NOBODY’S HERO
Katey Hawthorne
www.loose-id.com
Nobody’s Hero
Copyright © March 2012 by Katey Hawthorne
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eISBN 978-1-61118-804-2
Editor: Raven McKnight
Cover Artist: P. L. Nunn
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Acknowledgements
Thanks to John and Jen for their support and help bringing these guys to life. Thanks to
Raven for getting it. So, so much getting it.
This one’s for the Reillys, who are far weirder and more wonderful than fiction.
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Katey Hawthorne
Chapter One
My sputtering iPod gave up the ghost on a Monday afternoon. Normally I don’t
mind the start of the work week—my name’s Monday, so I defend my day on
principle—but I was still slightly hungover from Saturday night. The only way I was
going to survive was with a little help from MGMT. The frigid silence of the old cube
farm drove home several irritating facts:
1. I had a phone number of dubious provenance in my wallet.
2. A tequila headache lingered behind my eyes.
3. I was totally unprepared for the sales call from hell tomorrow morning.
4. Last night’s visit from the recurring nightmare was clinging to my brain.
And last, but oh God, not least:
5. My stomach was cannibalizing itself.
To add insult to injury, my phone chose the exact moment of iPod death to vibrate
on the desk, screen flashing the most ominous word in the English language: MOM.
She picks today to bestow a phone call upon her grateful son. I love my mother, but I
really wasn’t in the mood.
Only one thing for it. The electricity was practically bouncing off the inside of my
skin, so I let tiny white sparks crackle around my fingertips. I shouldn’t, I knew. Any
sleeper—as in, non-superpowered-type—who saw me would freak and call for a wiring
inspection. Well, that or know me for what I am, or at least some weird sleeper-friendly
version of it. Call me a witch, maybe.
But really, screw it. I let the charge build up until the crackle became audible, then
let it go. It leaped to the iPod, sending up a hiss and spark from its useless innards.
Nobody’s Hero
3
Fried.
Not quite the storm I was craving, but the fizz of ozone in my nose and the tingle
it left in my hand—goddamn, that was nice. I closed my eyes and took a deep breath.
“Jamie.”
My stomach dropped. I shoved the iPod under some papers and spun the chair
around.
Clark leaned against the partition, eyebrows high. “The hell, you watching porn
on that thing?”
“What?”
“My mother once caught me with a copy of Swank, and that’s exactly how I
reacted.”
“You got a dirty mind, man.”
“Uh-huh, that’s great, coming from you.” He chuckled. “Get up, fool. I’m
starving.”
“Where’s Sarah?”
“We’re supposed to bring her a chicken Caesar. You getting one for your best
friend?”
“Yeah, it’s Monday.” My phone vibrated again. I shoved it into my pocket and
followed Clark out, listening to him rant about his mother-in-law—who I happened to
know was a really nice woman, by the way.
He paused near the door, nodding to the far corner of the cube farm. “You meet
New Guy yet?”
“The code monkey? Nah.”
“Off your game.”
“Shitty day.”
“I’ll introduce you.” He waved me along the narrow aisle between the drab gray
partitions and the beige wall. “Weird dude, though.”
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“There’s a first, a weird programmer.”
“Ha-fuckin’-ha.”
That got him a dirty look from Isabella, since we were passing her cube. I swung
inside and kissed her cheek. “How you doing, gorgeous?”
“Don’t flirt with women older than your mother.” She patted my face. “Hot date
this weekend?”
“It’s not a date if you meet a guy at a club, slam shots for an hour, go back to his
place, and get a cab home at three a.m. So, no, not really.”
Really should’ve asked him to write his name next to his number. Ferris?
Frederick?
My head gave an answering throb. Fuck.
Bell chuckled. “Tell me more.”
“If I remember, you’ll be the first to hear it. Got any new romance novels for me?”
We had a barter system: I’d divulge tales of my sordid affairs, and she’d divulge other
people’s tales of sordid affairs. Because, yes, there were days when we were that bored.
“No, but I just went to the library, so I’ll have some for you soon.” She went back
to her keyboard, Clark’s verbal transgression forgotten. Mission accomplished.
I wandered around the corner after Clark and then almost forgot how crappy I felt
for a second. New Guy’s desk chair was in pieces on the floor, which meant he had to
bend over his desk. And you know how there’s always one guy on the football team
that’s a little slimmer than the rest of the line when they get set, but you stare at his ass
anyhow because it’s got that perfect shape?
Yep, that’s the guy.
Clark said under his breath, “If I looked at a female employee like that, I’d be
fired.”
“You did look at a female employee like that, and she just popped out your second
brat.”
Nobody’s Hero
5
“That brat is your goddaughter.”
“And she’s beautiful, just like her godfather.”
But by then New Guy was standing up, one of those “Welcome to Humphries”
folders in his hand. We weren’t near enough that he’d catch what we were saying, but it
would’ve been hard to ignore our presence.
Clark said, “Hey, New Guy.”
I gave him the once-over when he turned. First thing: he wore glasses, black wire-
rimmed. (Bona fide librarian sexy.) Second: basic white button-down, flat-front
pinstripes, plain belt, no watch, stylishly shaggy, no obvious hair product. (Didn’t ping
the gaydar but didn’t shut it down either.) Third: he was pale, super pale, but his hair
and eyes were a deep chocolate color. (Goth kid by night?) Fourth, and most
importantly: swimmer build. Tall, wide shoulders and slim hips, and did I detect a
telling bulge at the—
“Kellan, actually.” Luckily he was too busy eyeing Clark with extreme suspicion
to notice me checking him out like a hungry dog with a juicy bone.
No pun intended.
“Yeah, I know, but for about a month, you’re New Guy.” Clark accompanied this
announcement with his biggest grin. “That’s just how it works.”
“Right.”
Clark clapped him on the shoulder, and Kellan’s mouth pressed into a pale, thin
line. Oblivious, Clark went on. “This is Jamie Monday, our social director.”
I held out my hand. “Not really. Sales.”
He took it, and his gaze dropped, but nervously. His voice was warm, middle-
toned and gentle, which somehow took the edge off the words: “So you’re the guys
who sell things we don’t have and then expect me to produce them?”
I laughed.
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Pricing consulting: selling software that doesn’t exist (yet) to companies that could
probably do without it, then bleeding them dry by charging for every planning
meeting, conference call, training session, and product update for years to come.
But hey, you want to know what a fifty-cent price cut will do to your holiday
sales? Have I got the product for you.
One corner of Kellan’s lips twitched upward, and his gaze dropped again. Those
eyes were something, now I was a little closer.
I got the feeling he’d been a little bit serious. Better keep it simple, then. “Nice to
meet you, Kellan.”
“New Guy,” Clark corrected.
Kellan pulled a face like a five-year-old staring down a plate of Brussels sprouts. It
drove home that he was a lot younger than I’d expected, but I recalled something about
him being a wunderkind. I mean young in a cute-college-guy way, not a creepy way.
Considerate of them to hire someone worth looking at, at least. Brightens the place up.
I said, “We’re going to lunch. You hungry?”
He poked at a cardboard box with his toe and chewed on his nails. “Ah, no,
thanks. Just arranging my stuff.”
I laughed. “Don’t let us tear you away from anything exciting.”
He looked up sharply, mouth pressing into that line again. It was like someone
pouring cold water over my head. I’m not saying I’m Prince Charming, but I’m not an
ironic dickhead either. Damn.
“Right.” He turned around and went back to digging through the lone pile of
papers on his desk.
“Okay.” I allowed myself one last look at his fine backside. Hey, I could be a jerk
too. Yeah. “Later, New Guy.”
“Later.”
Nobody’s Hero
7
We couldn’t talk about it in the elevator, since it was jammed full, but in line at the
sandwich shop, Clark said, “Told you. The code monkey has a stick up his ass.”
“Yeah, well he can stick his—”
“Don’t finish that sentence.”
“Don’t knock it till you’ve tried it.”
“James, I would do anything for your love. But I won’t do that.”
I sighed. “First Swank, now Meatloaf. Jesus, man. You have the worst taste in
everything—except women.”
“And you’re the expert there.”
“You’re such a cock.”
“And you’re the—”
But I was at the front of the line by then, so we stifled our adolescent banter long
enough to order sandwiches. We took the long way back to drop my extra off with Will-
Sing-for-Food Guy on the corner. Clark always called him my best friend, but I
considered myself a patron of the arts. You dropped a buck in his ancient coffee cup,
this guy made up the best couplets you’ve ever heard, usually based on you or
something going on down the block at the moment. Drop enough dollars, and he’d
eventually start talking—and you’d find out what kind of sandwich he liked.
If that’s not worth a three-cheese panini on a Monday, nothing ever will be, man.
* * * *
Clark, Sarah, and I made it a point to say hi to New Guy when we saw him. His
standard reply was to grunt a hello and drop his gaze, then keep walking. Sometimes
he’d do that little lopsided smile but never for long.
Clark decided he was stuck-up, Sarah pointed out he was just acting like a
programmer, and I didn’t know what to think. I shouldn’t have cared, but Clark calling
me the social director wasn’t far off. I arranged the happy hours; I managed the
intramural team; I knew everyone, and everyone knew me. Being just about the only
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Katey Hawthorne
eye candy in the office didn’t make up for him giving us the cold shoulder. If I could
convince Isabella to sub in at left field, I was sure I could convince Kellan Shea to sit in
the dugout, at least.
So on Friday, I tried again, resolved that I wasn’t taking no for an answer. I
stopped by Bell’s cube to drop off a Danielle Steel novel I’d found in a bargain bin and
then pretended to take the long way back. When I saw the back of Kellan’s head, I
stopped and rested my arms on his partition. “Hey, New Guy.”
“Kellan.” Then he looked up, seemed surprised to see me. “Oh, right. Sorry. New
Guy, that’s me.”
Well, at least he was trying. I turned on the smile. “You like baseball?”
Looking even better than usual, he spun his chair around, lines of code flashing on
the screen behind him. His Casual Friday jeans were worn where they hugged his long
thighs, and the T-shirt under his tweed sport coat had a circular emblem made of
shamrocks and snakes. It said Flogging Molly.
I filed that away for later use. It’s a sales thing.
“Post-season, mostly,” he said. “Haven’t been to the Jake in years.”
Bonus points for not calling it Progressive Field. “The amount you have to drink to
make it through an Indians game these days, the bar’s more cost-effective.”
That halfway smile appeared. “So, office outing or something?”
“Better than that. We have an intramural team, play some of the other local
companies. Got a game this weekend, if you’re interested. We need a shortstop;
Megan’s better at first, and Lance is killing us there.”
He chewed at his fingernails. I’d never noticed before, but they were bitten down
to the skin. “Uh, no thanks.”
Usually when people say no, they give you a reason, either because they feel
obligated or because part of them wants you to convince them to change their mind. If
you do, and you’re good, you can even make them think it was their idea all along.
Nobody’s Hero
9
I didn’t have much of a read on this guy, but instinct told me there was more to it.
So I waited, schooling my expression.
Then he said, “More of a watcher than a player.”
There it was. “So come cheer for us. We’re pretty good—we won the league two
years ago.”
He smiled halfway again, but one dark eyebrow went up. “You really spend your
weekends with people from work?”
When I recognized the stinging sensation in my cheeks, I gave a low whistle.
“Ouch.”
“Shit. I didn’t mean it, uh, like that.” And he went back to chewing his nails.
I stopped myself asking how, exactly, he could’ve meant it otherwise. I chose that
moment to wonder if he was so awkward around me because of the queer issue.
Sometimes it takes a while to get an insecure straight man to treat me like, you know,
just a guy. Like I have to prove I’m not on a recruitment drive or something. I mean, if
they’re really that concerned about a gay man idly noticing whether they’re hot or not,
maybe they should stop checking out the T&A on every woman to pass by.
That’ll be the day.
In Kellan’s case, it was unlikely. He’d been awkward from the first, and though
Isabella’s interest in my dating habits had surely informed him of my proclivities by
now, he couldn’t have known then. Even so, the thought pushed me into an
uncomfortable mental area. “Forget it. I’m gonna go get a Coke. Need anything?”
“No.” He stopped chewing on himself. “Thanks…Jamie.”
“Later,” I said.
“Later.” But he didn’t turn around, just sat looking at me, lips pink from abuse
and parted like he wanted to say something else.
I got the feeling if he did, it’d be awful. As I pushed off the partition and walked
on, I noticed a plastic Red Bull cup full of chewed-up pens on his desk. Just above that,
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he’d tacked a few pictures to his cube, among them an old-school—as in, Stan Lee and
Sal Buscema era—Amazing Spider-Man cover: Spidey swinging from a building with his
hand out, like he was about to spray webbing all over the desk.
That brought back my smile.
I know most kids consider comics vaguely dorky, but for us—people with
awakened electromagnetic manipulator-type powers—they were even more of a guilty
pleasure. Guilty because they were everything we weren’t supposed to be.
So yeah, okay, socially inept nerd, but probably not homophobic douche.
My mind turned to happier speculation: I wondered if his jeans were really as soft
as they looked and if his legs were as muscled under them as I suspected. Wondered if
that office chair would hold the both of us at once.
Heh. That was more like it.
* * * *
Halfway through that evening’s inevitable soiree, I sneaked out of Severance Hall
with the smoker crowd. Cleveland has this reputation for snow, I know, but in summer
it’s sweltering up here on the lake. The nights, though, those are nice.
Even when you have to spend them in a three-piece suit at a fundraiser.
“Still sneaking out for cigarettes, Jamie?”
I knew who I’d see when I turned, but my heart still skipped a beat. Not in that
“true love” way. In that, “God, seeing people who know how fucked-up you were as a
teenager sucks” way.
Billy Armin—now Dr. William Armin, plastic surgeon specializing in
reconstructive trauma surgery—pulled a Camel out of his pack and offered it to me. His
suit was as designer as mine but about three years older and slightly too big at the
shoulders. His watch was a brand-new Rolex, shined to perfection.
Nice to see his priorities hadn’t changed.
I held up one hand. “No, thanks. I quit when I was sixteen.”
Nobody’s Hero
11
He laughed and lit up, bright eyes tracing the front end of University Circle before
coming back to mine. “How’s your mother? Haven’t seen her in forever.”
“Hell, I see her once a week if I’m lucky.”
“Some things never change.”
“Was just thinking that myself. Never got to tell you, the wedding was really
nice.” Though I’d ducked in and out as fast as possible and barely even gotten to shake
his hand.
He grunted and made a face.
I grinned and shoved my hands into my pants pockets. Standing outside on a fine
early summer evening, smoking with Billy Armin. Jesus Christ, that brought back some
memories. “How’s Lisa?”
“You know how it goes, Jamie. Jesus, you’re one of the few who really does.”
I smiled, which I figured would say it all.
“We should hang out again,” he said. “Why’d we stop?”
I somehow understood that he wasn’t pretending not to know, more stating the
stupidity of our reasons.
“College,” I suggested as a polite alternative to the truth. “You went to…?”
“Temple.”
“Yeah. And I went right there.” I made a general gesture to indicate the Case
campus surrounding us. “So you were spared a few years of this bullshit.”
It wasn’t bullshit, not entirely. Yes, these charity events tended to be dual purpose:
for one, the awakened community gets together and actually does a lot of good. Our
particular gifts—be they of the thermal kind like Billy’s, who, through a complex
manipulation of electromagnetic fields and photons, could cool matter down enough to
freeze it—or electric like mine, are good for augmenting any number of regular
occupations. To some, using our powers responsibly might mean simply not being a
dick about them. But to others, it meant actively using them in service of the
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community. In this case, we had a couple of correctional officers who thought some
money needed raising for a local charity that did volunteer work at prisons, and so
Mom had gotten this black-tie affair up with the symphony. Fundraising was the main
attraction, of course.
But it was also an opportunity for us and ours to get together. Prominent doctors,
police officials, energy providers, whatever—I’d have been surprised if any of the rich
and powerful who’d flocked to Severance tonight were sleepers. Fulfill our obligations
to the community and get together to talk, reconnect.
And occasionally marry off our kids to each other.
Billy smiled. “I’m making up for it. So’s Lisa. Tell you what, though, nothing
brings a couple together like mutual bitterness.”
“Well, at least make-up sex is the best.”
“No shit.” He dug in his inside pocket and produced a card. “I’m serious, give me
a call. We’re near City Center, in East Fourth.”
“Hip.” I took the card and tucked it away.
“Yeah, well. Lisa insists that she has taste. Apparently it’s something you can
buy.”
We had a laugh before I decided it was safe to ask, “So, you ever see…?”
He shook his head. “Guess Mason moved to the west coast. Like Mae.” He raised
his eyebrows expectantly.
“Yeah, don’t go there.”
He clapped me on the back. “And I don’t know what happened to most of the
other kids. But we all come home eventually.”
I was about to agree when a new voice interrupted from behind. “Jamie, there you
are.”
Mom’s Chanel No. 5 reached me before she did, and in the meantime, Billy
respectfully chucked his cigarette into the nearest smoker’s port.
Nobody’s Hero
13
“William, your father said you were here. It’s so good to see you boys together
again.” She did that mock-scolding face, the one that looks more like a smirk, as she
took my arm. “Not giving him cigarettes, I hope.”
“Tried, but smoking isn’t cool anymore; only doctors and nurses do it now.”
I forced a laugh.
Her grip on my arm tightened. It was meant to be a reassuring squeeze but served
the opposite purpose in practice. “Well, I’m glad Jamie didn’t like med school, then.”
I winced and hoped neither of them saw it.
“It was the worst four years of my life.” Billy looked at me with renewed respect.
“You’re my hero, man.”
I knew he meant it. And it was true that we were the few who could understand.
He’d done everything right. Gotten the right job, married the right girl, come back
to Cleveland. He was really powerful, at least as powerful as me in his own way—we
were bred that way. Lisa was a little weaker on the scale; no one would ever mention it,
not even in anger, but she knew that everyone knew she was meant to be more
impressive. But her blood, as they said, was strong, and she and Billy would very likely
produce perfect little superpowered babies to go on being doctors and police officers
and quietly fighting the good fight against humanity’s natural tendency toward
entropy.
And then there was me.
Funny, but no matter how sincere Billy’s admiration, I didn’t feel like much of a
hero.
Five minutes later, Mom dragged me back into the hall, where swaths of silk and
clouds of perfume adorned a crowd of Cleveland’s richest and most powerful—in the
awakened sense. “Jamie, honey, don’t pout. If you can’t joke about it—”
“I have no idea what you’re talking about, Mother.”
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She rolled her eyes. The grayish green of them was the one physical feature I’d
directly inherited, but it always looked cleverer on her. “You only call me Mother when
you’re pouting.”
I rolled my eyes right back and let her brush invisible lint off my jacket for a few
seconds before finally saying, “Stop.”
“Sorry.” She took a step back to admire her handiwork. “Margaret’s here.”
I scrubbed my hand through my hair, trying not to scream. “That’s why I had to
come?”
“She hasn’t seen you in months.”
“She’s your friend.” And out of her damn mind, to boot. Woman smiled so hard, I
always thought of the Cheshire Cat. This did not inspire confidence, especially
considering—
“She says Mae can’t wait to see you again.”
I froze. “I thought Mae was still in San Diego.”
“Well, yes.”
I narrowly avoided yelping in relief.
“But Margaret wants to see you. Jamie, you’re going to be the father of her
grandchildren.”
Yeah, just lie back and think of England, Jamie.
“Let her look at you and think of how handsome they’ll be.” She leaned forward,
went up on her toes, and kissed my cheek.
I rolled a million snarky comebacks around on my tongue. That was power too—
the kind of power that made me sick to my stomach, just knowing it existed anywhere
in the world, let alone inside me. The power to hurt her. The power to let her down.
Again.
I took a deep breath.
Nobody’s Hero
15
She patted my face and stood there looking at me for a second. The wrinkles were
getting deeper at the corners her eyes these days. It made her smile sweeter, softer—
tiny lines at the corners of her mouth too.
I took her small, pale hand, compared it to my long, rough fingers and baseball
tan. Noticed how thin her skin felt.
I still felt sick but not in the same way. Something in my throat.
“You look really good, by the way,” I said. “Love that dress on you. That the new
Versace?”
“Yes, it is, sweet talker.” She laughed. “Mae better come home soon; I don’t know
how one of these other girls hasn’t snapped you up already.”
I followed her into the crowd, stopping, waiting, smiling, speaking when I was
spoken to. Oh, Andrea, look at your boy! Jamie, have you met my daughter…?
* * * *
No big shocker that I had the nightmare again that night. People write about
recurring dreams, and there’s that cliché: The dream was always the same.
But it is, is the thing. Only twice a month or so, at least since I had the sense to
ditch the Doctor Jamie idea, but it’s enough that there’s no time to forget.
It always starts in an alley. Not a real one, but some weird gray and brown alley in
some strange city that exists only in my subconscious. And there’s always this guy
there—again, not a real guy, not the real guy, but he’s close enough, with his grizzled
gray hair and wild eyes. And he starts yelling at me in a language I shouldn’t be able to
understand. I can smell his sour breath and feel his hate. I mean hate like I’ve never
known in the waking world, hate like a nuclear bomb.
Sometimes I realize here that it’s a nightmare. Sometimes they come close together
enough that I really can’t forget, and something flicks on in me, some half-
consciousness. But it’s never a lucid dream; it just makes what comes next even worse.
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Katey Hawthorne
Because I get angry. I get angry, and I puff out my chest, and I don’t even say a
word to him. I just put my hand into him—not on him, but I reach out and shove my
hand into his chest like the bad stereotype of a priest in Temple of Doom—and I amp
myself up hard. My whole body lights up; God, it feels so fucking good to let it go like
that, like I never could, never should. All of me exploding, racing from the little place
inside that generates the fields, through my torso, funneling it into my arms, into my
hands—
Into him. His mouth goes wide in a silent scream; his body lifts into the air in slow
motion, lit up like a storm cloud with all my lightning, jackknifing around and through
him.
And I’m not even sorry, because I’m too busy laughing and wiping the blood off
my hand.
At fifteen, I used to wake up screaming. At twenty-eight, it was just a lot of
shivering, so I guessed that was an improvement.
Nobody’s Hero
17
Chapter Two
In the first three innings, I knocked two out of the park. Sex, electricity, and
beating the hell out of the ball with a Louisville Slugger: the holy trinity. Cures
whatever ails you.
Of course, it had been a week since Dubious Provenance Guy, so I was getting
twitchy in the sex department. There were a couple of guys I could call for something
quick and easy, and Derrick was already on me to go down to the west side again,
but—
“Is that New Guy?” Clark asked.
I looked to the stands, where Isabella sat next to a lanky young thing in a green
ball cap and well-broken-in jeans. Huh. “I’ll be damned. It is.”
“What?” Sarah came up behind Clark and ducked under his arm.
“New Guy,” he said and kissed the top of her cap. Then he looked at me.
“Thought he impolitely declined, as usual.”
“To play,” I admitted. “Maybe Bell talked him into coming. They look kind of
chummy.”
“Jealous?” Clark asked.
I pretended to ignore him. “Aren’t you up to bat?”
“Nope,” Sarah said. And she took off, orange ponytail swinging behind her.
“Back up!” yelled the Datasoft pitcher when he saw her coming up to the plate.
“Outfield, back up!”
“That’s my wife,” Clark said, grinning.
* * * *
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Katey Hawthorne
We hopelessly outmatched Datasoft, the poor bastards. Sarah and I had more runs
than their whole team together. I’m not exactly sure how, but Isabella convinced Kellan
to come to the Winking Lizard with us after. When I expressed surprise, she said, “He’s
a sweet boy, Jamie. You have a big personality; you have to be careful around people
like that.”
Only Isabella could consider herself an expert on someone after a week of cube-
farm association. Or, for that matter, consider grouchy-ass Kellan Shea a “sweet boy.”
The Lizard crowd thinned from eight down to four over the course of a lot of
wings and two rounds. Sarah and Clark hung around because Saturday was the day
they left the adorable brats with the grandparents. I guessed Kellan hung around
because the three of us kept putting beer in front of him. He drank like a professional,
keeping pace with Clark—who was an offensive lineman in college, to give you some
indication of what that means—and there was noticeable difference in both the amount
of time Kellan’s fingers spent in his mouth (less) and the amount of words that came
out of it (more).
And then they did it. Clark looked at his watch and sighed. “Guess it’s time.”
Kellan and I had both started new beers not two minutes before this
announcement. I hoped the dirty look I shot Clark would communicate my Et tu, Brute?
sentiments sufficiently.
He shrugged and smiled. I shouldn’t have been so surprised. It would’ve violated
Clark’s personal Man Code to say anything, but I knew goddamn well he thought my
voracious clubbing and random sex habits were juvenile, bordering on self-destructive.
Just, I never thought he’d stoop to a setup.
Sarah threw some money in my direction. “Pay for us, will you? Don’t want to
keep Mom waiting.”
“I feel that.”
She made a sympathetic face and prepared to leave. I looked at Kellan across the
table.
Nobody’s Hero
19
He had his head thrown back, gulping his Fox like someone was going to take it
away. I was very nearly disappointed, but watching his white throat contract and
expand as he swallowed distracted me.
The massive awkwardness potential of the situation presented an irresistible
challenge. When he put the mug down, I asked, “Thirsty?”
He laughed, always silently, but at least it seemed real. “Guess so.”
“You got somewhere to be?”
“Oh. No. I just thought you would.”
“Nope. Spending Saturday with people from work is kind of my thing.”
He flushed. He’d taken his hat off just before he’d sat down at the table—so had
I—so his hat-hair bangs fell into his eyes.
Cute. I could do worse than have another beer with him, anyhow.
Sarah kissed my cheek, and I kissed hers twice, saying, “Extra one’s for Caitlin.
Tell my baby I love her.”
The bill came as they were leaving, and Kellan was staring at me, obviously
wanting to ask, so I said, “Charlie and Caitlin, their kids. Cait’s my goddaughter.”
“Wow.”
“Kid has a black dad, a white mom, and a queer godfather. They figure that covers
her bases.”
Kellan blinked a few times. His mouth opened, then shut.
“It’s a joke, Kellan.”
He smiled, all crooked. “Yeah…I…yeah. Heh.”
Okay, so he wasn’t offended. Which left only one option for the source of his
mystification. He was either hard of hearing or completely oblivious, to go a week in
that office without hearing someone say something indicating my state of extreme
queerness.
Well, one way to find out if he was bothered: “You staying?”
20
Katey Hawthorne
He cleared his throat and said, “Sure. I must owe you three beers by now.”
Curiosity ruled me. Would he be more awkward now? Or less? Or was he in a
static state of awkwardness? “I got at least three more in me. Let’s move to the bar so
they can turn this table over.”
The second we were propped up on bar stools, he said, “I really didn’t mean it to
sound that way, about spending your weekends like this. It just came out wrong.”
“Forget it, man. You’re here, so you obviously don’t think it’s that pathetic.”
“Heh.”
“Though I almost asked what the hell else you could’ve meant. At the time.”
He waved for another beer, then pointed to me to indicate that I wanted one too.
“I meant—you seem like the popular kid.”
I raised my eyebrows. He blew upward, sending his bangs flying. Nice mouth.
Sweet lips, the bottom one fuller than average, pale, palest pink, and perfect teeth. More
idle speculation: Wonder what all that repression tastes like.
“In school,” he said. “The popular kid. The one who always had parties to go to on
a Saturday night because he’s everyone’s best friend. Baseball with your married
coworkers…”
“I’m starting to feel like a disappointment.”
He looked into his beer and bit his nails.
So serious. I leaned nearer, one elbow on the bar, and lowered my voice. “I’m
batting .1000 tonight with the jokes, so I’ll just be honest with you.”
“Yeah?” One corner of his lips quirked upward.
“Yeah.” I don’t know why I decided to tell him; he just seemed like the kind of
guy who’d appreciate it. “The truth is that we all have options. And my favorite day of
the week is the one where I play baseball with Clark and Sarah. Them, Isabella, Megan,
Lance—they’re good people.”
Nobody’s Hero
21
For the first time, he smiled. A full-on, teeth-showing smile. And, oh God, he had
just the tiniest dimple in his left cheek.
My blood rushed hard; I shifted to relieve the building pressure against my fly. I
wasn’t even sure what about the moment had just done it to me, but there it was.
“I know. I’m just really shit at being the new guy.”
“Nah. You just seem a little…”
“I know how I seem.” A pause, during which the bartender brought us drinks.
Kellan polished off his old one, and I made a sizeable dent in mine. Then he went on,
staring into his beer. “Like I think I’m too good or something.”
I scanned for something soothing to say, something to take the edge off it, to let
him know it was all right, we all give an impression we don’t mean to, and all it took
was five minutes’ conversation with him to realize—
“But I’ll be honest too.” He looked up, ruffling his hat hair as he scratched his
head. “I’m, like, the fucking definition of white trash, so I never look down my nose at
anyone. I’m just not good with new people, is all. So I’m sorry if I come off like a
douche bag. I mean, I am. But it’s not because of that.”
“I don’t know about trash.” And encouraged by his sudden affection for strong
language, I said, “But I do know you’re a fucking nerd.”
He laughed. “What gave me away? The affinity for SQL?”
This was sarcasm, but I replied in earnest: “Spider-Man.”
“Heh.”
“I mean, I was more of a Fantastic Four guy, myself, but—”
“Spidey and Human Torch crossovers.”
“Yes.” Torch. Obviously based on an experience with someone who was
awakened, by the way. You get a good heat-type, and they can make it look like they’re
covered in fire. It’s magnificent.
22
Katey Hawthorne
“Those were the best.” He took a long swig and grinned. His wide shoulders
rounded, he slouched, but not in that protective, curling-in-around-himself way.
“Fucking Johnny Storm, man.”
The strange softness of his voice combined with his wanton use of the word
“fuck” had a predictable effect. It beguiled me into admitting, “Always thought he was
hot.”
“Shit, I was just about to say you remind me of him.”
“That’d explain it.”
“What?”
“Why I think he’s hot. I get a little narcissistic sometimes.”
He smacked the bar and laughed, this time out loud.
“See, you laughing at my jokes only encourages me.”
He shot me a sideways glance, a little knowing smile.
The gaydar, which had been swinging this way and that all night, finally pinged
so hard it pinned the needle. Something hot woke up deep in my belly.
And then, of course, my phone buzzed.
While he was gulping his new beer, I pulled my phone out. Text from Derrick: You
coming tonight or not, sweet pea?
I typed back immediately: Not. But don’t do anything I wouldn’t do, sugar britches.
Which sounds like a joke, but the number of times I’d scraped Derrick out of the gutter
on a Saturday night was astronomical. I was a slut but not an idiot. Derrick was both,
poor lovable bastard. That finished, I set the phone on the bar and said, “Sorry.”
“No, go ahead.”
“Just trying to shake off this—” It buzzed again. Since he could see “Derrick” as
well as I could, plus half of the text, no point in making up some story. “Friends trying
to convince me to go down to West Sixth.”
“It’s still early.”
Nobody’s Hero
23
I paused, on the verge of inviting him to go with us now that his self-conscious
facade had dropped. But something about his face, a bend to his lips that seemed to
signify vague distaste, stopped me. “I’m going to leave a conversation about hot comic
book characters to go be the creepy old guy in the club? No, thanks.”
He snorted. “Old. Right.”
“I’m twenty-eight. And you, wunderkind?”
“Not that young. I mean, old enough to drink.”
“Old enough to drink is old enough for anything.” Old enough to take you out to my
car and show you what a backseat is really for.
Huh. Okay, that was a little more than the usual idle speculation.
“Old enough to be over that bullshit.” He took another drink. “I’m twenty-three,
and I think it’s fucking pathetic.”
That probably should’ve stung, but I’d had enough to drink that the truth
sounded good. The phone buzzed again. He laughed.
“Dickhead. Take a hint.” I rolled my eyes and turned it off for the first time since
I’d bought the damn thing. “So, you don’t think Spider-Man’s kinda hot? I mean,
you’ve got the whole smart-guy-hiding-behind-glasses thing going, so you have to at
least appreciate Pete’s mystique.”
“Thanks for couching that in pleasant terms. Real nice of you, James.” He paused.
“Are you a James?”
“Yep. I even answer to it.”
“You look like a Jamie, but I like James too. So, okay, James, Pete’s awesome, but
he’s kind of a twat.”
“So’s Johnny.”
“Yeah, but Johnny makes it work. He makes everything work—that’s the point.
It’s fucking infuriating, right?”
24
Katey Hawthorne
And I swear to God, this discussion continued for another round and at least an
hour. His swearing got more creative, and we both got more and more pink-faced, and
he laughed and flushed at my flirting. There were even a few moments when he
seemed to call up enough courage to give me that look again and get my, um, hopes up.
Hell. It was fun.
* * * *
It was nearly midnight before we stumbled out onto the sidewalk. We’d covered
so many topics, but he was almost as good at diverting personal questions as I was, so
they’d all ended up rooted in music (we had never heard of each other’s bands), books
(we both stuck with our parents’ affinities for classics), and movies (we shared a love of
B-movies and crime drama). Which was fine with me…
Except that now I really liked him.
A sudden thought. “Did you leave your car at the field?”
“No. I live, like, not too far. Easy walk. You?”
“Same.”
“Pegged you for a City Center kind of guy.”
I chuckled. “Pegged me for a lot of things I’m not, looks like.”
He grinned and looked away. I scanned Coventry Road. It was clearing out, being
more of an evening spot than late night, but it wasn’t totally abandoned. I had a cavalier
impulse to offer to walk him home, nevertheless.
Well, that or invite him to my place, which was effectively around the corner.
Inappropriate. You work together. Don’t fuck this up.
Some college kids crossed behind him, distracted his attention, and I watched him
from the side. Admired his dimple. The curve of his neck. His shoulders under the
fitted T-shirt. His eyes, dark under the replaced baseball cap. He said, “Thanks for
asking me to come today. Someone less, uh, stubborn would’ve given up on me. I had a
good time.”
Nobody’s Hero
25
Not yet, you haven’t. If you weren’t so goddamn sweet… Isabella was right after all:
“sweet” was the very word. There was something about him that begged to be…
Dirtied up.
Oh, Jamie. You are so going to get fired.
I assumed that he, having had more beer than I, wouldn’t notice that my voice
was a little rough when I said, “Me too. So, you have my number.”
“Yeah, definitely,” he said. “And…you have mine.”
Invite him home. Invite him home; show him what you can do; make him like you, really
like you—
Yep. Definitely not the usual harmless ogling anymore. Goddammit.
“Talk to you soon, Jamie.” Two steps backward, and he shoved his hands into the
pockets of his jeans.
“Later,” I said.
And he turned to walk away. Once he hung a right on Euclid Heights, I made
myself turn toward Mayfield and not look back.
* * * *
There was some text messaging but nothing too obvious. I stopped for coffee on
Monday morning and asked him if he wanted one. Tuesday he brought me some
Flogging Molly, in re: our music conversation, and I brought him some Hot Chip. He
occasionally came out with something awkward and horrible during a conversation—in
person, not via text, at least—but I’d figured it out enough to laugh it off by then. He’d
flush, and I’d get hard and picture crawling under his desk and giving him something
to really flush about.
His being a coworker was all that saved me from doing something to ruin it, I’m
sure. I still thought I had the right approach, but my libido is blinding enough to blot
out even the sharpest instincts in a moment of weakness. I ignored Sarah’s questioning
looks, and Clark at least had the decency to keep his mouth shut about it. Bell was even
26
Katey Hawthorne
mercifully silent, though she did occasionally smirk when I stopped by on my way to
his cube.
It was a good distraction, in truth. I’d ducked Mom most of the week, but on
Wednesday she called and wanted to know if I’d heard from Mae since she’d given me
her new e-mail address. “You haven’t e-mailed her already? Oh, Jamie!”
Oh, Jamie.
By Thursday afternoon, I was officially on one of my “I can’t play this game
anymore” trips. I hadn’t seen Mae in probably ten years, right before college. I’d long
since given up on women by then, but I’d kept it in the closet for the most part, just to
avoid parental complications. I’d meant to tell Mae then, to ask for her help throwing
off this archaic bullshit.
We used to be friends when we were little, though things got weird after they told
us their absurd hopes and dreams for our future together. But we barely had five
minutes alone the last time we met, and Jesus, the poor girl had always stuttered a little
when anyone put her under pressure, but she could hardly get out three words together
that evening. I always felt bad for her, being so quiet, with the overbearing Cheshire Cat
mother. I spent the whole time trying to make her laugh and then couldn’t bring myself
to tell her that the idea of marrying her terrified me. As in made me feel like I was going
to puke in her lap.
Even a gay teenage boy knows goddamn well you can’t talk to a girl that way.
But we were older now, and she’d escaped Margaret’s clutches, at least
temporarily. She probably had a boyfriend—hell, maybe she had a girlfriend. And it
wasn’t like she’d ever tried to contact me. She’d understand.
Mae,
Hey, long time, huh? Mom just gave me your new e-mail and I thought…
I thought what? I thought you should know that I’m queer as a three-dollar bill, so
don’t worry about that whole marriage thing?
Nobody’s Hero
27
I’d been way too careful to ruin it all with one stupid e-mail. Yes, I needed to rip
off the Band-Aid, sooner rather than later.
But one problem at a time.
Mae,
Been a long time since we saw each other, huh? How’s life in southern California? Your
mom says you’re coming back after the postdoc, but I know how it is—moms can’t handle their
babies growing up and getting lives of their own.
Yeah, real subtle. Might as well tell her she had girl cooties while I was at it.
Fuck.
I scrapped the whole thing one more time and ended up with:
Mae,
Hey, Jamie here. Hope California’s good to you. Same old up here in the Mistake by the
Lake. We should probably talk before our mothers drive us crazy. Give me a call sometime.
Monday
Cell number in the signature.
I hit Send before I could think twice, pushed out from under my desk, and
wandered blindly in the direction of the coffee machine. Not the best choice, since I
needed a sedative more than a stimulant, but I’d take whatever drugs I could get. It was
either that or fry something for the momentary release, and seeing as I’d almost gotten
caught last time, I couldn’t justify it.
It was beyond stupid. I knew the answer, the one way out of this mess, and I was
just dancing around it. It was so, so past time to have The Talk. But I just kept thinking
of Mom’s little frown when I’d told her I was dropping med school, and my heart—
I rounded the corner near the copier, and my train of thought jumped the tracks.
Kellan was on his knees in front of the monstrous machine, pushing tray buttons at
random and swearing inventively under his breath. He sat back with his ass on his
heels, so it became obvious that his legs were just as tight as I’d previously speculated.
28
Katey Hawthorne
That was a pretty hard body he was working there. He looked up at me, sighing, mouth
just slightly open.
Hey, while you’re down there…
And there it was, the inappropriate workplace boner. I ducked down to eye level
and asked, “Problems?” This served to mask my reaction well enough that I could be
sure, at least, that he wouldn’t slap me with a harassment suit.
He made that face again, the annoyed-kid one. “Paper jam. I can’t find the fucking
tray. There’s A, B, and D.”
I reached out and tapped the side of the copier, as it happened to be near me,
where he couldn’t see it. The tray popped open, and I said, “C.”
He scrubbed a hand through his hair, leaving it wrecked, and pushed his glasses
up on his nose. “Motherfucker.”
I couldn’t help it. “You know, Kellan, you got a mouth on you.”
He bit his bottom lip as if to keep from smiling. “Sorry.”
“Oh, don’t apologize. Really.”
He grinned outright but looked down.
I rearranged myself as best I could without showing off how impressed I was with
his dirty mouth and dug out the paper that was causing him grief. “Poor old thing.
He’ll work for anyone, but there’s just no heart left in him.”
“Him, huh?”
“Wrong or right, men are statistically more likely to work for anyone.” I fixed him
with a significant glance around the copier.
He shifted in a familiar way, sort of folding in on himself, still on his knees. He
laughed, and the little dimple appeared in an unnaturally flushed cheek.
Couldn’t get a clear view to check the state of his package, but I didn’t need to—
other than just wanting a good look at it. I told myself to stop there, let it be, but
something perverse in me pushed me onward. “We can’t help ourselves, I guess.”
Nobody’s Hero
29
“No shit.” His eyes crinkled at the corners. They were better than good when he
was genuinely amused—they were exquisite, even hidden behind glasses.
I wondered what he’d do if I stood, let him see how hard this got me, and then
nodded toward the door. Would he follow me to the bathroom? To my car in the
garage? Or would he just silently fantasize about yanking down my pants and sucking
me off in the middle of the office? Maybe pulling me down on the floor and fucking my
brains out right there and then?
The way his flush crept into his ears, I could almost buy that it’d be something like
that anyhow. Always the quiet ones, right?
No. This was anything but idle speculation. This, I wanted. Bad.
“This thing giving you trouble again, James?”
The sound of that particular voice snapped me out of my head so fast I almost got
whiplash. I looked up at Amy Delmonico: read, my boss. She’s drop-dead gorgeous and
wears power suits; great sense of humor, but never steps over the line; doesn’t drink too
much at the Christmas party; at her desk by nine a.m. sharp. She’s one scary-perfect
executive, I mean to say.
Not someone I wanted to fuck with. But thank God, she was smiling.
So I said, “Yes, ma’am.” And then, though I knew I shouldn’t, that perverse
thing—probably the one in my pants—made me continue with, “Don’t worry. I’ll give it
a good flogging.”
She laughed and walked on.
Phew.
Kellan said, now from behind a hand, “Can’t help ourselves with that either,
huh?”
“Hell no.”
He chuckled silently as I finished digging out his paper jam, calming down
slightly but not even close to enough to stand.
30
Katey Hawthorne
When I handed over the crumpled remnants of his print job, he said, “My hero.”
By that time, my brain was screaming at my dick to stop it, but this was definitely
a libido-override situation. I licked my lips, fixed him with another look, and said, “At
your service.”
No, really. Anything you want. Anytime you want it. At. Your. Service.
His grin was blazing—he wasn’t even pretending I hadn’t meant what I really
meant. He cleared his throat, made a useless effort to school his face, then stood. And
though he strategically positioned the worse-for-the-wear papers just in front of his
crotch—
Goddamn. He was filling out those pinstripes real nice, up and to the right. Briefs?
Guh, the thought of him in a pair of white jockeys… And what the fuck—weren’t Irish
guys supposed to be tiny?
He spared me one last guilty grin before turning to walk away. Leaving me on my
knees, my cock impatient against the inside of my thigh, watching his ass retreat.
I laughed at the completeness of my own stupidity, stuck my hand into my pocket
to readjust while I made a big deal of getting up, and swiped at it just in case it was as
dire as it felt and about to leave a wet spot on my favorite work pants.
And then I went straight to the men’s room—thank God it was empty. I unzipped,
got out my dick, and the relief, the thrill I got just wrapping my hand around it almost
collapsed my knees. A few good, tight jerks, an outlandish fantasy about Kellan pulling
out a mouth-watering hard-on under his desk and going at it at the same time, and my
head was done in. I had just enough time to grab a wad of paper to contain it, and I
came harder than should’ve been possible in a workplace bathroom stall; I had to lean
against the wall and bite my tongue to keep from moaning.
I was just congratulating myself on one hell of a self-administered orgasm when I
realized just how fucking pathetic the situation was. Not to mention creepy and wrong.
But sometimes, you do what you’ve gotta do to get through the day. And I have to
admit, the rest of it went a lot smoother.
Nobody’s Hero
31
* * * *
I had the nightmare again not long after, so I resolved to forget Mae and my
mother and devote the rest of the week to Operation: Ask Kellan Out. When I wasn’t
acting like a horny teenager, I was aware of the potential problems success might bring.
If he’d been awakened, like I said, it would still be complicated. He was somewhat
local, and therefore our families would know each other. I’d dated a couple of
awakened guys in an almost-serious way but never for more than six months. Partly
because I always expect to be judged by them for dropping the ball—even though our
weird system of intense expectations and overtly arranging marriages seemed to strike
most awakened from outside Cleveland as insane—but mostly because I just never fell
for anyone, I guess.
But we’re all raised to be very, very careful when it comes to relationships with a
sleeper. Mostly, they’re outright discouraged. Yes, sometimes it works. There was even
a (sort of) generally accepted system of criteria for telling them about your powers in
extreme cases. But if you really want the relationship to work, odds are good you never
tell them.
How well is that really working, though?
I’d never cared either way, and I didn’t really care then. It was putting the carriage
before the horse. But it was always there in the back of my mind, which was as it should
be. Reminded me why I stuck to fuck ’em and forget ’em most of the time.
But yeah, not an option here. So Friday morning I brought him the coffee he liked
(double cappuccino, plain), and he flushed and stammered and thanked me too much.
And I lingered and flirted and eye-fucked him until he got over it and started grinning
again, showing me that little dimple.
And the second I got to my desk, I got slammed with last-minute bullshit from the
Timely Rentals people in Denver—to whom I was trying to sell a pile of our software
and services—and only managed to eat lunch because Clark and Sarah took pity and
32
Katey Hawthorne
brought me fast food. It was almost seven by the time I was done, which I guess is only
five in Denver. Good for them. Bastards.
I was in a hell of a mood for a Friday night when I finally lumbered toward the
exit, but I saw a light in the far corner that lifted my heart. I started past Isabella’s
abandoned cube, and sure enough, there was Kellan’s dark head bent over his desk.
The telltale white screen, tiny-ass lines of nonsense, and barely familiar icons told me he
was neck deep in SQL hell.
In view of the Copier Incident, I could only suppose that my time had finally
come.
He didn’t even hear me coming up behind him. I leaned against the partition.
“The hell are you still doing here?”
He sat up straight. When he spun his chair around, he had a chewed-up pen cap
between his lips. He started to say something, realized it was there, and swiped it up
with one hand. “Uh, working. How about you?”
“Some bastards in Denver kept me late.” But suddenly, I wasn’t so angry at those
bastards. “You gotta sleep some time, you know.”
“Sleep is for the weak and the dead, James.”
“It’s Friday night.”
He did the lopsided smile. “And I’m not one of the cool kids.”
“You seem like a nice guy, in spite of your best efforts, so I’ll tell you a secret.” I
sauntered into his cube and leaned my ass back against his desk so I was looking down
at him; he swiveled around to follow. I finished with, “After high school, there are no
cool kids.”
He leaned back in his chair, smiling and running a hand through his hair. Not self-
consciously—in fact, he left it a mess. It wasn’t long, just in that in-between haircut
stage where it covered the tops of his ears. “Only the cool kids would ever say that.”
“You have a complex.”
Nobody’s Hero
33
“Takes one to know one.”
“True that.” I looked down at the screen and made a face. “Am I keeping you?”
“Yeah.”
I was torn between laughter and injury. But considering the specific mission I was
on, it was enough to induce second thoughts.
I was strangling an impulse to push off his desk and wish him a good night with
his lines of meaningless drivel, when he said, “I mean, you are, technically, keeping me.
But that’s okay. I’d rather you did. Just, you are. And that’s what you asked.”
Then I laughed. He looked away, scratching at the back of his neck and flushing.
I really, really wanted to find out if that chair would hold the both of us, suddenly.
Which, no, still at work. After hours, but—
Right. Get him out of there. Then jump him. “Seriously, are you busy tonight?”
He looked up and raised his eyebrows as if to ask if I was serious.
Phantom fingers, the electricity crackling inside me, squeezed my heart. God,
what a rush. “Want to go out?”
He cleared something from his throat, pointing at his own chest as if to clarify to
whom, exactly, I’d addressed that question. “Like…?”
“On a date. With me. I don’t know about you, but I’m starving.”
“Seriously?”
“Man, Kellan.” I laughed again. “What did I ever do to you?”
When he smiled, it was that same slightly evil smile from the bar. From the copier.
“Uh, nothing.”
I licked my lips. “Yet.”
He laughed out loud.
“Look, I’ll even wait until you’re done so we can leave together. What do you
say?”
34
Katey Hawthorne
He swiveled his chair around and clicked Save. He then typed a pointlessly
gigantic but no doubt slightly different file name, clicked again, and closed out SQL. “I
say, fuck this noise.”
Nobody’s Hero
35
Chapter Three
We discussed dinner options on the way to the elevator, in that weird cloud of
first-date tension that I always associate with the feeling of electricity running over my
skin, of my insides coming out and taking over—in a good way. In the way that makes
me remember why I love it. But seeing as he was awkward when he was happy, I didn’t
want to know what he was like when things got weird. God only knew what a disaster
he’d be under pressure.
I said, as we waited for the Down button to work its magic, “And, just for the
record, if you end up hating me, I am really good with smoothing shit over. So you
won’t have to be all awkward at work.”
He was looking at the door with that lopsided smile on his face. “I’m definitely
not going to hate you.”
Seeing as it was after-hours, the elevator popped right up. We got inside, and I put
myself a little too close. “You never know. It could happen.”
He leaned against the wall, looked me in the eye—he was close enough that it sent
a lightning bolt into my stomach—and said, “There’s no way you’re that fucking
clueless, James.”
“Oh, so you do like me.”
He grinned full on. “What I know of you.”
“A lot?”
“Shit, you weren’t kidding about the narcissism.”
“You mind?”
“No. God help me, I like that too.”
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Katey Hawthorne
I’d done so well up to that point, if not controlling, then at least hiding my
inappropriate urges. But there was something about being alone in that small space
with him, standing close enough to smell his aftershave.
Okay, and I’m a slut for flattery above all else. Say something nice about me, and
I’ll hit my knees like a two-dollar hooker.
I leaned forward and kissed him before I even knew what I was doing. It wasn’t
the best moment for it, since I had my bag over my shoulder and had to balance by
resting one hand on the wall beside him, but his mouth found mine without hesitation.
At first, neither of us was breathing—he might’ve been as surprised as I was—but he
grabbed my belt loop with one hand and tugged me nearer.
Then it really happened. His lips parted and unexpectedly, gently opened mine
under them. The rush of it, the faint taste of spearmint gum, the sensation of warm lips,
the promise of his mouth… He turned his head and pushed in on me, and I went with it
again. His tongue ran over the connection between our bottom lips, then the edge of my
top teeth, sending a wet, electric thrill through my head and then down through my
chest, my stomach, my cock, my legs.
It started with me kissing him and ended up with him thoroughly kissing me,
filling my head with the sweet taste and smell, the gentle push of him. By the time he
closed it off, my knees had gone weak. He didn’t move, still held my belt loop tight, and
let his forehead rest against mine.
The elevator dinged. I wondered how many floors we’d gone down, but not
enough to actually look.
“Fuck.” God, he made the word sound so charming. “I thought I was just
imagining…”
“Been wanting to do that since we met.”
A puff of hot breath, spearmint and sugar on it. “No way. I was a complete dick.”
And man, I must’ve liked that, because I kissed him again, this time moving in
nearer so we were almost touching.
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Ding. And the door slid open.
We pulled apart, smiling in that guilty-wonderful way, and stepped into the lobby
together. Jared, the ruddy-faced, middle-aged security guard, stared into the elevator, a
hilarious look of trepidation on his face.
Guess you can see that corner of the elevator from the security desk. Duly noted.
I cleared my throat but couldn’t look at Kellan again. I could feel him trying not to
laugh behind me. “Night, Jared,” I said.
Jared managed to choke out a very civil “Night, Jamie” before we made it through
the marble foyer and out the door.
* * * *
Yes, he fired off a few more classic Kellan lines over a dinner of mori soba and
Honeyed Fox seasonal brew. But after that kiss and the way he kept looking at me like
he wasn’t even close to finished—hell, he could’ve indulged in any abrupt jackassery he
wanted, and I would’ve begged for more.
It was barely nine when we’d eaten enough to stave off the kind of ravenous
hunger born of working overtime, and we’d had a drink or two, but nothing near the
damage we were capable of. Catching that look from him again, I felt confident enough
to say, “It’s early. You want to come over for a movie or something?”
“Yeah.” He paused, bit his bottom lip. “But I can’t.”
My heart hit the ground. I flipped back through the entire meal in my head, trying
to find the moment where I’d fucked up my chances of getting… Okay, I probably
wasn’t getting nailed, but I’d thought I could at least count on some heavy petting.
Weirdly enough, that was even more exciting. There was something kind of low
pressure about the whole idea.
Fun.
He sighed, and his shoulders rounded. “I have to feed the cats. They’re going to be
pissed.”
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Katey Hawthorne
“Cats. As in multiple.”
“Three of them.” He smiled a little sheepishly. “Uh, you okay with cats?”
“I never met an animal I didn’t like.”
He dropped his gaze and adjusted the bag over his shoulder. So quietly I could
barely hear, he said, “You, uh, want to meet them?”
Just like that, my heart was back in my throat. I mean, where the hell had this guy
come from? “Love to.”
He looked up, then laughed. “The fuck are you grinning about?”
“I just figured out why Isabella’s in love with you.” Not really a lie, since she was
as much a stereotype as I—happily single middle-aged woman with four cats.
“People, I can take or leave. Animals, I love.”
“That explains a lot about you.”
“Shut up.”
* * * *
He lived in one of the old gutted and remodeled buildings on Euclid Heights, just
a neighborhood or two away from me. It had an open kitchen and living room with a
recessed dining area, authentically creaky but well-restored hardwood floors, and top-
of-the-line fixtures. Track lighting over the island counter separating kitchen from
living room, restored woodwork and doors. Hell, it was even decorated in a modern
but too-expensive-to-be-Ikea way.
Didn’t smell like he had cats; smelled like incense or something. No clutter, no
dirty dishes. The rugs even showed evidence of recent vacuuming.
Shame I hadn’t seen this earlier. I would’ve known he was gay for sure.
He left me to lock up behind us as he threw his keys on the counter and flipped
open a little book. I realized it was some kind of tablet only when he tapped it a few
times and lights came on in the living room—revealing, unsurprisingly, old-school
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39
Spider-Man posters in the dining area and what appeared to be framed genuine comic
art panels against the far wall of the living room.
“Wow,” I said.
“Yeah, welcome to the nerd cave.” He tapped a few more times, and the kitchen
lights came on.
“That’s awesome.” By this time, two small four-legged creatures had emerged
from one of the back rooms, one of which was extra small and trundling toward me at
an alarming rate. I’m one of those people who’s reduced to utter stupidity at the sight of
cute, furry things. I announced, “Hey, cats.”
The lanky ginger tabby went straight to Kellan. He picked it up and kissed its
head. “Hey, buddy.”
Ginger cat mewed. Had to admit, he did sound kind of pissed.
The kitten, mostly gray fluff and overlarge white paws, knocked its little head into
my shin. I knelt and scratched its ears. It purred and rubbed against my hand.
“Who’s this?” I asked.
“Morgan.” He put the tabby on the counter. “This is Wyatt. Virgil will come
running when he hears me open this cupboard.”
I laughed. “You named your cats after the Earps.”
“Well, yeah.” Ginger Wyatt meowed at Kellan from his perch on the counter, and
Kellan spared him a dirty look. Then back to me where I crouched on the floor with
little Morgan. “Drink?”
“Yeah, thanks. Whatever you’re having.” I continued to oblige the sickeningly
adorable kitten with scratches and murmurs while Kellan knocked around the kitchen
with a bottle of something. Eventually the third cat emerged from one of the bedrooms,
hopping carelessly along on three legs. I let out a surprised “Whoa.”
And then felt kind of bad. Not that the cat would care.
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Katey Hawthorne
Kellan, pouring drinks into icy glasses, said, “My sister’s to blame for everything
here but my Spidey collection. She picked every stick of furniture, and then she filled
the place with mangy cats. She’s into rescue. She keeps fostering them, and I keep
adopting them.”
This was the longest single speech I’d ever heard Kellan give on himself or his
family. He’d mentioned a brother and sister—maybe more than one—often, but never
got too in-depth. But I was more impressed because he was, like, even cuter than the
kitten.
“Last time, I told her I’m out of Earp brothers, so no more.” He put the cap on
whatever it was and brought two drinks to the counter, pushing one across it toward
me. Whiskey on the rocks. “It’s Powers. Little bit like Bushmills. I grew up with it, so…”
I stood and swiped it off the table. He sipped at his gently. Not like he drank beer,
but like he was really enjoying it rolling around in his mouth. Like he talked.
Like he kissed.
Then he left it on the counter and turned to dig through a cupboard.
Virgil picked up speed so he could shove his head between Kellan and the cabinet
door.
“Doesn’t seem to slow him down,” I said.
“Animals don’t have inadequacy issues,” came the response from deep within the
cupboard. “Part of what makes them good company.”
“Never thought about it.” Good point, though. I let him sort out the cats, all three
of which were congregated under his feet now, and wandered into the living area. The
smaller wall had framed photo collages and one or two portrait-type pictures.
When I got there, I was surprised to find a small painting of the Virgin Mary
staring down from the top, like it belonged in the family tree or something. One of the
portraits beneath, a sort of informal deal, caught my eye as actually having Kellan in it.
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Must’ve been a few years ago, but it was him and a bunch of other similar-aged types
standing in front of a pond, feigning patience for someone’s camera.
However long ago it was, he hadn’t changed. Still had the same hair, and his T-
shirt said Dropkick Murphys. Today he wore an ancient, beat-up Pogues shirt under an
open button-down.
Over the impatient mews of cats and Kellan’s occasional swearing, I asked,
“Family reunion or something?”
He poked his head up and made a face. “Uh, no. That’s just my brothers and
sisters. Fourth of July a few years back. We do a thing.”
I sipped on my whiskey—which did have kind of a Bushmills bite and was damn
good—as I counted. Then I counted again, just to be sure. But yep, four boys, three girls.
“Seven of you?”
“We’re, uh, really Catholic.”
I glanced up again. “Yeah, so I guessed from the Blessed Virgin over here.”
Don’t normally see that outside old Italian ladies’ apartments, do you? Weird. But
seeing as he was from a family Catholic enough to produce seven children in this day
and age, not as weird as it could’ve been.
Even though he was gay. Which was decidedly un-Catholic of him.
Oh God. He wasn’t one of those bizarre Catholic queers who thought it was okay
to have a relationship but not sex, was he?
I glanced over to find him again, but he was ducked down, dishing out food.
Nah. He was bizarre, but in a good way. Not a self-hating, religious-hardliner way.
I contented myself with searching for him in the other pictures. There were a
couple, mostly of awkward teenagers with their arms around each other, one of him in
an inelegant high school state of development and goofy running shorts, a blue ribbon
around his neck, and people I presumed to be his parents on either side.
Explained the thighs, anyhow.
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Katey Hawthorne
By that time, he’d appeased the wild beasts and come to my side. “What?”
I looked up and realized I’d been grinning. “Hmm?”
“What’s that look?”
“Seven? What number are you?”
“Five.” He pointed at each of the siblings down the row: “Maura, Kennedy, Finn,
Erin, me, Tara, Ryan.”
“Wow. So which one’s your decorator?”
He pointed to the girl under his left arm. “Erin.”
“Which one’s the vocalist at CIM?”
This time he pointed to the girl on his right, one of the two light-haired kids in the
picture. “Tara.” Then he pointed to the remaining girl, the one first in line. “Maura’s
obsessed with scrapbooking and makes us all these framed monstrosities, which we’re
obligated to put on our walls.” He eyed me sideways. “You never mentioned any
siblings.”
“Only child. That’s why I’m so spoiled.”
He smiled and sipped at his drink. “Just because you drive an old Benz doesn’t
mean you’re spoiled. Your mama did good by you.”
“How do you know?”
He lowered his voice and leaned a little closer. “You took your hat off.”
“What?”
“At the Lizard. You took your ball cap off before we sat down to eat. And you
chew with your mouth closed.”
I took another drink myself and asked, “You always notice how people chew?”
“If they’re sitting close to me.” A pause, wherein he pretended to eye the pictures
on the wall. “Or I like their mouth.”
Unh.
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My brain function halved just like that, the instinct I had thus far counted on with
him obscured. I was frozen, with zero grownup experience of this kind of thing to go
on. He wasn’t just a nice guy—he was a really nice guy, in every way imaginable. He
adopted stray cats and let his sisters take over his apartment and had a picture of a
religious icon on his walls.
But, Jesus Christ, I was hot for him. Just hearing him say that had me hard, and I
wanted to—
“Ah, fuck it.” This wasn’t unusual of his sudden interjections, but this time he
followed it up by stepping closer and laying another of his brilliant kisses on me. We
were both holding drinks, but I slipped my free arm around his neck, turned my head,
and pushed my front against his. I breathed deep, the whiskey-spit taste of him filling
me with an unfamiliar but thrilling sense of gratefulness. He put his free arm around
my waist and pulled me against him, so I could feel the rise and fall of his chest, the
tightening of his hard stomach, the press behind his fly.
He was slightly taller, so I tilted my face upward, and he rearranged the angle of
the kiss so he pressed in on me, parting my lips under his just like before, dipping his
tongue into my mouth and taking it back. It became a hot, wet, building thing between
us, lingering seconds, closing off one kiss and starting another. Not the teeth-clacking
first real kiss of desperation—but it was there, just beneath the surface. He sighed,
shifted his stance so one thigh slipped between mine. His cock swelled against me, up
high, and we both angled our hips to better advantage.
He pulled his lips off mine after a good bit of that, his forehead still against mine,
and said, “Sorry. But—”
“Yeah.” I took a deep breath, then cleared my throat. Like he’d said, though, fuck
it. “Maybe we could…?”
“Definitely. Couch?”
“Perfect.”
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Katey Hawthorne
He rained a series of similar if shorter kisses on me as we edged toward the couch
and peeled off random inconvenient articles of outerwear: shoes and glasses and
button-downs and anything else that was too much in the way, eventually left in a pile
on his Scandinavian designer coffee table. Once we took care of all that, it was obvious
he was settling into the couch for the long haul, and I had my hands far enough up
under his shirt to know his body was at least as good as I’d hoped, if not better. He was
warm and hard, perfect flat planes and tight, long muscles.
He tangled his fingers in my hair and pulled me close. I kept coming forward so I
was pushing him back into the couch, up on my knees, and sat down in his lap facing
him, one leg on either side, both hands on his shoulders. His hips shifted in
acquiescence, and he slipped lower until his stiff cock—mmm, goddamn, it was thick
too—pressed tight in the crook of my thigh. I sat down and snaked upward so he was
pinned into the couch
I halfway expected a moment of hesitation, but his arms were around me, one
hand flattened under my T-shirt at my side, the other pulling my ass forward, feeling
me up. The position put me slightly above him, and I came in for another kiss hard,
openmouthed, and lost myself in the rush of his mouth, of the way his hips fitted into
me, the mutual subdued desperation of trying to rub off on each other through two
pairs of jeans.
Eventually he pushed my shirt up over my navel, and we pulled apart with a
faint, sweet kissing sound, breathing like we’d forgotten to for the last couple of
minutes.
I said, “God, you’re good at that.”
He laughed. “Right.”
I kissed him again, this time quickly, and reached down to help him get my shirt
off. “Even better than I expected.” I threw it behind me blindly, added to the pile.
He swallowed, his eyes fixed on my bare stomach. In a voice gone ego-pleasingly
faint, he said, “You, uh, expected?”
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I leaned forward and grabbed for his shirt, pressing my lips against his again. He
made even the tiniest kiss about the connection between us, about the heat inside us. He
ran his hands all over me, up my back, down my side, brushed the thin trail of pale hair
down the flat of my belly into my jeans. Gentle, almost careful, a barely there touch like
a static charge.
“Imagined,” I said into his lips. “Wanted. Whatever.”
“No way.”
Jesus, what did it take with this guy? Jumping into his lap and trying to get him
naked wasn’t good enough? Not that I minded the challenge, and I’ll sure as hell never
turn down a chance to talk dirty. “I think about it at your desk, especially. Wonder if
that chair would hold us. All the goddamn time.” I shifted my hips forward again,
earning a sweet little gasp from him. I jerked the hem of his shirt upward. He
cooperated, sitting forward and helping me get it off.
I froze just after I got it over his head, still holding it in one hand, looking down at
the work of art I’d just unveiled. “Fuck me,” was all I could say.
Not even just his body, which was great, but not in some extraordinary perfection
way. What turned it into an expression of appreciative surprise was that his right side,
starting just beneath his pectoral and ending inside the jut of his hip bone, was covered
in a huge, black, knotted Celtic cross tattoo. One cross-arm stretched into the center of
his torso, finishing with an intricate knot just beneath his sternum. The other stretched
around his side, finishing in the same way just before it curved around to his back.
He bit his bottom lip but at least seemed to take it in the right spirit. “Uh, I
mentioned the Catholic part, right?”
I ran my fingers down the length of it. Like I’d uncovered this weird artifact that
explained everything. (Hey, not a lot of blood to the brain. I was in no position to
construct a decent metaphor.)
Man. It is always the quiet ones.
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Katey Hawthorne
When I got to the end, I tucked my fingers into his jeans and leaned forward,
flattening my other palm against his chest. His heart pounded hard, and he turned his
face up, lips parted, sinking one hand into the back of my jeans and trying to pull me
impossibly closer. God, what I would’ve given to send electricity racing all over him
just then, to let him see just how good I could be to him.
I settled for, “You are so fucking hot, Kellan.”
He gave one of those abrupt little laughs. “Shut—”
But before he could finish, I shut him up with my mouth. The taste of him was
familiar now, wrapped up with mine, still tinged with whiskey, and I drank it in. It was
thoughtless then. Our hands had all those new places to explore; one of mine rubbed at
the back of his neck, fingered his hair, the other still flattened against his chest, tracing
the lines of him down, then up.
He shifted his hips under me again, pulling my ass forward with both hands
before returning to petting me. But one strayed to my thigh, up, up. I ran my thumb
along the dip in his shoulder, down to his stiffening nipple, the same pale pink as his
lips, and rubbed at it, spreading my legs just a little farther so my knees pushed into the
back of the couch and my cock thumped against him. He broke off the kiss to gasp, and
I buried my face in his neck, opened my mouth, and sucked at the soft part of it,
pushing with my tongue. I took my other hand out of his hair and fitted it between us,
finally. Jesus Christ, finally. His erection was hot even through his pants, and when I
lifted so I could flatten my palm and feel it up good, he clutched hard at my ass.
I had him unzipped before I even knew what I was doing—and sure enough,
white waistband with the word JOCKEY in gray print and a fat seven inches straining
against white cotton underpants.
No shit, when his fingers found my button, I started to drip; I thought I was going
to lose it right there.
I felt him up through his underwear. He swelled again to my touch, shifting and
sighing under me. He tugged at my pants so they hung open and low on my hips,
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47
returned the favor, pulling me down with his free hand for another kiss. I was just
thinking that I needed to get his pants off—as in, five minutes ago—when he started
sitting up. I sat up to crawl off him for long enough to get out of my jeans.
He grabbed me by the front of my shorts and held me there, biting his lip. He was
looking straight at the tent I was pitching, but eventually his eyes—they were so, so
fucking dark—found mine. He swallowed hard.
For a second, I thought he was going to call it off.
But he smiled and said, his voice all rough, like he hadn’t spoken in years, “I, uh,
imagined something too. At work.”
Now we’re talking. “Tell me.”
He let the front of my shorts go and guided my hips so I could back off him and
stand without falling over the coffee table. I dropped my pants, and he started
wriggling out of his.
“Yeah,” he said as he lifted his ass off the couch, which meant I was staring at his
erection trying to bust out of those absurdly sexy white underpants. God, it was
so…Kellan Sexy. Kind of dorky and cute but mind-bending all at once.
“I, uh—” He interrupted himself again by kicking off his jeans and reaching out
for me when I climbed back on top of him. “At the copier.”
“Fuck, that was hot.” I kissed him, replacing my knees on either side of his lap but
not sitting down yet. Then I kissed his ear, his jaw. “I had to go jerk off.”
“Jesus.” He ran his fingers so softly up the inside of my thigh, to the lower hem of
my shorts. “I was on my knees…”
My legs had that quivery feeling, but I wasn’t sitting just yet. I hadn’t quite
decided what I wanted to do to him first; where he was going with this confession
would dictate where I’d go with my ass. The anticipation was incredible, like I’d
scream, like I’d die. I kissed his face, ran my hands all over him. “Yeah.”
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Katey Hawthorne
“All I could think…” He trailed off again, kissing my neck, his fingers moving up
and up, to the softest part of my thigh, tickling, so close. “I have a, uh, fixation, kind of.
Maybe you noticed.”
I put my forehead against his, hands at either side of his face, and laughed even as
he tugged my shorts down around my hips until my ass was halfway out. I don’t think
I could’ve cracked the joke with anyone but him: “Is it too soon to tell you I love you?”
He laughed and then sort of lifted me up, rolled us over, and pinned me flat. Two
seconds and I was on my back, my head resting comfortably just below the couch arm.
There was even a pillow convenient, and he was over me, grinning with that goddamn
gorgeous dimple owning his face.
Oh my God, whatever that was, do it again. Do that all. Fucking. Day.
In this spirit, I rearranged myself, parting my legs so he could fit between them,
and he lowered himself slowly. I pulled him down with my hands in his hair until we
were there—that first moment where two bodies, naked or very nearly, fit into each
other in that singular way. The one where all the parts really click into place, stomachs
rising and falling in synch, cocks pressed tight between hips, thighs fitted between
thighs, mouths gasping together, still connected. The thrill raced all the way through
me and then back again, and I shifted under him so we both sighed, Kellan with a kind
of “unh” sound into my lips.
Just a few seconds of it, and he started kissing his way down my chest, stopping at
all the good spots on the way. His mouth was just as persuasive there as it was against
mine. He teased my nipple with his hot tongue, made my skin prickle and my cock
pound. At the same time, his hand slipped softly downward, tugging my shorts the rest
of the way down. A flash of self-consciousness finally hit me—always does when I’m
the first one to lose all his clothes. But by then he’d moved his mouth farther down,
licking a line across my belly and then kissing it, lifting himself up so he could get the
shorts off all the way.
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Another tattoo: a yellow and blue shield that filled the space between his shoulder
blades. Upside down, I read the word O’Shea in script beneath it, shifting with the flex
and stretch of muscle as he threw the last of my clothes at the table (and missed), then
went back to putting his mouth all over me.
This was so much better than I’d expected. Not even because he was so keen on
this blowjob idea, but because he was hot. I knew that, but he was so hot, in such
completely unexpected ways. Like…like—
His hand, which had been slipping up the inside of my thigh again, found my
balls. They’d pulled up tight, and his gentle-hot touch sent me reeling. He pressed his
hot, eager lips to the inside ridge of my hip bone, opened his mouth, and sucked at my
skin. The hair on my arms rippled. My cock, standing straight and just barely brushing
against his pale shoulder, ached for attention.
I swallowed a groan, grabbed the pillow, and stuffed it behind my head. The
better to watch him—for multiple reasons, not the least of which was the way his
eyelashes fluttered behind his bangs, the way he sighed and smiled against my skin
with those pretty lips.
He left small, benign pink marks between my hips, kissed up to the clipped patch
of hair at the base of my cock before he started somewhere else. I shifted my hips, and
he—in case I thought for a second he wasn’t torturing me on purpose—grinned. Then,
all at once, he took one of my balls into his mouth. I almost sat up, the wet shock of
pleasure was so intense. He licked me all over, first one, then the other, until I was wet
and gasping, absolutely dripping for it.
By that time, I was propped up on my elbows, legs as wide apart as they’d go,
being up against the couch on one side, watching in amazement as he worked me into a
state of confused, hot, wet excitement. Then he stopped, replacing his mouth with his
hand, and licked my cock from base to head. The sensation I was desperate for
magnified by the slickness of his tongue shook me, starting between my legs and racing
up and out. My arms gave, and I fell back against the pillow. He licked me once or
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Katey Hawthorne
twice more, just at the head like he was tasting me, then opened his mouth and took me
in.
Fireworks went off in my brain, but I strangled them for a few seconds by closing
my eyes and focusing hard, every muscle in my body tight, back arching involuntarily.
Just, his mouth was so hot, and his tongue was so clever. His fingers had slipped
behind my sac, rubbing all that spit in the direction of my asshole, and Jesus, he could
take a cock, look at him, building that steady, unrelenting rhythm with his lips getting
pinker and pinker wrapped around me, and fuck that was deep—
I shifted my hips with him, pushing deeper into the willing heat of his mouth but
also angling my ass into a better position. He never let up, not for a second, just kept it
building until the waves of sensation were coming too fast and hard to deny anymore.
One ran through me, and I shuddered, sighing. Another right on its heels, and his
fingers crawled backward, teasing me, almost there. Another, and I said something like
“Oh God,” but then another, and I couldn’t speak, because it was all I could do to—
“Unnh.” Another, another, oh God, too fast to tell one from the other until it was one
supermassive explosion of light and sound that just crashed me.
I came with a string of expletives, and he swallowed—I felt him swallow—and
another shudder ripped through me, an aftershock almost as devastating as the quake.
Then I just lay there, gasping and running my fingers through his hair. Smiling.
“Oh fuuuuck,” I said once I could.
Kellan was in the act of crawling back up toward me. His mouth was gorgeous
and red, his eyes burned hot and dark, and I caught sight of a wet spot soaked into his
underwear. He kissed me, mouth closed until I opened mine and tasted sex in it. I
rolled onto my side and wriggled into place against him, making him close his eyes and
clutch at me hard.
“Okay,” I said, my voice weak and rough. “I didn’t expect you to suck dick like
that either.”
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He smiled, kissing my face here and there, mostly just grabbing at my ass and
letting me rub him off against my leg. “Don’t get too excited. It’s my only area of sexual
expertise.”
I could finally see, but my legs weren’t going to be able to work anytime soon.
“No way someone hasn’t punched your V-card.”
“No, but not by much.” He pulled back just enough that I could see him making
that uncertain face. “Um, should probably, you know. Keep it that way.”
“Oh, baby.” I kissed him and rolled a little more so he was pinned beneath me.
Started tugging off his underwear. The things were fighting a losing battle anyhow.
“I’m way too creative for that to hold me back.”
“Fuck yeah.” His cock stood at an angle, heavy and…guhhh, no words, just, guh.
Now if I could just get my legs to work well enough to put me in blowjob position,
we’d be good to go.
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Chapter Four
I spent the night. Partly because he asked me, partly because we couldn’t stop
making out, which generally led to a happy ending, another round of drinks to wet our
dry mouths and crushed lips, and a resolve to watch an episode from his beautiful
collection of Mystery Science Theater 3000. And then the whole thing starting all over
again until it was suddenly 4 a.m. and we were falling asleep sitting up.
And when I’m not paying attention to MST3K, you know I’m hooked.
I woke starving, with cotton mouth, a sweet, tired soreness between my legs, a
vaguely aching jaw, and…a fluffy gray kitten curled up between my knees. When I
pushed myself up off my stomach and looked over my shoulder, Morgan looked up
from under one of his massive white paws and protested with a little mew. Kellan’s
side of the bed was empty, as straightened as it could be with me still taking up the
other end, and the door was shut, faint music thumping through it. I looked up.
Yep. Plain wooden cross hanging over the bed. Still.
That should’ve been creepy—possibly even creepier than the BVM (as my
blasphemous college Art History 101 prof had called the Blessed Virgin Mary) in the
living room. But there was something wickedly hot about his Catholic trappings that I
wasn’t wanting to examine too closely. I had a feeling they had something to do with
his request to keep our activities to anything-but-fucking. But hell, that was kind of hot
too.
Yes, I wanted his dick. It was gorgeous, and every time I’d looked at him last
night, I’d imagined him doing that thing where he flipped us over and ended up on top
of me, but with me facedown and him nailing my ass to the couch. Or bed. Or kitchen
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53
counter. But there was something about having it just out of reach that I couldn’t
quite—
Holy shit. Was that bacon I smelled?
I tried to get out of bed without dumping the cat over the edge. He stood and
mewed at me till I scratched his ears, then curled up with his head on my pillow. I
detoured to the bathroom, pissed, splashed some water on my face, brushed my teeth
with my finger, tried to lay my hair down flat—my cowlicks are murderous, which is
why I keep it short—and pulled on my jeans. Only then did I emerge into the living
room. The undeniable strains of his Irish-American punk rock thumped from the high-
tech speakers, and that wonderful smell… Oh yeah. Definitely bacon.
Kellan’s shaggy hair was a sexy just-been-fucked mess still, and he had his glasses
in place. He turned away from the stove and swatted at Wyatt, who watched him from
the island counter, with a “Fuck off.” Once the cat hopped off to join his three-legged
brother on the couch, Kellan finally noticed me standing there. He scratched at the back
of his neck and said, “Uh, morning. Sorry, I know it’s gross, but I can’t keep him off the
counter. Little bastard loves bacon.”
“I don’t trust anything living that doesn’t.” I came to lean against the counter
Wyatt had just abandoned. “I can’t believe you cook too.”
“Well, yeah. I eat like a horse and live alone.”
“Me too, and my fridge is full of take-out containers.”
He smiled—the shy, crooked one. “So stay for breakfast.”
“Thanks. I was just about to ruin your good opinion of my upbringing and invite
myself.”
His smile became easier, and he turned back to whatever he was doing at the
stove. The yellow and blue O’Shea crest showed through his ribbed under-tank. Last
night he’d said his oldest brother had gotten one when he turned eighteen, and all the
others had done the same after. I admired the smooth, easy movement of his back, the
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way the shiny track pants hugged his fine ass. I wondered when the last time a man had
made me breakfast was. But I said, “What are we listening to?”
“The Tossers.” He reached into a cupboard, grabbed a coffee cup, and started
pouring.
I laughed. Because yes, in my mind, I will always be thirteen.
He turned and slid the coffee across the counter, grinning. “Plain, or you want
whiskey in it?”
“I’m not that hungover. Maybe just sugar and milk.”
He turned to the cupboards again and pulled out a little bag of sugar, obviously
rarely used. “Milk’s in the fridge. I gotta flip.”
I went around the counter and opened it. Holy God, he even had vegetables. A little
box of cherry tomatoes and fresh carrots and a half-eaten bag of salad, all kinds of shit. I
glanced at him over the refrigerator door, noticed that he had fat slices of yellow tomato
frying in the bacon grease too. He scratched at his hair, flipping a tomato over and
eyeing it for defects.
Man, the weirdest shit about him got me hard. My cock protested even as it grew
heavy. It got too much more action before I left, and I wasn’t walking out of there.
Wasn’t my fault if he was sexy. And gave a killer blowjob. And, as it turned out,
had already made a promising start when it came to pushing my buttons while—
He looked up, blinking in surprise. Probably to see me standing there with the
damn fridge open, staring at him. “What?”
I licked my lips and ducked down to grab the milk out of the door. “Nothing.”
When I emerged and closed the door, he was back to flipping, chewing on his lip
and grinning like he knew damn well what.
I threw my coffee together and watched him while enjoying the abrasive,
infectious twang of the Tossers, until he seemed content that his flipping was done and
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turned back around. He leaned against the counter and sipped his own mug, so I could
see the outline of the cross down his right side through the shirt.
Ah, what the hell. “So, if I ask you about the crosses, am I stepping over a line?”
“I had your dick in my mouth after one date, Jamie.”
I laughed. “We had a half date before. The Lizard was a total setup.”
He considered. “Okay, one and a half. But still, if there was a line, we blew right
over it.”
“Didn’t think of it that way.”
He laughed into his coffee. “Didn’t think you would.”
I raised my eyebrows. “You calling me easy?”
“Yes. Yes, I am.”
I raised my eyebrows again, this time with less accusation and more suggestion.
He put his coffee down. “Okay, wait till we’re done eating to be superhot, James.
Your first lesson in Catholicism is that it’s a sin to waste food when there are starving
children on the street.”
“So, you’re really Catholic? Not just hereditary Catholic? Go to mass, confession,
all that?”
“Not as much I as used to.” He shrugged and set down his coffee, then opened the
fridge. “I’m partial to the priest I grew up with, and he’s way down in Medina. But in
theory, yes, I am really Catholic.”
I admit that a priest crack flew to my lips, but even I’m not inappropriate enough
for that. Instead I said, “I’m not trying to be a jerk, but…you’re gay.”
He snorted. “Sherlock fucking Holmes.”
See, a few days ago, that might’ve stung. That morning I just smiled and took
another sip of his supercharged French Roast. (Yes, I was getting the impression that
Kellan Shea was not a man who halfway did anything.) “I’m just saying, the Church,
capital C, thinks you have a disease that wants curing.”
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He emerged with a carton of eggs. “They also think that God made me exactly
who I am and that He loves me.”
“So how do you reconcile that kind of…?”
“Hypocrisy.”
“I was looking for a nicer word, but yeah. That.”
“It’s not about force-feeding dogma.” He set the eggs down by the stove and
didn’t turn for a moment, head bowed. I thought that meant he was looking for a way
to get out of the conversation and came up with several options. He turned around
before I got any of them out, making a serious face, but earnest, not angry. “You’re
taught to use your conscience, meditate and pray on things that confuse you. I’m not
saying it never bothers me that the pope hates me, but fuck it, I don’t like him much
either.”
“But he’s God’s representative. He’s divine, right?”
He barked out a laugh. “I’m willing to have this conversation, but you have to not
be a patronizing dick about it.”
“I—Sorry.” I flushed, because, “You’re right. I don’t get it, but it’s fascinating. I
really want to understand.”
“About the pope. And me.”
I nodded.
His smile slipped into that lopsided shy thing. He shrugged once more, picking up
his coffee. “Okay, there’s the obvious answer: that believing anything unilaterally is
stupid. Even Jesus had human moments and questions, and that’s what made him
awesome. So, the specific-to-Christianity answer is, if someone who’s supposed to be
the son of God can have doubts, how can anyone else be right all the time?”
All I could think was that it was the first time in my life that I had heard a rational
adult refer to Jesus as being “awesome.” And my respect for both his sanity and his
superior intelligence made it seem…kind of cool.
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(No, that was not my desire to fuck him talking, either. I’m perfectly happy to fuck
an idiot. I spent most of my twenties doing just that with staggering success.)
“I know it’s picking and choosing—I want to believe in love; I don’t want to
believe in hate. But I’ve read the books. I know what the Man said and what he didn’t.
They’re informed choices.”
“Yeah, that makes sense.” I was careful not to take a tone, as my mother called it,
when I asked, “So do you believe the stories, the gospels, in a literal way?”
“Not how you’re thinking, no, but it wouldn’t change the point if I did. You’re an
atheist?”
“Agnostic, I guess. I’m not saying there’s nothing. I’m just saying I…” Actually, I
didn’t know what I was saying. I’d never given it too much thought, apart from
wondering where my dad had ended up when I was much younger. But I’d long since
reconciled myself to the idea that I wasn’t supposed to know until it was my turn.
Still smiling, he turned and started removing the bacon and tomatoes onto a bed
of paper towels. “You don’t believe your spiritual authority expands with the size of
your hat.”
“Well, yeah.”
“I get it, believe me. I’m not trying to explain the inexplicable phenomenon of
faith; I’m just coming at it from a rational humanist standpoint here.” He finished that
task, then made for the eggs again. “Two, three?”
Jesus Christ, did I win the lottery or something? I stopped just short of telling him
that this morning, I definitely believed in God. “Wow. Two, please?”
“Scrambled, over easy, over hard, sunny-side up?”
“You’re incredible.”
He looked over his shoulder, flashing that dimple.
Guh. “Whatever you’re having.”
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“Over easy.” He started cracking eggs and dropping them into the bacon grease.
“People act like Catholics can just commit murder and go ask God to forgive us, and it’s
fine; we’re going to heaven. But it’s the opposite. It’s direct accountability to the Guy
Upstairs. You personally have to face what you’ve done, and you have to be okay with
it to move on with your life. If you do it right, it’s really hard to make the same mistakes
over again. You ever do something stupid you wish you could just accept so you could
stop living in it all the time?”
“God, yeah.” Every weekend. Except this one. “So it’s not a cop-out, you’re saying.”
“Honestly…” He trailed off as he cracked the fourth egg, then swished the pan to
settle them. When he turned around again, he said, “It’s really hard. It sucks, admitting
what an asshole you are. But it keeps a fourteen-year-old poor kid whose parents don’t
have time to wipe their own asses from doing a lot of stupid shit. I know it can be a
form of tyranny. But it’s not supposed to be.”
“Historically, it has been.”
“Any human organization ends up that way. We’re imperfect; that’s my point. But
when you’re on your deathbed, it’s just about you and God. I’m talking personally.”
“I…” I paused with my coffee halfway to my lips again, working this over and
over in my mind, wondering at the alien shape of it, finding that it wasn’t so alien after
all. “I could see that.”
“And unlike me, you have everything going for you, probably always have. Only
thing to single you out in a potentially bad way is that you’re gay, and you probably
made it into a fad at your high school.”
That got me to prickle a little, though it wasn’t even what he’d said. “I wasn’t
exactly out then.” Just that, you know, I wasn’t even completely out now. And I
definitely didn’t have everything going for me—Good job. Good family. Good friends.
Never gone hungry. Never been lonely. Hot guy with a libido to rival mine making me breakfast.
Also, incredibly high-level electronic manipulation, causing my own people to envy, covet,
and expect great things of me all at once.
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Well, fuck. Couldn’t complain about any of that, could I?
“But you see my point,” he said.
Too well. One of my tried-and-true conversational techniques was necessary: turn
it back around. “How do you not have everything going for you, exactly? You’re
ridiculously smart, I know you make more than I do, and you’re painfully hot.”
He looked over his shoulder and rolled his eyes.
“Plus you can cook, which is icing on the sex cake. So—”
“Easy on the flattery.”
“I’m trying to rack up points here.”
“Yeah, I lost count last night.” He paused to pry the first egg from the Teflon and
gently flip it, then continued down the line. I was about to jump on this opportunity to
get out of looking like an overprivileged dick, but he started before I swallowed my
coffee. “In school, I was the nerdy shy kid in hand-me-down clothes that you would’ve
pretended didn’t exist. Your friends probably would’ve given me shit, even if you
wouldn’t. It’s easy to ignore God when you don’t need him, especially as an invincible
teenager.”
“First of all, I was really nice to everyone in school—especially the nerdy kids in
hand-me-downs. And second…” Well, okay, some of my friends would’ve been dicks
to him, but, “I wouldn’t have kept any friends that gave you shit.”
He laughed.
“I would’ve defended you to try and get laid, if nothing else.”
“That, I believe.” I heard the smile in his voice even if I couldn’t see it.
That set me a little more at ease. Anyhow, if I was going to question his religion, I
could at least be gracious about him questioning my socioeconomic privilege. “But I
take your point, otherwise.”
I spared a moment to appreciate the weird profundity of it too. I’m not sure why I
hadn’t expected that my initial question would be biting off so much. Just that I only got
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into these conversations with people like Sarah and Clark usually. Hell, sometimes even
Derrick and Mike, if we were all really fucked up and still hanging out at the end of a
long night’s work downtown.
It did lead to one more, incredibly self-centered thought, though. As he finished
up the eggs, I considered him with…not new eyes, but a new depth of perspective. He
didn’t just inspire prickliness; he was practically a porcupine himself. But he was
apparently feeling pretty open to me after last night. Why not? “So, would you confess
about me?”
He hesitated. Then, quietly, “I don’t know.”
“Sorry. Too much. Strike that one from the record.”
“No, it’s…” When he turned around, he was smiling, but in a sheepish way that
implied he’d been the one to say the wrong thing. “Okay, a little too much. But not in a
bad way. It’s cool.”
Jesus. Kellan Shea was actually capable of being gracious. Who knew?
He shuffled the eggs, tomatoes, bacon, and forks onto a pair of plates and pushed
one across to me. “Good morning.”
“It really is.”
He looked away, flushing a little.
What the hell was he doing to me? One second, we were having a serious
conversation about God; the next, I wanted to get down on my knees and give him
fucking everything.
In the circumstances, I kept it to, “Thank you.”
“Anytime.” He sipped his coffee while I took the first couple of bites—which did
not disappoint, because it was even better than it smelled. And then, before even
touching his own food, he said, “Okay. I will say this: if I confessed, it wouldn’t be
because you’re a man. And it definitely wouldn’t mean I regretted it.”
More graciousness. The fucking sky was falling. “Well, that’s a relief.”
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Then he started eating.
* * * *
We didn’t realize just how like Dad I was, just how powerful, until I was fifteen.
Mom was running a drive at a soup kitchen just off Euclid, and I sneaked out the back
to smoke with some of the other awakened kids, including Billy Armin. A back alley
behind a shelter—smart place for a bunch of swaggering teenagers in overpriced shoes
to hang out sneaking cigarettes. But if anyone needs evidence that we’re just as human
as sleepers, they can have that for proof, I guess.
Of course we were approached by one of the city’s many homeless, probably a vet,
definitely not in his right mind. All our families were into the “help the less fortunate”
scene, but most of the kids were spoiled dickheads, me included. Though that day
made it pretty clear that, at least comparatively, I had a little compassion in me.
And that it wasn’t necessarily a good thing.
Anyhow, we were out in this shitty neighborhood, this poor guy ranting at us
about how he was going to shoot all us worthless brats in the head. It scared me a little
but not as much as it probably should’ve. Even the cockiest of us wouldn’t dare to use
his powers on the guy unless it became actually dangerous, but we all knew how to
handle ourselves.
The oldest boy among us was sixteen, a handsome, swaggering athlete type called
Mason. He was a hot-thermal manipulator—the opposite of Billy, he could make fire
from thin air. And he started egging this poor guy on, telling him to go ahead and do it,
pull out his gun and shoot us, or get his crazy ass into the building where he belonged.
Effectively mocking the guy for being shell-shocked.
Mason was hot, and I was a horny adolescent, but I wasn’t exactly starving for the
approval of my peers. Kellan was right about me in that. While the two other guys
laughed uncomfortably around quivering cigarettes, I told Mason to shut the fuck up.
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We got into it right there, him threatening to fight me, this guy still yelling that he
was going to blow our brains out against the wall, electricity crackling about my
fingers, the temperature rising a sudden twenty degrees all around Mason.
I thought I was doing the right thing, standing up for someone who couldn’t stand
up for himself, like I was raised to do. Like a Monday. But it was just as much bullshit
grandstanding as Mason’s mockery. I should’ve just gone inside and gotten help for the
guy and ignored Mason strutting like a cock in a henhouse.
But I didn’t, and Mason went after me.
And the random guy pulled an actual gun.
If Billy hadn’t seen him and jumped between us, I don’t know if we would’ve
noticed. As it was, he managed to knock Mason out of the way, but I just got
sideswiped. So I was left staring down the barrel of an unhinged—if understandably
provoked—man’s gun.
I still remember that moment, every single detail of it, or at least it feels that way.
That’s probably why the nightmares stuck so hard when they came. Mason’s leftover
heat all over my skin, soaking through my T-shirt, my jeans. Billy gasping for air, trying
to make something calming come out of his mouth, unable to think of anything. The
other guy—I hardly knew him, some kid from one of the Akron families—probably
staring into the back of my head, waiting to see if it’d explode.
The guy’s hand was shaking, and his finger was on the trigger. And I was fifteen
and scared and stupid and vibrating with electricity. I’d never been amped up that high
before; it coursed through my bones, like they’d pulverize if I didn’t let it out.
So I shoved my hand out, palm to the middle of the guy’s chest, and let it fly.
There was a huge pop, and he was thrown backward like someone getting
Tasered in a cartoon, limbs and layers flying, gun held out wide. His finger squeezed
the trigger—they dug a slug out of the brick wall later. He hit the far wall and slumped
into a pile, eyes shut, gun clutched tight in his lap.
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I was fifteen and scared and stupid, and I thought I’d just killed someone.
Electricity still running up and down my right arm from the charge, and just me,
staring, my throat full of puke and my heart squashed under my feet.
Billy ran to him, grabbed the gun, and sent it skittering across the alley. He felt the
guy’s neck, told us he was alive, and yelled for someone to go get his mom.
Mason was still frozen against a wall, and the Akron kid didn’t move either.
So I went and got Dr. Armin myself.
My mom didn’t say anything about what I should and shouldn’t have done. She
just kept saying it was all right, everything had come out okay in the end, and I’d
thought quickly. She understood why I’d done what I’d done. She knew I agreed with
her already about why I shouldn’t have.
I told her I wanted to go to bed early that night, but really, and maybe for the first
time in my life, I just wanted to be alone. It wasn’t until she hugged me—weird in itself,
as our usual practice was to shout “good night!” down the hall at each other—that I
noticed her hands were shaking. The next morning, her eyes were bloodshot, but she
smiled and made me breakfast—another oddity, since she was usually out the door
before I rolled out of bed on a weekend—and asked if I had homework. Her voice and
hands were steady. I never saw them shake again.
I don’t know how many kids that age realize how lucky they are to make it that
far. I wonder how many parents take it for granted that theirs have. And I wonder how
many awakened, knowing what we can do, how much damage we can cause, soothe
their conscience by performing anonymous good works. I wonder if it makes them feel
like their world is safe from them.
I’ve never had the heart to ask my mother. Hell, I’ve never even had the heart to
tell her about the nightmares, so I definitely wasn’t going to ask her about her own
issues. Sometimes I tell myself she does it because it makes her feel like her life
matters—like most people, sleeper or awakened, who get into charity. Sometimes I tell
myself it’s just the way she was raised, and she took to it.
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* * * *
And sometimes I just have to realize I don’t know the first fucking thing about
her.
She came up to Coventry for dinner at Tommy’s Saturday evening, a tradition
we’d kept up about once a month since I was a kid. Mom’s schedule was so crammed
full that it was about the only time we got alone. Peanut butter and grilled cheese and a
giant chocolate shake to wash it down, for me. She liked to go through the spinach-pie
menu and then start back at the beginning. Today she was on the MR3, so it was a mess.
I was still thinking of Kellan, enjoying the lingering tiredness, the physical
reminder of one hell of a night, and wishing harder than ever I could be honest with my
mother. Not because I’d tell her about him—she never asked about my love life, and
God knew I considered that a convenience. But I was still high on the nice-boy thing. I
had this romantic idea in my head that Kellan was the kind of guy you tell your mother
about. Eventually.
“I feel like you’ve been avoiding me,” she said about halfway through.
“This from you?”
Her manicured eyebrows pulled down and together. “Honey, I always answer
your calls.”
I laughed it off because if I didn’t, she’d start sectioning off extra time in her
planner for me. That was just about the last thing my life needed. “No, I just missed the
call. Date went later than I expected.”
The eyebrows went up. “Oh.”
“I do date sometimes. It’s a thing single people do.” I poked at my shake with the
straw. “You could try it.”
In twenty-five years, she’d had one boyfriend and a handful of dates that never
went anywhere, that I knew of. There must’ve been more, but she never seemed
impressed or inclined to take anything very seriously.
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Maybe I got that from her.
“It’s a young people’s game.”
But it might give her something to think of outside her little circle of friends, their
weird plans and clubs, their unconsciously high-horse efforts to let them sleep at night.
Something to do for herself. “You’re barely middle-aged. You’re beautiful. You’re set
for life. And you’ve got all the time in the world to do anything you want. Sounds like a
better time to date than when you’re…me.”
She reached out and took my hand on the table. “Jamie, honey. I’m not like you.”
“What’s that mean?”
She paused, watching me, and eventually answered my question with another
question. Another thing I must’ve gotten from her. “You don’t think I’m unhappy, do
you?”
I just looked at her for a long time, at this face that was so familiar I hardly ever
saw it anymore. I thought about it. Did I think she was unhappy?
If she was happy, would she be so set on never having a minute to herself? Would
she be trying to plan my life in spite of not really having one of her own?
Or was all that really just a function of who she was, who she was raised to be?
Just a function of losing her husband young and realizing how easy it would be to
lose her son too not long after?
“I don’t know, Mom. Are you happy?”
“Yes. Are you?”
I thought for a while longer. Then I said, “Today, yeah. I’m happy.”
She toyed with the Tiffany diamond pendant I’d given her for some ancient
Mother’s Day—hell, I must’ve been seventeen, and she still wore it all the time. “You’re
not always.”
“No one is. I’m happier than most people.”
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She smiled, a small, tight thing, but it reached her eyes. I read genuine regret in it.
She said, “You’re still mad at me for bringing up med school last weekend.”
What do you know? I was. I took my hand back and made for another bite of my
sandwich. Denial would only make it worse, and I didn’t want to talk about it.
Like she was reading my mind, she said, “It’s over and done, Jamie. If you can’t
laugh about it, or at least talk about it, it’s never going to get better.”
“I’m fine with it. I’m the one who dropped out.”
Her jaw tightened. “Honey, you have to let it go. You had good reason, and no
one thinks any less of you if—”
“Mom, please.”
She let it drop and eventually turned the conversation back to some inane
community-happenings gossip. I let her talk me down until I was comfortable in my
skin again.
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Chapter Five
I like my job. I probably even love it sometimes. It’s hard, makes me think on my
feet, surrounds me with people, lets me use the things I’m actually good at. That’s all
anyone wants from a job. And then they want to go home, put up their feet, make a
drink, watch some TV, and forget about it.
But I liked coming in to work even more after that weekend. Work didn’t just
mean work; it meant Kellan. It meant that my urge to talk to him more than was
probably acceptable in a brand-new relationship was easily satisfied without revealing
just how much I was obsessing. It meant lunches full of his special kind of weird
conversation. It meant an after-work visit to Sarah and Clark’s to drop off cool vintage
toys (turns out Kellan and I both took proximity to Big Fun into consideration when
apartment shopping) expanded to include him. It meant we could casually arrange to
meet up for old movies on someone’s couch and then make out all night and wake up
tired and fall asleep at our desks the next day.
Bell hinted around with questions but nothing detailed—she still thought of
Kellan as a “sweet boy,” and I wasn’t about to contradict it. Sarah was surprisingly
quiet about it. It was Clark who finally asked outright a few weeks after it all got
started. “So, that Kellan thing’s working out for you after all. You fucking him or
what?”
“Something like that, yeah. Thanks, by the way.”
He had the grace to look embarrassed. “Sarah was wondering if he was your
boyfriend. Weren’t sure what to tell Charlie. You’re Uncle Jamie; he’s the Guy Who
Brought the Jean Grey Action Figure with Uncle Jamie.”
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“I’m not seeing anyone else. Don’t think he is either.” As I said it, I had a
revelation. Kellan and I talked a lot—mostly during work hours and dining out, as we
had better things to do when we were alone—but we didn’t really talk about us after
that first time with the God conversation. This seemed to suit us, but now Clark
mentioned it…that, the whole together-or-not thing, was something Kellan would care
about, wasn’t it? Hell, that might’ve been why he never talked about us. And I still
remembered that hesitation in answering my confession question.
Was that why he’d confess about me? That he was sleeping with someone to
whom he hadn’t made some kind of commitment?
Clark was going on, “You better go talk to HR. You have to sign that—”
“Actually, that’s a good point.” Now I thought about it, seemed idiotic that I
hadn’t considered it sooner. And if not totally heartless of me, at least inconsiderate.
“You think? Surprised Delmonico isn’t on your ass about it already.”
“That too, but I mean the whole—”
A dark head poked around my partition. “Hey.”
I smiled, both at Kellan and at the stupid fluttering in my stomach his sudden
appearance caused. “Hey.”
He stepped inside the cube. “I’m glad you’re both here, because I have a question
about the Archibald project. Just from a sales point of view.”
“We can do that,” Clark said.
Kellan cocked his head, shoved his hands into his pockets, and asked with a
completely straight face, “Am I Jesus Christ?”
Clark stared.
I laughed. “What?”
“Am I Jesus Christ?” He looked from me to Clark again. “Do you guys think I can
walk on water and multiply loaves and fishes on command? Because what you want is
a miracle.”
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I held up my hands, grinning. “Wasn’t me. Not my sale.”
“That makes my personal life easier but doesn’t really lessen the shit-storm I’m
about to experience rewriting half my code.”
Clark made a face. “What, you wouldn’t be pissed if it was Jamie’s fault?”
“I’d be even more pissed—that’s what I mean about it making my personal life
easier. I tweak on him; he doesn’t put out; everyone ends up with a cranky code
monkey.” Still totally straight-faced, he raised his already high eyebrows, stood to his
full six feet one, and looked Clark in the eye. “Seriously, Clark, this is bullshit.”
“Two flaws in your argument.” Clark settled back on my desk as if for a long
conversation. “One: I’ve known Jamie for six years. The man will always put out.”
I nodded in agreement.
Kellan rolled his eyes.
Clark continued, “Two: you’re always a cranky code monkey.”
“So stop doing this to me.”
“My job is to sell the product.”
“They warned me about you sales fuckers.”
Clark punched my shoulder. “You gonna let him talk to us like that?”
I held up my hands again. “No one likes a cranky code monkey, Clark.”
“You are one selfish bastard, James. Kellan, I think you might be overreacting.”
Now Kellan started to look prickly. His jaw worked hard, and his forearms flexed,
hands still stuffed into his pockets. “You try explaining this shit to five Ukrainian
programmers and tell me I’m overreacting. These guys are working overtime every
night for you bastards, and I’m not going to be responsible when one of them drops
dead just so you could up your sales record.”
Knowing I was taking my life into my hands, I said, “You’re hot when you’re
bossy.”
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Clark, with that impeccable timing that made him my only real competition for
top sales, pushed himself up off my desk. “I’ll leave you two alo—”
Kellan stepped into his way. “You’re not getting out of this.” His eyes flicked to
mine, and one corner of his mouth tried to pull up, just barely. But it was enough. “I’ll
boss you around later, Jamie.” And he beckoned for Clark to follow him out. “Come
here. Let me show you the special hell I’ve just been thrown into thanks to your…”
I silently wished Kellan good luck because he was going to need it to convince
Clark to feel shame.
Then again, Clark didn’t have the benefit of sex to get the better of Kellan’s
infallible logic. So maybe I should’ve been wishing him good luck, all things considered.
Nah.
* * * *
I was just starting to forget about the Mae issue, so of course that Friday she
finally e-mailed me back. This was all I got:
Hi Jamie,
Hey, yeah, long time. Things are really chaotic for me at the lab right now. Maybe next
month sometime. Tell your mom I said hi next time you see her!
Mae
No phone number, no nothing but “Dr. Mae Haywood, Aidan Faulkner Research
Fellow in Nanotechnology” in the signature.
Never been so happy for a brush-off in my life. I definitely wasn’t going to tell
Mom about it, because God knew what she and Margaret would get up to if they
realized we were both totally uninterested in their plans. Would’ve been better if we
could work together on thwarting them, but it was enough to know Mae, at least,
wasn’t going to give me crap.
I had better things on which to spend my precious mental energy. Clearly.
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That afternoon, Kellan went about arranging things in his usual way. “So, you got
anything going on this weekend, apart from the game?”
This question had many variations, such as “Already have lunch plans?” (which I
never did), “Are you hanging out with your mom Saturday?” (which was even less
likely), and the most direct of them all: “You have time for a drink tonight?
Or…tomorrow?” (which I always did—at least, for him).
At which point I always started making plans for us, and he seemed relieved to go
along with them.
That night we fed the cats, then went to my place. While I stood before the DVD
shelf trying to decide which of my golden-age vampire collection would be best to lay
on him next, Kellan poured drinks at the wet bar in the corner.
He asked, “What are we watching?”
“More Bela? Or some cheesy seventies color vamps? Ineffectual English public
schoolboy accents, Peter Cushing, Chris Lee, that kind of thing?”
“Bela.” He came bearing whiskey, handed one off, and stood eyeing the Hammer
Horror collections with appreciation.
It was time. I plucked out Mark of the Vampire. “Then tonight, you get to see my
all-time favorite Lugosi film.”
“Whoa.” The dimple appeared. “Taking it to the next level.”
“Scared?”
“Bring it, Monday.” He threw himself at what I already thought of as his spot on
the couch. It was one of those L-shaped deals, and he always went straight for the
corner.
I set it all up and crawled up after him, rearranging him so I could fit between his
legs and lean my back against his chest. I fully intended to broach the boyfriend subject
tonight, so he wasn’t far off with the “next level” thing, but now the time was here, I
wasn’t sure how to go about it. It wasn’t that I thought he wouldn’t want it. It was just
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that I’d never had to ask anyone before—they always asked me. And Kellan…was
Kellan.
Which is to say, physically incapable of asking for anything. Even when he kissed
me first, half the time he ended up saying sorry or stammering like he’d done
something wrong. Only after I had him warmed up would he start taking over.
And God, it was good when he did.
But in the meantime, it was usually up to me, and I’d be lying if I said I didn’t get
a kick out of that too. This shouldn’t be weird, just more of the same. And the more I
thought about it, the more I thought I really should’ve done it ages ago.
So how the hell do you bring that up, anyhow? And why was it freaking me out?
We watched the first half of the movie like that, his arm thrown over my shoulder,
his hand resting against my chest, sweating glasses held against our thighs, sipping and
occasionally offering commentary, the thump of his heartbeat audible in my head. It
was warm between my legs, down low in my belly, at the base of my spine, a kind of
patient arousal common when I had him near but was otherwise engaged. I actually
finished my drink before him, I was thinking so hard. When he took his last sip, I sat
up, saying, “Want another?”
He handed me his glass but grabbed the waist of my jeans just above my ass crack.
“Not yet.”
That patient fire flared, sending its heat through my veins. I set our glasses on the
table and returned to my former position, but this time up higher so more of my back
was tight against his front and my ass fit into the inside of his thighs. He slipped his
arms under mine and wrapped me up, one hand sinking into the waist of my jeans.
“Sorry,” he said. “I—”
I wriggled, pushing his legs outward in the hope that it’d put his crotch in closer
contact with my ass.
He didn’t finish the sentence, just kissed my neck, then bit at my ear.
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I sighed and leaned back into his arms, pulling my legs up and resting the
outsides of my thighs against the inside of his, feeling my way up the soft denim over
his long, hard quads. My knees fell farther apart, the shape of my stiffening cock visible
just down the right leg of my jeans.
He scooted forward so I could feel his pressed into my back. I shifted against it,
and he sighed hot into my ear, biting at it again. One of his hands moved under my
shirt, fingers light and electric against my belly. The other drifted south and found my
dick. It jumped at the warmth of his hand through the material, and he traced it,
teasing. This time when I wriggled, it was involuntary.
I had to have him. I might not have thought of it if Clark hadn’t said anything, but
now it was driving me up the wall. I finally said, “Can I ask you a serious question?”
I felt his lips against my ear, heard the smile in that sweet voice. “Oh, I like those.”
“You seeing anyone else?”
He ran his fingers softly, so softly, through the trail of hair down my lower belly,
so my torso broke out in goose bumps. His other hand rubbed at my erection again, this
time with a little more pressure. “Thought you said this was serious.”
He shifted so my knee hooked over his. The cotton of my boxers bunched up on
my cock, the denim flattened it and increased the pressure. Kellan rubbed the length of
it again, and I bit back a groan.
Fuck, what were we talking about?
I thought hard, tried to focus. The one time Kellan was able to tell me what he
wanted was when we were hot. It was perfect. I should ask now. I found the thread
again and said, “I’d be jealous.”
He laughed and kissed at me, petted me more.
I arched as he stroked me, harder now, and ran his fingers up under my shirt,
tickling and burning. I asked, “Mmm, are you all mine, then?”
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“Sure. Yours.” That time he didn’t laugh. He unzipped my jeans and felt me up
from inside them, so I squirmed against him. I reached up to put one arm around his
neck, and his other hand found my nipple. He pinched; I arched again. He rubbed my
hot cock against the inside of my thigh, and I sighed and closed my eyes.
Now his voice was rough but still like honey in my ear. “Fuck, you feel good.”
The wet sensation of his lips, his breath, the sweetness of the words, translated to
something equally wet and sweet in my shorts.
That was another thing he was getting good at: he’d figured out that any little
compliment could get me off twice as fast and hard.
I toyed with the hair at the nape of his neck, let him pinch me and rub me into a
state of desperation for the next few seconds, lost in it.
Then he said, “Pause the movie.”
I fumbled for the remote but managed.
He pulled his fingers out of my shorts and applied both hands to my shirt. “Unh,
can you…?”
I helped him get it off and leaned forward so he could lose his.
But he caught me by the waist again. “No, all of it.”
I looked back over my shoulder, already scooting to the edge of the couch and
pulling off my pants. “So fucking bossy.”
He swallowed hard, just watching for a moment before he realized he was still
mostly dressed. While he took care of that little problem, he asked, “You complaining?”
I yanked off my shorts and threw them over the back of the couch. Then I pulled
at his long-suffering underpants, mouth watering at the familiar but thrilling shape of
his thick erection through them. “Complimenting.”
Once our clothes were strewn randomly about the room—which didn’t make
much of a difference, since I lived in chaos anyhow—I climbed back onto him. I
straddled his lap like I had that first night (he liked that—if I got him hot enough, he’d
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put me there himself) and sat my naked ass down with his heavy, straight cock in the
split of it.
He closed his eyes and grabbed for my waist, sighing. “Jesus.”
I ran my hands down his chest, to his belly, then leaned forward and pressed my
dick into it, leaving a little wet spot against him. His hands lowered to my ass, and he
held on as if for his life.
My first instinct was to tell him what I felt, what I wanted. How having him so
close set my whole body crackling, how he made me ache and burn. How I wanted to
feel him inside me, under my skin, filling me up, and give him everything.
Someday.
I couldn’t. Even in that stupid state, I knew it was too much. But it was the truth,
the only one I knew right then, and I rolled it around inside me, enjoyed it.
I put my forehead against his, pressed a breathless kiss into his mouth, and said,
“I have a brilliant idea, Kellan.”
“Yeah.” He cleared his throat when it came out like a croak, squeezed my ass
again. “You usually do.”
“You should be my boyfriend.”
He laughed and kissed me harder, his face turned up and his mouth suggesting all
kinds of vague, delicious things. “I will be anything you fucking want, James. But
especially that.”
We made out like that for a while, me shifting regularly to rub us both off. There
was something about fake-fucking him, like a demonstrative promise, like driving
myself, him, us crazy. Like being a teenager and discovering sex but without the
awkwardness, just the first thrill and the sheer fucking pressure-free fun of it. He held
my ass and tweaked my nipples and sucked my tongue and licked my neck,
occasionally pushing up against me, his cock swelling between my legs.
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Then he bit at my neck gently, just as gentle as his fingers on my skin, and
muttered, “You’re too fucking amazing to be real, Jamie.”
My dick pounded with my heartbeat. I wrapped my hand around it and gave it a
quick, tight stroke against the flat of his belly. The thrill made me gasp into his hair.
He gasped with me and bucked his hips. His cock pushed tight against my ass, my
balls, and I loosened up, let my legs slide as far apart as they could. He clutched at me
harder, lowered his mouth to kiss my chest. I reached behind with my free hand and
pulled the head of his cock upward to catch it tighter in the split of my ass, the better to
work us both up. I stroked myself again, slow and tight, and he found my nipple with
his tongue. This wrung a little moan out of me, and I looked down, catching a glimpse
of my dick pressed next to his tattoo.
There was something blasphemously hot about that. I rocked my hips, still
holding his cock tight against my ass.
“Jesusfuck,” he said.
Speaking of blasphemy.
Normally when he pulled out that one, it shocked me a little. This time just the
sound of the word fuck made me drip. I stroked my cock faster, and he licked my
nipple, then sucked at it, tighter and harder, so I got faster and faster, grinding down on
him and rolling my hips. I gasped. “Oh goddamn.”
“Need more?”
“Uh-huh.”
He dug his fingers into my ass on both sides and lifted. I went with it, sitting up
on my knees, though I sure as hell missed his dick. He said, “Turn around.”
I did, as fast as I could, and he nudged and pushed and pulled until we were
arranged how he wanted, with me on all fours, hands propped up on the armrest, and
him behind me. He traced the crease of my ass with hot fingertips, sending another
spark-wave across my skin, then deep into me. I tried to get my knees farther apart but
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was in serious danger of slipping off the couch, especially with the way my legs were
shaking.
I looked over my shoulder, watched him spit. When it hit my crack, I lifted up and
bit back a moan, grabbed for my cock again. He licked all the way down until he got to
my hole.
I arched my back; my dick pounded in my hand. “Oh fuck yeah.” My voice went
up at the end, and I bit down on my lower lip hard.
“You close?”
“So fucking close.”
He licked some more, teasing until my ass was so wet it was dripping. He reached
up and cupped my balls, rubbed the spit around with his thumb. My back bowed
involuntarily, and I dug into the armrest with my fingernails.
His other hand started working on my asshole, at first just mimicking the motion
of his tongue, but harder, which made me buck and moan again. So much electricity, so
much sensation all through me that my fingers, toes, my dickhead tingled with it. Then
he pushed up a little, inside, just one finger, and moved it back and forth, pressing into
my taint and desperately near where I needed it.
“Mmm, fuck m—” I started to say, but I cut it off with a gasp when he added in
another finger, stretching me out—and almost shorting me out. A static charge built in
my middle and pushed to my hands before I knew what was happening. I bit my lip
again, harder, wrestled it down quick.
He pushed up inside me, spit-slick and careful, and crooked both fingers just a
little. That place inside me lit up, sent electricity racing through my blood. I slipped my
knee off the couch and planted one foot on the floor to open up more as I rocked back
on him. Lightning crackled behind my eyes even as I turned my head to look at him
again.
He worked his fingers up and down, feeling his way, stroking my balls so they
pulled up tight. His mouth was open, his chest heaving, his eyes wide and taking in my
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ass with so much abject appreciation, I almost came right then. The second I squeezed
my cock and started my hand moving back and forth under the head, catching his
rhythm from behind, it was like my entire body might explode into pieces. I swelled
impossibly, rocked my hips, and arched my back, concentrating on him taking me from
behind, trying to hold on to the moment.
But there was just no fucking way, with him working me from the inside out.
When the mounting explosion was finally too much to hold, I pushed back on him,
locked my elbow, and dug my nails into the couch, then shuddered and came with a
hell of a satisfied moan that sounded a lot like “Oh yeah, baby, fuck yeah.”
I tried to catch most of the damage, but there were four or five really fucking good
spasms to it, and my hand, even my belly was dripping by the end. His hand stilled on
my balls, and the other rubbed what was left of his spit into my ass, bringing me down.
He got up on his knees and kissed my back, between my shoulder blades, down my
spine, into the small.
When I stopped shaking with the last major wave of perfect fucking pleasure, he
pulled out and took me by the hips, fingers all sticky, and fitted himself into the curve
of my ass. I rocked backward, rubbing off his fat cock in my wet crack and grinning
over my shoulder at him, panting like a dog on a hot day.
“You’re so good, Jamie.” He palmed an ass cheek with that same hot-as-fuck
appreciation. “Jesus Christ, you’re so fucking good.”
Which was funny, since he was the one who’d just taken all of sixty seconds to
finger-fuck me into bliss. I ached a little, in that sweet way, where he’d been inside me,
and goddamn that was sexy. I laughed breathlessly and turned on him, grabbed my
underwear off the back of the couch to wipe my hand but left the mess on my stomach
intact. When he fell back into the L of the couch, still wide-eyed and looking at me like I
was some kind of rock star, I climbed into his lap again.
I’d tightened up while blowing my load, so I relaxed my legs, my ass, and sat
down on him, rolling forward until his cock was trapped between me and his own lap.
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Now he could reach, and since he already knew goddamn well I wasn’t shy about
where his mouth had been, he kissed me openmouthed.
I could almost think again. I smiled into his kiss, leaving my cock to deflate
against his belly as I felt up his chest. “Really? You think I’m good?”
“Yeah. Fuck yeah.”
I grinned and pulled back slightly, still breathing hard and wriggling to work a
groan out of him. “Which part of me?”
“All of you.” His hands went back to my ass. His eyes were veiled by thick,
drooping lashes, sex-confused and hungry. Voice gentled further still by shortness of
breath, he made a valiant attempt. “Your hands. Your mouth. Your—You have really
pretty eyes.”
I laughed, mostly because he was actually looking at my eyes when he said it, and
kissed him. “Good start.”
“Your legs.” He ran one hand down the length of my thigh, then back up. “Your
ass.”
“Mmm-hmm.” I sat forward and retrieved his dick from between us. I kissed his
mouth again, and this time when I pulled back, bit down carefully on his bottom lip.
“Keep talking.”
“Uhh—”
But the moment he opened his mouth, I traced his dickhead along my belly, right
through a trail of still-warm cum. I rubbed it all over him with my thumb, into the hole,
down the slit.
His head hit the cushion behind him. “I—Jesus…”
“Nope.” I kissed him again, then sat back so he could watch, if he wanted, and
built a slow, tight rhythm. I lingered under his dickhead, then squeezed in the middle
where it was a little thicker, enjoying the hell out of it. My cock, still only halfway
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down, lay lazy next to his as I worked him. I angled so I could get my free hand
underneath and cup his balls, just brushing my own on top. “Just Jamie.”
Sure enough, he looked down. His grip on me tightened; his hips shifted again,
like he’d fuck my hand. “Uh, I said ass, right?”
“Yep.”
“Your stomach.”
This being a new and satisfying answer, I went a little faster.
He gasped, one hand now clutching the cushion below his ass as if he was afraid
of falling off the couch. “God, so good. I just—I want to…”
I grinned and kissed his open, pink mouth again. “What else?”
“Your cock.”
I tightened my grip.
His back arched. His fingers dug into my ass hard. “Your—Oh God.”
“Come on, baby. This is a beautiful cock.” I felt him, hotter and fatter than he
could sustain in my hand. I jerked faster, stroked his sac as it pulled up, suddenly
supertight. I whispered, “I want it, Kellan. I fucking want it.”
“Ah fuck.” He reached up, locked one hand into the hair at the back of my head,
and pulled me down for a kiss. I let him guide my lips to his, licked at the roof of his
mouth. His cock spasmed in my hand, hot sex spraying across my belly. He moaned
into my mouth and held me there for a long moment, ruffling my hair, curling his
fingers against my scalp, almost like he was trying to soothe me or put me to sleep,
playing with it. I held his cock until there was no more and its pounding was just the
rush of his blood, the aftershock.
Then his other hand pulled my ass forward, and I took the hint and got my hands
out from between us so our bellies met, slippery. We smiled into a new kiss,
closemouthed so he could catch his breath. I put my arms around his neck and applied
myself completely to it.
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After the rise and fall of his chest had leveled out, he said, “Your ass. That’s a
really good part. Definitely.”
“You already said that. Three times now.”
“It’s fucking evil to make me talk to you while you’re, um, doing that.”
I licked his lower lip, then bit down on it. “But I like it when you tell me how hot I
am.”
“I know.” He ran his fingers through my hair again. “And I know I said ass three
times. That’s how hot it is.”
“Well played, Kellan.”
A few more seconds of making out, heartbeats regulating. And then Kellan
laughed. “Fuck, we’re a mess.”
“That’s how you know we’re doing it right.”
* * * *
Massive Attack was Kellan’s favorite of all my music. I was convincing him about
plenty of it, just like he was convincing me of his beloved paddy rock, but that one had
grabbed him first, if only because it’s superior make-out music.
I turned it up the next morning after breakfast so he could hear in the shower, so
I’m not sure how I heard the doorbell ring. I dried my hands on my track pants—I
always cleaned up since he always cooked—and looked through the peephole,
expecting the landlady or a neighbor or something.
Instead, it was the absolute last person I’d ever expect to show up unannounced:
my mother.
My heart froze. There was no pretending, what with the dirty bass of “Atlas Air”
thumping through the door at her. I turned down the volume to a more reasonable
level, made sure I could still hear the shower running, and took a deep breath that did
nothing to dispel the sensation of electricity vibrating through my skeleton.
I opened the door.
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Mom, immaculately put together as ever, eyed my state of disarray and laughed.
“Another late night, honey?”
“Uh, no. I mean, yeah. Kind of. What are you doing here?”
“I’ve been trying to call you since yesterday. I need you to come to lunch.”
“I have a game this afternoon.”
“It’ll only take an hour. I thought I could come and meet your work friends after—
I haven’t seen you play in years.”
“I can’t, Mom. You—”
The shower shut off.
Mom looked over my shoulder.
“I can’t,” I repeated, this time more quietly. “I’m busy all day. You’re not the only
one who—”
“Hey, James.” Kellan’s voice echoed down the hall.
Mom raised her eyebrows. There was nothing suggestive, nothing accusatory in
the expression. Just pure curiosity.
My heart was in my throat. I stepped backward, letting her inside. And looked up
just in time to see Kellan step into the hallway, his lower half wrapped in a towel, his
hair wet and fucked up, tattoos and long muscles and scrubbed-pink-ivory skin and
dark eyes. Looking like a goddamn work of art.
Looking like my boyfriend.
“Where’s that—” He stopped talking when he saw the look on my face. Peeked
around the corner. And, naturally, met my mother’s inquisitive eyes.
There I was, half naked, with an extreme case of bed head, thanks to his
thoroughness on the couch and between the sheets the night before. This was not how
she should find out. And if she already suspected, this was not how it should be
confirmed.
She deserved so, so much better from me.
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Mechanically, I did the only thing I could. “Kellan, this is my mom, Andrea
Monday. Mom, Kellan Shea.”
Only the faintest suggestion of confusion in her eyes, Mom smiled. “Hello,
Kellan.”
He flushed. “Ms. Monday. I, um, sorry for the…”
Her smile grew. With more than enough grace for all three of us, she recovered. “I
understand, dear. Nice to meet you.”
“And you, ma’am.” He disappeared down the hall with less grace but a good
amount of speed.
She schooled her expression. “A new friend?”
I was torn. It would’ve been easy to tell her the truth right there and then. She
knew. Though she’d erased all traces of it from her face, I felt it in her body language,
saw it in her eyes.
Just like I knew she saw the truth in mine.
But it wasn’t the time and place, and she deserved the full explanation. She’d
deserved it for a decade, and I found myself staring down the black hole of years past,
wishing I’d had the common sense to see that it’d come to this.
The awakened were liars by nature, liars by omission. It was how we survived.
But we didn’t lie to our own.
I shot her a significant look, one that promised the full story later. “We work
together. He’s the new head monkey at Humphries.”
“He’s very…young.”
She didn’t mean young. She might’ve meant handsome. Or wet. Or naked. But all
possible options implied the same end result: There’s a handsome, wet, naked young man in
your apartment on a Saturday morning, Jamie.
I nodded, still holding her eyes, but said, “Yeah. Kind of a wunderkind.”
“He comes over to shower?”
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My breath hitched. I looked over my shoulder to make sure Kellan was still in the
bedroom and stepped nearer, suddenly wishing I’d left the music on loud. “Something
wrong with the water in his building, I guess. Look, we’ll talk at lunch.” This
accompanied by another significant look. I expected fully that she’d recognize the lie; I
expected she’d know it for a refusal to get into the truth with him there.
She squared her shoulders, an undeniable tension in the set of her jaw and
straightness of her spine. “Margaret’s meeting us.”
My knees nearly gave out. “Not today.”
“Just come to Mama Santa’s. An hour, no more. After, we can—”
“I’ll stop by. In half an hour.”
She looked at me in this scary and unfamiliar way. Like she’d never seen me
before. Then she said her good-byes and left me with a kiss on the cheek.
I closed the door behind her and leaned one forearm against it, then rested my
forehead against that, sighing.
I deserved that. I deserved her questions, her unwillingness to let it go for the sake
of my convenience. I even deserved the inevitable anger and betrayal that’d be turned
on me after I did my explanations and mea culpas that afternoon.
But goddamn, this sucked.
Light footsteps jerked me out of my unpleasant reverie, and I looked over my
shoulder to see Kellan shoving his old T-shirt—which had spent the night on the
cluttered coffee table—into his bag.
“Sorry about that,” I said.
He dug his underwear out from behind a pile of magazines and stuffed it into the
bag.
“She doesn’t usually turn up like—”
When he turned, the force of his dark glare shut me up. A muscle in his jaw
twitched, and his right hand made a fist at his side. His voice was pitched sharp and
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hard, almost unrecognizable. “Problem with the water in my building? We work
together?”
I leaned back against the door, knees going weak again, this time irretrievably.
“No, it’s not—I didn’t mean—”
“Maybe I’m getting the definition of boyfriend wrong, but this is not what I meant.”
The guy could throw a verbal kidney punch even when he wasn’t aiming. That
one, carefully placed as it was, knocked the air out of me. “That’s…that’s so not what
that was a—”
“Oh, so it’s not that I embarrass you.” He strapped up his bag and threw it over
his shoulder. I noticed belatedly that his T-shirt was slightly crooked, one edge of it
pulled up high enough to show skin, wet patches betraying the uncharacteristic haste
with which he’d dried and dressed. “For a second I thought you didn’t want your mom
to know you’re fucking tattooed white trash. My mistake.”
“The hell? Christ, Kellan, where’d that come from?” But as soon as I said it, I
realized exactly where it came from. I saw my mother through someone else’s eyes: her
shiny blonde hair, gray meticulously covered by sunny highlights, swept up in an
elaborate twist at the back of her head. Her high forehead, her clever eyes, just the right
touch of subtle makeup. Her simple but expensive designer slacks-and-blouse
ensemble, her Tiffany pendant and diamond ring the size of a meteorite and Prada bag
and shoes.
And Kellan, the poor kid in hand-me-downs, who I would’ve pretended didn’t
exist in high school, his heart written across his naked body in permanent ink for all to
see.
He covered the distance between the living area and the front door in a few long
strides and stood there like a boxer glaring down the opposing corner. “You tell me.”
My head throbbed. It was stupid, all so stupid, just a misunderstanding. I had lied
to her, but in a way that she’d be sure to understand. But how to explain that to him
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without it sounding like some miserable excuse? Jesus, why hadn’t I just shuffled her
out and apologized to him right away for the crappy introduction? Why hadn’t I…?
Both his hands clenched then. I knew if I didn’t say something, he’d push past me
and be out the door. The first thing I could think of leaped out of my mouth. “It has
nothing to do with you or—”
“Yeah, I see that.”
“Oh, so if it was your mom, you would’ve just said, ‘Yeah, meet my new
boyfriend’?”
“That’s exactly what I would’ve said.”
“And she would’ve been okay with that?”
“Jamie, my mother is the most amazing human being I know. But whether she
loves it or hates it doesn’t alter a fact.”
I ran a hand through my hair, pulling on it. All my clever explanations, my
smooth excuses deserted me. I just stared at him and wished so, so hard that I could tell
him the truth. “She’s not ready to hear it so bluntly. I’m having lunch with her. I’ll talk
to her about it then, I swear.”
“Right. She’s not ready.” Then he paused, mouth slightly open, as if having an
epiphany.
I had a sick, sinking feeling he had.
Confirmed when he said, “Jesus. Does she even know you’re queer?”
I closed my eyes. “Kellan.”
He took an audible deep breath, and when I opened my eyes again, his hands
were spread wide in front of him, chest rising and falling with controlled slowness. He
said, in a tight, frightening voice, “Okay. You know what? It’s none of my business.
Nothing about you is any of my fucking business.”
I pushed off the door and took a step nearer, reaching out for him. “No, it is.
You’re right. Just, you don’t understand.”
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“I noticed.” He stormed past me and reached for the doorknob.
“Please, don’t just walk away. Let me explain.”
“I don’t want to talk to you right now.”
“But—”
“I’ll say something I can’t take back.” He looked over his shoulder, biting his lip,
but his eyes still burned hot and dark. “Megan will have to be your shortstop today.
Tell everyone I’m sorry.”
“Kellan—” But before I got any farther, he was out the door. He closed it in my
face—gently, but it still amped me hard. The charge started in that place deep in my
middle, the source of it, and jumped from wire to wire until it raced all through me,
begging to get free.
I turned around, let little lightning bolts arc across my hands, jumping from finger
to finger. The visible, tangible expression of all my frustration, everything I held inside,
everything I wanted to scream from the fucking rooftops.
I shoved one hand forward, sending a bright blue arc from my fingertips, right
into the nearest poster frame on my wall. The plastic sizzled; the paper curled in
sudden frenzied electrical flames.
I put it out before it set off the alarm and emptied the whole fucking building.
Feeling like exactly what I was: a giant fucking five-year-old. Lonely, frustrated, and
pathetic.
Shit. And this is why I can’t have nice things.
Or nice boys.
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Chapter Six
I don’t remember walking down Mayfield Hill, but eventually I found myself in
Little Italy. So I edged into the incredible hole-in-the-wall we all knew and loved as
Mama Santa’s, and searched for Mom at her usual table.
Margaret sat there alone. Mom’s Prada bag was next to Margaret’s Gucci, but she
must’ve been in the bathroom. I considered slipping out, but Margaret chose the exact
wrong moment to look up and give me that unnatural Cheshire Cat grin.
Any other afternoon, I probably would’ve been some combination of annoyed,
frightened, and amused. But I was battle hardened, my brain still muddied from the
instant, devastating wall Kellan had thrown up between us with so little effort or
conversation.
I took up a seat across from her, painting on a smile only half as fake as hers.
She said, “Sweetheart, look at you!”
She’d been Mom’s friend since childhood, and so I was always as polite as
possible. Her husband was a nice guy; Mae and her brother, Rick, were good kids. But
Margaret’s constant commentary on my appearance made my skin crawl.
Wonder what kind of fee Mom gets if I knock Mae up, anyhow. Wonder what they’d say if
they knew Mae wants to talk to me about as much as I want to talk to her.
But no. That wasn’t fair, and there was no point getting into that mess now, not
with how fucked-up my head was. I’d only make a bigger hash of it, if that was
possible, and I wasn’t here to start another fight. I kept my comments to, “You just saw
me, Margaret. Last month, I think.”
“But you were in that monkey suit; today you look like you. How’s the current
running?”
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Wouldn’t you like to know? “Fast and hard, like always. Sorry, but I’m only stopping
by.”
“Andrea said you’d be in and out.” She winked, flashing improbable blue eye
shadow at me. “But I knew you wouldn’t abandon us. You’re too good a son.”
Keep it classy, Margaret. “Yeah, except not. So how have you been, anyhow?”
Thankfully, Mom’s Chanel No. 5 cut through the baking-bread-and-cheese smell
of the restaurant. She kissed my cheek and slipped into the seat next to me. “Honey,
glad you’re here.”
I glanced at her from the side, but she was looking down at the menu. “Mom.”
“Jamie’s being modest, Andrea,” said Margaret.
“He’s incredibly modest—when it suits him.” Mom smiled, mostly unaffected.
Under normal circumstances, I would’ve laughed. Today, not so much.
“He says he’s not a good son.”
Mom put her hand on top of mine. “He’s the best son.”
Likely this was her way of telling me it was all right. That whatever happened that
morning, whoever I was sleeping with, whatever I did, she loved me. I swallowed hard.
“Mae’s dying to see you again.” Margaret had moved on in her bubbleheaded
way. “After she missed Billy and Lisa’s wedding, she promised to come back soon.
She’s working on nanotech—”
“I know.” I couldn’t help it; I had to shut her up. “Brilliant stuff.”
Mom said, “Jamie e-mailed her a few weeks back.”
“She’s apparently really busy,” I said. Or just really grown up. Wonder what that’s
like.
“I’ll remind her to write back. You know how shy she can be.”
I was trying to strangle a smart remark when Mom squeezed my hand. I couldn’t
even begin to fathom her timing. The dark little restaurant started to close in around
me, the current racing through my bones again.
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We’d never get to talk with Margaret there, and Margaret would never leave so
long as I was there. I’d just tell Mom to come over after. I pulled my hand out from
under hers. “Well, I should—”
“Call her, maybe?” Mom said.
I paused, mouth still open. What the hell? “Maybe not,” I replied. Now my smile
was utterly false.
Margaret laughed. She had a sweet, low voice and a smooth, infectious giggle, but
it irritated me anyhow. “Jamie, you were never shy. Let me give you her number.” She
started digging through her bag.
I looked between her and my mother, suffocating. “She has mine. I’m pretty sure
she’s not interested, honestly.”
Goddammit, why couldn’t she have just faced up to it and worked with me on
this? Maybe I should write back and convince her—
No. Shit. That wasn’t even fair. If she wanted to run away and hide in California,
hey, I couldn’t blame her. If Margaret were my mother, I’d probably have done the
same, and Christ knows I wouldn’t want to hear about it.
At least one of us could escape.
But if Margaret was kind of airheaded, she wasn’t stupid. Yet here she was,
laughing like I’d just told the joke of the century. “She’d die if she heard you talking like
that, Jamie.”
Oh, Jamie. I hope the babies are comedians like you! I bit my tongue to keep the
sourness from spilling over, making to stand up. “It was good to see you, Margaret, but
I have to be on second base pretty soon.” I turned, searched my mother for a sign that
this clusterfuck had just been a slip on her part. A momentary lapse, like mine not an
hour ago, the one that had sent Kellan storming out of my apartment.
I got nothing. “Mom,” I said. I pushed the seat in behind me and started out.
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She said something to Margaret and followed me out onto the sidewalk. “Jamie,
it’s going to rain. They’ll call the game.”
I looked down the street in the direction of Holy Rosary. Already signs up for the
Feast of the Assumption, and it wasn’t for another month and a half almost.
I wondered if Kellan celebrated it. Wondered if he came down here and ate the
deadly carnival food and watched the procession. Wondered if he spent the morning of
the feast praying at the altar and his evening drinking wine and laughing and playing
bocce with the old guys on the lawn.
Or was that just an Italian thing? What’d the Irish get up to on—A fat raindrop
plashed onto my forehead, reminding me where I was.
“What’s all this about?” Mom asked, laying a hand on my arm.
“Be serious, Mother.”
She withdrew her hand and sighed. “You’re acting like a child.”
I looked over and down at her, surprised. “What?”
“You heard me.”
“Make up your mind.”
She cocked her head.
My stomach fell into my shoes. I’d been wrong. She was not on my side on this
one. Yes, maybe she knew what it was about. Maybe seeing my half-naked boyfriend—
hell, she’d probably spotted his clothes all over the living room too—had informed her
of my proclivities once and for all.
But it didn’t matter. Whether I was dating a man or a woman, it would never
matter. It was irrelevant. It was just something to occupy me until I finally settled down
with The Right Girl.
Just like she had. Or just like Dad had.
I felt sick. “First you want me to be a child so you can tell me where to work and
who to marry and what I should do with my electricity. Then you want me to grow up
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and be you—or Dad. I don’t even know, but I wish you’d make up your mind. What do
you want from me?”
She considered this question with a seriousness that made me despair, then said,
“I want you to find the balance.”
“What does that even mean?”
“The balance between who you are and what you want. The place where you can
look at your life and know it is what it should be. I want you to be happy.”
I wished I could feign confusion, but I understood too well. I would never be free
of this sense of duty. Of the honorable ideal, of the mechanical chivalry to which I’d
been raised. I would never be happy if I felt like I’d betrayed it. And she knew it
because she knew that six years later, I still felt bad about med school.
But she didn’t know everything. The truth was, “I know what happy feels like.
Happy is my life twelve hours ago.” I had the thought and spoke the words
simultaneously. Hearing them out of my own mouth was a revelation.
What the fuck had I done? How could I ever explain this to his satisfaction?
Halfway would never do—he was too smart; he’d see right through me. One stupid
little sentence, one unnecessary lie, and—
“Honey, I—”
“I gotta go.” I started in the wrong direction, toward the church, shoving my
hands into my pockets. Another raindrop smacked me in the face, fat and full. I finally
looked up at the steel gray sky.
They’d definitely call the game. Good, since that meant it would be perfectly
acceptable to eat a couple of Presti’s glazed doughnuts for lunch.
At least the weather gods had my back today.
“Jamie, please—”
“Margaret’s waiting for you,” I said. “I’ll call tomorrow.”
But not right then.
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Right then, I was afraid I would say something I couldn’t take back.
* * * *
That evening was…well, it wasn’t pleasant, anyhow. I didn’t have the game to
distract me, and I declined Sarah and Clark’s dinner invitation, then Derrick and Mike’s
request for my presence at West Sixth. My electricity was freaking out a little in spite of
my fizzle of a temper tantrum earlier in the day. It was a hot, rainy summer night, and I
wasn’t about to subject the people I loved to my miserable self.
I was, of all things, pensive—a new and strange state of being, with a confusion of
emotions on which I didn’t normally dwell. I bounced from bewilderment to guilt when
it came to Mom, from agony to resolve with Kellan. I felt like shit about Mom, one part
pissed and three parts hurt, but part of me knew we’d work it out. She’s my mom.
With Kellan, not so much. The resolve was the most confusing of all, maybe.
Resolve to apologize, yeah, but also tentative resolve, or at least, the idea that I ought to
have some, to let him go.
He was open, honest, wholehearted. I couldn’t begrudge him his dickhead
moments, even when they hurt; they were his only line of defense. I was born to lie,
mostly by omission, but I knew—I knew—it was all the same to him. He deserved better
than I could give him.
But how could I sleep at night with him out there hating me?
All this chased itself in my head until well into Sunday afternoon. I wasn’t ready
to speak to my mother but had to force myself not to call Kellan constantly. I allowed it
once or twice, and I never left a message, since he never checked them anyhow. A few
texts, just “Please call me” or other simple, pathetic things, not even really knowing
what I’d say if he responded.
It didn’t matter, since he never did.
I refused to feel sorry for myself, as all my troubles were of my own making, but it
didn’t help with the gnawing loneliness. Half of my life was awakened, the other half
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full of sleepers, and what I could say in one wasn’t allowed in the other. For the first
time in a long time, I had no idea what to do with myself.
And then I remembered Billy Armin’s card in my jacket pocket.
* * * *
We met for a drink on the roof of the Green House Tavern in Billy’s trendy
neighborhood. Lisa came with him to say hi, then left with some of her friends. We
caught up on school, jobs, family, all the usual bullshit over our first Fox summer ale.
Over the second, I got the lowdown on the latest advances in plastic surgery meets cold
manipulation. That got him going, and just being around him, this same skinny, bug-
eyed kid getting so excited about weird science, made me feel a lot better somehow.
On the third beer, he finally said, “I didn’t think you’d call.”
“I wasn’t sure I would.” Great, that sounded like some Kellan shit to say. “Not because
I didn’t want to. But…you know. Lots of memories.”
“I guess none of us will ever be over it. We shouldn’t either.”
I considered saying that I was, for the most part. But I was sick enough of lying
just then to leave it with a “Yeah.”
“At least you stuck up for the guy,” he said.
“Not my finest moment, for all that.” I snorted and glanced at the late-Sunday-
afternoon foot traffic below. The rain had cooled things off overnight, but the sun was
back, though it hung low by that time. Seemed like everyone was out for a last nice
meal, an evening at the Improv, something before Monday came and strangled them
again.
“We were kids. We got lucky.” He shrugged. “You’re not the same cheerful Jamie
you were back in the day, though.”
“I am. Just not today.” I scrubbed a hand through my hair, that wave of confusion
and frustration crashing over me again. Hadn’t really wanted to bring this up—I’d
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come here to escape it. But the hell with it, at this point. This was Billy. “Had a big fight
with the boyfriend. Ex-boyfriend. Maybe. Fuck.”
His eyebrows disappeared under his hair. “Uh…”
“Yeah.”
“Oh.” He flushed a little. You know a guy your whole life, that he’s slated to
marry some girl you’ve known just as long, it’s natural to be a little surprised by that
kind of thing. “I mean, that’s cool and all.”
I smirked.
He laughed and leaned back in his seat. “Hell, Jamie, you know what I mean.”
“Yeah. And for a while there, it was very cool.”
A pause while the bartender came to ask if we wanted another drink (which we
did), and then Billy said, “I dated this girl for years in college. Lived with her, even. My
parents hated it, wouldn’t even meet her, but what could they do?”
“What happened?”
“Didn’t work out.” His smile slipped into something nostalgic but not quite sad. “I
try not to be old-fashioned, but I’m not sure I ever could’ve told her. In retrospect, I
think I sabotaged it. It was just too hard.”
“I’ve been there.”
“So…” He cocked an eyebrow. “Just guys?”
“Yeah, my gate only swings one direction.”
“But your mother still, ah…?”
“My mother is in a state of denial. Either that, or she’s lost her mind completely.”
“They all do. This guy a sleeper?”
“Yeah.” I considered the question. That was the thing that strangled any tentative
resolve to let Kellan go. If he were anyone else, any less honest, any less loyal, okay.
But, “I think he might be the kind of sleeper you could trust with it, though.”
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Billy looked impressed. “What’s the old saying? After ten years, you can consider
it?”
“We’re a long way off that. If he even speaks to me again.”
“They always do, if only to tell you where to stick it.”
“Sounds like Kellan.” We laughed over that, and our beers came.
By that time, Billy had formulated another probing question. “Why’d you drop
med school? Seriously?”
“I never wanted it. I only tried so I wouldn’t have to let Mom down.”
“Yeah, didn’t we all.”
“What you do is brilliant. Just because I couldn’t do it, it doesn’t mean I don’t
appreciate that. All that power in you going to help people—”
He snorted. “For a fee.”
“Everyone’s gotta eat. And everyone knows you do clinic work.”
He shrugged again. “I probably wouldn’t have chosen it, if I wasn’t an Armin. But
I love it now.”
There was a moment of silence as we both considered that, and I, at least, applied
it to his entire life. Which seemed to be working out okay.
Then he said, “But you’re the brave one. You’re doing what I think all of us
secretly dreamed of when we were kids. You just said no.”
“I’m a goddamn coward.”
He made a face.
“I don’t mind little stuff, using it on someone’s skin or even in the muscles, but
any deeper…” I suppressed a shiver, afternoon heat or no. Suppressed the memories
and the nightmares with it.
“But that’s good. You should respect it. I hate when I catch myself taking it for
granted.”
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“No, I mean—” I faltered. Half of me really wanting to just say it, finally, just get it
out and admit it and get the fuck over it; half of me still stuck in mortified-teenager
land. I took a deep breath and made myself finish. “I can’t. I can’t use it to fuck with
someone’s life, because”— it reminds me of being fifteen and scared and—“it makes me hate
it.”
Something sour rose in the back of my throat, and it wasn’t the beer.
“You don’t hate it. You’d drop dead if someone took it away, just like the rest of
us.”
“That’s exactly what I mean. I don’t want to feel that way about it.” That was why
it made me shiver, in fact. Like two warring notes, some bullshit psychological
dissonance that never resolved. Hate what I can do, love what I can do.
“Lookit, maybe this is hypocrisy coming from me. But I was there,” he said. “I saw
what you can do, and I’ve never seen anything like it since. So you take the
responsibility seriously. How is that a crime?”
It didn’t make me feel like less of a coward. But it did, at least, make me feel like
less of a madman.
“Responsibility should be scary.” He went on, “I’m terrified of having kids. And
so’s Lisa. We’re both sure we’d end up dropping the thing on its head, and neither of us
likes them very much.”
I whistled low. Brave words—braver than mine. “So don’t have them.”
“We’re talking about it. It seems kind of stupid. We got married mostly to please
our parents, because we’re supposed to have babies. Now we’re together, we’re kind of
united against them all.”
Yeah, looked like it was working out just fine. “Wow. Hardcore awesome.”
“Jeez, I never said that to anyone else.”
“I know, right? Feels good.”
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“Really good. Anyhow, who says you have to be a goddamn superhero? And who
says I have to pass on this power to some poor kid who never asked for a crappy dad?
Hell, talking about it makes me realize how I’d actually be an awful human being to go
along with it.”
“In your case, yeah, why screw up some kid? But mine’s completely selfish. I just
don’t want to hate who I am.”
He raised his full glass again. “I think we’re all working on that, man.”
* * * *
Lisa gave us hell about being drunk when she came to get Billy. Then she sat
down and drank enough vodka and tonic to sink a small ship, and the three of us talked
shit until it was time for them to stagger down the street and me to hop into a cab,
seeing as we were responsible adults with real jobs.
I knew very few things when I came into the office Monday morning, but I knew
them for sure. The first was that Kellan was still pissed, because he had yet to reply to
any of my texts, let alone call me back. The second was that though the success of our
relationship depended on factors partly out of my control, I wasn’t letting him go
without a fight. The third was that my mother was getting antsy, as she sent me a text
on Sunday night to which I replied, Will call this week. Love you.
One problem at a time, but I intended to line them up and knock them over.
I don’t know how he did it, but Kellan managed to avoid me until almost
lunchtime. When I finally ran into him, it was on the stairs between our floor and the
one above, where the big conference room was. Lance and Sarah and a bunch of other
implementation consultants came flooding down. Having noticed and commented on
my state of distress earlier in the day, Sarah stopped, grabbed my hand, and nodded
upward. Sure enough, Kellan trailed behind the rest, his face buried in a tiny notebook
and a pen hanging out of his mouth.
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Since I hadn’t seen him for a few days, which was just enough time to forget the
effect he had on me, I stalled out. Fuck, he was…so…just…
She squeezed my hand and left, closing the stairwell door behind her. He kept
coming down, oblivious, and when he got within four steps of me, I finally found my
voice. “Kellan.”
He froze, back foot still on the step above him, and blinked as if I might be a
mirage. Or a nightmare. He chewed his pen cap and tucked the notebook under his
arm. He made as if to push his glasses up, but he was wearing contacts, so he ended up
poking his nose and then staring all wide-eyed.
Electricity surged in my belly. I wrestled it down but had enough presence of
mind to enjoy the thrill of it. Enjoy the moment. Live in hope and all that. “I’ve been
trying to call.”
“I know.” He took the pen out of his mouth and stuffed it into his shirt pocket. He
chewed on his lip instead.
“Please, let me explain.”
He opened his mouth, the bottom lip almost red from abuse. Nothing came out.
I took one step up so I was nearer to looking him in the eye. “I mean, there’s no
excuse, but there is an explanation.” What little of it I could give him.
Not now, maybe. But some day. He’ll forgive you when he understands.
He has to.
Just like that, he deflated, leaning against the railing and chewing on his nails.
“This weekend sucked.”
“Apart from Friday night.”
He looked down at his fingers. I took one more step and grabbed his free hand. He
started but allowed it.
“Let’s take a long lunch?” I suggested, increased hope propelling me forward. I
stepped up again, this time on the level with him.
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He ran his thumb along the edge of mine, down to the knuckle and back again.
Another surge of hope, and I moved nearer until I could smell that mint gum and
shampoo and Kellan scent. “Please. Just to talk.”
He pulled his fingers out of his mouth. “I didn’t pick up the phone, because I
wanted to be angry. It’s easier.”
At first, this was baffling. But then I considered, well, him. And, “I…think I
actually understand.”
“I don’t know how to apologize.” He swallowed visibly. His fingers weaved
between mine. “But I need to. If there’s any fucking thing I should understand, it’s
feeling like you can’t tell your family anything that matters. So…”
The world was full of happiness and light; there were fucking angels singing in
that stairwell. I wanted to run and scream and shoot lightning like a coked-up Greek
god.
“Don’t. You were right.” But more than any of that, what I really wanted was to
kiss him.
So I did. Just a little one, right there in the stairs, where anyone opening the fire
door above or below would’ve had a first-rate view.
I hadn’t felt that kind of relief, the leg-weakening, earth-shattering kind, in years.
There was something unspoken—neither of us wanted to get carried away right then,
and if we opened our mouths into it, we’d never stop. But all I needed were his lips
against mine, that perfect demand-and-yield balance between us, to know that this was
going to be okay.
Seemed a little melodramatic that I’d ever thought it might not be.
So I pulled back just enough to separate us and said, “Come on. I gotta buy
someone a sandwich. Then let’s go get a beer.”
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Chapter Seven
He slid into the same side of the booth as me once we got to the dark little Irish
pub down the block, which I took to be a very good sign. I explained as much as I could
without touching on superpowers, over a meal neither of us seemed interested in
eating.
He already knew that it had just been me and my mom for as long as I could recall
and that I had dropped out of med school after one year. He didn’t know that the two
were intertwined in my mind, so I started there. My great failure, my mother’s attempts
to spare my feelings and hide her disappointment. But when you’ve lived alone with
someone as uncommunicative as her for so long, you know how they feel even when
they pretend they don’t, right?
Then I told him about our circle of family friends. He knew about the community
spirit in which I and my “rich kid friends” had been raised, but he hadn’t quite grasped
the link between the two. I explained about the archaic practice of intermarriage—felt
good to discuss it as disparagingly as I really wanted to, for once—and about Billy and
Lisa. And then, finally, about Mae.
He’d maintained a look of disbelief almost the whole way through, but that finally
pushed it over the edge. “Are you, like, the duke of Cleveland or something?”
“Heh. No.” Though, now he mentioned it, it was a decent comparison. Noblesse
oblige and all. “But the thing is that everyone in my mother’s life knows about this.
Including Mae’s family. And they’re all pretty much just expecting us to go along with
it. So if I don’t, my mom… It’s not that these people won’t be her friends anymore, but
it’s kind of a fuck-you to them.”
“What kind of fucked-up country club is this?”
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“Good description. Thing is, she’s always juggling a million things, but she
doesn’t really have another person in her life. And I—” I faltered, hampered by my
inability to open it up and put it on the table like I really wanted. The closest I could
come was, “It sounds so pathetic, but I hate letting her down.”
“No, I get it. I’d do anything for my mother.” He paused, chewed at his lip, an
inscrutable, stony look in place. “But let me just make sure I have this straight. You’re
twenty-eight years old and living a double life as an out gay man with your friends and
a closeted mama’s boy with her friends.”
“Well, when you put it like that…”
“And she never figured this out before?”
“I have no idea. We’re kind of close. But—”
“But you have a monthly dinner appointment and a lot of crowded social events
and otherwise behave like little Lord Jamie and the duchess of Monday?”
I shifted in my seat. “I guess it is kind of weird.”
“That alone would be weird. On top of the double-life thing, it’s straight fucked-
up.”
I flinched.
He grabbed my hand. “We’re all fucked-up. You meet my family, you’ll feel one
hundred percent better about yours, believe me. That’s why I should’ve been less shitty
about it.”
“No, it was stupid of me to lie about it. I didn’t even expect her to believe it. I was
just saying random things to make her go away so I could talk to her later.” My face
was still hot, but that was all right. It ought to be. “But that was the worst thing I
could’ve said. The…I don’t know, the commitment thing—that’s important to you.”
His hand tensed over mine. He looked away, took a long drink of his Guinness.
I squeezed him. “Don’t be like that. I just mean that I figured you were feeling
guilty about us at first because we weren’t, you know, officially together.”
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He took his hand back and picked at his fries. “So you just wanted to be my
boyfriend because you thought it’d save me a couple of Hail Marys?”
“Shit, Kellan.” I pulled at my hair and leaned back. Knowing why he did it sure as
hell didn’t make it sting any less. “Can we have a conversation without the boxing
gloves?”
He stuffed a fry into his mouth.
I watched him chew, helpless. Bereft of all strategy, except the certain knowledge
that anything but the truth would lose him, I said, “I guess when I say things while you
have my dick in your hand, they hold less weight, but I meant it: if you were seeing
someone else, I’d be scary jealous. That usually means it’s time to make it official.”
His jaw twitched. “That’s what I thought, yeah.”
“I know. And I’m sorry. I just panicked, and it won’t happen again.” That was all I
had. I moved closer, willing him to look me in the eye.
He flicked me a sideways glance. “You talk to your mom?”
“No. I wanted to talk to you first. But I will.”
“Not because of me.”
“This never would’ve happened if I’d been honest with her from the start. But I’m
going to talk to her now because of you, yes.”
“Don’t.” He looked up. “I’m sorry for being a dick about it. Don’t try and have
that talk until you’re ready. I’ll never—”
“Kellan, she saw you naked in my apartment on a Saturday morning. I’m not
telling her anything she doesn’t know. I just need to lay it all out. I owe her that much.
But you said something, like, whether she loves it or hates it, it doesn’t change facts,
right?”
He nodded.
“I want to be with you. I’ll grow up if that’s what it—”
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He rolled his eyes, but one corner of his mouth was pulling up. “Knock it off,
Shakespeare.”
I grinned and leaned a little closer.
The other corner of his mouth pulled up, and he tilted his head like he’d kiss me.
But then he stopped and said, “You sure you don’t…?”
Okay, this talking thing was just going to get me into more trouble. I shifted to
make up for the half-assed angle of his head and swept in. He kissed back with zero
hesitation, mouth going soft. I slipped my fingers into the silky hair at the nape of his
neck and held him close for a long second. A faint kissing sound as we parted, and I
breathed into his lips, “Please forgive me.”
“You know I forgive you, you dick.” He kissed me again, this time opening my
mouth under his, running his slick tongue over the connection between our lips,
drawing me into him and resting his hot, strong hand against my thigh. He pulled back
before I was ready, saying, “Shit, it’s sort of a relief to know you’re screwed up. For a
while there, it was like trying to fuck an angel. Freaky.”
I laughed and pressed in on him, pinning him against the tall wooden booth. He
licked at the roof of my mouth and slipped his arm around my waist, holding me tight
against him. I threw a leg over his lap and drank it up, my blood racing, my electricity
singing. By the time the server dropped the check off—he disappeared fast enough after
that—I was so hot, I couldn’t imagine not getting him off right that very moment.
Not just because I wanted it, though. Also because I wanted to know he was mine.
I wanted him to look at me like that, break down that awful, angry wall and feel him.
Know for sure that it was okay.
I slipped my hand down his chest, down his stomach, and went right for his
crotch. And goddamn—
He sat up straight, gasping into my mouth. “Ah, Jesus”
I scrambled for my wallet, yanked out some cash to throw at the check, and
shoved Kellan out of the booth.
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His lashes fluttered, heavy over glazed eyes. “The hell, Jamie?”
“Bathroom.”
“What?”
I finally got him to his feet, where he adjusted to try to hide the press behind his
fly without a lot of success. I stood, doing the same, and said, “You and me, in the
bathroom, right now.”
His mouth hung open.
Yeah. Exactly.
I dragged him through the lunch crowd and locked the bathroom door behind us,
then put him against the wall, right next to the baby-changing station with the freaky
cartoon koala. Even that couldn’t slow me down. I started unbuttoning his shirt, trying
not to tear it in the process.
He was already on mine too. He sighed out, “Jesus.”
I leaned in and kissed him, barely leaving room for busy hands between us. “Did
you miss me?”
“Mmm-hmm.”
“Think of me?”
“Yeah.” He finished with my shirt and tugged at it. I finished with his, and we
both tore them off, tucking them into the metal railing behind his ass for safekeeping,
ignoring under-tanks and starting on pants. He went on, “Three or four times, in
particular.”
My cock swelled again, a rush of blood and a jolt to the brain. “Was it good?”
He said, his face buried in my neck, “Only fun I had all weekend.” Then he licked,
sucked at the soft spot just beneath my jaw, sending goose bumps down my right side.
I thought of him sitting on his couch, jerking off and imagining, wishing for me on
top of him, like the other night. The electricity wound low and tight in me, sparking and
fizzling, building. I got his pants open, then hit my knees on the cold tile floor and
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yanked them down around his ankles. Oh God, his perfect package in those demure
little briefs. Mouth watering, I kissed it, breathing hot and heavy on him through the
soft, straining cotton.
He gripped the metal bar behind him and smothered a groan.
I opened my mouth, sucked carefully so as not to wet the fabric too much, then
moved my mouth up, up, until I couldn’t anymore, pushing up his undershirt to show
a strip of flat belly. His dick moved, begging to be let out. I looked up again, caught his
eyes, and said, “Show me.”
Again, his eyelashes fluttered, sex and confusion in his expression.
I pulled his underwear down. His erection stood, the weight of it causing it to
angle downward slightly, flushed and smooth and hard. Mine gave a twitch, still
trapped in my shorts, and I leaned forward so bare inches remained between him and
my mouth. I looked up again. “Come on. Show me, baby.”
He almost took hold of his dick but stopped, this funny little half grin on his lips.
“Um, are you seriously telling me to jerk off in your face?”
I don’t know why—is there ever a real reason? I was so taken with the idea of him
jerking off over me that I wanted, more than anything else in the world right then, to
see it. “I’ll help,” I said. And to demonstrate, I licked my lips.
His whispers had gone rough now. “Goddamn, you are fucking—”
I licked the head of his cock, just the slightest application of my tongue against the
slit of it, then up over the tip for a taste. Then I rolled it back into my mouth and looked
up.
He blinked so slowly, it was more like shutting his eyes for a few seconds. His
hand found his cock, wrapped tight around it, and stroked it a few times, like he wasn’t
sure how to operate the equipment.
While I had no qualms about helping to service myself, I had yet to see him do
more than the occasional self-grab or readjustment-fondle. The perpetual repression of
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Kellan coming out of the box—fuck, I was going to come in my shorts, and I had to
wear them all goddamn day after this.
I licked him again, this time burying my face in the crook of his thigh to get at his
balls. I sucked one into my mouth and felt him sigh, then fall into a more natural
rhythm, still slow but tight and regular. I put my hands at his waist, drank in the feeling
of his soft, warm skin, his hard muscles through my fingertips, my palms. Breathed the
scent of his sweat and soap, tasted his skin, swallowed it down and went for more in
another spot. Now his belly, now his inner thigh. Then, sitting back slightly, I situated
myself to taste his cock again.
His hand slowed; his gaze fixed on me, on my lips an inch from the head. My
mouth watered. I opened it, turned my head, and licked at him, this time tasting the salt
of his precum and leaving him even wetter. His left hand went white-knuckled on the
bar; his right sped up, readjusting so as not to interrupt the workings of my open
mouth. He swallowed a groan.
All of it fed the electrical fire inside me, increased it to a fever pitch, made me
almost as desperate to let go with a static charge as I was to grab my own cock and go at
it. I reached for it, pushing frantically at my open pants and then the elastic of my shorts
until I had it out.
“Oh fuck yeah,” he whispered.
I looked up to find he’d readjusted his stance to see all the way down to my hand
on my dick.
I held myself there, knowing that if I started too hard, I’d make a mess of his work
pants before I could help it. So I contented myself with just touching it, toying with the
wave of pleasure from the contact, the way it tried to swell further, until my vision
swam.
He went tense, dribbling again, and I licked it off. Not long now. Part of me
wanted to be perverse, for him to keep pumping that gorgeous cock in my face and not
let me have it.
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But part of me just wanted to feel him in me. So I opened my mouth for him and
let out a deep breath.
He pushed in. I closed my eyes and stretched my lips around him, my erection
giving a thrill that defied my brain. His hips angled forward deliberately, then again in
a shorter and more erratic movement. I let my throat relax, took him, grabbed his ass to
align his soft, building rhythm with mine, his fingers combing through my hair gently. I
wasn’t sure what I was doing with myself; I focused on going down on him, wanting to
make the most of the moment, reveling in that sweet, careful caress.
His fingers tightened in my hair. He pushed forward into my mouth and shot off
with a little “Ah fffffffuck…” that was more a sigh than anything else.
With him still filling my mouth up, the taste of his sex ruling my world, I
reapplied attention to my now aching cock. I swallowed, and he moaned softly, his
stomach curving over my head like a fucking cathedral ceiling, his hand brushing my
cheek, then my chin, as the other continued to play with my hair.
Just as the first almost-there wave hit me, he pulled out of my mouth and reached
down to draw me up to standing.
I let myself go with equal parts reluctance and gratefulness, meeting his mouth
with a kiss still heavy with the taste of him. It was wide open and wet and a desperate
mess, tongues and spit and everything else that made a blowjob good going into it on
both ends. I pressed my dick into his thigh and rubbed it in, thrilling myself on him.
He closed the kiss off and took my face in both hands, holding me just inches from
him so our eyes were locked. “Oh, Jamie,” he whispered like a little sigh, eyelids still
heavy but eyes betraying something other than smoking-hot sex, of a sudden. “Did you
miss me too?”
“So much, baby.” I leaned forward, and he allowed me another kiss, though he
still held me with both hands. I angled my hips for another rush and clung to his waist
with both hands, afraid he’d push me away at any moment, though I couldn’t have said
why. “I’m so sorry.”
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“You don’t have to be sorry.” This time he kissed me and held me tight against
him. For a few seconds it was almost delicate, his tongue darting into my mouth and
out again, but then his lips crushed into mine bruisingly hard. When he finally closed it
off, he said, “You’re amazing.”
Before I could respond, he was on his knees, back still to the wall, going down on
me with even more than his usual zeal and thoroughness. It was about ten seconds
before the tight, skillful ecstasy of his hot mouth brought my orgasm on, whether I was
ready for it or not. I came down his throat, wanting to swear and scream and tell every
fucking person in the city that he was incredible.
The electricity that had been crackling inside me all afternoon amped so hard, the
light over the mirror flickered off, then back on, buzzing. For my field to reach all the
way over there and come close to frying shit… Well, I’m sure I would’ve been more
appalled at the uncharacteristic slipup if I hadn’t been so goddamn dizzy with
satisfaction.
When he finished and stood, I leaned into him, breathing hard, and he did the
same. We kissed, but briefly. We just stood, my arms around his neck, his around my
waist, de-pantsed and crookedly undershirted and a little bit sticky.
In the family bathroom at a faux-Irish pub. I smiled into his neck.
“I shouldn’t get so angry,” he whispered after we’d caught our breath, the sweet
sound sending a shiver down my spine. “I’m a fucking idiot.”
“No, you were right, baby.” I kissed his neck, thinking we were a sappy mess and
not really giving a shit. I pulled back to rest my forehead against his. “Can I see you
tonight?”
“Come over. Stay.” His cock moved, pressed between us tight, swelling again.
And then someone knocked on the door, naturally.
* * * *
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Mom called a few times during the week but was too busy to meet up—nothing
new, but all things considered, it caused me some anxiety. Having Kellan at least partly
in the know helped, though. He suggested that I allow him to amuse me until the
weekend came and she had time for more than a rushed phone call.
Twist my arm, huh?
When Friday night rolled around and I got a demanding text from Derrick
insisting that I introduce him to this wondercock that was keeping me from going out
lately, Kellan grinned and said, “Why not?” So we got dressed up—which still meant
jeans for Kellan but with the addition of a fitted button-down that inspired me to make
us very late getting downtown.
Derrick was instantly smitten. If I’m kind of a stereotype, Derrick is a cartoon. He
lavished affection on Kellan, who responded with a lot of throat-clearing and flushing
but seemed to take it in the spirit it was meant. We met up with Mike at the next bar
and by one had moved on to one of our favorite pickup places, the Cave, which had
little tables semisecluded by hanging curtains on circular chandelier-type racks. The
four of us leaned our heads over our drinks and laughed it up until Mike saw someone
he knew (read: a likely prospect) and ditched us. At which point Kellan announced a
need to take a piss, and Derrick suddenly needed one too.
So I sat guardian of the drinks, sinking into the plush pseudo-Persian
surroundings and suggestive throbbing of cheesy euro-techno. Don’t get me wrong—I
consider electronic music my thing, but there was music meant to listen to, and there
was music meant to dry hump to, and very few musicians had the skills of Massive
Attack to provide a two-in-one. I was minding my own business, sipping my Jack and
Coke, when a familiar face (and body) suddenly peeked around the curtain.
“Jamie. Thought that was you.”
Oh shit. Tall, dark, and handsome, curly brown hair, and a faint something about
the eyes that spoke of bad (read: good) intent.
Dubious Provenance Guy.
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I was torn between laughing and feeling like a complete twat. “Hey. Long time,
man. How you been?”
He tucked into Mike’s seat. “Good. So, don’t panic. I’m not here to ask why you
never called.”
His big grin relieved me somewhat. I said, “It’s a long story, actually, but—”
Derrick suddenly appeared and threw himself into his seat, and Kellan, with a sort
of bemused/amused look on his face, wasn’t far behind. Derrick, God bless him, never
forgot a name that went with a hot face. He said, “Farley!” and sidled up to the new
addition.
Farley, right. I knew it was something, er, like that.
“Hey, uh—”
“Derrick. And this is Kellan.”
Farley eyed him across the table as Kellan slipped in next to me. There was no
way for us to share the little bench without our arms touching, and the easy way Kellan
leaned into my shoulder must’ve told him everything. Farley gave me a look. “Oh. I get
it.”
“Yeah,” I said. “That’s the long story, short.”
Derrick, God bless him again, took Farley’s arm. “Dance with me, big man.”
“Nice to see you,” I said as he allowed himself to be dragged to his feet.
Kellan waved, the look shifting decidedly more toward amusement now. When
they were gone, he said, “Shit, that’s the only one tonight? I expected four or five, at
least.”
“You always make me feel like such a disappointment.”
“Right.” He smirked and leaned back. “Hot shit, though. I’m feeling kinda proud
of myself right now.”
“Speaking of, did Derrick check out your dick?”
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“Oh yeah. Didn’t even pretend. Looked up in the mirror and the bastard was
winking at me.”
I was on him in an instant, kissing and running my fingers through his hair. He
smiled into it, but when I started moving one hand up his thigh toward his crotch, he
stopped and laughed. “Jesus, what is it with you and public places?”
“Baby, it’s almost two a.m. Anyone here who is lonely or sober enough to notice
will thank us.”
“You’ve got to be the dirtiest mind I’ve ever met, James.”
“Keep talking like that, and I’ll get down under this table and prove you right.”
“I ever tell you you’re fucking amazing?”
I shut him up with another kiss, and we spent the last hour of the evening
alternately making out, feeling each other up, and finishing off our drinks. Happy as
could fucking be.
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Chapter Eight
“You’re not coming?”
“No. I’m going down to Kellan’s parents’.”
“Everyone will expect you to be there, honey,” Mom explained in her best patient
voice.
I snorted. “Everyone who?”
“Just…everyone. All the families.”
“They see me all the time. Kellan’s mom invited me. The Fourth of July is their big
family event.”
Now she paused. “I see.”
“Can I take you out to lunch or something?”
“After the Fourth. Things are so busy—”
“Dinner? Breakfast?”
“It’s okay, honey. You don’t have to explain yourself to me. We’ll meet at
Tommy’s the weekend after.”
“This is important.”
Silence, the longest three seconds of silence ever. Then, “Is it serious?”
No, I’m just being invited to key family functions and electing to spend time with him
instead of you on holidays. Not fucking serious at all, Mother. “Yes.”
Yet more silence. “It’s okay. I dated too. We’ll talk about it later.”
That odd sense of despair I’d felt in Little Italy returned, that same thought that it
didn’t matter. Whether I was dating a man or a woman, it would never matter. It was
irrelevant.
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So I swallowed hard and said, “I’ll see you at Tommy’s, then.”
“I’m sorry, honey. Next week I’ll cancel my—”
“I’m busy next week.”
Another pause, but shorter. “I love you, Jamie.”
“Yeah. Love you too.”
Part of me was sort of relieved. At least she wasn’t rejecting me for being queer. It
should be irrelevant. It shouldn’t matter who I was fucking, not to my mother.
But most of me was gutted. Because in this case, it did matter and was
unquestionably relevant. Her pretending it didn’t and wasn’t hurt like hell.
I wondered how long she’d known and never said anything.
I wondered how long I’d have let us go on with this convenient lie, if not for
Kellan.
And I was glad she didn’t have time to let me take her to lunch, after all. Though I
guess it could’ve been worse.
She could’ve asked me about Mae.
* * * *
Kellan had compiled a playlist that was half electronic dancey stuff, half paddy
rock, and his ancient Chevy pickup blared it on the way down to Medina that Fourth of
July. The windows were open, my feet were up on the dash, and I was singing Gorillaz
to the flat Ohio countryside. Kellan alternately winced and laughed at my off-key
efforts but enjoyed the performance all the same.
About halfway through, I turned it down and asked, “So, how’d you tell your
parents?”
Partly because I wanted to be prepared, partly just because I was curious,
considering the spectacular failure I was experiencing with my own tiny family just
then.
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“I’m probably not the best example.”
“Okay, now I really want to know.”
“Well, my dad asked me if I’d met any new girls, and, I mean, everyone knew; he
was just being a douche. Like he could guilt me into being straight.” He shrugged. “So I
said, ‘You know damn well I’m gay.’”
“Only you, Kellan.”
He grinned.
“Like, where? When?”
“Freshman year in college. About three days before Christmas.”
“Ouch.”
“At least I waited until after dinner. Tara and Ryan thanked me for that later.”
“They were still living at home?”
“Yeah, this is Ryan’s first year out. Tara was a senior in high school.”
“So what happened?”
“Mom cried.” He looked a little uncomfortable there. “Dad told me to get my
sorry sodomite ass out of his house. Erin was in for Christmas, and she said if he kicked
me out, he was kicking her out, and he said all right, fuck all y’all, as it were. Tara tried
to come with us; Ryan kind of went into a coma. Maura and Finn both called me the
next day freaking out. Ken was the only one who didn’t have anything to say, but he
doesn’t give a shit.”
I consider myself pretty good with names, but without faces to match, the Sheas
were mind-boggling. “Wait, so what’s the order again?”
“Maura, Kennedy, Finn, Erin, me, Tara, Ryan.”
“Is this going to be on the quiz?”
“You haven’t seen anything yet, man.”
But I still couldn’t get over it. “So he seriously kicked you out?”
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He shrugged. “I was already out anyhow, and he wasn’t paying for school. But he
didn’t speak to me for a few years.”
I stared. “Years?”
“Two. I kind of expected it, just felt bad for my mom. The whole thing really
embarrassed her.” Another quick glance. “Not me, but Dad being a dick. She dragged
him to Father Tom to get it sorted out in the end, she got so pissed off.”
“Heavy, man.” A little pause for contemplation. Then I asked, “So, what would
you have done differently?”
“I would’ve said it sooner.” No hesitation in his reply, and he said it with a smile.
“Okay, I’m going to tell you something serious, so don’t be a cock.”
“Wouldn’t think of it.”
He chewed on his bottom lip, but the smile didn’t quite fade. “I cried that night.
Wasn’t sad—it was just such a fucking relief.”
If he hadn’t been driving, I would’ve been on him so fast. Holy shit.
“But don’t worry; we’re cool now. It won’t be—well, it’ll be weird, but not that
weird.”
“He just said he was sorry, and you forgave him? Just like that?”
“Fuck no, he never said he was sorry.” He laughed. “And I definitely never said I
forgave him. No, my mother begged me to come home for Thanksgiving, he
acknowledged my presence, and after a few hours, I acknowledged his. A few hours
after that, he offered me a drink. We sat up all night knocking back a bottle of Powers
and singing old songs; we got sloppy and sentimental about the old days—mine and
his. And now here we are, father and son.”
“You just…moved on?”
“Pretty much. He’s a mean old cunt, but that just shows I got it honestly.”
I sat back in my seat, eyebrows up to my hair. “This is gonna be educational.”
“Still time to back out.”
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“Not enough money in the world to buy me off, Kellan.”
A pause, and then he asked, “What do you think your dad would’ve done?”
“I wonder about it sometimes,” I admitted. “I like to think he would’ve shrugged
and kept eating his steak or whatever. My grandma always said he was really laid-back.
Everyone does. He must’ve been, to deal with Mom.”
“Uh, and to be a fucking neurosurgeon.”
“That too. But mostly Mom.”
* * * *
He rolled the truck up a dirt-and-grass drive and parked it beside an old
farmhouse, the kind that’s obviously been standing there for a few hundred years and
had a lot of work done to keep it upright in the meantime. A giant barn sat at the end of
the drive, and in the distance behind it, a few acres of open field. The nearest house was
about three hundred yards to the left, and a huge pond, complete with a ramshackle-
looking boathouse and a well-repaired minidock, sat on what looked like the property
line, half on the Shea side, half on the other side.
I was about to comment about it being badass, but a chorus of small, piercing
voices started announcing, “Uncle Kelly!”
I raised my eyebrows.
“Shut up.” He laughed and waved at the kids, who raced toward us in an
amoeboid mass.
“So, how many nieces and nephews?”
“Eight. So far.” The smallest of his admirers—a beautiful dark-haired girl of about
three—reached us. He swept her up and spun her around, and she wrapped her little
arms and legs around him. “How’s my girl?”
“Good!”
He turned toward me. “Jamie, this is Maggie.”
I held out my hand. “And who does she belong to?”
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“Erin. Mags, meet Jamie.”
She took two of my fingers in a chubby little hand and approximated a grownup
shake. “Hi, Jamie.”
By that time, the older children had reached us, and Kellan put down the little kid
and began distributing hugs and hellos, starting with a blond preteen girl who seemed
to be the leader of the adorable rabble.
“Guys, listen up,” he said. “This is Jamie. Feel free to introduce yourselves. He
doesn’t bite.” He turned back to me, where I leaned against the car to watch this
fascinating ritual. “But they do. Especially Gerry.” He ruffled the hair of the one kid he
hadn’t hugged yet, one of three boys sporting bare, muddy knees.
The kid laughed and hugged him, and his two buddies marched up to me,
announced themselves as Matt and Delany, and took turns shaking my hand.
We were accosted by two stragglers, a pair of little girls, one shy, one decked out
in designer wear, but eventually our path was clear to the grownup types. They
lounged around a smoking brick barbecue, everyone with a beer in hand or very
nearby.
There were…a lot of them.
“You about to turn back yet?” he asked
“Oh hell no.”
“Good, because we hit the point of no return the second my mother laid eyes on
you.” Dimple in full force, he took the last few strides toward a small, round woman
with the exact same dimple in her left cheek. He wrapped her up and kissed her. “Hey,
Ma. This is Jamie.”
Mrs. Shea let her son go and pulled me into her arms, going up on her toes to lay a
quick peck on my cheek. “Jamie, so glad you could come.”
There were about twenty pairs of eyes on me right then, and it was nice to know at
least one of them was friendly. “Thanks for having me, Mrs. Shea.”
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“Our pleasure.” She pulled back and did that patting-the-side-of-my-face thing.
“Make yourself at home; the Lord knows we don’t stand on ceremony.”
Kellan had been shaking the hand of a lanky middle-aged man with dark, familiar
eyes and a perpetual downturn to his mouth. When Mrs. Shea released me, Kellan said,
“Dad, Jamie.”
I hoped my deep breath didn’t show. The man had a personality a mile wide; I felt
it in that first look—not confrontational, not even judgmental, just in charge. Kellan’s
tale of facing his father over a dinner table and saying something as audacious as “You
know damn well I’m gay” reached a new level of coolness.
He took my hand and shook it firmly, and I said, “Mr. Shea,” like I was about to
try to sell him software.
I was glad I wasn’t, that was for damn sure. Though fucking his son wasn’t a
whole lot better, now I thought about it.
“What, Mags?” Kellan turned to the little girl pulling at his pant leg.
Mr. Shea released my hand and said, “Good to meet you, son. Where is it you’re
from?”
I don’t know why, but it surprised me. “Cleveland. Shaker Heights.”
“Knew some folks up there. Who are your people?”
I wasn’t entirely sure what this question meant, but the best I could do was, “Our
name’s Monday.”
This seemed to satisfy him. “What do your parents do?”
“My dad was a doctor, and my mom just retired from Cuyahoga Power.”
“You’re a college man?”
“Yes, sir, Case Western Reserve.” I paused. If this was a business meeting, he
would’ve told me about friends he had who went there, or how he’d heard it was so
wonderful, or maybe asked me if I was an engineer. But instead he just nodded, so I
said, “I work with Kellan at Humphries now, though. He said you were in the mill?”
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He smiled, though it was a little grim. “Thirty-five years. Couldn’t retire soon
enough. Need a beer?”
Relief flooded into my limbs, which I hadn’t realized were extraordinarily stiff
until that moment. “Love one, thanks. Just point me in the right direction.”
“That’s what grandkids are for. Mags.” He waved his hand at the little girl
chattering up at Kellan. “Leave Uncle Kelly be and get Jamie here a beer.”
This tiny fairy of a creature looked up at me, cocked her head, and asked with
extreme seriousness, “Killian’s, Coors, Fox, or Guinness?”
That dissolved most of the remaining mystery around Kellan right there. I
laughed. That said, I was not entirely comfortable with the idea of a three-year-old
getting me a beer. “Tough decision. How about you show me where it is, and I’ll take
what’s on top?”
She pursed her lips but relented.
Kellan went with me. “Sorry. Dad doesn’t know how else to treat you, so he treats
you like he would one of my sisters’ boyfriends. The third degree, making sure you’re a
nice boy, all that.”
“That what that was?”
“Yeah. Nice work, though.”
“Hey, I got nothing to fear. I am a nice boy.”
“Right.” He bumped his shoulder into mine and grinned so brightly, I had to look
away, lest I be forced to make out with him in the middle of a Shea family picnic.
* * * *
A flag football game took about an hour to get organized, during which Kellan
distributed more hugs, one for each sibling, and I was introduced all around. I found
myself sitting between Tara’s boyfriend—a bewildered college boy who started every
sentence with “uh…”—and Erin, who was holding the youngest of the Shea rugrats,
baby Bernadette.
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It was sweltering, as all Independence Days ought to be, so there were O’Shea
crests on display everywhere. Tara had her shirt tucked up into her bra, showing hers
was a tramp stamp, and all the brothers had their shirts off but Kennedy, the oldest,
whose stocky frame supported a slight beer belly. The guy didn’t strike me as
particularly vain, but the one just younger than him, Finn, did. Tall and fit like Kellan
but with high cheekbones and bright blue eyes to contrast with the dark hair, Finn
clearly—and mistakenly—considered himself the good-looking one. Ryan, the
otherwise soft-spoken baby of the family, started the game by throwing his sweaty shirt
at Finn’s head and pulling a Charles Atlas pose. He pointed downward to his own
tattoo with both thumbs, causing the kids to send up a cheer, and they were all off.
“I should’ve waited till I had my girls before getting mine,” Erin confided. She
was petite, with a sweet, round face like their mother. The pretty baby in her arms
sucked on a pacifier. “Pregnancy is hell on tattoos.”
“So I hear,” I said.
“Kelly said Morgan likes you better than him.”
I laughed. “I think he gets jealous sometimes.”
“Of you or Morgan?”
“Yes.”
“Erin!” Kellan waved at us as he trotted down the field after the ball. “Get out
here, you chickenshit. And bring Jamie!”
She stuck out her tongue.
Though normally I would’ve been all about it, it didn’t seem like the best way to
familiarize myself with the boyfriend’s family, if you know what I mean. I said, “No,
thanks. I need to get to know someone before I start grabbing flags out of their pants.”
She snorted, and the college kid on the other side of me showed signs of life and
laughed. Erin said, “How you feel about babies?”
“Great. Got a goddaughter that exact size, even.”
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I found myself with a bundle of little girl in my arms that fast. Erin said, “I need to
go show these boys who’s boss. If Kyle ever comes back, you can dump Bernie on him.”
“We’re good,” I assured her.
The baby took one of my fingers in a death grip as if to prove the point. Kellan
rolled his eyes at me. I shrugged, displaying my beautiful excuse for sitting there,
watching him run around shirtless.
Tough life.
Erin stomped onto the field, announcing, “Right, I’m in, but if anyone squashes
my boobs, I swear to Jesus Christ Almighty, you’ll lose a limb. I’m nursing, people.”
College Boy said, “Uh, guess they’re all like that, huh?”
“Explains a lot, doesn’t it?”
“For real, man.”
* * * *
Following this game—which had no discernible winner as far as anyone knew—
we were stuffed full of Carolina Gold-style brisket and even more beer.
Everyone talked all at once, yet everyone seemed to actually understand what was
going on all the time too. There was a kind of Venn diagram to it, where there were
maybe four separate conversations at any given time between children, adults, and
elders, and then there were spots where we were all magically discussing the same
thing without having veered off topic.
I say we, but I mostly just listened for once in my life. Every one of Kellan’s
siblings made it a point to ask me my opinion or draw me in, so it wasn’t that I felt like
an outsider. Just, there were so many of them. And they talked so much, about
everything. Personal lives to politics, nothing was sacred except Jesus, Mary, and God,
and they got their names thrown around a lot too. It wasn’t scary, just a little
overwhelming. And fucking fascinating.
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Eventually Kellan pulled me away on the pretext of a walking tour. When we
were wandering by the pond, listening to the splashing of the little-boy clique, he said,
“You okay?”
“Great, yeah.”
“You’re not usually this quiet.”
“I’m not usually surrounded by people who like each other this much.”
He gave me a sideways look, then took a big gulp of his beer. He had replaced his
shirt before eating, much to my disappointment but probably for the best, in the
circumstances.
A sudden fear gripped me. “Shit, I don’t seem like I’m sulking, do I?”
“No, you’ve been smiling the whole time. Just didn’t know if it was fake or not.”
“You can’t tell when my smile is fake?”
“Well, yeah, most of the time.” He paused. “But you’re easy to misread.”
“I’m, like, the shallowest person in the world. How is that even possible?”
Another sideways look. “That’s your story, huh?”
I laughed. I almost asked him if he thought I was harboring some horrible dark
secret. Then stopped. Because I was.
And here he was, laying his entire life out in front of me, inviting me into it.
“This is what sincere looks like,” I said, taking his hand. “For future reference.”
He accepted this with a smile, and we continued our walk in silence. Once we
neared the barn again, we were hailed by a picnic table full of beer bottles—or rather,
one of its occupants. Finn sat, listing slightly to one side, across the table from a ruddy-
cheeked Kennedy.
“Kelly, Kelly, c’mere!” Finn beckoned.
Kellan raised an eyebrow at me.
I waggled mine in reply, and we took up residence with his brothers. As I tucked
in next to Finn, he asked, “Do you want to get married?”
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Kellan shot me a what the fuck? look. “Finn, we’ve been dating, like, two months.”
“No, I just mean, you know. In general. Do you want to get married someday to
someone.”
Kellan turned the WTF look on his brother. “That sort of depends on the someone,
doesn’t it?”
Ken elbowed him. “Just say yes, Kelly.”
Kellan scrubbed at his face with both hands. “You guys just met Jamie. Could you
please not—”
I interrupted with, “Just say yes, Kelly.”
All three pairs of eyes fixed on me, two in amusement, one in annoyance.
I shrugged and tried to look innocent. “What, like it takes more than two months
to figure that out?”
Kellan flipped me off, but he was still looking at his brother. “Sweet bleeding Jesus
on a stick. Lookit, Finn, just because you had the ugliest divorce ever, it doesn’t mean
no one else should get married.”
Kennedy chuckled. “Just that some of us should’ve thought twice. Not me, but
some of us.”
Finn made a face. “Fuck you, Ken.”
Kellan elbowed Ken. “He’s getting belligerent already. The night is young,
brother.”
“Seriously, Kelly.” Finn leaned forward on the table unsteadily, poking one finger
in Kellan’s direction. “If anyone’s gonna back me up, it should be you.”
“I never back you up. Even if I agree with you, I don’t back you up, just on
principle.” Kennedy clapped Kellan on the back. Kellan asked, “Why the hell would
this time be different?”
Finn rolled his eyes. “’Cause you’re gay, dumbass.”
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Kellan puffed out his cheeks in a sigh. “You are far too fucking stupid to have
lived this long.”
“Fuck you.”
“You just think the only reason people get married is because they get knocked
up.”
Once more, Kennedy the Spectator laughed out loud.
“Fuck you both.” Finn jabbed his finger first at Kennedy, then Kellan. “I mean,
you’re lucky, Kelly.”
“Agreed, for a lot of reasons. Which one were you talking about?”
Kennedy said exactly what I was thinking: “’Cause you can’t put a baby in Jamie.”
In this limited company, I felt confident piping up with, “Could have fun trying,
though.”
Kennedy smacked the table and laughed harder than ever. Kellan made an
exasperated face at me.
But Finn was all drunken seriousness. “No, that’s exactly why he’s lucky. And I
mean, look at this guy. Jamie, you’ll back me up.”
Now there was an extraordinary belief. “You think so, huh?”
“Come on. Dude, you’re like me. I can tell.”
I gave Finn a once-over, trying to figure out how, exactly, I was like him. I had to
mentally step back, stop thinking of him as Kellan’s older brother, and just imagine
meeting him at a party or in the club.
And then it was all clear. He was charming—when sober—quick-tongued,
handsome, and, at least on the surface, confident. I’m not saying I was any of those
things, but I definitely had certain similar qualities that had allowed me to survive my
mother’s society parties and coast through adolescence—and later, nightclubs—with
relative ease and success.
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I also happened to know he had tanked his marriage by cheating on his wife with
her best friend, and several others, and nearly lost shared custody of his daughter
because of it. Which, after meeting him, made perfect sense.
Couldn’t help but notice his designer girlfriend wasn’t in on the conversation
either. Just saying, man.
I said, “If you mean I’m a slut, okay. But I just said that I know Kellan is the
marrying kind. And I’m still dating him. So wouldn’t you infer that I was just his slut?”
Kellan was scrubbing at his face again and grumbling.
Kennedy reached across him and the table to high-five me. “That’s way too
complicated for him right now.”
Kellan asked, “Why are we talking about this, again?”
Kennedy grinned like an evil garden gnome. “’Cause gays don’t need to get
married. That only works for a man and a woman.”
I laughed out loud, watching Kellan’s and Finn’s faces change as he spoke—one
turning red, the other filling with trepidation. This Kennedy was one hell of a wind-up
artist.
I was starting to like him.
Finn said, “That’s not what I mean. I just mean you can spend your life with
someone without—”
Kellan interrupted with, “Shut the fuck up, or I will take you around the back of
the barn and kick your ass again.”
“Fuck you. That was not fair.”
“Because you were stoned? Yeah.” Kellan flattened his hands on the table and
leaned over it, glaring hard at his brother. “Fucking try me, you bigoted prick. I’d love a
rematch.”
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“Dude, I am not a bigot. I defended you to Dad, even.” Finn looked from Kellan to
me, baby blues clouded with confusion. “I think you guys make a great couple.
Seriously.”
Kellan obviously did not see the humor in the situation, and Kennedy looked like
he was about to start winding them up again, so I cut in before someone could get
murdered. In as light and conversational a tone as I could, I said, “Oh, no, I get it. It’s
cool if we live together forever; we just don’t deserve the rights and privileges granted
to other, legally recognized families.”
Finn blinked at me, his mouth working open and closed.
“Like, if we live together forever and I die, it’s totally cool if all the stuff and our
house gets bogarted by my mother, leaving Kellan totally fucked and destitute, right?
And if I lose my job and get some degenerative disease, it’s awesome if Kellan’s
insurance doesn’t have to cover me. Oh, or if he loses his job and I end up supporting us,
we should definitely not be allowed to declare him my dependent on a tax return.
Because one of us doesn’t have a magical, civil-rights-granting vagina.”
“One per relationship!” Kennedy was howling.
“Exactly. Anyhow, us queers just want to fuck everything in sight.” I smacked
Finn on the shoulder companionably. “Not suited for marriage like you breeders.”
Kellan was smiling by then, if slowly.
Warmed me up just to see it. And though all my bullshit had just been a
hypothetical constructed to poke holes in Finn and leave him leaking for our
amusement, I actually meant what I was saying. Not just the whole human-rights
thing—I mean, that’s a given. But that I could see it being…you know, us.
Finn looked across the table. “Oh my God. You actually found someone as smart-
ass as you, Kelly.”
“Apparently.”
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Finn’s mouth worked some more, like he was having one last go at coming up
with something to say. And then he did it. “You gotta admit, though, you can’t get
married in the Church.”
Kellan turned pink again, but he was using that scary controlled voice. “No, I
can’t. Because I’ll be in prison for murdering my raging fuck-hole of a brother.”
Finn turned to me. “Jamie—”
I held up my hands. “You’re on your own, man.”
Ken was still rolling. “But we haven’t even talked about children! Kellan, you
gotta have kids. They love you!”
I shook my head. “Damn, you’re good.”
He wasn’t grinning like an evil gnome so much as the devil by then.
Finn looked down into his empty beer bottle, suddenly morose. “I love my
daughter. You guys should have a daughter.”
I said, “We’ll get right on that.”
Kellan seemed to be getting ahold of himself again. He gritted his teeth and said,
“Awesome. Can’t wait.”
Finn opened his mouth once more, but we were all saved by a sweet little-girl
voice shouting, “Uncle Kelly!”
Kellan’s face changed, like he’d forgotten about Finn and Ken, maybe even me,
and he smiled his most honest, wide-open smile. He lifted Maggie into his lap when she
held up her chubby little arms. Her face was pink with sun, and though it was barely
creeping into evening, her eyelids drooped low. He kissed the top of her head. “You’re
tired, sweetheart. You have a nap today?”
Just like that, the grin slipped off my face. One second I was indulging in Ken’s
evil politics for the sake of amusement; the next, my heart was swollen, lodged in my
throat so I could hardly breathe, looking at Kellan.
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“I’m not tired,” Maggie said, though the last word was swallowed by a massive
yawn.
“Okay, you’re not tired.” He kissed her head again. “Tell Uncle Finn he’s an
idiot.”
“Last time you made me say that, Mommy got mad at you.”
“I’ll take the heat.”
Kennedy and Finn both laughed. I think I did too, but my head felt spinny of a
sudden. Too much sun and too little water.
Yet I felt like I needed another beer more than anything else in the world. Maybe
twelve.
I pushed myself up to standing. “Can I get anyone a drink?”
Kellan returned briefly to his exasperated expression, though it resolved back into
the dimple-revealing smile. “God, please, James. Save me.”
Ken waggled his empty. “If you don’t mind.”
“Yeah,” Finn said, still seeming a little dazed, but happy once more. “Yeah,
definitely.”
I managed a “Be right back” and walked away as straight as I could. I didn’t feel
drunk. I didn’t feel tired. So what the hell had that been, that weird, sudden choking
feeling? Like getting the wind knocked out of me or something.
Just before I was out of earshot, Kennedy said, “I like that one, Kelly. Tara’s
boyfriend, though—the hell are we gonna do about that tool?”
* * * *
Just before dark, Maura and the Three Stooges—the inseparable Matt, Delany, and
Gerry—built a crackling bonfire behind the barn, and everyone started gathering there.
This seemed partly an effort to convince the mosquitoes to stay away and partly
because an unnamed something was about to happen. Kellan pulled me down next to
him on a little blanket at the edge of the gathering and put his lips against my ear,
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sending a shiver down my spine. “Sorry about Finn. I’d like to say he’s not normally
like that, but he is.”
“I like him,” I admitted, putting my arm over his shoulders and pulling him close
against my side. Finn and his gorgeous girlfriend—who’d spent most of the afternoon
trying to be helpful to Mrs. Shea and really just irritating her—were looking kind of
snuggly, and Erin leaned against Kyle’s shoulder, so I figured it was all right. “I mean,
he’s easy to pick on, and he doesn’t seem to care we’re doing it.”
He snorted, leaning into me. “Comes with being an arrogant prick, I guess.”
If I ever wondered before where Kellan’s issues with not being one of the “cool
kids” had come from, I had my answers in Finn. Not his fault, not really. Finn was
playing the hand he’d been dealt, and for all his stupidity, he’d insisted on hugging
Kellan and apologizing no less than three times since.
Finn loved his brother. He was just kind of an idiot.
Kellan watched the fire build, teeth clacking absently against the mouth of his beer
bottle. Was he mad at Finn? Did he care that Ken wound them up like that? Or was he
just so used to it all that he didn’t even notice anymore? Was he remembering this same
party, years ago, when he was as young as the stooges and running around in bare feet
screaming and wrestling?
Was he sorry he’d brought me?
Why was I even thinking that? What the fuck was wrong with me today?
“Okay.” Ken held up something like a smallish guitar—no, wait, that was a banjo.
When he had most people’s attention, he said, “Where are we starting?”
“‘Rocky Road to Dublin’!” Finn announced, disentangling himself from the
girlfriend and making his way toward a guitar case. He pulled Tara away from her
college boy and dragged her to the front with him.
I looked at Kellan. “You’re kidding.”
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“Nope. And I apologize in advance for how much this will weird you out, but you
might as well get the full experience.”
And so I did. Several tries at “The Rocky Road to Dublin” ended in chaos and
laughter, but the rest of the impromptu program worked out a little better. The kids ran
around and danced and babbled; the grownups stood and sat in clusters, sucking on
their beers, intermittently singing along and talking among themselves.
Kellan sang under his breath sometimes, often with the harmony. The discovery
that his melting speaking voice translated into a honeyed light baritone shouldn’t have
been so astonishing, but it was. Like his lips on my ear, it sent pleasure bumps racing
down the near side of my body to hear it, feel it on his breath.
Never heard a tone-deaf voice that evening, since I kept my own mouth shut. Too
busy trying not to breathe, not wanting to miss a note.
* * * *
Eventually the party started to break up, leaving just the musicians around the fire
while others went for more food, bug spray, marshmallows, or an evening dip in the
pond. Kellan pulled me inside, past Abby and Siobhan—the two little girls belonging to
Ken and Finn, respectively—playing ancient video games in the living room, then up
the creaking stairs and to a little room at the end of the hall. He flicked the light on,
revealing twin beds and a few out-of-date video-game and comic-book posters.
“Sorry,” he said. “Just need a second of quiet. I love ’em, but…”
I closed the door behind us.
He made his way across the room, looking around as if he hadn’t seen it in a long
time. He gestured to a nearby rack of plastic gold awards and said, “So, these are my
track trophies. And there’s my first Spider-Man poster. Thrilling.”
I flipped the lock. He grinned.
I was on him in a heartbeat, pinning him against the wall next to his high school
memorabilia, my hands in his hair and my mouth opening under his. The usual wet
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thrill raced down my spine, waking up the electricity in me, but it was more this time. I
slipped one of my thighs between his, pressed him tight against the wall, and wanted—
Actually, I didn’t know what I wanted. Maybe just to melt into him once and for
all.
He pressed his hips into me, hummed happily as we closed it off, and lodged two
fingers of each hand into the waist of my jeans on either side, warm against my skin.
When I touched his face, it crackled.
He started. “Jesus, you’re all staticky. You dragging your feet or something?”
I gritted my teeth and got myself under control. This new development where I
forgot myself around him was a pain in the ass. I would’ve been more worried, but
thank God, a little static shock was a mundane enough occurrence that it wouldn’t raise
eyebrows. I wrapped one arm around his neck, smoothing down a few stray hairs that
were standing on end from the charge. Goddamn, that was adorkable. “Dunno. Should
I make a pun about you and me and electricity, or is that too much?”
He smiled, dimple and all, and I got that feeling again, like he’d punched me in
the solar plexus.
It was the music, probably. The effects of that sad, romantic song Tara had
finished with. Fucking Irish and their depressing stories. But I couldn’t keep my eyes off
him, couldn’t keep my hands off him, and maybe I never had been able to, but this was
different. It was like all his pugnacious instincts and that hard outer shell and the
surprising sensitivities and glaring soft spots all made sense, of a sudden, and it was
even better than I’d expected, and I was amazed and stunned and madly in love with
him.
Oh God.
Oh. God.
I shut my eyes tight and kissed him again, as much to keep me from speaking as
because I needed the kiss. He turned his face and went with it, slipping one hand into
my back pocket. When that kiss finished, he said, “You’re sure this isn’t too—”
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“It’s perfect. You’re perfect.” I kissed him again, hard, demanding, more than a
little desperate. He put his other arm around me, holding me tight, and gave it right
back. Like he understood, knew exactly what I needed. His long, hard body shifted
between me and the wall, and the whole room seemed to grow hotter around us.
If I didn’t stop soon, it was going to get painful, but I couldn’t. I started to tell
myself maybe there was time for a little something, just to hold us over until we got
home. I slipped my hand between our hips and found his semihard cock, rubbed it
through his jeans, and hummed into his ear.
He gasped. “Holy fuck. Is there anywhere you won’t do it?”
“Nope.” I squeezed gently, felt up over his dickhead, then back down again.
“You?”
“Apparently not.” His hand slipped into the back of my pants, beneath my
underwear, fingers digging hard into my ass.
I disentangled my arm from around his neck and went for his zipper. “It’s okay—I
locked the door. Think you can be quick?”
“I think I’m about to need new underwear. That quick enough?”
I laughed with him, into another kiss, and got his pants undone. I felt him up
through his little white underwear, torturing me as much as him. But they were just so
fucking sexy, I couldn’t help playing with them. He alternately panted and kissed me—
rather, invaded my mouth and owned it as he was tugging my pants down in the back,
working his way around my busy hands to get at my button. When I felt a wet spot
soaking through the cotton at his dickhead, I rubbed at it with my thumb.
He moaned into my ear, almost like a whisper, and his whole body went tense.
So did mine, goose bumps all over me, and I had to wrestle the electricity down
again. Just, to know that I made him feel like that, that I made him that happy, that he
wanted me that bad…
Oh my God, I fucking love you.
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Footsteps pounded on the ground below the open window, followed by a
chattering of little voices.
He went tense again but not in a good way. “Fuck. Maybe we should…”
There was no way anyone could interrupt, technically speaking. But frankly, the
very fact of minipeople in any proximity kind of cut the moment off, if you know what I
mean.
I suddenly felt a pang for Sarah and Clark. No wonder he was so damn cranky
sometimes.
“Wait.” He pulled his hand out of my pants. “Maybe they’ll go away.”
I kissed his neck. “You say that like you know they won’t.”
He laughed helplessly. And sure enough, within seconds the little mob began
shouting, “Uncle Kelly!”
I chuckled and peeled myself off him. His head fell back against the wall. “Ah,
fuck.”
I laughed and kissed him again, but close-lipped. This time, his little hum was
regretful.
“Uncle Kelly, you’re gonna miss the fireworks!”
“I’ll live with it,” he mumbled.
I made sure he was safely tucked away and zipped him back up; the pain of it was
somewhat alleviated by the hilarity of his expression.
He adjusted his package, but it was already going back down, at least. “Well, it’s
still the most action I ever got in this room.”
“So far. Don’t worry, baby. I’ll pick up where I left off later. Promise.”
He shot me a look that said I was not helping with the package situation, but
before he could protest out loud, there came at least three voices in unison from outside
the house: “Un-cle Kel-ly!”
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“Coming! Jesus Christ, hang on a second!” he yelled toward the window. He
rolled his eyes and started for the door.
“But Kellan…”
He looked back at me.
“Let’s wait a few years on that daughter thing, after all.”
He smirked and unlocked the door.
* * * *
It was pitch black outside, and the rugrats went sprinting for the fireworks setup
as soon as they were sure Uncle Kelly wasn’t going to miss anything. They were waved
back by the marginally more mature types trying to figure it out, and Kellan and I
rolled up behind Ryan, Tara, College Boy, Finn, and Designer Girlfriend.
Ryan said, “The fuck have you two been?”
Kellan replied, “Dirtying up your clean sheets.”
Ryan mock-punched him in the shoulder. “Get your shit pushed in on your own
bed.”
Everyone laughed, even Kellan as he grabbed his little brother, leveraging his
height advantage to catch him in a headlock. “What was that?”
“You heard me!” Ryan, who was built like a little linebacker but couldn’t quite
overcome the angle, swatted at him, laughing. “Fuck, Kelly, get off me!”
“Yeah, come up here and say that.”
“If you give me a noogie, I swear to Christ—” Ryan tried twisting out of the lock,
and by that time, the rest of us had backed away, pointing and mocking as suited our
personalities.
I asked no one in particular, “They always like this?”
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“Oh yeah,” Finn replied, to nods of agreement from Tara. “Ever have to share a
bedroom growing up?”
“Nah, it was just me and my mom.”
“Lucky bastard.” But Finn’s grin said something else entirely.
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Chapter Nine
By the time we got back to his place, it was all either of us could do to shower off
the bug spray and sweat and smoky smell and fall into bed. I was out before I hit the
pillow, and he couldn’t have been far behind. When I next opened my eyes, it was still
dark, just the barest hint of misty light through the blinds indicating it was nearer to
morning than evening. One of Kellan’s arms was thrown over my middle, and his
breath was hot on the back of my neck. A lazy morning erection made me consider
rolling over and checking for signs of life, but heavy eyelids suggested I save it for an
hour or two.
I stretched as subtly as possible so as not to wake him. His fingers spread against
my stomach, palm flattening just above my shorts, and pulled me closer. I wriggled into
the perfect position, aligning my ass with the inward curve of his hips to find his cock at
full attention.
The sweet surprise of it woke me more fully. I wriggled against him deliberately
that time.
A small, sleepy growl built in his throat, and he kissed the back of my neck, arm
tightening around me. He readjusted so he could slip his bottom arm under my neck,
threading his hand over my shoulder and down to rest against my chest. The other
traveled from my belly to my side, under my shorts, and palmed the curve of my ass in
drowsy appreciation.
My cock, not so lazy anymore, pushed at my shorts, pulled tight with his hand
down the back of them. I rolled my hips again, and his left hand squeezed my ass. The
fingers of the right traced through the hair on my chest until they found my hardening
nipple, then toyed with it. For a long, quiet moment that was all there was in the world,
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his hands all over me and his front pressed tight against my back, making me ache and
spark for him.
He snaked his hips against me, his dick pressing hot and fat through underwear,
and hummed deep in his throat. “Jesus. Thought I was dreaming.”
“Of me?”
“Fuck yeah.” He laughed, a sweet, rough sound. It vibrated into my back. “Think
about something enough, and it creeps into your dreams.”
It hit me even deeper than usual, struck some string pulled tight in my chest and
made it vibrate with electricity. Then it rushed through me, so every part of me he’d
ever kissed or touched or used to get me off hurt for him.
I tore off my shorts, and he did the same. Then we came back together in a similar
position, this time with his erection just where I liked it in the split of my ass. I closed
my eyes and let him play with me some more, running his hands up and down me all
over again, kissing and biting at my neck, then sucking, applying his hot tongue here
and there.
I should do something interesting. Crawl on top of him or ask him to tell me what
to do or say something dirty or bring in some prop or—
He edged lower, kissing at the nape of my neck, and I adjusted to match. I parted
my legs and rearranged myself so his cock was between them, pressed tight against my
asshole at the base, then heavy and hot against my inner thigh. I arched my back, the
exact angle I’d use if I expected to get fucked.
The change in position must’ve made him happy; he growled into my neck again
and nipped at it, pulling me into him, almost on top of him. The hand on my ass moved
between my thighs, pried them apart until my left leg was halfway wrapped around
him. Again he rocked his hips, his cock hitting all the sweet spots. I moved with him
like he was inside me and glanced down to see his erection standing hard just beneath
mine, inches from rubbing up against it. He was thicker, paler, pinker, so fucking hot; I
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angled downward so they touched. The sight sent another jolt through me. I gasped,
unable to parse the wash of sensory information.
As if he felt it, he wrapped his strong, hot hand around me, stroked me from base
to head, then back again, rolling his hips against me so his dick rubbed at my thigh
again.
I shuddered. He’d only just touched it, but it was all I could do to stop myself
from—
“Ah, Jamie.” He sighed into my ear. “I want you so fucking bad.”
The only reason I didn’t blow it right there was that he let me go. I swallowed a
groan, too hot to understand what his sudden readjustments could mean. He sat up and
pushed me down onto my stomach, allowing me time to adjust, then nudged my legs
apart until I took the initiative and spread them. I looked over my shoulder to see him
lowering onto his stomach, then burying his face in the split of my ass.
He played at first, tracing up and down with his tongue, but not as long as usual.
He began circling my hole within seconds, and the warm, wet sensation traveled from
the base of my spine into my cock, causing it to leak between my belly and the sheets,
up and up until it felt like there was nothing but light in my brain. I edged my legs
farther apart, naturally lifting the angle of my backside for him. He ran one hand up the
back of my thigh, that static-electric gentle touch of his pausing just at the top, then
continuing upward, admiring.
I was so goddamn hot, I couldn’t stop it. I rolled with the waves of feeling his
tongue set off in the deepest parts of me. My dick thrilled, pressed into the bed, and
then I rocked back against his tongue. He pushed it into me, barely—just fucking barely
stretching me, setting off yet another chain reaction that ended with me fucking the bed
again.
“More?” he asked.
And I said, “Mmm.”
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His tongue slipped downward, leaving me dripping, and his fingers replaced it.
He licked at my taint, pushing up and in hard with his tongue, and pressed two fingers
into my hole to open it. I angled upward, rubbed my dick off, moaned. He worked his
slick fingers into me carefully, and I relaxed into the pull of it, the sweet sensation of
being slowly filled. Then he crooked them just right, setting off a sudden electrical chain
reaction deep down inside me that ended in my fingers, toes, cock, head.
I grabbed at the sheets and moaned even more loudly, thanking God there were
no lights on for me to fuck up, because I had zero control. He found the rhythm he’d
had before, this time rubbing me into a frenzy from deep inside as his hand moved
faster, more surely. He hit the spot a little harder each time as I angled up sharp to beg
for it, fucking the bed on my way back down. His tongue never stopped, rewetting,
teasing, amping it up from the outside, a vicious circle of pleasure, until I wasn’t sure
what he was doing anymore, only that he was stretching and owning and lighting me
the fuck up, and it was so wet between my legs, and he was licking me, feeling me,
taking me, and I wanted him, wanted it, wanted him to love me—“Mmm, fuck.”
It washed over me hard and fast. I came, blind and gasping into the sheets, wet
and sticky against my stomach, between my legs, everywhere I wanted it. He slowed,
rocked his fingers a little bit inside me and made me shudder again, then waited for me
to relax. He crawled to his knees, his free hand feeling me up.
I turned my head sideways to gulp air once I could breathe again. He was just
staring at his hand on my ass cheek, squeezing now and then, his mouth open and
breathing hard. When I sighed, he slipped his fingers out of me and grabbed the other
cheek too.
The whole athletic little bubble-butt thing has served me well, but I’ve never been
quite so goddamn proud of it as that appreciative look of Kellan’s could make me. I
rocked again, inviting. Another aftershock took me, and I shivered under his hands. He
slid them up my back, moving forward on his knees until they were pressed tight to my
parted thighs.
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I arched my back hard.
That time, he lowered himself, fitted his front into my back—the tops of his thighs
against the insides of mine; his cock, heavy with his pulse, into my slippery-wet ass
crack; his belly to my back; his lips to my neck. He held himself up with an arm on
either side. They shook, but I knew it wasn’t because it was a difficult position.
Again I rolled my hips, deliberately using his own spit and gratifying fascination
with my backside to get him off.
“Ah, Christ—” The rest of what he said was lost to another growl—not so much
sleepy now as just plain hot.
I kept moving, at first slow and careful, until he matched me, nipping at my neck
and shoulders and driving me into the mattress. My spent cock stirred beneath me. The
spit between us grew sticky as it dried, so the thrill of him rubbing up on me became
rough, tinted with the barest hint of the pain I wanted so bad I could taste it. Satisfied,
but with that sensation of emptiness from having him in me, from wanting more, that
was so goddamn hot.
He shifted his weight to one hand and used the other to turn my face to the side.
He curled downward, and I angled up for a rough, openmouthed kiss. When he broke
it off, I bucked back into him hard.
He gasped and grabbed his cock between us with his free hand. Still pressed into
my ass, he jerked it a few times, then came in a rush that must’ve lasted goddamn near
ten seconds and left me a hot mess.
When he finished, he collapsed slightly off to the side but still halfway into his
own sex sprayed across my ass. He put an arm around me and pried me from the bed,
ignoring the stickiness beneath my belly and pulling my front against his. He buried his
face in my neck and held me tight about the waist.
I kissed him and toyed with his hair, head still spinning. Wondering how
something so simple could be so good, so satisfying, so promising. Thinking over and
over and over, I love you, I love you, I love you. Shocking myself with the ease with which
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I articulated it in my mind, the comfort it gave me to just roll it around inside me, like it
was a thought that belonged, that always had.
I’d never had it for anyone else. And, as I now understand is common in these
situations but found remarkable then, hoped desperately that I never would.
* * * *
While he fed the cranky cats the next afternoon, I went out for burritos. We ate
them at his dining-room table, laughing over stories from the day before, both of us in
rare moods. After a brief moment of silence when we happened to be stuffing our faces
at the same time, I finally said, “Weird question, because it’s always, um, pretty
spectacular, but this morning was—I mean, it seemed kind of…extra spectacular.”
I’d had fun at his parents’, no doubt about it. But the reason I was so high that
morning was that, yeah, okay, I was in love. But I also hadn’t been able to stop thinking
about the sex. I kept thinking I should’ve done something to make it more interesting.
Quickies were one thing, but when you were going at it with the intent to drive
someone crazy, it just seemed like it’d be better that way. But it hadn’t been anything all
that different, and we’d just kind of…
Done it. And holy shit, my mind was still blown. I was at once satisfied and
hornier than ever, sitting beside him at the table right then. It was like that first couple
of weeks times a hundred. If I had my way, I’d push him back into bed, lock the door
behind us, and keep him there till we dropped dead.
“Definitely.” He swallowed a mouthful and grinned. “I wanted to say that, but
then…”
“It’s like you’re saying the other times weren’t good by comparison. But that’s
not—”
“Yeah. No, I know. It was freaky good.” Then the grin slipped off his face, and he
paused. “Do you ever think I’m being childish?”
“Um, just to be clear, are we still having the same conversation, or did it just…?”
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“Yeah. About the sex.”
“In that case, no. This, um, will sound even weirder, but I”— love it; I love you; I
love you for it—“like it.”
He made a face and took another bite.
“I’m serious. I’ve never believed in anything in my life, and sometimes I wish I
did. I respect it. I respect you.”
“So it’s tolerable. You’re sure.”
“You’re not listening. It’s actually one of the things I really, really like about you.”
He raised his eyebrows. “You like that I won’t fuck you.”
I laughed. “Call me crazy.”
His eyebrows remained aloft; he continued eating.
I knew he’d let it drop there, but I wasn’t going to repeat my earlier mistakes. This
was important to him, and if I let him play it down, it’d slip through the cracks.
Unacceptable. “Okay, for example: you know I’m a slut. Is that tolerable?”
“You know goddamn well I think it’s hot.”
“See what I mean?”
“Oh. Huh. I…” His forehead creased. “It’s not the same.”
I shrugged. “Close enough to make my point. I mean, what kind of douche bag
dates a guy who has a policy and spends the whole time trying to get him to break the
policy? That’s like dating a vegetarian and trying to force-feed them meat. Who does
that?”
“You’d be surprised.”
“Actually, no, I wouldn’t.” I made a sympathetic face because, yeah, we’ve all
been there. People like me, more than we’re willing to admit, even to ourselves. “The
last guy?”
He shrugged one shoulder and kept eating.
This set off an alarm in my head. “You don’t want to talk about it?”
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“No. I mean, I don’t care.” He looked up at me and wrinkled his nose. “Just, you
really want to hear about my ex?”
“It’s one thing to talk about them perpetually on the first date”—been there too,
ugh—“but come on.”
He snorted. “Yeah. Dominic was kind of fucked. I mean, who isn’t?”
“How long did you date?”
“Over a year. He got a little impatient. You start to feel…you know. Like you’re
the crazy one. We’re adults; adults have sex. I mean, I obviously don’t think dick-in-ass
is the only sex, but I mean all kinds of sex. I don’t know.”
I knew his body language well enough to realize that if he was uncomfortable, it
wasn’t with me. Seeing as this could be necessary knowledge, I pressed onward. “So
you didn’t really want to?”
“I wanted to. No one had to twist my arm. But I knew I shouldn’t, and I did it
anyhow. Wasn’t scarring or anything. Just, like, normal.”
I made a face. As if the first time could ever be called normal. “But you were sorry,
is the point.”
“Yeah. And he wanted more. Beginning of the end.” He leaned back in his chair,
shrugging again. “Don’t get me wrong—I needed to have the experience. Taught me
not to do anything if I’m even slightly iffy on it.”
I smiled. “Wow, the shit you do with me, what the hell makes you iffy?” Not that
we actually did anything freaky. For all my willingness to try anything once, I wasn’t
precisely a freak.
Whatever the hell that means, right?
He smiled back. “Haven’t found anything yet.”
“I’m not trying hard enough.”
“By all means, James, keep trying.”
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“Yes, sir.” I threw my leg over his and scooted nearer—though this would make it
difficult to finish our food without bumping elbows, and I was still starving. Didn’t
care. “Seriously, though, don’t be paranoid. For one, we’re having a metric ass ton of
sex. I’m one demanding little fucker, but let’s just say I never feel neglected. You take
good care of me, baby.”
He actually flushed when he laughed that time.
Seriously. Adorkable. How the fuck could anyone trade that away? For anything?
“And yes, I want your dick. But another cool thing about your policy there is that it’s
extremely fucking sexy just knowing that to even be with me, you must really, really
like me.”
The smile went adorably sideways. “That’s some ego you got on you.”
“Baby, that’s not all I got. Won’t try to fuck you, though. Scout’s honor.”
He snorted and returned to eating but after a few bites said, “I’d do it, though.
Wouldn’t think twice.”
I didn’t know what to say. I watched his eyes, but he only stared at the table.
“I think about it all the time. This morning.” He took a deep breath, paused again.
“I just kept thinking that I’d—I’d do anything you asked. And I don’t think I’d regret it,
honestly.” Another pause, in which I tried to come up with something brilliant and
reassuring to say but was dragged down by the weight of my own surprise, by the
weight of this sweet, this trusting confession. He started to go on, “But I want it to be—”
“I wouldn’t even ask, Kelly. I get it. And I love that about you.” I flushed hard,
cursing myself for letting the L-word pop out like that, even in what was possibly a
more acceptable application. I still managed to choke out, “I mean it.”
He leaned over and kissed me quickly. Within seconds, we were back to eating
and talking like it had been nothing, just another conversation, just another morning
after.
And maybe it was, for him.
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* * * *
My unwillingness to tell him how I felt had nothing to do with the newness of the
emotion, nothing to do with self-esteem or the fear of it being unreciprocated. I was
reasonably sure that he didn’t consider himself in love with me, in fact. He liked me, he
wanted me, he was comfortable and happy with me, but he’d expressed on multiple
occasions a certain dissatisfaction with what he knew of me. Pieces were missing, but in
his usual Kellan way, he would never ask me for them. I now understood that it wasn’t
a function of his occasional shyness but a kind of quiet belief that anything given ought
to be given freely.
Which was precisely why I’d never ask him to fuck me, even knowing, as I now
did, that he would.
I’d always known he wouldn’t accept less than the whole truth. Even if he
suspected he’d fallen for me, his rational mind would hold it at bay. It might show
when we screwed, but he’d talk it down anytime his brain was in control. There was
nothing I could do, short of introducing him not only to my mother but also to the
electricity that coursed through the pair of us like human power lines.
And that, I couldn’t do.
It wasn’t about me. All it took was one fuck-up, one lovesick puppy, one
overzealous crusader to fuck it up for everyone. It had happened before—hell, I could
remember specific occurrences—and the cleanup was always hell on the community.
There were entire sleeper conspiracy societies dedicated to breaking us down, even
vigilante witch-hunters who’d got a burr up their ass, usually with good reason, and
taken to murdering anyone they even suspected of being able to manipulate energy.
Everything from devotional cults to supervillains could spring up and mess with us, all
of it painful and frightening for the quiet ones—the regular awakened, like us.
Well, okay, so my particular circle of awakened society is not that regular in some
ways. But we’re not superheroes either. We just want to live, goddammit.
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I had never known anyone as trustworthy as Kellan. I could tell him someday; I’d
always been sure. But a few months was not a reasonable amount of time, no matter
how I looked at it.
Until I could show him everything, Kellan would never love me. And I would
never put him in the position of hearing “I love you” and being unable to honestly say
it back. I’d been there enough times myself to know it was just as hard on the person
biting their tongue as the person desperate to hear the reply, just in a different way. I
loved him too much to do that to him for the sake of my selfish confession.
Hell, if I did, he’d probably bawl me out for my trouble.
But I would make it work. And the first step would be sitting my mother down
and forcing her to join the real world.
Because, yes, it was serious. It was very fucking serious.
* * * *
Our usual table at Tommy’s was tucked into the back, and it was busy enough no
one would’ve been paying attention anyhow. I looked her in the eye and said, “I’ve
been a dick lately.”
She smiled. “And your language hasn’t improved.”
“I’m sorry. For all of it. But we really have to talk about this.”
“Yes, we do.” No hint of reluctance, of fear, of anything but faint concern etched
into lines at the corners of her eyes. “And I’m sorry for putting it off. I hope you
understand. I wanted to collect my thoughts.”
Part of me didn’t want to know what that meant. All of me knew it didn’t matter.
No more dancing around, no more faking it. Not with her. “You asked me if it was
serious. And it is. I love him.”
She smiled, but sadly. “I…thought you preferred…”
“Prefer isn’t the word, Mom.” I tried to sound as gentle as possible. “Actually, it’s
considered insulting.”
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“But some young people go through a phase.”
I snorted. “You remember how you used to take me over to the Reynoldses’ all the
time?”
The apparent change in topic confused her, but she went along with it. “Yes. Ellen
and I were just talking about it.”
“You two would be down in the kitchen with martinis, talking about your
projects, and you’d send us all off to play. Except Ginger and Tommy could never find
me and Anthony.” I smiled at the ancient memory. “I’m sure you told yourselves we
thought we were too cool for the little kids.”
She arched her eyebrows.
“We were usually in the closet playing seven minutes in heaven—except we
changed it to a half hour in heaven, at least.” I laughed. “What was I, fourteen when
they moved away? God, it was the end of the world.”
“Yes,” she said quietly. “I remember.”
“We still laugh about it. We talk a couple times a month. He lives in Minneapolis
with his partner of five years and a bull mastiff.”
“Ellen mentioned it.”
I was sure she had, probably right alongside her mentions of Tommy’s spectacular
marriage to another cold manipulator from a rich Canton family and their gaggle of
perfect children, or Ginger’s burgeoning career as a rocket scientist. But I stuck to the
point. “I’m telling you this because that’s a long ‘phase.’ I was, like, eleven or twelve the
first time I kissed Anthony Reynolds. I didn’t even know what sex was, really. I just
liked him so much.” I looked at her, looked right into her sharp, penetrating eyes,
begging her to understand. “I wanted him to like me back more than anything in the
world.”
She nodded, and then there was a long pause. “I wouldn’t ask you to stop seeing
this boy.”
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“I want you to tell me you understand.”
“I do. I dated too. I even thought I was in love a few times. But, honey, he’s a
sleeper.”
I nodded.
“You know that never works.”
“It does sometimes. If they’re extraordinary. And he is.”
“Everyone goes into a relationship thinking it’s the one, or they wouldn’t do it at
all. But even your father and I—we were very young.”
Um.
But before I could ask the obvious questions, she went on with, “But you can
never be close to him if he doesn’t know; and if he finds out you hid that much of
yourself from him for years, he’ll resent you.”
My heart froze. My blood slowed.
“It’s a breach of trust, Jamie. You can’t build a relationship on lies. That’s why it
never works.”
I gripped the edge of the table, trying to swallow the nonexistent chunk of ice that
seemed lodged in my throat.
Kellan would understand. He might be angry at first—okay, he would be—but he
was smart. When I explained everything, at long last…
He…
Breach of trust.
“I don’t begrudge you your romances, honey. Get them out while you can.” She
covered my hand with her fine French-manicured one, fragile and warm. “But we don’t
just marry our own because we want to pass on our finest. We marry our own because
they’re the only ones we can ever really be with. The only ones who can ever
understand. As you get older, that will come to mean more and more to you.”
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I closed my eyes, still trying to swallow. Or maybe just swallowing the urge to
lightning the hell out of the world right about then, seeing as my blood was starting to
crackle.
No. It was insane. It was old-fashioned. It was impossible.
“Don’t break your heart for something that can never be.”
I laughed, but it was one of those ugly, helpless ones.
“What if you spend years with him before it ends? What if Mae’s moved on?”
I opened my eyes. “What?”
“She’s a beautiful girl—”
I pulled my hand back. “Are you even listening?”
“Honey, it seems silly to you now, but—”
“I don’t care how beautiful she is. I’m queer.”
The tables in closest proximity to us hushed. And I didn’t give a shit. She leaned
forward, lowering her voice. “And I was in love with a sleeper when I married your
father.”
“Lucky for you he only lasted five years, then.” Even as I said it, I hated myself for
it. I couldn’t imagine where the hell it had come from or how it had come out. My eyes
stung, all anger and shame, and I made to stand.
She grabbed my hand again, holding me in my seat. “It was the smartest thing I
ever did. We talked about it after you were born. We went into it blind, but we came
out of it with you. And we loved each other for it.”
I pulled my hand back just as the server brought our food. I looked up at her and
said, “Can you box mine up?” She left Mom’s spinach pie and threaded back through
the crowd.
“Jamie—”
“No. Stop.” I waited, stared her down hard. To my surprise, she sat back in her
seat, taking a deep breath. “I can’t tell if you’re genuinely confused about what queer
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means, or if you’re doing this on purpose, but either way, let me make this clear: I can’t
date women. It is not something I chose, and it is not something I have control over.” I
lowered my voice again. “And even if I could change it, I wouldn’t. Because I. Love.
Dick.”
She sighed. “Really, Jamie.”
“Really, Mom. The poor woman who got conned into being my wife would have
the most unsatisfying marriage in the world. I’m sure we’d be great friends, but
anytime she wanted to get laid, she’d have to accost the pool boy.”
“Jamie—”
“No. A marriage of convenience would be out of the question even if I was
straight. But being gay makes it impossible. I am not a goddamn Kentucky Derby winner
you can breed to the highest bidder.”
She pressed her lips together, paling where her lipstick had worn off on the straw.
“What if he was awakened?” I asked.
She thought. Then, “I couldn’t object. But he’s not, honey. And Mae—”
“I love you, Mom. But don’t call me until you get over this.”
On my way out, I ran into the server. I accepted my box and, for the first time
since I’d gotten a paying job, left my mother with the check.
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Chapter Ten
Before I even left the parking garage, I tapped out a reply to Mae’s e-mail from
almost two months ago on my phone, finally:
Mae,
I know you’re busy, but things are getting ridiculous over here. I’m sure we feel the same
way and can help each other. Please give me a call.
Monday
I probably shouldn’t have in that agitated emotional state, but I was desperate.
And hey, at least I held it together enough not to come out and say, “I wouldn’t marry
you even if there were no more men left on earth,” if only because I was pretty sure being an
asshole wasn’t going to get me any mercy. It was last ditch, and even as I sent it, I knew
she’d never respond. She was free. She was out of it. Why the hell should she bother
herself about my unraveling life?
It would at least keep Mom from pressing this fucking exasperating Mae issue if
Mae would just stand with me and say no. Mom clinging to a childish pipe dream with
her crony Margaret was blinding her shit.
But it wasn’t all that was blinding her; that much was crystal, at that point. The
Mae obsession was a tiny symptom of a much, much bigger sickness. And even
thinking about it made me spark inside, so much that it physically hurt to keep it in.
I swung around to the liquor store after that, prepared to go to any and all lengths
to distract myself from the bullshit she’d spewed on me. And it was bullshit, end of
story. Sure, there would be a sort of…readjustment period. Kellan was big on trust. And
okay, he was going to be royally pissed when he found out. But if he loved me…
Except, he couldn’t love me. Not if he didn’t know me. And—
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No. Not thinking. Not letting her do that to me, sabotage me, make me feel like
shit for being myself.
That wasn’t fair, though. She’d never tried to make me feel bad about anything.
Even this, yes, she was trying to convince me, clinging to this idea even in the face of all
evidence that it was impossible, ridiculous even. When was the last time someone had
told her no, let alone about something she truly believed in?
It’d be fine. And we would be fine.
And I needed a drink. And Kellan. Now.
I grabbed a bottle of Powers and a few interesting extras and showed up at his
door feeling like hell.
He opened the door, looked me over, and said, “Guess you had your talk.”
“Yeah.”
He stepped back and gestured for me to come in. “I assume it was not a success.”
“Probably as good as it was going to get.” I put my bags on the counter and
started pulling things out. “Goddamn, that woman can change a subject.”
“Wow, she pulled avoidance?”
“It’s a WASP thing.” Speaking of which, I really, really didn’t want to talk about it
right then. I tucked my uneaten sandwich into the fridge, then pulled my secret weapon
out of the bag: amaretto-flavored alcoholic whipped cream. “But it’s done, and I have
good news too. Look what I found.”
He eyed it, one eyebrow cocked. “The hell is that for?”
“You are so unimaginative.”
He smirked.
“But don’t you worry your pretty little head.” I leaned forward and planted a
quick kiss on him. “That’s what I’m here for: to be the brains.”
“What’s that make me?”
I set the can down on the counter and kissed him again. “The cock.”
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“I’ve been called worse by nicer people.” He grabbed it and started toward the
couch, ostensibly reading the back copy.
“Where you going with that?”
He threw himself down on the couch, still reading. “C’mere. I’ll show you how
imaginative I can be.”
Yes. Yes, this was just what I needed. Exactly what I needed. Another of Kellan’s
finer qualities: his willingness to be diverted—at least for a while.
And, in turn, to divert me.
I followed him to the couch and crawled up into his lap just how he liked, leaning
forward with my hands on his shoulders, ass up, and kissed him to distract his
attention from the can. “I know you can, baby.” Another kiss, and this time he took
over, biting at my bottom lip and breathing deeply.
I did too, the warm, clean scent of him, the faint spearmint taste of his favorite
gum, sinking into the feeling of his hard thighs between mine. I closed it off again and
continued with, “But you know I like to surprise you.” Another kiss, and I put my
hands at the hem of my shirt, pulling it up slowly and breaking the kiss only when I
absolutely had to in order to get the thing off. I threw it on the coffee table and tugged
at his.
He set the can down to help.
I grabbed for it, hopped off him, and wandered around the couch, pretending to
read the back of the can like he had.
He groaned. “Oh, you prick.”
I pretended to ignore him, making my way toward the kitchen again.
I heard him vault over the back of the couch. “That’s cheating.”
I kept my back turned as I popped the cap off. “What’s that saying about love and
war?” I tilted my head back and shot some cream into my mouth. It was stronger than
I’d expected, like a frothy shot of vodka with just the faintest almond flavor. I
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swallowed unhurriedly, though I felt him stalking me just feet away. “Mmm, it’s good
too.”
He attacked, wrapping me up in his arms; happily, he had continued taking his
shirt off after I’d abandoned him. I doubled over as if to protect the can, my protests
drowned out by laughter as he wrestled me to the ground. He pinned me on my back,
straddling my hips and holding my wrists over my head, his lips inches from mine,
grinning.
I smirked and let go the can.
He snatched it up, using one hand to pin my arms to the floor, and put it out of
reach near his left knee. Then he leaned back over, positioned himself just above me
again, settled his ass down right on my crotch, and said, “Aw, lookit you, all defeated.”
I arched my back, rubbing my swelling cock against the inside of his thigh. “Unh, I
dunno, Kelly. Feels like winning to me.”
He shifted his hips, increasing the pressure. Boy had a future as a lap-dancer if the
whole code-monkey thing didn’t work out. He took a deep breath of me, put his lips
not half an inch from mine, so I could feel them move. “Jamie, Jamie, Jamie. Fool me
once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me. Guess no one ever taught you: best
way to get something you want is just to ask for it.”
“Kellan?”
“Yes?”
I arched again, sighing, mouth just open enough to let him get the right idea.
“May I please, please have some?”
He bit back a smile.
I stuck out my lower lip. “Pretty please? Sugar on top?”
“See, who could say no to that?” He rearranged me so I could sit up, then put his
ass to the floor.
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I scooted forward between his legs and threw mine over his thighs. I ran my
fingers down the trail of dark hair that led from his chest, down his belly to the little
wrinkles sitting up created just above the low waist of his jeans. I eyed his erection,
obscenely filling out the denim, and strangled a manic urge to get it out and get it in me
right then.
By the time I raised my eyes again, he had the lid off. He squirted a decent-sized
dollop of fluff onto two fingers and then held it out to me.
Always just what I fucking needed.
I took him by the wrist and guided his fingers into my mouth. I closed my lips,
sucked the cream slowly, running my tongue first along the bottom, over his knuckles
up to the fingertips, then turned his hand over and licked my way up the inside.
He smiled, openmouthed, and licked his lips almost as if he didn’t even realize.
I tickled the inside of his wrist, then sucked his fingers in as far as they’d go, until
I felt them pressing at the back of my throat.
He gasped. “Jesus.”
I sucked as I pulled his fingers out of my mouth, dragged my teeth carefully over
the fingertips, and finally kissed them. “More, please?”
His dark eyes had that look, the one that told me he was far gone and open to
suggestion. He moved to oblige me, and this time I licked it off his fingers all at once,
then leaned forward and pressed my lips to his. I opened up and pushed at least half of
the sweet-sharp confection into his mouth with my tongue.
He moaned, swallowing and pulling me closer until I was in his lap properly, his
mouth working its usual magic against mine but tasting like vodka and dessert.
I shifted us around until I had him pinned against the back of the couch, still on
the floor. Whipped cream can forgotten on its side, the tables fully turned, I pulled back
and said, “Sweet, huh?”
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He ran his sticky hand up my side, two fingers of the clean one tucked into the
front of my jeans. “Uh-huh.”
I laughed and kissed him again, feeling him up, sinking into his skin, breathing
him until nothing else existed. But silence made the thoughts come again, if boiled
down to their simplest, most instinctive form: I love you, I love you, I love you, please,
please, please don’t hate me.
I had to shut it up. “Kellan?”
“Hmm?” He kissed at my neck, sucking here and there.
I shivered. “Now can I have what I really want?”
“Huh?”
“You, baby.” I reached between us, undoing his fly one-handed, then slipping my
fingers into his pants. “You’re so much sweeter than that.” Another kiss, and I licked at
the roof of his mouth to illustrate my plans for the immediate future. “I’ll suck your
cock all night just for a taste of it.”
He held my face to his with both hands and kissed me so hard it hurt. Hurt good,
that is. I rubbed him through his underwear—not because I needed him any hotter or
readier, but just because I couldn’t stop touching him once I started. But I wanted him
naked, now, so I had to sit up eventually, which meant our mouths had to part. He
licked the tiniest remnant of cream from just beside his mouth, laughing in surprise at
finding it there.
I grinned. “Ever taste it before?”
“My…?”
“Yeah.” I got off him and tugged his pants down around his ankles. “Yours.”
He kicked them off. “Just when I kiss you. After, uh…”
My pants were already unbuttoned—he’d been busy. I pulled them off. “Want
to?”
He stared, openmouthed.
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I practically tore off his underwear and pinned him against the back of the couch
again, this time sinking lower and lower myself, leaving a trail of kisses from the center
arm of his tattoo down his belly, till I was crouched between his legs. I went straight for
his cock, sure to build up a lot of spit and let it leak out, using my hand to work the
thick shaft while I pulled up, shoving him as far into my throat as I could when I went
down. I got him wet fast and rubbed some of the spit down lower, working it over his
balls with my free hand, slipping down behind them to stroke his taint. His legs spread
wide, his head sinking down the back of the couch, one elbow propping him up, one
hand tickling my scalp, ruffling my hair with that shiver-inducing gentleness.
His cock swelled against my tongue, hotter and fuller, stretching my lips. That
taste, the first hints of salty-musky precum and the smooth, faint sweetness of his
skin… Instead of trying to make it last, I went faster, kept the seal with my lips tight,
and took a long, deep breath out to relax my throat further, take more of it in. His hips
shifted under me as he tightened up under my fingers. In almost a sympathetic
reaction, my cock swelled, wetness seeping into my shorts. I hummed deep in my
throat, both to express my excitement and increase his.
He held his breath, but his legs relaxed so his knees fell farther apart. An instant
later, his dick spasmed hard, shooting a long, warm stream of cum into the back of my
mouth. Some of it slipped down my throat, but I kept at least half, rubbing my tongue
against the head of his cock until the throbbing and spurting slowed, until I felt him
breathing again. Then, carefully, I pulled him out, crawled back into his lap, and kissed
him, at first close-lipped, but then I formed a seal between our mouths and pushed my
tongue into him, covered thickly with his sex. He sighed and shifted beneath me,
brought one hand up to brush my cheek, then flatten against it, fingertips ruffling my
hair.
He swallowed; so did I, sharing it with him completely. When it was all gone, I
said, into his mouth, “See? Sweet, isn’t it?”
“Jesus Christ. You’re so fucking dirty.”
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“Not iffy yet?”
“Keep trying.”
“That’s the plan.”
For as long as he’d let me.
* * * *
We had a baseball game and a Lizard night, and alcohol and variations on
common sex acts covered the rest of the weekend. But by Tuesday, Clark was asking me
what the hell had me looking so bleak when I thought no one was paying attention.
Wednesday morning, I woke shivering in Kellan’s bed, and he was already awake.
Normally he was up and out, maybe going for a run or cooking breakfast or something
else I would consider ridiculous at that hour. But this time, he was just there. Watching
me.
My brains were extra scrambled from the nightmare. I wanted to wrap him up,
disappear under the sheets with him, and forget. Kelly, all pale and serious and dark-
eyed, looking at me like he’d never seen anything so fascinating.
He asked, “What do you dream about?”
I squeezed my eyes shut.
“I never know if I should wake you up or not. Sometimes you—it’s not talking,
exactly,” he said, his sweet voice all morning-rough. “You sort of groan. And you go all
tense and…shake.”
I had to keep my eyes shut. “I don’t remember my dreams.”
He was quiet for so long that I finally opened them. He hadn’t moved, just lay
there on his side, his arms crossed in front of him. His mouth pressed into a little line,
and I knew he didn’t believe.
I said, “I mean, I’m sure I have nightmares. Don’t you?”
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“Yeah. Sometimes.” And he withdrew to the bathroom, looking very much like
one of his cats after being thrown off the bed. He didn’t bring it up again, but he didn’t
ask me to go for a drink after work either.
* * * *
I wasn’t about to let another stupid misunderstanding ruin things, though. Shit
was getting way too real for me to even consider it. The next day, I dropped off a latte
for Sarah (mad post-pregnancy PMS, poor woman—she was all about the mood-alterers
at that point), then made my way to straight to Kellan’s cube to give him his favorite
cappuccino.
He accepted it but chewed on his nails like he wanted to say something and
couldn’t.
So I went first. “I’m sorry, Kelly. About the nightmares. I’m just, you know, not
used to talking about them.”
He looked down at his coffee cup, still chewing. “How’d you know I was still
thinking of that?”
“You didn’t call me last night.”
“I don’t always…” He looked up, smiled all lopsided, and pushed his glasses up
his nose. “Okay. Point taken.”
I glanced around, saw the coast was clear, and leaned down over his chair. The
added weight of my arm on the rest made it creak—still had no idea if it’d hold the both
of us, but that groan didn’t bode well. In the circumstances, I figured it’d be best just to
kiss him.
So I did. And he let me, at first, sitting there and turning his face up and slightly to
the side. Kissing back but that was all.
Which just wouldn’t do. I moved closer, put my legs on either side of his knees,
and pushed in on him so his chair creaked again as the back tilted. I parted my lips and
his with them. I licked at the backs of his front teeth playfully.
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That’s about where he gave a little “Mrph” and reached up to touch the side of my
face, ruffle my hair, and started sucking on my tongue.
Now he was prepared to be convinced. When we closed it off, I gave his bottom
lip a nibble, made him sigh, and then put my forehead against his. “I have these client
meetings with Delmonico. Think I’m supposed to be in Boston tomorrow or something.
We can talk on Friday, okay?”
“About the…?”
“Anything you want. Nightmares, stuff with Mom, whatever. I’ve just got a lot on
my mind, is all. Not used to it.”
“So you say.” He smiled, again lopsided. “But I thought about it, and I don’t like
to talk about that shit just after, either. I didn’t want to be pushy.”
“You are the opposite of pushy, baby.” I kissed him again. “We still on for
Saturday with your mom at the farmer’s market?”
“Uh-huh.”
“Loads of time to talk, then.”
“Yeah. Sure. Just—you sure you’re okay? Because you don’t seem okay. And I,
um, worry.”
“I’m always okay.” Except that he was so fucking sweet, it made my heart hurt.
This time I kissed him so hard that I pushed the chair back again, and he reached up
and grabbed my face with both hands. I was so relieved that my little apology had been
not only accepted but that it had him actually owning my mouth in the middle of work,
that I lost myself in it. My knees were so weak that I nearly collapsed into him, and the
fizzling in my belly was extreme.
Until the fizzling turned into a sound over my shoulder, and I broke off the kiss
and looked over my shoulder to see his monitor flickering.
His eyes went wide, and he grabbed for my arm like I could reassure him—or
save his precious code. “Oh, God, please, no.”
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Thank God, the thing righted itself once I got control again, and Kelly sighed in
relief. If he’d lost anything, I would’ve felt even shittier than I already did.
I needed to talk to someone about that, actually, as these little control freak-outs
were getting on my nerves. But first things first.
He smacked me on the ass on my way out of his cube. Isabella was coming back to
hers, so she got a front-row seat for that part, which made her laugh uncontrollably. I
guess I did too, but I was thinking pretty hard.
Friday night.
That gave me precisely three days to come up with a story. Three days to think
about what I would—what I should—do.
Three days to decide if I believed my mother, if I believed everything I’d been
raised to believe.
Or if I believed what my heart screamed every time I saw Kellan.
* * * *
I was just about to head to his place after work on Friday—with no more firm plan
of action than I’d had last weekend after Mom had torn out my heart and shown it to
me at Tommy’s—when I got a call from her.
Her voice was raw and tired, barely recognizable. The first thing she said was,
“I’m sorry about the other day, honey.”
“It’s okay,” I said. It wasn’t, and she’d know it wasn’t. But she’d also know it was
a peace offering. Now, more than I had in what felt like a very long time, I needed…I
just needed my family, I guess.
She shocked the hell out of me by saying, “No, it’s not. You were right.” The slight
quaver in her voice remained.
It made me achy. I wasn’t sure what to say but, “Really. It’s okay.”
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“And I knew it was hurting you. I knew you were being dishonest, and I let you,
thinking that if it was true, you would tell me. I even knew you were suggesting I find a
date because you wanted me to leave you alone.”
“Well—”
“I don’t want a date, Jamie. The truth is, I like being alone. But I did love your
father.”
“You don’t have to dig all this up again. That stuff I said, about it being lucky
that…that he died…” The memory made me sick to my stomach. Something I couldn’t
take back. “God, I’m such a shit. I’m really sorry. I swear, I didn’t mean—”
“It’s all right, honey. You were rightfully angry, and they were just words. Your
father and I—we did what we were supposed to do, and neither of us had a regret in
the end. But you…are not me. And you’re not your father. And we were both angry at
our parents for a long time for that very reason.”
I wondered why the hell she would do this. Call me right here, right now, and just
lay this on me. Why not later, at some more convenient, more appropriate time? Christ,
she hadn’t even asked where I was before she started.
On top of everything, my mother had been replaced with a pod person. Fucking
fabulous.
“I don’t even know what to say,” I admitted. “Just, I’m sorry. For everything.”
“I love you. I just want you to be happy.”
“I am.”
“I know.” A sound then, a massive intake of air.
I’d heard it once before that I could recall. Not even that night after I’d
electrocuted that guy in the alley. Years before, a decade and more. I sat down on the
nearest chair so hard, I jarred my tailbone. “Jesus, Mom. Are you crying?”
“I don’t know…how to…”
“Okay, just hold on. Are you home?”
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“Yes.”
“I’ll be there in fifteen minutes.”
“Honey—”
“I’ll be right there.”
* * * *
I burst through the door into the mahogany-inlaid foyer, halfway expecting to find
her on the ground, staring at the ceiling, clutching at her chest or something. When this
gruesome sight didn’t greet me, I was so relieved that I almost had a heart attack
myself. I staggered into the pristine granite-tiled kitchen to find her at the center island,
sitting on one of the stools, sipping a martini.
But her eyes were red-rimmed. No mistaking it.
I went to her. “What happened?”
“Jamie…”
“You can’t be this upset over some stupid argument with me.”
“No. And yes. I—” She reached up, laid one soft hand against my cheek. “I’m
very, very sorry, honey.”
“You’re freaking me out.” I recognized the absolute contrition in her eyes, though
I wasn’t sure I’d ever seen it before. But then, they were my eyes too. “Tell me what
happened. Please.”
“Mae tried to kill herself last night.”
“In…San Diego?”
She nodded, retracting her hand and applying it to the martini. The soft white
light of the twelve-times-remodeled kitchen highlighted the gentle curves and lines of
her face, etched into my brain in a similar but ageless, possibly even angelic, form.
It’s like, you know your mother’s human. It’s just easy to forget if you’re not
paying attention.
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She said, “I’m fine, honey. I just keep thinking of Margaret and what she must be
going through. She’s gone there now, to see Mae.”
“What did she do?”
“She took some pills. She was afraid to come home because…”
“Because she thought she’d have to marry me.” I tried to think back to that e-mail.
Had I been vague? I’d said something about thinking we felt the same, but I was pretty
sure I’d been, well, terse. As in, definitely not trying to charm. There was no way she
could’ve thought—
“No. Margaret says she was afraid…you didn’t want to marry her.”
The Red Alert siren went off in my brain. Yes, Mae had been a quiet, frightened
child. Yes, she could possibly have reason to believe that I didn’t (or did) want to marry
her (depending on which gossip her mother passed on, depending on which gossip she
chose to believe, and how that gossip spun my spare communications).
But apart from how drastic this all was, add in that her one discussion with me in
the last ten years had been an absolute brush-off on her end, and it did not compute.
Either my e-mail cry for help made her think I hated her and sent her into a suicidal
downward spiral of despair, or someone was lying about something.
So, yes, clearly it was that second thing, because the first… What the fuck?
“If I’d been more honest, if I’d listened to what you’ve tried to tell me for years, it
wouldn’t have happened,” Mom said. “She’s such a sweet girl.”
“I’m practically a stranger,” I said. “How can she—”
“You know how the Haywoods are. It’s everything to them. They’re such
traditionalists, and Mae put it off for so long.”
“She never even called. I practically begged her last week and didn’t get so much
as an e-mail.”
“It was like that in the old days.”
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I sat down hard. “Shit. Should I do something?” Like what? Call her up and say,
“Don’t feel bad, Mae. You can’t help not having a dick”?
It really didn’t feel right. Mae was shy, and Margaret was certifiably insane, but
they couldn’t be this far removed from reality. There was this shadow over it,
something I couldn’t quite see.
“It’s not your problem.” Mom shook her head.
“No, it’s not.”
“I only called because—Honey, it’s Margaret’s fault. She must’ve known how Mae
felt. Am I any better?”
I swallowed hard. “Yes.”
She took another drink. The specific shape of the martini glass made it all too
obvious that her hand was shaking.
“You raised me to be who I am, even if you didn’t want to see it for a while.” I
took her free hand and pressed it, trying to still it. Reminded me so much, too much of
hugging her in this kitchen all those years ago. Fifteen and scared and thinking I’d
almost killed someone. My throat contracted, but I pushed out, “You’ll never come that
close to losing me again.”
She set her drink down and wiped beneath one eye, then the other. There were no
tears, but maybe it was a preemptive strike.
I kissed her cheek, then sat back and pulled at my hair for a few moments, trying
to wrap my head around this. She pushed her martini across the counter to me, and I
took a grateful sip.
She almost smiled. “Help yourself, honey.”
“Thanks.” I stood again and headed right for the liquor selection glowing under
the track lights on the far end of the kitchen. “I think I’m gonna need it.”
* * * *
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I stayed in my old room that night. Kellan was too relieved that I was working
things out with my mother to mind that I ditched him, and said if I needed to bail on
the market, he’d explain things to his mom. I told him I’d pick him up at nine, and we’d
leave as planned.
Mom and I downed martinis and vacillated wildly between argument, affection,
and understanding. She apologized profusely for her handling of my queerness, and I
apologized profusely for keeping it semicloseted. She reminded me I had to be careful
with Kellan, reiterating that it would never work, and I told her it was none of her
business who I was in love with. She told me she only wanted me to avoid a broken
heart; I told her I wasn’t sure I’d have a heart at all without him. And we were back
where we began.
And of course we talked about Mae. The more I expressed my bewilderment,
explained how my attempts at contact had gone nowhere, the more Mom came around
to it. The specifics were too vague, the motivations murky. Maybe thirty years ago,
Mom admitted, but would a person independent enough to live on her own for a
decade all the way across the country, intelligent enough to do postdoctoral work in
nanotechnology, really consider something as idiotic as suicide over another person
she’d not seen since she was a kid, a person she’d shown no interest in either then or
since? It was the plot of a bad movie from the thirties, starring Kellan’s little Lord Jamie
and the duchess of Monday characters.
It was a farce. But to what end?
I explained that much to Kellan on the way to Medina. This may not have been my
best idea ever, as it flipped his switch from “understanding, concerned boyfriend”
mode into “silent but righteous fury” mode without so much as a pit stop in the middle.
We spent a sunny afternoon with his mother, and I used my highest level of
performance to be sure she’d never know my mind was somewhere else entirely. Kellan
was less convinced; he knew very well where my mind was and kept shooting me looks
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behind his mother’s back, his irritation growing more and more obvious in the
straightness of his spine, the set of his jaw, and the aggressive angle of his shoulders.
So I thought it best not to tell him right away when Mom texted me with: Marg
back from SD. Mae’s weak, but ok. Thinks you should visit. Not sure, myself.
But we managed to leave his mother with a smile on her face and an invitation to
do it again in a few weeks. When we piled back into my baby (Mercedes-Benz W126
SEC coupe, by the way. Fuck yeah.) and got on the road, I said, “You’re pissed.”
The muscle in his jaw twitched. “Why did you even come if you were going to be
somewhere else the whole time?”
Once I started the car and got us moving, I said, “I wanted to see your mom. I
don’t think she noticed.”
“I did.”
“I’m sorry. I wanted to talk to you about it. I needed to.”
“They’re jerking you the fuck around, Jamie.”
Which was a fair enough cop, really. But even if it was belligerent, I did need his
opinion, needed his outsider’s point of view on the proposition before me. Not to
mention there was no way to hide something that had this much effect on my life from
him, of all people. Even if I wanted to try, which I really, really did not. “The latest is
that Margaret thinks I should pay Mae a visit.”
He leaned forward, elbows on his thighs, and buried his hands in his face. “Fuck.”
“It could be a way to get to the bottom of this stupid—”
“Why the hell is it your fault if some delusional fucking debutante fixated on you?
She doesn’t even know you.”
“Whatever happened isn’t her fault. It’s her mother’s fault. And my mother’s.”
“So let them fix it.”
“I can help. I should help. Mom was so freaked out last night. I’ve never seen her—
”
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“Jesus, Jamie. I know other rich people. This is not how they do things. Even
actual princes get to pick who they marry these days.” His glare burned right through
me. “Why else would she have done it? Why else does some jack-off pop a bunch of
pills and claim it’s all for the love of a goddamn stranger?”
“That’s what I have to know.”
“What if that’s really why she did it?”
I swallowed hard. I had to consider it; I’d since gone back to my Sent folder and
checked out my last e-mail. In a certain heightened state of panic and madness, it
might’ve been possible to misinterpret what I’d said as an “I need you now” or “I need
to get out of this now because I hate you.” But it would take a seriously unbalanced
mind to think of it as either. I’d been vague not only out of politeness but because I’d
assumed we were in agreement. I had not, however, been alarmist, for fuck’s sake.
Thing was, if this was really happening, if Mae had really put herself in the
hospital, well, she was clearly not so balanced.
I didn’t believe it, but I had to prepare myself for the worst. Therefore, I had to
admit, “Then it’s kind of my fault too. If I’d just come out to my mother sooner, she
would’ve handled it with Margaret.”
“Do you even hear yourself?” His voice went up at the end. He paused, hands
clenching into fists, and visibly gained control of himself. The pitch and volume
lowered substantially when he asked, “Do you actually have no idea how insane this is?
It is bat-shit insane, Jamie. You always fucking let them drag you into their melodrama,
and it’s like watching you submit to emotional blackmail. But this…this is a whole new
level of bat-shit.”
My mind fluttered to come up with the proper terms in which to couch things,
how much I could say, how much I couldn’t. A full silent half-minute later, I felt as if
my head might explode. I stared hard at the abandoned country road stretching out
before me, put my foot down harder on the accelerator, tried to take comfort in the
soothing hum of the engine.
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But it was no good. All I could get out was, “So, are you trying to say I should
never have told you about it?”
I felt the glare again, this time even hotter. “That’s really how you’re going to play
this?”
“Play? Is that what you—”
“Yes, Jamie, play. It’s always a play with you. You pull me just close enough that I
start to think I know you, and then some fucked-up thing happens that shows me
that…that there’s a goddamn glass wall between me and who the fuck you really are.
Then you start the fucking play so I’ll forget it’s there until the next time something
happens.”
“Kellan—”
“I don’t want some dumbfuck excuse.” He turned his glare forward, and I could
see him out of the corner of my eye, twitching, fuming. “You say you have all this
respect for my intelligence—well, act like it. If you go to California, I’ll have to either
assume that you’ve gone completely out of your mind or that you’re not telling me the
whole story.”
I gripped the steering wheel hard, gritting my teeth.
“So if you have a better explanation for why you’re considering this, for why you
even give a shit, you better get it together and tell me.” He was mostly grumbling under
his breath when he said, “The shit I put up with…”
Well, if it was so awful, “Why do you put up with it?”
“I ask God that question every night, James. When he gets back to me, I’ll let you
know.”
Verbal evisceration, as only Kellan could deliver it. Cold settled over me. He
looked out his window, chewing on his fingernails, jaw twitching. I squeezed the
steering wheel and tried not to scream.
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He was right. I had no counterargument, no possible explanation that could
satisfy—
“Holy Mary, Mother of God,” he said out of nowhere.
This was not a curse; this was a prayer. I looked out his window, down one of the
little dirt cross streets just past a crumbling red-washed barn, and saw exactly what had
inspired it. One little hatchback and one big old Ford truck, slammed into a twisted pile
of metal. There was a teenage-looking kid just outside the open door of the truck.
I jerked the car off the road, heart in my throat. We were both out of it and
running for the accident without another word. Now it was obvious the truck had been
coming out the open barn door and the car blazing along the little dirt road toward the
highway. It had been T-boned for its trouble, the passenger side bent inward and
completely mangled.
“Oh shit, there’s a kid.” Kellan took off after that announcement, and he got to the
crash about ten yards ahead of me and looked in the backseat. Sure enough, I heard
someone crying in there. Kellan opened the door before I could say anything; a little
boy spilled out. There was a woman strapped into the front seat. She was still.
“Don’t let anyone move!” I shouted.
The teenager who’d oozed out of the truck was hammering at a cell phone and
sobbing.
I ran to his side, asking the most useless question imaginable: “What happened?”
“She’s not moving, man,” he blurted, speech thick with panic. “There’s no signal.
No fucking signal.”
I grabbed him by the shoulders, checked out his eyes. “Are you hurt? Look at me.
Look me in the eye. Are you hurt?”
He held my gaze; when I let him go, he stood straight, shook his head. “No. No,
man. I’m fine. Just—”
“What’s your name?”
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He replied.
“What’s the date?”
“What?”
“The date, tell me the date.”
He did.
“Ears ringing?”
“What? No. What the…?”
I checked my own phone, just in case. He was right: no signal. I pointed down the
road. “See that house?”
He looked past the crunched grill of his souped-up truck. The big old farmhouse
was at least a quarter of a mile down the stretch, but it was the only one in sight.
“Yeah.”
“Go there. Call 911. Now.”
He stood a little straighter, nodded, and took off at a sprint.
The little boy had returned to the backseat but only halfway, choking on sobs, red-
faced. Kellan turned around, panic in his eyes. “Jamie, what the fuck do we…?”
I checked out the woman without moving her. No visible bruises, no bumps, no
blood, but she wasn’t breathing. She was warm, but if there was a pulse, it was
incredibly faint.
I closed my eyes, let my electricity take over in that subtle, unquantifiable way,
and felt for her. The only way to explain it is like…every human being generates an
electromagnetic field, but we awakened have a special organ, one we can control, just
for that purpose. Part of being extra-strong even for an electrical manipulator is that I
can kind of push my field and feel for it in others. And, thanks to training, find spots
where it’s strongest or being generated.
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There was electrical activity in her, but it was about to die. If she went without
oxygen to the brain, it wouldn’t matter so much if we aggravated a spinal injury or not.
Split-second decision. I said, “Help me.”
We got her out and on the ground. I wasn’t even thinking, just started delivering
CPR. Kellan tried to soothe the little boy, who was up on his feet by then, walking back
and forth and moaning. I heard Kelly saying, “Sit down, please, sit down. If your neck
hurts…”
I counted it out, breathed for her, counted it out again. “He almost to the house?”
“Still running,” Kellan said, voice tight. “Please, kid, come here. What’s your
name?”
Middle of fucking nowhere. By the time the teenager called 911, how much of her
would be gone? By the time an ambulance made it…
I paused briefly to feel her carotid—something there, faint, dying again. I reached
out, sensed the electrical impulses in her, but they were weak and fluttering.
A shiver began down low in my spine.
I stamped it out, crushed it with a ten-ton anvil, and said, “Kellan, keep him busy.
Turn him away. You too.”
“What?”
“Please, just do it.”
“But—”
“Now.”
I put both hands on her chest, this time up higher and to her left side, let the
electricity sing through my bones, measuring, careful. So fucking careful. It had been
too long since Dr. Mehlman’s special awakened lecture on defibrillation. Obtain a
shockable rhythm in the heart, then—
I let it go, a single charge, fizzling blue around my hands and into her, deep. She
bucked. I checked, and there was no change. Again, palms against her chest, closed my
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eyes and let it amp, just a notch or two more. One, two, three. She rocked with the fizzle
of electricity; I pulled it in tight, wrapped it up, checked her pulse. One more time. One
more time, don’t think about it; don’t think if this doesn’t work…don’t think, just do, just do—
One, two, three.
She twitched, then gasped, lips grayish pale. Her chest rose, fell.
“Blanket,” I said, putting two fingers against her neck again. The thump of life
was there for sure now. Slow, slightly irregular, but there. “Forgot to bring the kit. It’s in
the trunk.”
Footsteps behind me, Kellan saying, “No. No, just stay in the car, Andy. Stay in
the car, okay? I’m coming right back.” And then he took off like a track star.
The kid—Andy—didn’t listen. He was standing over me in seconds. “She’s not
dead?” he asked through a mess of snot and tears.
“She’s not dead. Your mom have heart problems?”
“Yeah, I think. She takes some pills or something.”
“Right.”
“Mom—”
“Let her be, kid. She’s okay for now.” I sat back on my heels, took her wrist in my
hand, just to convince myself, make sure it was true.
And the world around me blurred.
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Chapter Eleven
At the hospital, Kellan finally said, “Are you going to make me ask?”
My head was numb. My eyes felt swollen, though I hadn’t cried. My lips were
cold. My world was still blurry, like I was looking out from behind a waterfall.
Emotionally, there was too much of everything, and so I registered nothing. “No, sorry.
I—Uh, what did you see?”
He looked at the floor, sinking farther into the seat next to me, careful not to let his
elbow touch mine. “Does it matter?”
“Maybe.”
“As in, you’re going to tell me as little as possible to explain whatever it is I tell
you I think I saw.”
“No. Yes.” I sighed. “Shit, I don’t know.”
He looked at me for what felt like the first time in a long time. “I saw you act like a
human crash cart, that’s what I fucking saw. Your hands were crackling blue, and you
did it with no discernible effort or concern for yourself. Like you’re used to it.”
“Not used to using it like that, no. But, well, that’s why my mother wanted me to
be a doctor.”
The last thread of my grand lie, my entire life, undone. This was not how I
imagined it happening somewhere down the road, when we were happy and secure,
getting married, buying a house, having kids.
But this was how it was, so I told him everything. About the awakened, about our
various powers, about their applications in the real world, about our secrecy, about the
witch-hunters, about the haters, about the irritating superheroes and even worse
supervillains, about the small communities—about ours in particular. I put it on the
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line, and he sat there watching me, listening in silence, stony-faced. Never once moving
but to chew on his nonexistent fingernails and occasionally nod.
And when I finished, he said, “So, this is why you get staticky sometimes. It’s been
right in front of me the whole time.”
“Yeah. I never had trouble with control before, but lately it’s been a little weird.
Nothing big, just lights flickering and stuff.”
He was quiet for a second. And then he said, “Okay.”
My throat hurt, tight from the stress and the talking and the tears that hadn’t
come. “Just…okay?”
“I—” He licked his lips and looked at the floor again. “I want to understand why
you never mentioned this.”
I laughed but not in a funny way. “So, you’re not at all concerned that I can do this
weird-ass thing. Just that I didn’t tell you about it.”
“I’m not saying it’s not, fucking, like, out there. But, Jamie, I believe in God. You
think some lightning I can actually see is going to shut my brain down? Get serious.”
I scrubbed at my hair with one hand, trying to fathom him, finding it impossible.
It was like a goddamn hamster on a wheel up there in my head, running and running
and getting nowhere.
I had really just done that. That had really just happened. The thing that had
horrified me my whole life. The fear that haunted me in my fucking sleep and made me
who I was had come to pass. And I’d walked right through it.
And Kellan had seen it. All of it.
“Well, I mean, obviously we can’t just go around telling people about it. We’re all
raised to keep our mouths shut and never use it where we can be seen. Except, you
know…in emergencies.”
After a short silence, he said, “I understand. And this…is why I don’t know you.”
“It’s the reason you don’t—didn’t know all of me.”
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“That’s what this weird-ass arranged marriage is about too.”
I nodded. “Not all of us do that. It’s just common around here. With especially
powerful families, in particular. I’m kind of off the charts.”
“So you’re the prize stud.”
I didn’t even have the energy to laugh at the concept. I just nodded.
“How long before you would’ve told me?”
Through the haze of fear and confusion, through the swamp of relief and self-
loathing, I could still see perfectly that my mother had been right. No matter what
answer I gave, he would resent me for it.
Maybe I’d always known that and just pretended not to. Just drawn it out so I
could have another day with him.
I’d told Billy the truth that day at the bar: I was a coward. I should’ve done the
right thing after that first fight—I’d known it then, and I saw it now. But I hadn’t loved
Kellan then, or I hadn’t known I loved him, and so I’d put myself before him. And now
it was too late.
I said, “I wanted to.”
“I would’ve fucked off before you told me.”
“I would’ve told you before I let you—”
“No, you wouldn’t. You never tell anyone anything until you have to, and by then
it’s too fucking late.”
There was no argument for this, so I didn’t try. “But you said you understand.
About the secrecy.”
“I want to understand. Rationally. But I’m not feeling particularly fucking rational
right now. I just saw someone I—someone I’m supposed to be really close to shoot
lightning out of his fucking fingers and save a woman’s life. Someone who…who
knows every fucking embarrassing and incriminating detail about my own mental and
emotional state at pretty much all times.” His grip on the arms of his uncomfortable
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waiting-room chair tightened, his knuckles going white. His voice, conversely, lowered
almost to a whisper. “Not to mention my body, my family, and my God. I…am having
a fucking hard time not…not exploding on you.”
Somewhere in the middle of this speech, my heart began to thaw. The pain was
excruciating, like a long-asleep limb waking up, but hotter, deeper. I covered his near
hand with mine, desperate. “Kellan—”
He jerked away. “Don’t do that. Don’t—don’t fucking confuse me. You always do
that.”
“What?”
“Just—” He leaned away. “Don’t touch me right now.”
My eyes grew hotter. This was it. And though I knew I deserved it, oh God, ouch.
“Kellan, please.”
But the doctor appeared. She stopped just in front of us, brown circles under her
eyes but a smile on her pale lips. “She’s all right, and the little boy has a minor
concussion. The rest of the family might want to meet you, but if you like, you can just
leave your information, and I’ll pass it along.”
I fumbled in my wallet and handed her a card. “Sure.”
She tucked it into her coat pocket. “You boys did a good thing.”
“It was nothing,” I said. “I’m just glad she’s okay.”
Kellan just stared, pale and silent.
I kept quiet until we were in the car, but everything in me was burning, crackling
by that time. If he didn’t talk to me soon, there’d be nothing left but ashes. “Should I
take you home?”
“Yes” was all he said.
“Kelly, please talk to me.”
“I can’t. I just need to think. I need to be alone.”
So I bit my lip and did as he asked.
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* * * *
I knew I wouldn’t hear from him anytime soon, so I did the only thing I could,
short of sitting home and getting drunk and feeling sorry for myself: I went to San
Diego.
I found myself on Mae’s doorstep on Saturday evening, wondering what the hell I
was supposed to say to her. The five-hour flight, the rental-car line, and the subsequent
search through unfamiliar neighborhoods hadn’t given me any answers. Neither had
the conversation with my mother on the way. So there I was, standing in a stucco-and-
tejas cul-de-sac in the dry Southern California summer heat, wondering what the fuck
my life had come to.
A large, well-tanned blond man opened the door. His gaze ran up and down me,
but he wasn’t checking me out—unless it was to estimate who’d win in a fair fight. (The
answer: him, since zapping people counts as unfair.) “So, you’re Jamie.”
“Uh, yeah. Nice to meet you…?”
Big blond guy narrowed his eyes.
A small, frail-looking woman appeared by his side, prodding him out of the way.
Only when she said, “Hi, Jamie,” did I realize that the long, curly hair, healthy tan, and
thick glasses hid the pixielike Mae Haywood I’d known as a child.
“Hi, Mae.” I mean, what the hell was I supposed to say?
Big blond guy put an arm around her.
“Okay,” I said, even as I had the thought. “I think whatever is going on here…is
not what I think is going on here.”
He snarled—I mean, really snarled, like a dog. “It’s exactly what—”
Mae gave him a gentle push and sidled out onto the stoop with me. “Shut up,
Dallas. Jamie, let’s go for a walk.”
“Mae—” Dallas (wow, stereotype much, pal?) tried to protest.
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“Shut up,” she repeated. There was enough of her mother’s edginess in it that I
wouldn’t have argued.
Dallas apparently felt the same, though he continued with the glaring. “You make
her cry, and I swear to God, I will break your legs.”
Maybe it was juvenile to roll my eyes, but it was, at least, less juvenile than that
threat. “I’ll keep it in mind.”
“She’s not going back there,” he replied nonsensically.
“Good.”
“What?”
As if trying to communicate with a very stupid great ape, I said, “Good. As in
great. Glad to hear it.”
He stared, which I suppose would’ve been satisfying, had I been in a state of mind
to be satisfied by anything at all.
Mae put a hand on my arm. “Coffee?”
“Sweet Jesus, yes.” I turned and followed her out of the cul-de-sac, then walked
side by side with her along a little suburban thoroughfare peopled with smiling early-
evening, skin-baring types.
Nice neighborhood. Lots of palm trees. I always found it hard to believe I hadn’t
left the country, no matter which coast I was on, really. You can take the boy out of the
Midwest, etc.
When Mae declined to speak—which didn’t surprise me, since I still halfway
expected the shy, gobsmacked seventeen-year-old—I said, “Okay, so, let’s start with the
obvious: you’re not still on death’s door.”
“I was never on death’s door. It was a lie.”
That…made so much more sense.
“We just told Mom I took those pills so she’d leave me alone. Cut me loose.”
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I almost wished it didn’t make so much sense, so I could get pissed. “Okay, I get
that you didn’t actually try to kill yourself. Congratulations, by the way.”
“On the lie or on not trying to kill myself?”
I laughed.
She didn’t.
“Yes,” I replied. “But your mom told my mom you did it because you thought I
didn’t want to marry you.”
She stopped walking. “What?”
Wow. Brilliant. Utterly fucking brilliant. “You thought I was coming here to
convince you to marry me?”
She nodded.
“And your mother…?”
“She said I’d change my mind when I saw you again.”
“So, when I sent you that e-mail last week—”
“With everything Mom said about you asking about me all the time, and
how…kinda desperate you sounded, I thought…”
“No. In fact, I was trying to get you to suck it up and deal and help me talk to our
mothers about this stupid shit. And by the way, my mother knew I was coming here
solely to find out what the hell was really going on. We both thought the whole
attempted-suicide story was idiotic.”
“Well, it was. But you got the wrong story. I didn’t know Mom told you guys
that.”
“Fuck, Mae.” I sighed, pulling at my hair. “Just, fuck. This is so fucking…fucked.”
Yet more evidence that Kellan was slowly wearing down my vocabulary. I laughed
again, starting to feel like each time brought me a little closer to madness.
She stared at my feet but seemed to agree, at least.
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“I came here to tell you what I should’ve told you when we were kids, which is
that I would not have then, and would not now, ever consider marrying you.”
Her mouth fell open.
I went on, “And it wasn’t because of you. I mean, even now, the fact that you’re
obviously out of your goddamn mind is just gravy.”
“I am not—”
“You staged a botched suicide attempt to avoid dealing with your mother, Mae.
Not that I blame you, but you’re officially even less stable than I am. But it doesn’t
matter, because I’m gay.”
“Gay.”
Why the hell was this concept suddenly so foreign to everyone? “Yes. Gay. Over
the rainbow. Friend of Dorothy. In the family. Homo, pillow biter, queer as fuck.”
“Oh my God.” She closed her eyes, the blood draining from her face.
“So, yeah. That’s why I kept bugging you about helping me out with our
mothers.” Another thought occurred. “Jesus, is that guy a sleeper?”
“Yes.” She started walking again.
I went with her. “Goddammit. God-fucking-dammit.”
“I’m sorry. I just—”
“Wait. Just…just wait a second. It’s not your fault.” I could hardly believe it was
coming out of my mouth, but it was true. “None of this would’ve happened if I’d just
owned up to taking it in the ass sooner.”
“You said that to your mother?”
I shot her a look that I really, really hoped would make it clear that I considered
her a fucking idiot. “That’s what concerns you here?”
More Kellan influence—more than justified, if you asked me.
She winced. “Oh. We’re so screwed up.”
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“Yes. Yes, we are. Every single one of us.” Another long silence, wherein I
pondered the immensity of our collective fucked-upness. Just as we came up on the
little strip mall that I assumed was our final destination, I said, “You do know Billy
Armin married Lisa Brandt last year, right?”
“Yeah. Lisa used to call him ‘bug eyes’ in school.”
I laughed yet again, and this time I was afraid I’d never stop.
* * * *
And so it transpired that the whole affair was even more farcical than I’d
expected, engineered by one of the very few people to whose faults my mother was
sentimentally blind: her childhood friend, Margaret Haywood. A last-ditch attempt to
cow her absurd daughter into marrying an equally absurd son of a similarly ridiculous
family.
If I looked back three months, I could hardly recognize myself in the imaginary
city of lies and performance I’d made. Now here I was, standing in the rubble of it. But I
wasn’t sorry, for the most part. There was just a single regret that made it impossible to
enjoy, that lone shadow over everything, and it wasn’t going away anytime soon.
I was completely at Kellan’s mercy, and the odds were grim. It’d come down to
whether or not he could trust me again. Nothing I could say would change how he
already felt. Bring it out, confirm it, maybe. But if it wasn’t there already, I had no hope.
Monday morning, I swung around Isabella’s desk first, clutching a Michael Bublé
CD I’d seen in a shop window and knew she didn’t have. She squealed over it happily,
but her face fell when she got a good look at me. “What’s wrong, dear? You’re not sick
too?”
“Something going around?”
She arched one overpenciled eyebrow. “You haven’t talked to Kellan?”
I swallowed. “I was out of town this weekend.”
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She paused, looking at me like she wanted to ask another question. I don’t know,
maybe she saw it in my eyes, on my face. Maybe she just knew me well enough to see
the truth. But miraculously, mercifully, all she said was, “He’s on sick leave. Must be
serious—he’s out all week.”
My knees nearly gave out. “Oh. Shit.”
“You don’t look so good either.” She stood and came around the partition to feel
my forehead. “No fever, but maybe you should go home. If he’s got something…”
“No. No, I’m good. Thanks, gorgeous.” I staggered back to my desk and put my
head down on it, telling myself it was self-centered to imagine this “sick leave” could be
a way to avoid me.
Even my weekly visit to Will-Sing-for-Food Guy couldn’t raise my spirits. His
couplet for me that day was utterly uninspired. Monday, Monday, smiles so bright/but
when he’s sad, it’s dark as night.
An hour after lunch, I finally gave in and sent Kellan a text. Hope you’re not really
sick. Starting to think I might be, though.
* * * *
The week dragged. I spent a few evenings at Clark’s, where Sarah convinced me
to lay most of the story on them—as much as I could, anyhow. They already knew
about my mother’s weird habits and friends, so they weren’t quite as shocked as Kellan.
Clark even seemed to think the whole Mae snafu was hilarious, though he curbed his
laughter for the sake of my sanity. I went out for drinks again with Billy, who was, of
course, sympathetic and made me feel like a regular hero for my human-defibrillator
stunt.
I still felt strange about that. But good too. I’d done it because I had to. Turned out
that it hadn’t been her first heart attack and might not be her last, but for now, she was
okay. I wasn’t going back to med school; the idea of doing it again made me sick to my
stomach.
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But now I knew I could, if I improbably found myself in a similar situation again.
Nice to know what little training I’d had, not to mention my entire upbringing, hadn’t
been wasted. Nice that I hadn’t had a nightmare since.
Nicer to know that kid still had a mom.
While I had Billy’s attention, I also figured I’d get his professional opinion. “So, is
it weird to start having control issues this close to thirty?”
“Little late for a second spurt, but not unheard of. Jesus, though, if you get any
more power in you…”
I shrugged. “I don’t feel like it’s bigger or anything. Just, sometimes it’s like I
forget myself and things happen. TVs go funny or lights flicker.”
He grinned crookedly over his beer. “Like being a teenager, you mean?”
“Exactly like that, now you mention it.” Like puberty wasn’t bad enough, throw in
raw, untrained superpowers and sometimes it could get a little freaky.
“When does it happen?”
The general pattern was pretty obvious, by then. “Usually just around Kellan.
When things get intense.”
“Intense as in…?”
“Yeah, sex, mostly.” I thought about it hard. I was always a little sparky in bed—
even the thermals had to put the brakes on their hot and cold when they got excited like
that—but the times things had actually gotten out of control were big enough to stick
out in my mind. That time after our first fight, in the pub bathroom, when I was all
desperate. In his parents’ house, when I realized I was in love with him. And that one
time really recently, just kissing him in his cube when I was trying to apologize. Which
forced me to admit, “Not all the time, though. Just when things are kind of emotionally
hardcore and I’m not paying attention, I think.”
“You ever been in love before, Jamie?”
My eyebrows went up. Not exactly a Billy kind of question. “Um, no.”
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He laughed and leaned an elbow on the table. “It’s a chemical reaction in the
brain, man. We’re powerless against it, to some extent, and that’s science talking.” He
lowered his voice and narrowed his eyes. “And you know, I wouldn’t be surprised if it
was some subconscious desire of yours to let him know. You’re always talking about
how you could tell him if—”
“Not always.”
He raised his eyebrows and stared me down.
And another admission was wrung from me. “God, I’m so pathetic.”
“Love makes fools of us all, Jamie. Any man who pretends that isn’t true is
compensating for something.”
“That, I’m sure of.”
He laughed. “I’m at once repelled and intrigued by that statement.”
I saw my opening to change the subject. “I knew this guy in college…”
But his hack psychoanalyzing stuck with me hard and fast. He was no Dr. Freud,
but that didn’t mean he wasn’t dead right. (Actually, I had to read Freud as an
undergrad—pretty sure that makes him closer to being dead right.) Or that I wasn’t
completely brainless for not having thought of it myself.
Even if I hadn’t known myself to be powerless, I still would’ve been unable to
resist driving past Kellan’s a few times on my way to or from work or just taking the
long way around when I went out for food or to hang out with people. But his truck
was never in its spot, and my phone was deathly silent apart from the usual check-in
calls from Mom and Derrick.
And then, finally, on Friday night, I got a text from him: I’m good. Take care of
yourself. Summer colds are the worst.
A quick shower, a few minutes in front of the mirror, trying in vain to make
myself look as good as possible, a stop at the liquor store, and I was off.
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Chapter Twelve
This time, the decrepit pickup was there. Long before I was near his door, I heard
a bass-heavy 3/4 thumping that would probably convince anyone that the nice, quiet
boy in 2B had an affection for polka. He had the Dreadnoughts cranked.
I rang the bell, heart pounding sickeningly in my throat. The music quieted.
Someone shuffled on the other side of the door.
For a second, I thought he’d ignore me. I thought I’d go home with my tail
between my legs. I wondered if I could make it back down the stairs without puking.
But then he opened the door. Standing there in a wrinkly red T-shirt with a black
spider in the middle of his chest, his jeans dangerously low, glasses just slightly crooked
on his nose, hair looking like it hadn’t seen a brush all week.
I swallowed my heart, opened my mouth.
He eyed the telltale bag in the crook of my arm. “Damn, James.”
“Uh, I figured it’d make the long apology I prepared less boring.”
He worried his lip. I knew, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that he was considering
telling me to go away. Something in him wanted to.
But after the longest three seconds of my life, he took a step back. “Come in.”
I did. As usual, the place was spotless, but it didn’t have that faint incense smell,
sort of stuffy and disused. As I set the bag on the counter, a little ball of fur weaved
between my feet. Wyatt and Virgil watched from the back of the couch but were less
surprised to see me, or just less excited.
I ducked, scooped Morgan up, and scratched his head. “Hey, little guy.” He
purred like a tiny chainsaw.
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Kellan closed and locked the door, then walked around the long way to get behind
the counter, keeping as far from me as possible.
I said, “So, you’re feeling better?”
“Wasn’t sick. I was at Erin’s. Kyle was out of town for work, so I figured she could
use some help with the girls.”
I thought of him sweeping Mags up in his arms.
Thus weakened, I leaned my hip against the counter and put Morgan down on it.
He stayed, demanding more scratches. “But, um, you weren’t just avoiding me?”
He poured two drinks. After a long pause for that, he said, “I wanted to think it
over.”
And it was official. He had actually taken a whole week off work just so he
wouldn’t have to see my face. I didn’t even know how to feel about it. I was already
achy all over. What difference did it make? “And?”
“And…” He came near enough to hand me my drink but was careful not to touch
my hand when I accepted. “You lied to me.”
I swallowed hard again but kept silent. What mattered was what he had to say.
“I get why, but I’m not sure I can get past it, all the same. I sort of had to go all in
on this from the beginning. It was that or nothing and…well.”
Since he was clearly waiting for some kind of response, I said, “I realized, and I
tried to fix it.”
“I know. And it—you know it meant a lot to me. But I don’t know how you can fix
this one.” He sipped on his drink, rolling it around gently.
I thought of from the first night he’d brought me back here to meet the cats. When
we’d ended up naked on the couch, and I’d learned all about his oral fixation.
The gentle way he drank, enjoyed with his mouth. Like the way he kissed.
He looked down into his glass, chewing on his nails. “It wasn’t just some stupid
white lie. It was huge. I can’t make myself stop feeling shitty.”
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Again I nodded, afraid to do or say anything more.
“But…rationally, I know you couldn’t tell me.” After a pause, he looked up
through his eyelashes. He stopped chewing. “And what you can do is amazing.”
My heart surged, just like that. It was that look, that thinly veiled hot one, the one
that said all was not lost. The one that said he wanted me.
I took his free hand and moved nearer, trying to balance caution with my need to
be close, to make him remember me. “I always wanted to show you how good it can
feel too. I—”
He pulled back, eyes darkening. “I don’t know why you think it’s okay to—to
keep doing this. It’s completely fucking, like, manipulative.”
I reeled with that queasy, familiar, verbal-sucker-punch feeling.
“Anytime you don’t like the conversation, you just come up with some new and
inventive way to get me off, and I shut up about it for a few weeks. Do you even realize
you do that?”
“I don’t—”
“You do. You know goddamn well I can’t think straight when you’re around, and
you use it against me. It’s fucking mean of you.”
“But I just hate to see you all pissed off, and so I—” I don’t even know where it
came from, but I knew even as I said it that I’d never spoken truer, never made a
confession that said more about me, as I did with: “It’s the only thing I know how to
do.”
“Bullshit. Complete fucking bullshit.”
I just stared, helpless. Morgan finally hopped off the counter and made himself
scarce, poor guy.
Kellan went on, “You’d make me happy if you’d tell me who the fuck you are.”
“What if you don’t like it?”
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It hung in the air for a long, painful second, the entirety of my self-esteem issues in
a single sentence, making me wish I could sink through his floor and never have to see
him look at me like this ever again.
But at the same time, I loved it. Loved how it reduced me to ashes.
And then he slammed down his drink. “Fuck you, Jamie.” He pushed off the
counter and made as if to walk away.
I didn’t know where he was going—the bathroom, the bedroom, the front door to
escort me out—but I reached out and grabbed his wrist before his second step. “Kelly,
please.”
He jerked out of my grip but planted his feet. “I accepted that you’re
uncomfortable with who you are, even though I didn’t know why or how. I accepted
that you were going to know more about me for a little while and that I was way more
invested in this than you from the beginning—”
“That’s not fair, and it’s not fucking true, ei—”
“Fuck you, and fuck your words.” He jabbed his finger in the air, the other hand
flexing and stretching impotently at his side. “You’re all just words and sex. I see your
soul in there. I know it’s good, and I can’t touch it. You have any idea how goddamn
frustrating you are?”
For a horrible second, I actually thought he expected a reply.
He went on, though it gave me no relief. “Maybe it was too soon for you to
volunteer information, but if you ever come to terms with something—anything—to do
with reality, it better be this: it happened. I see you. So deal with it, or get the fuck out
of my apartment.”
God, it was like it was raining fire, and I loved it. I loved it and—“I love you.”
His eyes flashed. “Don’t you fucking dare—”
“I remember exactly when it happened too. You just told off Finn and…and Ken
was laughing. And you turned around, and Mags threw herself at you, and you picked
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her up and kissed her and were completely happy again just like that. Something inside
me just cracked. Like—like I finally understood everything about you, and it broke me.
Since that moment, maybe even before, everything I’ve done has been trying to deserve
you. You remember that morning? You remember how good it was?”
He hesitated, jaw flexing. Then just the slightest lift of his chin.
“I wasn’t playing. I just wanted you so bad, and I was too confused to make a
game out of it. You felt it.”
Nothing. He just stood there like a statue, hard and oh-so-nerdy-angry-beautiful.
Watching.
But it was just falling out of me. Something in him still gave a shit; I’d caught that
flash in him, and now I couldn’t stop. “It’s not just words. I changed everything for it.
My whole life, this huge lie I built, it’s all dissolving around me, and it feels so good. I
would’ve gone on forever like that, living these two lives, lying to everyone and myself
until I got too old for it to matter. Some lonely fucking dirty-minded loser with nothing
to show for his life. Kellan, I could be that guy, and I didn’t even know it until that exact
moment when I knew I loved you.”
His shoulders slumped, but his hands were in tight fists. His chest heaved.
It might’ve meant he’d heard me. Or it might’ve meant he was trying not to punch
me in the face. I was wilting, desperate to take a step nearer and cling to him but very,
very aware that that was the worst possible move I could make. “And it’s okay if you
hate me now. You’re the most honest human being I’ve ever known, and I understand if
you can’t trust me again. But you should also know that no matter what happens, I’m
not going to be that guy. Because of you.”
He closed his eyes and sighed.
I waited for a few seconds, tried to remember what I’d already said and what I
hadn’t. Tried to find that one last thing I hadn’t answered, that one last bit that would, if
nothing else, at least tell him that I really, truly loved him.
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Words and sex. That was it. “And if I like to get a little weird in bed, it’s not
because I’m trying to change the subject. Well, okay, I am sometimes, but I can’t help
myself around you. I wanted to fuck you way before I loved you, and it just made it
worse.”
He laughed, a kind of helpless thing. “Jesus, Jamie.”
I hung my head.
He took two steps nearer, then hesitated. His gaze ran down me, then back up.
“What the fuck are you?”
I held up one hand and let it go. Tiny arcs of lightning sprung up between my
fingers, then figure-eighted around and down them.
Eat your heart out, Nicola Tesla.
Kellan watched, the blue glow reflecting off his glasses, in his wide, dark eyes.
“That’s what I am.” I took another step forward, held my hand out to him.
He raised his hand.
I nodded and reached out a little farther, palm up.
He aligned his so it hovered a few inches above mine. And then he lowered it,
little by little, until the charge reached him. I let it leap, sharing the faint, ticklish
sensation with him, letting it bounce off his skin and back to me, then again.
He took my hand, weaving his fingers between mine.
I dulled it to a faint static charge, just enough to make the hair on his arm stand
up, and pulled him closer.
He came, even leaned forward as if considering coming nearer still. “I had a
moment too. I loved you—before, in that stupid adolescent worship way. I knew what
it was.”
For the first time, I let myself smile. As I cut the electricity, my heart felt like it
would burst through my rib cage; the smell of him, his laundry detergent and
aftershave and spearmint gum, warmed my blood.
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“But then I saw it, and everything made sense.” He stepped forward, put his
whole front against me, clinging to my hand, using his other to tilt my face upward. He
put his forehead against mine and took a deep breath. “You even smell electric.”
I closed my eyes, struggling with the instinct to kiss him. Kiss him hard. Never
stop kissing him. Make him love me.
But what I really wanted, really needed, was to know that he already did. “You
love me?”
“You really are Johnny fucking Storm, aren’t you?” He laughed and patted the
side of my face. “Dickhead.”
“Maybe. A little. But…?”
“If I didn’t love you, would I give a shit?”
I leaned into him and put both arms around his neck—not so much because I
meant to but because my knees finally gave out.
He kissed me, slipping his arms around my waist, then tilting his face and parting
his lips, letting me taste him. He closed it off, then did it again, this time deeper and
longer, licking at the backs of my front teeth, sliding a hand into my back pocket.
I wanted to do all the things I usually did. Wanted to angle my hips against him,
rearrange him between my legs, bite at his bottom lip and kiss his neck, encourage and
escalate with every part of my body. But I was still too scared that he’d think I was
using it against him. The next time he closed it off, I said, “Kelly, I swear to you—I’ll
swear on anything you want: I will never, ever lie to you again. I will never hide
anything. Just please, please—”
He kissed me again, this time hard, forcing me backward. He came with me,
closing in like a cat on its prey, his hands suddenly under my shirt, down the back of
my pants, everywhere. He paused for just long enough to say, “Shut up and get naked,
Jamie.”
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So I did, and he had me in the bedroom so fast I hardly knew which way was up. I
had to hold myself up with both hands to keep from slipping off the edge of the bed,
both fists squeezing the sheets tight. Kellan practically swallowed my cock, applying
every inch of his substantial talent for giving head to bringing me to climax as fast and
hard as possible. Curled in on himself between my wide-apart knees, two wet, sticky
fingers inside me, palming my balls, every avenue for perfect pleasure covered and
working in synch to drive me over the edge.
I groaned, rocked my hips, fucked his mouth, fucked myself, felt him swallow, felt
him hum, fought it. Fought it, fought it hard, but his finger-fucking was practiced; he
knew so well where to hit me, how to work me, and the slightest movement amped me
up on him hard. I pushed up and exploded into him, then wriggled down on his
fingers, thrilling while he groaned around my orgasm.
Then, when I’d relaxed just enough, he pulled out. I’d stopped actually coming,
but he usually waited until I relaxed completely to let me go. This time he pulled back
until he just had the head in his mouth, sucked at it gently, sent goose bumps racing
down my legs and up my belly, until my nipples were so hard they ached.
My cock still pounded, but he ignored it, coming at me like a big cat again. It was
all I could do to edge backward and accommodate him. He crawled onto the bed and
over my body until he had me pinned on my back, straddling my thighs and sucking,
biting at my neck. Still orgasm-high, I dug my fingers into his back and arched.
He put one thigh between mine and pushed my legs apart until he fit between
them, still working me over with his mouth, and lowered himself into the perfect
position, the heat of his smooth, swollen cock pressed into the cleft of my hip bone
tight. I let my knees fall wide, wrapping one leg around him so my heel dug into the
small of his back.
I ached for more where he’d been inside me; my dick was spent but pounding.
When I said, “Tell me what you want, Kelly,” I wasn’t looking for dirty talk. I really,
truly didn’t know what to do for him.
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I would’ve done anything. Literally. As in jumping off a bridge anything.
He kissed me, tongue tasting like me and licking the roof of my mouth, then
smiled. “What I want.”
“Really. Anything.”
He kissed me again. “I want to know every inch of you.” He rolled his hips,
sending a surprising thrill through me, causing him to pulse against my belly.
I dug my fingers, my heel into him harder.
“I want to know every thought in your head.” He kissed me again, light and
teasing, then bit at my bottom lip. “I want to get inside you.”
Just a few words. A few sentences.
The hottest fucking few sentences I’d ever heard in my life.
I crushed into him with my mouth, my hips, my fingers. The delicious ache in me
built exponentially. But I said, “You sure?”
“This is what I wanted. How about you?” Still more kissing.
I re-angled things into a more convenient position, my cock already responding
again. “Oh God, please, yes.”
He let up a little, and I reached for the lube on the nightstand somewhere over my
head. A moment of readjustment and preparation, and I went to work on him. He sat
back on his heels as I took him in hand, gasped when I gave him a few experimental
strokes, all slick and ready.
He put a hand on either side of my face, eyes suddenly wide and sincere. Not for
the first time in our relationship, I had the sinking feeling he was about to back out of a
sexual exploit.
But he just said, “You have to tell me how you, uh, want it.”
“Kelly.” I pressed my mouth against his chest, just where the tattoo ended in the
middle, sucked to leave a faint mark. “I want you to put me down on this bed any
which way up and do whatever the fuck you want with me.” Then I sat back and
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flattened my palm to the pink mark I’d left on him, fingers splayed, and let go with a
light electrical charge. It raced out of me, over his skin in a circle.
He gasped and rocked forward, gripping my shoulder for support.
I smiled and said, “If anything else comes up, I’ll let you know.”
He tackled me back to the bed, guided my sticky hand downward to rub the
remaining lube against my asshole, and applied his mouth to anywhere it could reach.
This accomplished, he repositioned just as we had been, front to front. I wrapped both
legs around him this time, angling upward while he held himself up with one arm,
guiding his cock with the other.
I swallowed a groan, not wanting to alarm him when he first worked into me,
stretching hot, sharply painful. I clutched at his shoulder with one hand, his ass with
the other, and urged him forward with my legs. With agonizing slowness, he pushed
farther inside, the fat slickness of him pulling at me, his breath ragged and hot against
my neck. Farther still, and my cock swelled as he hit the spot inside; now, it didn’t
hurt—or it did, but it hurt good. I couldn’t fight it, so I groaned and let one of my legs
fall farther to the side, aching for the final push.
“Oh God.” He paused. “Are you—”
“Come on, baby.” I squeezed his ass and dug my fingernails into his shoulder.
He rocked forward, hit it just right; an electric thrill started at the base of my spine
and took me, multiplied by the sensation of being filled up, stretched out, used up—and
completely fucked.
By him.
“Fuck yeah, that’s it.” I hardly had enough air, but I made myself say it, for his
sake.
And, okay, so he’d get down to it.
It was all he needed. He fell into a rhythm, getting used to it, but with an added
roll to his hips and application of his thighs, his ass, his stomach to the motion that
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rocked me from the inside out. My dick was hard again, pressed tight into his belly, and
I moved my hips under him to get that extra half inch of penetration. He sucked at my
neck intermittently, giving me shivers and goose bumps, adding to the building heat of
him inside me, unrelenting, almost unconsciously gaining speed and intensity.
The first wave of “here it comes” rolled through me too soon, but I wanted it bad
enough that I didn’t care. I angled again, dug my heel into his back.
He readjusted, putting all his weight on one arm, and hooked the other under my
thigh. This bent me up, my knee nearly pressed into my shoulder, my ass angled
upward so he could get in deeper still. He held my leg in position in the crook of his
elbow and used that hand to balance on top of me.
Jesus, he was a quick learner. And the way he moved those hips, that pounding
hard cock inside me, both demanding and pleasing, working me into a frenzy from the
inside. Fuck, it hurt so goddamn good.
The angle must’ve hit something in him too. He pushed into me harder, with a
little double-take when he was all the way inside, then pulled back and started over
with renewed passion. The increased pressure, the extreme sensation, rattled me. Before
I knew what I was doing, I had one hand at his nape, sending a wash of static electricity
down his spine.
He buried his face in my neck, rolling his hips harder and faster still, gasping
something that wasn’t quite intelligible but said it all anyhow. Sweat pooled in the
curve of my hips, slicked our stomachs, and made my fingers slip against his shoulder,
his ass. I licked it, salty and sweet, out of the cup of his collarbone, bit at it and made
him shudder, slamming hard up into me out of rhythm.
I couldn’t have held it back if I wanted to. My cock throbbed, dripping against his
belly; my body began to tighten, and I squeezed with my ass. He moaned and reached
between us with the arm not pinning my leg, wrapped his hand around my dick. I
wound my fingers in his hair, grabbed at his ass, pulled him frantically, harder into me,
and bucked against him all at once as it washed over me. For the second time in—fuck,
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that had to be a new record—I came with some vague exclamation of sublime pleasure
and “fuck yes, harder,” as that was just what I was thinking.
He provided, muttering sweet things about how good I felt and how amazing I
was and how I was the fucking best, as the tide of my orgasm rolled over me, doubled
back, tripled, and after long, perfect seconds, subsided. Then he let go my cock, and the
hard rhythm of his hips slowed.
Normally, this was where I would’ve been out. But Kellan, that incredible,
smooth, thick cock throbbing inside me—I’d wanted it for way too fucking long to let
him go now. I squeezed his ass, gasping, “Keep going, baby. Don’t fucking stop.”
Riding the rising ache and lingering ecstasy, I rocked with him, worked little
groans and sighs out of him as I ran my hands all up and down his back, kissed his
shoulders and neck. It was only moments before his hips jerked forward suddenly. I let
another shock go, this time so it raced all over his back with one hand, down his leg
with the other. I spread myself out and made sure he could get in deep.
He shuddered and came into me hard, gasping. Filled me right the fuck up, wetter
and hotter than my wildest dreams.
I kissed his face, wriggled beneath him as he held me still in that half-bent
position, him pulsing inside me, riding that first instant after, holding on to it.
He let my leg go and collapsed onto my chest. “Oh fuck, Jamie.”
What could I say but, “Mmm-hmm.”
Long seconds passed in which the only sound was that of ragged breathing. When
his dick stopped doing that aftermath pulsing thing inside me, he pulled out, then came
to rest against my chest again. I wrapped him up in both arms—and one leg, still.
Eventually he laughed and said, “The fuck did I wait this long for, anyhow?”
“True love, Princess Buttercup. True love.”
His hand flailed in the air before impacting uselessly with my arm. I think he
meant to tell me to shut up, but all that came out was “Mmm.”
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* * * *
We stayed up all night, drinking and talking and drinking some more. I told him
everything, about my electricity, about my childhood, about the weird little power
freak-outs he was causing, about my issues and my nightmares. He filled in the gaps in
his own life as we went, back and forth. We took breaks for making out, occasionally a
little more, but my whole body ached, and he was kissing like he wanted to kiss, so it
stayed sweet. In a hot way.
Once when he pulled his lips off mine, he asked, “Ah, was it really…okay?”
I wasn’t thinking straight. I just said, “Yes. What?”
“The…thing. Sex. It was all right?”
“No, I expected to come three times in fifteen minutes. Work a little harder next
time, Kelly.”
“I’m serious. You gotta correct my form.”
“I did, you just didn’t know it at the time. It was fucking hot.”
“Well, if you think getting bent up like a pretzel is—”
“So hot.” Another kiss, then I said, “Most poetic sex I ever had too.”
“Poetic?”
“Mmm-hmm, that stuff about wanting me.”
He chuckled. “Can’t believe I said that shit out loud.”
“Hey, Kellan?”
He raised his eyebrows and dropped his gaze, running his eyes all over me and
smiling crookedly. His hair was still fucked-up from the main event, falling into his
eyes or sticking up here and there. “Hey, Jamie.”
“I love you.”
“Yeah, you mentioned it.”
“I’ve been not mentioning it for a long time. I got some catching up to do.”
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Epilogue
That was about a year and a half ago.
Last month I had a sales call coming up in DC—big client, so I had to go in person.
We just figured he’d come along and we’d make a trip of it, since neither of us had been
since junior high. He could bring me along for his geek-outs at the museums, and I
could find us the best places to eat, drink, and be merry.
But a few days before we left, we were in bed. I put down the iPad and rolled over
and saw him there, propped up against the headboard, glasses on, shirt off, reading
Sherlock Holmes. And it was just one of those moments where you can’t explain why,
because there’s absolutely nothing extraordinary about the time or place, but you
suddenly realize you love someone so much that it may very well kill you. Like your
heart just swells to this dangerous size, and that’s going to be the end. Death by
sappiness.
I’d thought of asking so many times before. And Washington, DC. One of the few
places in the country it was even possible.
“Hey, Kelly?”
He didn’t take his eyes off the book. “Hmm?”
“How would you feel about…”
“What?”
“Like, while we’re in DC…”
He looked over the top of his glasses. “We can do whatever you want. We got five
days, and it’s not that big.”
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“Make it—” How long would it take, anyhow? Surely you had to be there to apply
for a license, and then you didn’t get it right away, did you? “At least a week.”
Now his eyebrow cocked. “Ah, right. Any particular—”
“Okay, if you don’t want to, I completely understand. But I really…I really think
the time’s right, and I—”
“Deep breath, James. What do you want?” He put down his book.
Deep breath. Then, “Will you marry me?”
His eyes widened.
My heart hammered, and I was already cursing myself for the outburst. The hell
kind of proposal was that? Half-baked middle-of-the-night nonsense spewed like some
fucking teenager asking his dream guy to the prom on a—
“Jesus, Jamie.”
I flushed. “I mean, I know it’s not—”
“Of course I’ll fucking marry you.”
* * * *
We didn’t tell anyone until we came back. For one, that’s Kelly’s idea of a perfect
wedding—it was about us, not anyone else. For another, I didn’t want him to have to go
through shit with his parents. His dad’s always been cool with me, but inviting him to
DC for a slapdash queer wedding at a courthouse would just stress things.
As for my mom, well, I knew she’d understand.
Like I said, it’s been a few weeks since then. It’s seven in the morning, just now.
Kellan can’t sleep past eight. His body wakes him up to go running, and I roll over and
tell him to get me up when he gets home. But now I’m at the desk in the spare room
with Morgan—who’s since grown into his giant white paws—curled up beside the
monitor. I’m typing like a fiend because I haven’t been able to sleep.
Last night, we had a party for our friends and family at the faux-Irish pub. The
“sorry we ran off and got married without getting you drunk first” party—you know
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the one. It was strange to see how the worlds mingled: my mother and our friends (with
the notable absence of Margaret, though Mae called to say congratulations) and the
whole Shea clan.
At some point it took on the character of a proper wedding reception, or maybe an
engagement party or rehearsal dinner or one of those lesser rituals. Everyone was
slamming beers and occasionally getting up to put a song in the digital jukebox and
dance. Finn, never one to miss an opportunity to entertain, told some stories about
Kellan, and Clark stood up and rambled about me, to our embarrassment and the
apparent enjoyment of all present.
After which Kellan suddenly chugged the end of his Guinness and picked up the
one standing by to settle. And then he stood.
He said, loud enough that everyone noticed and stopped what they were doing to
listen, “Okay, so, I made Jamie promise on pain of death that he wouldn’t stand up
tonight and make a speech and embarrass me. That’s what Finn’s for.”
A little cheer went up around Finn, who raised his glass.
Kellan drank to him before going on. “But Jamie forgot to extract the same
promise from me, so, here’s a story for you.”
I tried to catch his eyes, but he only winked and had another sip—no doubt for
fortification. “We were driving somewhere—we’d only been dating a few months—and
I got pissed off at him about something or other.”
“No!” came a cry of mock disbelief from somewhere within the Shea contingent.
Kelly pointed with his glass. “Shut it, Finn.”
“Was Kennedy!”
“Yeah, but Finn was thinking it. So I’m moaning about all the crap I put up with
from him, and he finally just asks, ‘So why do you?’ Instead of going for the obvious
answer—”
Now Sarah interrupted with, “What’s that?”
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Kellan grinned. “Ah, I’ll tell you after the kids go to bed.”
There was a laugh, including some of the older kids who’d been allowed to come
giggling behind their hands.
I raised my eyebrows and smiled but, for the first time in what felt like a long
time, had absolutely no fucking idea what he was thinking.
He went on, “Instead I said possibly the shittiest thing I’ve ever said in a lifetime
of shitty things: ‘James,’ I said, ‘I ask God that question every night. I’ll let you know
when he gets back to me.’”
“Ooh…” went the little crowd, punctuating it with laughs and the odd look of true
surprise from those who were not wise in the ways of Kellan’s mouth.
His smile went sheepish. “So I’m sitting there in this car, fuming like an idiot. And
about five minutes after that, something happens that makes me think about all the
selfless shit he does every day and then never mentions again. Doesn’t matter what it
was; I could give you a hundred examples, but everyone who knows him already has a
couple, I’m sure.”
“Preach it,” Clark said. There was a shout of agreement even I couldn’t avoid. I
looked out, and Derrick and Mike, those crazy bastards, waved their drinks at me. They
were next to my mother. And the smile on her face—that almost did me in.
Misguided fools, yeah. But it’s nice to feel loved, even when it’s embarrassing, I
guess.
Kelly’s shoulders relaxed a little. He shot me another quick look. I pleaded silently
for him to stop. End it there. Come here and kiss me, goddammit, before I feel like any more of a
complete fraud.
“I’m not an easy guy to love.” Kellan waved his beer at more howls from the
Sheas. “No, not now, guys, let me finish. Jamie, on the other hand, inspires instant
devotion. But he’s a listener, not a talker—he’s easy to love but hard to know. You’re
just sure he’s a really good guy, and you’re never going to be sorry you told him all your
hopes and fears within five minutes of seeing his face.
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“The truth is, I was just being a hateful son of a bitch that day in the car. I never
asked God why I put up with him. I thanked God for making him too damn stubborn to
give up on me even when I was hateful. And I still do every night.”
Unh. I mean, just like that, no air in my lungs.
“Anyhow, the point of the story is that I’ve always known he was the best man in
the world, but now seems like a good time to make sure everyone else does too.” And
finally, he turned in my direction and held out his glass. “So, here’s to Jamie Monday.
My fucking hero.”
I remember the speech, probably not word for word, but mostly. Sheer
mortification burned it into my heart and mind. Yet I don’t know what the hell
happened right after. I know there was clapping and cheering and drinking, and I know
I stood up and grabbed him and kissed him hard. But for a few minutes the world
became a complete blur.
And I didn’t feel like a failure. I didn’t feel like a fraud.
He had it all wrong. I never did anything anyone else wouldn’t do. I was possibly
the most selfish and childish of all the people in the room right then.
But it doesn’t matter. Because that’s all I need: to be his fucking hero.
* * * *
Mom dropped us off last night, so we had to behave in the car. The second we got
into the apartment, clothes started flying, and I dragged him into the bedroom and
dislodged a few cats. Then I grabbed him, threw him down on the bed, and crawled on
top of him, straddling his thighs and sinking two fingers of each hand into his sweet
little Jockeys and tugging downward.
He ran his fingers through my hair and pulled me down for a kiss. It’s been almost
two years since that very first kiss in the elevator at Humphries. At the time, I thought
he was incredible. Was so impressed with the way he turned it back on me, kissed me
so thoroughly that my knees went weak and my heart pounded hard.
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But back then, I had no fucking idea what he was capable of.
He arched his back a little, rubbing his swelling dick off on mine, and sucked at
my tongue. He tasted like Guinness; I tasted like Honeyed Fox. I ran my hands up his
chest, over his shoulders. “Mmm, baby. You have the sweetest mouth.”
He laughed and pushed himself up to sitting with one arm, the other hand still
tangled in my hair. This forced me backward, but I kept kissing, nipping at his lower
lip, then kissing again. “You’re the one, and you know it.”
“You’re the only one who thinks that.”
He grabbed my ass with one hand, my waist with the one that had been in my
hair, and flipped us over just like that. I found myself sprawled on my back with him
sinking into me from above, grinning with that fucking gorgeous dimple and all. My
head sank into the pillow; his hips fitted between my thighs, pressing them apart and
up until we found that perfect place. He rocked his hips; I rocked mine back. The
electric thrill is a little easier to control these days, just because I know what to expect in
these situations, but it still amps me hard and fast on him. I sent it fizzling down his
spine a little, made him shiver and buck into me. He buried his face in my neck, his
chest heaving against mine, all hot and delicious. “No. I’m not the only one. But I love
you, Jamie. So fucking much.”
And, of course, I was wet just like that. Rock hard and desperate to tear off those
underpants—and yet, I couldn’t quite escape the question that had been in my mind
ever since his little speech. Even as he tugged at my waistband, I managed to gasp,
“Why’d you say all that tonight?”
I believed that he loved me. I believed that he thought I was perfect—for him.
Kelly would never have settled for less than that. Like I told him ages ago, even just
knowing he liked me enough to be with me was something in itself. And now, Jesus, he
liked me—loved me—enough to marry me.
But he’d gone beyond that. And I honest to God didn’t get how anyone as smart,
as honest as him could talk about me like that.
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He paused. Pulled his face out of my neck, let his weight bear down on me, let me
feel him sinking in, hot, real, sweet, sweat. His face was beautiful in what there was of
the moon through the window; his eyes were pure black, deep as they were dark; his
pale skin flushed just a little at the cheeks. As I stared, holding my breath, he traced my
hairline, ruffled my short-cropped bangs. A long, quiet, hot minute, wherein my
electricity began to uncoil down deep in me. My fingers and toes tingled. My skin
tightened, pebbled up.
And then, finally, he said, “Because it’s the truth. And I want everyone to know
it.”
I didn’t even have words, of course—by now I guess you know I hardly ever do. I
had to show him instead, but Kelly’s used to that. Never complains either.
* * * *
I guess that’s why I wanted to write this down—why I couldn’t sleep for thinking
of it. The whole story, from the day I met him to last night’s poetic exhibition. To make
sense of my own luck. To keep me honest. To prove to myself that this isn’t a dream.
And in some distant future, when we’re old and bent and the kids are long gone,
to fill in the cracks in our memories. To laugh over together.
Because even if his speech wasn’t, this story is true. And I want someone, at least,
to know it.
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Nobody’s Hero: The Mixed Tape
“Grace Kelly” by Mika (Life in Cartoon Motion)
“Your Pure Soul” by The Charlatans (Who We Touch)
“Feel Good Inc” by Gorillaz (Demon Days)
“If I Should Fall from Grace with God” by The Pogues (If I Should Fall from Grace
with God)
“One Pure Thought” by Hot Chip (Made in the Dark)
“Whiskey Makes Me Crazy” by The Tossers (On a Fine Spring Evening)
“Kids” by MGMT (Oracular Spectacular)
“God Willing” by Dropkick Murphys (The Meanest of Times)
“Black is the Colour” by Sarah Dinan (From the Ashes)
“DARE” by Gorillaz (Demon Days)
“Sleep is for the Weak” by The Dreadnoughts (Polka’s Not Dead)
“Toothache” by The Charlatans (The Charlatans)
“Amazing Grace” by Dropkick Murphys (The Gang’s All Here)
“Touch Too Much” by Hot Chip (Made in the Dark)
“Might Tell You Tonight” by Scissor Sisters (Ta-Dah)
“The Rocky Road to Dublin” by The Tossers (On a Fine Spring Evening)
“Intimacy” by The Charlatans (Who We Touch)
“Atlas Air” by Massive Attack (Heligoland)
“Float” by Flogging Molly (Float)
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Katey Hawthorne
Loose Id Titles by Katey Hawthorne
Equilibrium
Nobody’s Hero
Riot Boy
Nobody’s Hero
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Katey Hawthorne
Katey Hawthorne is an avid reader and writer of dark fiction and superpowered
romance, even though the only degree she holds is in the history of art. (Or, possibly,
because the only degree she holds is in the history of art.) Originally from the
Appalachian foothills of West Virginia, she currently lives in the D.C. Metro Area. In
her spare time she enjoys comic books, B-movies, loud music, Epiphones, and
Bushmills.
Links to reach Katey:
Main Web site:
Blog:
Email: