much, would have blown him, fucked him, right there if he
hadn"t also been sick with the idea that he would lose
Everett when they went off to college, or go crazy on him, or
that his family would throw Alex out for touching their son.
Everett and his family had always said they only wanted Alex
to do the right thing, and that had not meant seducing
young, wasted Everett in the woods, he"d been certain of it.
“I could never,” he murmured at last, not even certain it
was audible.
It didn"t matter that Everett had offered himself before,
kissing practice, sharing stolen pornography and openly
beating off. For the kissing and other things, Alex could have
claimed the innocence of youth if asked, though it would
have been a lie. He"d never been that innocent, and never
about his feelings for Everett.
Everett exhaled noisily and then turned around. He
shifted back, still not quite touching Alex although suddenly
taking up more than his share of space. He grunted,
unhappy, uncomfortable, and after a second"s pause reached
behind him until he found Alex"s hand. He pulled on it until
Alex"s arm was around him and their fingers were laced, and
then he just as abruptly let go. Alex had the choice to either
move back to where he had been, knowing Everett would let
him, or to stay as he was and get comfortable too.
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His fingers had been sticky, but Everett had been the
thief, breathing life into him and taking that first kiss.
Alex waited, then shifted to surround Everett"s heat and
carefully settle his head on his pillow. He stared at the
outline of Everett"s head and the back of his neck. He
thought about the lake and then Everett"s virginity and
wherever he"d finally lost it. The wound had never stopped
hurting, not in all these years.
“Are you this pushy with your lovers?” The safer word,
“boyfriend,” momentarily escaped him, but at least his tone
was whisper light.
“Not all of them.” Everett breathed into his pillow. It was
impossible to tell if he was joking. Alex swallowed, but
Everett wasn"t done. “I know you needed to see if you really
are okay now, if you can handle things on your own, but I… I
missed you.”
“I"m sor—” He almost said it. “Everett.”
“No, no, I"m proud. I know you never wanted to admit
just how much it scared you.” He went silent, and Alex
closed his eyes, then opened them. Everett had to hear his
heart thundering against his ribs. “How is it, really?”
“Not as bright,” Alex answered immediately in the dark,
thinking of both life without Everett and life without mania.
Some things were forever gone, traded for the promise of
stability. He mourned them, but not nearly as much as the
lost years. “But not as terrifying. Everything looks different.”
He could sense Everett"s mind working on that revelation,
deciding on what to ask first.
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“Bad different?” Everett whispered too.
“No.” Alex shook his head to reinforce that, and then
because he was there and allowed to, he scooted closer until
they shared a pillow too. Everett leaned into him and let out
a long, shaky breath that could have held a prayer. “I feel
like I can handle things. Like maybe I won"t slip if….” If he
was without Everett, but Alex wasn"t verbalizing that
particular terror now. “Good different.”
“
Good
.” Everett meant it this time. Alex listened to him
breathing for a few more minutes, and then carefully slid in
that last inch until they were shoulder to shoulder, hip to
hip, and his words were damp against Everett"s skin.
He was so tired. Tired of wanting and not having, or of
having and still wanting more. Of thinking of all the things
his own mind had hidden from him. Tired of restraint and
wishing and longing for just a moment like this in Everett"s
room.
He wet his mouth and shaped out what he needed to
say as the minutes ticked by.
“It"s been a year, Everett.” A long, dry year to end long,
dry decades. There was a tree downstairs and dirty, thin
snow on the ground, and he did not think he could wait
much longer, even so scared that Everett had to feel his
quivering.
If Everett still wanted him, here he was. But he could
not say the words.
Everett gave a slow sigh and pushed back into him.
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“I know,” he agreed, his voice husky, but he didn"t
move. From the sound of his voice, he was headed to sleep,
already half in a dream. Alex shut his eyes, and the
cowardice made him speak when he knew Everett wouldn"t
remember, as though once again he had plied Everett with
whiskey until he"d passed out and then curled up beside him
to whisper every secret desire into his ear.
“This might be awkward in the morning,” he exhaled to
himself, though he wasn"t sure what he even meant, if the
children should come in and find them like this, or if Everett
would wake up and be horrified to find himself being
spooned, or if Everett no longer wanted him, not in that way
that his eyes had once promised, but then Everett gave a
tired snort, awake after all.
“You think so?” he murmured, sleepily surprised, and
pulled Alex"s hand back to his chest, this time without
letting go.
verett was gone, and the house smelled like bread
dough when Alex woke up. It was Christmas Eve,
E and judging from the sounds, the kids knew it.
In the kitchen, there were a few people at the
counters, meddling in Everett"s business, and several more
at the breakfast nook, enjoying what looked like coffee and
the remnants of scrambled eggs that Alex must have missed
while he was dressing.
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A Wealth of Unsaid Words • R. Cooper
“I"m not decorating all those cookies for the neighbors,”
Everett was protesting as he did every year, though his
sisters and Robert would give up halfway through the dozens
of sugar cookies. If the children didn"t finish all the frosting
work, Everett would, somehow successfully conning Alex
into helping him every time.
Alex took a seat next to Ty, who was getting the
rundown on what to expect today and tonight and all the
little traditions he was now a part of.
“There"ll be some drinking among the younger crowd
tonight, but be warned, when the kids wake you up for
presents, you
will
get up—as long as it"s after six. It"s the
only rule my parents have ever made stick,” Rachel was
explaining. Alex rolled his eyes. Molly was just as bad as the
children. She never had a hangover or a need for normal
rest, and she"d always be up and screaming, even bouncing
into beds with people and singing, “It"s Christmas! Get up!”
the entire time.
“The kids open one present tonight, and then in the
morning, after they"ve woken the house, they can look
through their stockings while adults get their coffee and
reconcile themselves to being awake.” Everett appeared to
scoot some cookies and a cup of coffee over to him. He
smiled and ignored his mother scolding him about the idea
of giving anyone cookies for breakfast. “He deserves a
reward,” Everett told her, then quickly ducked back over to
the other side of the counter.
Alex stared after him, fully awake now and almost
electric to realize that Everett must have heard and
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A Wealth of Unsaid Words • R. Cooper
understood him last night after all. The heat under his skin
didn"t vanish when he realized Ty was watching him, but he
cleared his throat and reached for the sugar bowl in the
middle of the table without saying anything but good
morning to everyone. They weren"t going to give him the time
to be alone today that they had yesterday, he could tell from
their talk of movie marathons and trips over to the mall and