Peak Coaching (Jonas)
The morning light had barely shifted when Jeff rolled off me, both of us still breathing hard, skin slick with sweat and the remnants of his massive load cooling on my chest and cheek. He looked down at me with a dazed, almost boyish grin, beard still messy from sleep and sex, dark hair tousled. I reached up, wiped a streak of his cum from my face with my thumb, then sucked it clean while holding his gaze.
“Jesus,” he muttered, voice wrecked. “I didn’t even know I could come that hard.”
I laughed softly, pulling him down for a lazy kiss. “You’re full of surprises, Langston.”
We stayed tangled like that for a while, trading slow kisses and murmured nonsense until the alarm on my phone buzzed... lesson time. Reality crept back in: skis, slopes, the real world outside this little studio. But the heat between us hadn’t cooled; if anything, it had settled into something deeper, steadier.
We showered together, hands wandering but not rushing, then dressed in ski gear side by side like it was the most natural thing in the world. Breakfast was quick: coffee and bread at the small table before we headed out into the crisp February air. The village was waking up: smoke curling from chimneys, ski buses rumbling, the distant clatter of lift machinery. Jeff carried his skis over one shoulder, helmet under his arm, looking more at home in the mountains than he had on day one.
Today was the day: his first red run. Not the steepest in Alta Badia, but a solid intermediate with long, flowing pitches, some tighter turns, and enough gradient to make you feel the speed. I’d been building him toward it all month. He was ready. More than ready.
We took the gondola up together, sitting close, thighs pressed, gloved hands brushing. No one else in the cabin this early. I leaned in, lips against his ear. “Nervous?”
“Excited,” he answered, turning to catch my mouth in a quick, heated kiss. “And a little hard already, thinking about you.”
I grinned against his lips. “Good. Use it. Channel that energy into your turns.”
At the top, the red run stretched out below us: groomed corduroy, a few gentle rollers, then a longer, steeper pitch that curved left before flattening out. Visibility was perfect, the Dolomites sharp against the blue sky. Jeff clipped in, took a deep breath, and looked at me.
“Lead the way, instructor.”
I pushed off first, carving easy turns to show the line. He followed, skis parallel now, body more forward than it had been weeks ago. His first few turns were clean: weight shifting smoothly, edges biting, poles swinging in rhythm. I skied backward a bit, watching him, calling encouragement.
“Beautiful! Keep the hips forward… yes, there!”
He grinned inside his helmet, gaining confidence. But on the steeper section the speed crept up, and his turns got a little hesitant. One left turn in particular: he sat back slightly, skis chattering.
I skied up beside him as we stopped at a wide traverse. “You’re dropping your inside hip on the lefts. Makes you wash out.”
He nodded, breathing hard. “Felt it. How do I fix?”
I moved closer, our skis almost touching. My hand slid down the front of his pants, palming the thick bulge there through the fabric. He sucked in a breath.
“Think about your cock,” I said, squeezing gently. “It’s hard right now, yeah?”
“Fuck yes.”
“Good. Imagine it’s pointing left when you want to turn left. Let it lead your hips. Shift your weight over that hard dick like it’s telling you where to go.”
He laughed, a surprised, delighted sound. “You’re ridiculous.”
“Does it work?”
He tested it on the next pitch: leaned forward, hips rotating left, imagining his erection as the rudder. His turn was sharper, cleaner, the skis carving a perfect arc.
“Holy shit,” he called back. “It actually helps!”
I caught up, laughing. “Told you. Hard cock makes the best ski coach.”
We played the game the rest of the run. Every time he hesitated on a turn, I’d ski close, give a quick grope or a whispered “point that dick, baby,” and he’d laugh, adjust, nail it. By the bottom he was flying... smooth, controlled, grinning like a kid.
“Red run conquered,” I said as we unclipped at the base. “You’re officially intermediate.”
He pulled me in by the jacket, kissed me hard right there in the open, not caring who saw. “Couldn’t have done it without my very dedicated instructor.”
We were still catching our breath when he pushed off too fast on the flat traverse back to the lift, caught an edge, and went down in a spectacular yard sale: skis flying, poles tumbling, body sliding a few meters in the snow.
I skied up fast, dropped beside him. “You okay?”
He was laughing too hard to answer at first, flat on his back, snow in his beard. “Yeah… just… ego bruise.”
I straddled his hips, pinning him lightly in the snow, leaned down and kissed him... slow, deep, tasting cold air and triumph. His gloved hands came up to cup my face, holding me there.
A skier glided past, older guy, gray mustache, classic red jacket, slowed just enough to call out with a thick Italian accent and a huge grin:
“That’s what I call personal instruction! Teach him everything, ragazzo!”
We broke apart, both cracking up. Jeff waved a glove at the guy, still laughing. “Grazie! Best lesson ever!”
The skier saluted and skied on, shaking his head with amusement.
I looked down at Jeff, snowflakes caught in his lashes, cheeks red from cold and laughter. “You heard the man. I’ve got a lot more to teach you.”
He sobered a little, eyes searching mine. “How much longer are you staying?”
“Through the end of the season. Another six weeks.” I brushed snow off his beard. “But I was thinking… you don’t have to leave when your month is up. There’s still so much to explore. The black runs on the Marmolada are waiting. The hidden powder stashes. The nights. Us.”
Jeff’s expression softened. “I was going to ask. I’ve got nowhere pulling me back to DC. No job, no ties. And honestly…” He swallowed. “I don’t want to leave this. Or you.”
My chest tightened. I leaned down again, kissing him softer this time: less heat, more promise.
“Then don’t,” I said against his lips. “Stay. We’ll ski every day, fuck every night, figure out the rest as we go.”
He smiled, wide and real, the kind of smile I hadn’t seen on him that first day. “Deal.”
We got up, brushed off the snow, clipped back in. The lift line waited ahead, the mountain endless above us.
One month ago he’d arrived burned out, searching, unsure.
Now he was here... laughing in the snow, hard against my hand earlier, ready to stay.
And I knew, as we pushed off toward the lift together, skis parallel, shoulders almost touching, that this wasn’t the end.
It was only the beginning.
The End
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