A Wealth of Unsaid Words • R. Cooper
“There"s cocoa in there somewhere,” Alex responded
preemptively, and Everett rolled his eyes but took a sip. He
instantly coughed.
“You could start a fire with this,” he wheezed.
“I suppose you could.” Not that they needed one. He was
warm already from being this close to the flames. Everett
had changed his sweater for a T-shirt a while ago. His skin
was flushed. Alex quickly raised his gaze. “Now drink up,
Everett.” Everett wasn"t the only one who could use liquor to
try to get what he wanted. He put a finger to the bottom of
the mug to tip it further back when Everett took another
drink, and then while Everett was coughing and distracted,
Alex dropped down to sit on the floor.
He could see the TV from where he was, though he
didn"t care about what was on. The fire was warm, and if he
leaned back, he could rest against the chair and Everett"s
leg. He pulled up the sleeves of his sweater and pulled out a
small rubber band to tie back his hair.
“You aren"t having anything?” Everett had reason to
wonder. Molly and Ty had been doing shots of something for
the past two hours. Rachel and her husband were sticking to
wine. Robert had some of George"s whiskey. Aunt Gigi, who
was generally not considered part of the younger group, had
had some too. George and Ally and some of the others were
either having their cups of Christmas cheer in the kitchen or
had gone to bed already, George barking at everyone to keep
the noise down. Alex could have had a glass of something
and sipped it.
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“There"s no fun in it when everyone else is drunk,” Alex
mused out loud, not quite fully honest. “How else am I
supposed to observe events and use them for my own artistic
gain?”
“You are truly evil.” Everett was properly awed. He even
took another drink, coughing less this time. The sound made
Alex sigh and lean back. Everett wasn"t angry with him
anymore. He wasn"t ready to ask Everett about the poems
yet, and he wasn"t going to ask what Everett had meant
earlier, but for now, this was enough.
“That"s what my teachers always insisted,” he pointed
out. His bones were weary, too, and they left behind an ache
as he relaxed. Everett poked his head.
“That"s just because you were smarter than them and
never listened to anyone.”
“To anyone but you,” Alex corrected, then swore softly to
himself. Everett was slow to reply.
“Is that true?” he asked at last, hesitation that shouldn"t
be there in his voice. Alex eased back against the chair and
closed his eyes before reaching out. He put a hand around
Everett"s leg and held it tightly.
If Everett doubted him, it was Alex"s own fault. He had
said no, or said nothing, at seventeen and then again and
again. Of course Everett had been left to wonder. But he
clutched at Everett before nodding.
“Yes.”
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There was a long sigh above him. Alex waited to speak,
listening to every sound Everett made and wondering if
Everett would ask him now, be as bold or reckless as Ty, or
if it was Everett"s turn not to speak.
Instead, after a few moments, Everett poked his head
again. Alex frowned and tilted his head back to look up at
him. Upside down Everett was getting pinker and had a
strange look on his face. Pleasure and pride and a wicked,
wicked light in his eye.
It was Everett who could lead good men astray and had
bad ones at his feet. It seemed impossible that he would
have any doubts. But again when Alex opened his mouth,
the damned words remained trapped.
“Drink up, and I"ll get you another Santa"s Little
Helper,” he offered hoarsely and let the clumsy hand
wrapped around Everett"s calf speak for him.
“To your health, then.” Everett was breathing hard, but
he raised the mug and downed it in a few swallows. Alex
watched his throat move, the sheen of sweat in the firelight,
and then reconsidered his intentions when Everett fixed him
with wide, trusting eyes. Hopeful eyes, as though aware of
how their roles had reversed since that night.
Alex got up, went into the kitchen, and came quickly
back with another mug for Everett. Everett took it, though
Alex couldn"t hear him drinking it as he sat back down
against the chair.
There was a mess of wrapping paper from where each of
the children had opened their single present for the night.
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They were all upstairs now, probably too excited to sleep.
But thinking of them wasn"t much of a distraction, and,
charming though they were, the children weren"t why he was
here now.
His reasoning a year ago had been a bit scattered, but
his goal had been clear. If Everett still wanted him, then Alex
had to be strong enough to have him, and to potentially lose
him. He no longer had the false confidence that euphoria
and mania had given him. He couldn"t bluff himself into
thinking that that would never happen. He"d had to know,
now that he was as sane as he"d ever be, if he could trust his
own mind again.
For the last year he"d had to. And he"d made it,
relatively unscathed, minus one wooden duck and a few
other bits of crap, and the hole in him with Everett"s name
on it.
“That was part of the problem, you know. My health. I
never explained it to you properly. I… have a bit of a problem
with that, Everett, believe it or not. You make me stumble
over my words.” He stared into the fire and hoped Everett
was good and drunk already.
“You didn"t have any trouble speaking last Christmas,”
Everett interrupted him. “Or, I guess, the day after
Christmas, after driving me home. You didn"t have any
problem in telling me you couldn"t see me for a year. „A year,
Everett," you said. „I need a year away from you."”
“And you asked why.” He looked at the fire until the
scent of hot pine and smoke made him feel ill. Alex hadn"t
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forgotten it either. It had been freezing outside then, too, but
Everett hadn"t seemed to notice.
“And you asked me if I wanted you.” With booze in him,
Everett was bringing up everything, but he might have done
the same totally sober if Alex had ever had the courage
before to speak this directly. “Out of nowhere you said
something so stupid, so wrong, down below my apartment,
where I always ask you, Alex. Where I"ve
always
asked you
up, every time I see you, I ask, I plead—”
“I"ve always had you, Everett,” Alex rushed on. He had
to get this out, he couldn"t wait, and he couldn"t say it if he
had to think about what Everett was telling him now.
“Through thick and thin, you have always been there. A…
good friend. The best friend.”
Everett made a small, hurt noise, but Alex kept going.
“So I had to ask myself, what if I didn"t?” He could barely say
those unbelievably frightening words. His face was stinging,
his eyes were dry, but he couldn"t even blame the fire. “I had
to see if I could, Everett. If I could make it. Be strong
enough. If I couldn"t… you"d be awfully disappointed in me,
wouldn"t you?”
He tried to be light again. “Anyway, I couldn"t do that to
George and Ally again. Your mother would never let me hear
the end of it.”
The attempt at levity failed. He put his fists down into
the carpet and didn"t breathe until Everett"s hand landed on
his shoulder. He didn"t mind the weight. The pressure let
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him exhale, though he didn"t speak. Everett was silent, too,
probably thinking, considering what to say.
After a while he handed the mug down. Alex took a
grateful drink and handed it back. He could only guess what
Everett was thinking about, but he knew where his mind