clear cut

About The Hustler Prince

by Lee Benoit
44 pages / 20500 words
Available file types - html, lit, pdf, prc

Martín, an American anthropologist in his early thirties, is settled in his life if still bruised from his latest break up. Then he visits Cuba on a fact-finding mission and discovers Alexei, a charming young man with hidden scars. Alexei introduces Martín to his dangerous and what had begun as an attraction deepens into love. Returning home and leaving Alexei behind nearly kills Martin.

Then Alexei takes matters into his own hands. Fighting to keep Alexei with him in the States isn't going to be easy but there's nothing Martín won't do to keep Alexei safe, even if it means asking help from a man he despises.

Sample

The coffee perked just as Doria tapped on the windowpane with one blunt fingernail. She never stood on ceremony (or the stoop), never waited for an invitation to coffee, and never wasted time on superficial greetings. A buss on the cheek and she was through the door, bringing a gust of smoky autumn air with her; a gurgle of coffee into the mug Martín had set out for himself and she was perched on a tall stool at the counter, rummaging in her backpack for the cream she must have stopped for on the way.

“Damn you and your lactose intolerance, Tino,” she grumbled equably, pulling out a slightly dented cardboard carton. “And put on a shirt before I start getting ideas.”

Groggily, Martín turned to leave the kitchen and comply but Doria called him back. “Would you look at this?” Frisbee-style, she pitched a folded newspaper at him, which he caught against his bare stomach. He unfolded it on the counter as he reached for a mug to replace the one Doria had hijacked. Martín glanced at the big photo on the front page above the fold and dropped the mug onto the scarred linoleum countertop with a dull thud. The sudden knot in his chest made it hard to breathe. He spun around to face his friend.
“It’s him, isn’t it?”

“Sure looks like him.”

“Oh, my. Oh, Doria. He really did it!”

Doria retrieved Martín’s mug and filled it with coffee. She put her arm around his waist and looked up into his startled green eyes. “I thought the little bastard was joking.” Doria always swore in crisis situations. Martín never did.

The picture in the newspaper was of a crowd of men at a detention facility at Guantánamo Bay, a cross section of the desperadoes and fringe dwellers who’d risked everything – not that most had much to lose – to leave Cuba during that crazy summer and fall. Fidel, taking the path of least resistance while publicly insisting he was thumbing his nose at yanqui hegemony, had simply failed to stanch the off-island flow of the undesirable, the redundant, the – not to put too fine a point on it – the poor, the dark, the queer. The irony of this glimpse into certain perversities of Cuba’s great egalitarian experiment seemed lost upon the redoubtable jefe.

Martín took a gulp of coffee. It was much too hot and burned his mouth. He put one hand over Doria’s to keep her close, set down the coffee, and took up the paper again. Left of center, a young man aimed a dazzling grin at the camera, bright brown eyes squinted closed with mirth. His hand rested flat over his heart, two fingers extended, in a salute Martín recognized. Martín made a conscious effort to force a breath deep into his lungs. The face, its dark eyes and white smile, the deliberately placed hand, the compact body, all belonged to Alexei. Martín had been trying to forget Alexei for four months.

“Ay, nene,” he whispered raggedly to the youth’s image. “You followed me! You tried to come to me.”