made wasn’t a whimper. Fairly
certain.
Shaking his head, he pushed himself up on his elbows, happy to find
that they were able to support him instead of having all the muscle
consistency of limp paste, as he’d half suspected.
“I can’t figure out half of what goes through that
‘mind’ of yours,”
Autolycus said, sparing a hand to smooth out his mustache. But he
smiled, his tone affectionate.
Joxer grinned back. “Oh, come on, Auto, sure you can! Hey, I bet
you
could tell me
exactly what
I’m thinking right now.” As he spoke he got to his feet,
armor indeed
squeaking with every tiny movement.
Autolycus stared up at him for a long moment, frowning. Then
Joxer’s
grin widened and it suddenly became so obvious.
“You have
got to be
kidding!”
Autolycus protested, sitting up fully.
“Um...no.” Joxer brushed off more marble dust before
unhooking the
straps that held his armor on.
“Fates have mercy on me,” Autolycus muttered as Joxer
carefully lowered
the armor, making sure there was no noise when it piled on the floor.
Apparently the Fates weren’t listening, though, because Joxer was
unlacing his pants now. Autolycus’ mouth went dry; his heartbeat,
just
starting to calm, sped right back up.
“Oh, to Tartarus with it,” he cursed under his breath. His
responses
were too predictable now and Joxer had to know it, so why fight?
Rising up on his knees, he started to reach for the waist of
Joxer’s
pants.
“Wait a second, Auto,” Joxer said, holding up a hand.
Autolycus looked up at him, raising an eyebrow in question.
Joxer looked...thoughtful. Not a good sign.
“Let’s make this a little more...exciting, huh?” he
suggested.
“Exc--?
What?”
Autolycus
stared up at him in disbelief.
Joxer didn’t answer, just grinned widely -- and leaned back
against the
altar.
The
twang of wires snapping
seemed deafening, but it was nothing compared to the sudden peal of
bells ringing through the air. All around them, from every side, every
wall, and it was good to know that at least Autolycus had been right
about that.
“Better hurry,” Joxer advised with a slight laugh, bracing
his hands on
the sides of the altar. More wires snapped. The bells grew louder.
This was...this was nuts! Autolycus spared a second to marvel at the
sheer stupidity of this, alarms going off around them, the faint,
growing sound of agitated people coming their direction, and him on his
knees, like an utter fool.
“You are
insane!”
Autolycus
spat out, right before he yanked Joxer’s pants the rest of the
way
open. “Totally, completely, out of your godsdamned
mind!” And he wasn’t
sure if he was
talking about Joxer or himself. Why in Zeus’ name was he doing
this?
Why?
“Love you, too, Autolycus.”
Autolycus’ gaze snapped up and Joxer was just...looking at him.
Smiling
softly.
Oh. That was why.
Autolycus found himself smiling back.
So it was crazy. But it was worth it.
Fin