Xander was tired. He was exhausted, and his body ached, and
underneath the cast-iron chemical plating separating his toe from the rest
of his cadaver, there was some serious pain-throbbing-agony going on in
his metacarpal phalange. The only thing keeping him awake was the
knowledge that Chris was going to call him soon—he"d promised—and
he had to know Xander was watching the game.
In short, Xander was too tired to deal with what Leo was saying,
but worse? He was too tired to escape it, either.
“What were you talking about?” he asked, fearing the inevitable.
“I was talking about the color that was missing on the television
screen. Xander—that"s not Chris, it"s the way you see him. That"s how
he looks to you, when you"re both playing the game. He"s a good player,
and he"s going to make a fine living. But he"s not you.”
“I hope not,” Xander murmured, almost to himself and half-stoned
on painkillers and exhaustion. “Because that would make sex almost as
boring as masturbation.”
Leo was surprised into a guffaw before he picked up the phone.
“Hey, Edwards, how"s the cutest little free-thrower east of the Rockies?
Or are you west? My sense of direction sucks.”
136 Amy Lane
Leo"s small talk didn"t last long, though, because in a moment the
phone was in Xander"s hand.
“Hey, man, how you feeling?” Chris was all concern, and Xander
fought the temptation to reach out to the television screen and summon
back the vision. Damn, he was out of it.
“A little stoned,” Xander confessed. “They gave me some
painkillers, and I took one before the food hit.”
“Yeah? How long ago was that?”
Xander thought hard. “Right at the beginning of the game,” he said,
and Chris did some thinking.