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One Night in Beirut

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[One Night in XXX Story Event]

Larnaca, Cyprus

Friday evening, 16 July 1982

Nabil was panting in anticipation, bent over on his belly on the yard wide and deep pillow-top rattan ottoman. Strong hands pinning his upper arms to the ottoman, Nabil was facing out over the small balcony and onto the European-style Larnaca esplanade, featuring a wide swath of outdoor café tables running out from the building to a cedar tree-lined promenade avenue and then onto a semicircular sandy beach, an old harbor castle to the right and a marina to the left, down to the harbor and the Mediterranean sea. With very little effort, he could imagine he was looking out over the Beirut esplanade before the destruction of the civil war and Israeli siege.

He exclaimed an “Al-lanah!—Oh, Fuck!” and panted hard as Andreas, hunched over him from in back and on top, moved his hands to gripping Nabil’s waist to hold him captive while the big Greek Cypriot drilled the smaller Lebanese man’s hole, penetrated him with a thick cock, and worked his way in deep. Nabil writhed under the man in pain-pleasure as Andreas pinned him to the ottoman with his cock.

“Parte to! Pare me!—Take it! Take my shaft!” Andreas growled, as he encircled the chest of the tall and slim, dark and sultry Lebanese young man with one arm and buried the fingers of his other hand into Nabil’s black wavy hair and arched the young man up into his muscular, workman’s chest. As he arched Nabil’s torso back, he thrust up inside him, and Nabil gasped and yelped at the thickness and length of the older Greek sailor. As Andreas pulled back, he let Nabil dip forward, only to growl, “Xana!—Again,” and to thrust up as he pulled the slimmer, lighter young man’s buttocks up into his crotch. “Again,” rang out and then another “Again,” a third and sixth time, and with a cry, Nabil, who had been fisting and stroking himself, arced cum out over the edge of the ottoman, splashing on the glass door to the balcony. Andreas grunted, “Again,” and “Again” and then he too pulled quickly out of Nabil, jerked the condom off, and creamed the Lebanese young man’s buttocks with his cum.

“Aeto etheles—That’s what you want,” Andreas growled, as he stood up from the ottoman and walked over to a table and a half-full whiskey bottle. “That’s what you’ve been nosing around me to get.”

Nabil, sprawled out on the ottoman and panting heavily, couldn’t say Andreas was wrong.

Twenty minutes later, the two men, Nabil tall, slim, dark, handsome, a man of the city and the shops, and Andreas, muscular, solid, also dark haired, but blue-eyed, and rougher of demeanor, a man of the countryside and sea, stood side by side, in their briefs as they clearly could be seen by the bustling crowd at the cafés below, on the small balcony, watching the sun sink behind the fourteenth-century, squat stone fortress of Larnaca Castle at the western end of the seafront. They were smoking cigarettes and drinking Keo beer. Nabil took in this view of the Larnaca seafront whenever he could, as it had so much in common with the esplanade of Beirut, his own city.

“I should go upstairs,” Nabil murmured, making the statement sound more like a question, as if he were seeking a follow-up session from the sturdy Cypriot sailor.

“?chi Akoma—Not yet,” Andreas commanded. His command was Nabil’s duty. What he commanded was Nabil’s weakness. Andreas took Nabil by the wrist and pulled him into the flat. They fucked on the ottoman again, but this time it was with Andreas sitting on the stool, with Nabil sitting in his lap, facing him, and rising and falling on the Cypriot Greek sailor’s cock, as Andreas encircled Nabil with his arms and worried the young man’s nipples with his tongue and teeth. They held there, panting lightly and Nabil arched back, arms dangling from his shoulders, when Andreas had come again. “That was a good one,” Andreas said at length.

“Yes,” Nabil answered.

“You are learning to ride to my rhythm.”

“Yes.”

“You will want to ride it again.” It wasn’t a question.

Nabil hesitated, but then he said, “Yes.”

“You will be here this weekend? You can get away? Either here or on my boat?” Andreas asked?

“I have to go to Beirut. I have to check on my family’s store,” Nabil said. “My father worries about it.”

“Ah. Be careful there. I sail off Sunday night. I have to pick up tourists in Rhodes and bring them back here. I will be back on Wednesday.” Andreas ran a tourist boat service out of the marina in the harbor.

“I will be here then.”

“Again, then.”

“Yes,” Nabil answered, giving a little smile and shiver, remembering Andreas crying out “Again” over and over as he fucked him the first time, Nabil’s eyes watering and his mouth yawning wide in a silent scream of passion and possession as the thick cock thrust up inside him. “But now I must go upstairs. Leyla will want me to greet the children before she puts them to bed and serves our dinner. We are eating early, as I must be off by 8:00.”

“Ah, beylikdüzü escort yes, the beautiful Leyla. You will be there tonight, then,” Andreas said, “in Beirut—and you will come back to Cyprus tomorrow?”

“I won’t return until Sunday,” Nabil said, as he, reluctantly, pulled off the thick cock that had gone flaccid inside him and reached for the clothes strewn on the floor by the ottoman. “Just one night in Beirut is hardly worth the sail.”

“Or the risk,” Andreas said.

“It’s always worth the risk. Beirut is home. Beirut will be Beirut for as long as it has the spirit.”

* * * *

Leyla Alwaiti closed the copy of that week’s glossy society magazine, the Beirut Monday Morning, and put it aside on the counter as she heard her husband, Nabil, enter the flat.

“We’re in here,” she called out, trying her best to turn her look of concern to a welcoming smile. She had thought they were beyond all of that. Apparently not. And there had been the added shock. She felt numb as she heard Nabil rummage around in the living room. She struggled to put on a welcoming face.

“There you are,” she said cheerfully, as Nabil entered the kitchen. Their children, Jasmine, five, and Issa, three, were sitting at the table, finishing their dinner. The older girl and younger boy always ate at seven. Nabil and Leyla usually didn’t eat until 10:00, but Nabil wanted to be off by 8:00, so they would eat now, before the children were finished and Leyla put them to bed. They had to be on a tight schedule here in Larnaca, in what they hoped was only a temporary home. Their house in Beirut was so much larger, and they had servants there. It just wasn’t safe to be there in the summer of 1982, during the Israeli siege and bombardment, but the flat in Larnaca, where Nabil’s father had a jewelry store seemed so impermanent. Leyla felt like a refugee here. She’d never known a home other than Beirut before. Beirut offered it all; there was no reason to be anywhere else until hell had descended on the city. Nabil said she’d would no longer recognize the city now—that she may never want to go back there again now.

Leyla couldn’t imagine ever wanting to be anywhere other than the Lebanese capital.

At least there were other displaced Lebanese families on the southern Cypriot coast, including many in their own social set, to console each other. And at least Nabil got to go back and forth, watching out for his family business in Beirut.

Nabil came into the kitchen and saddled up close behind her, putting his hand on her full belly and kissing her in the hollow of her throat. It was about as demonstrative toward her that Nabil got, coming at odd times. He was kind to her, though, and she knew he was trying hard.

“Has the little one been kicking today?” he asked.

“No. It’s quiet. I wish you didn’t have to go this weekend,” she said. “I think it’s getting more dangerous in Beirut. I hear the night shellings have picked up.”

“There’s that tall bank of flats between our store and the Israeli positions to the west, across the water,” Nabil answered. “I think the store will be safe. This can’t go on very much longer.”

“It will go on as long as it goes on,” Leyla said, with a sigh. Nabil was too much of a dreamer—not enough of a realist, she thought. Luckily, both families were wealthy enough to weather this civil war topped by the Israeli invasion. It was also fortunate that they had enough financial interests here in Cyprus to sustain them. It had been an arranged marriage between two families of wealth and position in Lebanese, and, despite those other rumors that did concern Leyla—more now from what she’d seen in Monday Morning—the marriage had been a good one—better than she had expected. With a bit of guilt, Leyla thought that the troubles in Beirut had something to do with that. It had forced a change. Leyla’s life centered on children, and she had been given children. Another one would arrive early in the new year.

“What are we having for dinner?” Nabil asked, turning his attention to the stovetop.

“Baba ghanoush, kafta, and znoud el sit for dessert.”

“You spoil me, Leyla. I don’t think I deserve you.” He remembered then why it was imperative that he go tonight. They had left Beirut in such a rush that he hadn’t retrieved the present he’d had made for Leyla. There was a necklace in the store safe he’d had made of her favorite stones, sapphires, and was set in gold. His family were jewelers. He could think of no better way to express his appreciation for Leyla and what she had agreed to than to shower her with gems. He needed to go tonight to retrieve that necklace lest he never could go there again.

Right at this moment Leyla didn’t think he deserved her either, but now wasn’t the time to discuss it. It must be discussed, though, before he slipped back into his ways—and in the worst of all ways. It wasn’t something that they could take to their families—neither his nor hers.

“Perhaps bolu escort we could eat on the balcony,” he continued. “I’ll like to watch the sunset. And then I must leave.”

Forty minutes later, having settled the children with coloring books, Leyla stood on the balcony of the flat, the offending Monday Morning in hand, and watched Nabil motor out of the marina below—into the sunset, toward their beloved, wounded Beirut.

* * * *

Beirut, Lebanon

Saturday morning, 1:00 a.m., 17 July 1982

Nabil made a fast trip across the Mediterranean from Larnaca to Beirut in his thirty-seven-foot speed cruiser, completing the calm-water trip in under five hours and arriving outside Beirut harbor slightly before 1:00 a.m. Although he had to remain aware of the needs of navigation as he skimmed the quiet waves, he couldn’t help but think upon his circumstance and the precarious double life he was leading, which was only complicated by the Lebanese civil war, a war more controlled by outside forces than by the generally life-loving Lebanese.

Did he really have to come to Beirut this weekend to check on the family jewelry and leather goods store? Did it really matter what happened to the store for now with all of Lebanon imploding? Hadn’t the more expensive goods been locked away, business being almost nonexistent in wartime conditions anyway? He did it for his father, who would surely die if anything happened to the store and who was “that close” to having a stroke anyway. But did he really do it for that? No, he did it mainly from guilt—from the need to retrieve that necklace for Leyla and assuage his uncontrolled cravings guilt toward her. He had a perfect life with Leyla and the children, and the family had transferred enough of the goods to the Larnaca store and had enough funds in reserve to lose everything they had in Lebanon and still manage—not with the luxury they had enjoyed before, of course, but they could build again.

If Beirut only survived this attempt to wipe it off the face of the earth and return to being a paradise on earth.

He would do just what was needed. He’d only go to the store and that was just to check it. That would satisfy his father. And he could go to retrieve the sapphire necklace for Leyla. He hoped that would please her. Then, he’d return to Larnaca. He’d be on the sea all night, but he could be back in Larnaca before the children woke. What a surprise that would be for them. He wouldn’t even go to the Cedars Nightclub. And he wouldn’t stop at the harbormasters to meet with the Syrian commander there to obtain safe passage to the store on the Route du Liban. It wasn’t that far from the port. He could manage that on his own. Meeting with the major would only make him sink deeper into the temptation he wanted to escape.

He resolved himself on that intent to honor his family, to change his life entirely, as he anchored off the harbor. The thought of his family brought a concern to his mind about his dinner with this family that evening. Something was concerning about that—something he’d seen or heard, or maybe only sensed?—but he couldn’t think what it could be, finally deciding that it was just the feeling of guilt of having been in a flat downstairs with the Greek Cypriot, Andreas Tsialis, just before he had come upstairs.

He was so weak. Here he was thinking of having chosen the family life when he’d gone in a different direction as recently as that that evening. He was too weak, and he couldn’t get enough of it.

But he would just look in at the store tonight and retrieve Leyla’s necklace; he wouldn’t go to the nightclub. Despite this mental struggle and resolve, he went below; stripped off the sea-water-soaked clothes he’d been wearing; pulled on the tight jeans, black mesh muscle shirt, and sockless open-toed sandals he liked to party in; lowered the dingy; and, as quietly as possible, with the motor on its lowest speed, turned the prow toward the harbor pier. As he motored in, he watched the night sky. The near-nightly shelling by the sieging Israelis of the uneasy occupation of the city by both the Lebanese and Syrian armies and also by the Palestinian Liberation Army fighters, each dancing around the other as the Israelis trapped them in the city, had already begun. The sky was intermittently lit up by the exploding shells, bringing daylight to the harbor area.

Nabil didn’t have a chance of not being detected by the Syrian army harbor patrol, the Syrians having taken control of the waterfront. The harbor patrol saw him in the light from the bursting of the shells before he hit the pier and were moving toward him. As he resigned himself to having been seen, Nabil’s thoughts went to the commander of the Syrian harbor guard. With his new resolve to get into the city quickly, check the store, and be out again quickly crumbling, he felt the old desires flowing into him. Well, it wasn’t his choice now. This was just the procedure already set up for him to navigate Beirut safely at night.

“Major bursa escort Idris said you would come tonight,” said the soldier who helped Nabil climb up to the stone pier as another soldier tied up the dingy. “Taal mai—Come with me.”

The Syrian major was sitting at a desk in the customs house when Nabil was brought in. He was a burley, heavyset, hirsute man in his forties. “Kent amel an tati al-lilah—I was hoping you would come tonight,” he said, swiveling his chair around, as Nabil was brought in. “I have the itch and need to relieve the tension. The Israelis are active tonight. They seem to want us out of the city. Strip off those clothes.” And, when Nabil had and stood naked before the Syrian officer, Idris sucked in his breath and said, “You have a beautiful body. Perfect, like Lebanon itself, and as desirable to be subjugated and possessed. I love violating that perfection. You will want an escort to the Cedars club afterward?” He slouched forward in his chair, and unzipped his trousers.

“Just to the Route du Liban tonight, and only for a short time. Perhaps your soldier can wait for me and bring me back.”

“Perhaps . . . if you please me.”

Nabil went down on his knees between the Syrian major’s thighs, pulled the man’s fat erection out of his fly, and pleased him with his mouth. When Major Idris wanted him more fully, he pulled Nabil up and laid him down on his back on the desktop, positioned himself between Nabil’s spread and raised thighs, penetrated him, and fucked him slowly and methodically, neither man speaking, to his ejaculation.

The man didn’t arouse Nabil deeply, but he was a man and he had a cock that could achieve and maintain an erection. He was thick, but not long. He wheezed and grunted as he worked hard to plow the young man, and he didn’t last long—not long enough to make Nabil come. But this was just a means to a desired end for Nabil, and having any man’s cock inside him was better than none. The major was not less tolerable than Nabil’s English professor—the man who had initiated him—had been at Al Jamaa, the American University of Beirut, and who Nabil had let fuck him for good grades. Little had Nabil known what path of desire that was to take him on.

Nabil lay there, his head turned to the window, watching the nightly fireworks over the city, thanks to the Israelis, and tried to pretend that he didn’t enjoy having a man’s cock moving inside him, even if the man was old, ugly, and fat. But the truth he was tortured trying to escape was that he did. The man had a cock and he could get it erect. Idris lasted long enough for Nabil’s concentration to focus on the shaft inside him and for Nabil to dig the heels of his feet into the edge of the desk, raise his tail to improve the angle of penetration, and to move his hips to the rhythm of the fuck. Major Idris laughed, knowing that the young Lebanese was now a full partner in the copulation.

The Syrian officer had won out through the wanton desire of the Lebanese youth just as Syria was in the process of overwhelming and fucking hedonist Lebanon—the Syrian man and nation each having its way in ruining the beauty of Lebanese sensuality.

It was enough for Nabil that the man had desired him, had wanted to possess him. Nabil had been raised in a position of underachievement behind an older, athletic brother his parents had adored. The best attribute Nabil had been accorded was that he was “pretty.” He had merely embraced that. All a man needed to debase Nabil was to pay homage to his beauty.

Unfortunately for Nabil’s resolve, the Cedars Nightclub, an edgy gay dance bar in what had been the subbasement wine cellar of a mansion on the Route El Arz, was located between the port and his intended goal, the family jewelry and leather goods store on Route du Liban. Nibal and his escort of two Syrian soldiers slipped along in the darker shadows of the streets leading from the port. The Syrians were in ascendance in this sector, but they never knew when the Lebanese army or the PLO fighters would choose to encroach. There always, as well, was the threat of the Israelis picking any given time to make a ground assault on the city center. They continually probed the edges anyway.

His escort probably would avoid a firefight with other Syrian patrols or even with roaming Lebanese arm and PLO units, but Nabil was a Lebanese civilian and should not be on the streets at night. They could take him from his escort and, if they found what he was useful for, what Nabil had sought and been sought for, as Beirut decomposed, he could have quite a night in their “care”—very probably a terminal experience in the “use, abuse, and discard” atmosphere in the war-torn city.

Nabil hadn’t known a night in Beirut to be this bad before. His beloved city, once known as the Paris of Middle East, with what had once featured wide, tree-lined avenues; classic European architecture; a world-class seaside esplanade; and unparalleled nightlife, was descending into a bleak hell of devastation. In spite of it all, the city maintained resilience. It was losing the battle of being a beautiful and serene European-flavor city in the Middle East, but it was refusing to give up its nightlife—the spirit of pleasure in which it had long dwelled.

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