
About Dragonwalker
by Lee Benoit
52 pages
/ 11000 words
ISBN: 978-1-61040-068-8
Ebook zipped file contains -
html, lit, Adobe and Sony optimized pdf, prc, epub
Endi has lived in the same small town his whole life. He walks and
grooms dogs for a living, tries to keep up with the sprawling old house
his grandparents left him, manages a boyfriend, and tries like heck to
hide his crush on the town's fire chief. Pretty ordinary, right? But
Endi's always hoped for better than "ordinary." One day, he meets a
mysterious new friend and his canine clients start sprouting wings and
spewing fire. Can the motley collection of pooches really be dragons?
Originally published in the Another Fine Mess Anthology.
Sample
It all starts with a blowjob.
As it turns out, the blowjob itself isn’t all that
important. In fact, it doesn’t even have all of my attention, or I wouldn’t
have noticed the wings.
I’m on my knees in Peter’s kitchen. I’d come to walk his
dog at lunchtime, like always, and he’d popped home from his office in the
next town over because he’d “forgotten something.” Yeah, to stick his dick
in my mouth, that’s what he forgot. Not that I’m not happy to oblige.
But there’s happy and then there’s happy, if you know
what I mean.
He smoothes his hand over my hair as I suck him off. He
isn’t guiding me, or forcing me, no, he’s tidying me up. That’s Peter all
over: his priority during fellatio isn’t getting off, or holding off, or
controlling my technique, it’s subduing my unruly hair. How a guy like him
can own a dog is beyond me. But the dog, not his dick, is why I’m there, and
we both know it.
Without letting up on my patented bob and weave
technique, I swivel my eyes around to see if Blackie’s still in the room.
Call me a freak, but I think it’s kind of impolite of Peter to get sucked
off in front of his dog, especially since he says his dog is neutered.
There’s Blackie, sitting in a shaft of noontime sun from
the kitchen window, watching us without blinking, his yellow ear fur all lit
up. Oh, yeah, Blackie’s not black; Black is Peter’s last name, arrogant
jerk.
In the light from the window, it looks like Blackie isn’t
a dog, either. He dances his paws a little on the floor, flexing his
shoulders, and I swear I see a pair of wings extend behind and above him,
flap once, and fold back into nothing.
It’s a good thing Peter’s just finished shooting down my
throat because I spit out his floppy prick and sit back hard on the green
linoleum.
“Did you see that?” I yell.
Peter chuckles and tucks himself away. “What, kiddo, did
I make you see stars?”
I must have a pretty harsh look on my face or something
because his face registers concern for the merest second. “Did I hurt you?
Cut off your air?”
I look over at Blackie, who takes my sprawled position on
the floor as an invitation to play. He ambles over and I watch him every
second, waiting for those wings to appear again. He sniffs my face and licks
at my mouth, which is kind of gross if you think about what was most
recently in my mouth. I stroke over his shoulders and down his spine,
scratching a little.
No wings.
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