A Wealth of Unsaid Words • R. Cooper
knew exactly which interview Ty was referring to. It had been
just after he"d been photographed a few times at events in
the city, and they had posted the pictures alongside the
interview; Alex with his jacket gone, his black hair once
again in his face, wearing a loose shirt with the top buttons
always undone, bracelets and rings visible because his
sleeves were rolled up. They"d find him when he was holding
a drink and had his reading glasses on, he assumed to make
him look the part of a hedonistic writer.
On the blog, they"d paired those pictures with candid
stills from his younger years that had made their way online.
Without context, the pictures of him driving a borrowed
sports car while naked, or fall-down drunk, or kissing men
and women in fuzzy, out-of-focus moonlit streets made him
seem devil-may-care, madcap, perhaps even romantic. The
kissing pictures had been especially popular. The pictures of
actual sex that had appeared later, even more so. He was
finally healthier now, had a decent body and some strength
to him, but then, living off little sleep and in constant
motion, he"d been some people"s ideal, strong and thin and
young, if shorter than he"d always wanted to be. Dark of hair
and eye, prone to heavy jewelry and tight clothes when he"d
worn them at all, they"d described him as having a wicked
glint in his eyes and a burning energy only supplanted by a
seductive intensity.
As Alex could barely remember driving that car and
absolutely couldn"t recall the names of most of the people
he"d been kissing or fucking, he had a hard time looking at
those pictures without flinching. Even now he felt sick to
think of them. As for the seductive glint in his eyes, he
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A Wealth of Unsaid Words • R. Cooper
thought he seemed lost, his gaze always off-center, always
peering into the distance. There was nothing wicked about it,
at least not to him. But he took another drink against all
doctors" advice and smiled anyway as he answered the way
he answered all questions about his past or his love life.
“I can"t recall.”
They hadn"t liked that, anymore than they"d liked his
attitude when the questions had turned to the subject of his
poems. Ty didn"t like to hear it now.
“Sexy Lexy,” Molly burst out, sharing that stupid
nickname with the kitchen at large. “Subtitled: Mad, Bad,
and Dangerous to Know. It was incredible!”
“Incredible,”
Alex
repeated
dryly,
and
George
uncomfortably resettled at his side, the frown he shared with
his son very much in evidence.
“It was bullshit is what it was,” Everett called out from
too far away, and Alex closed his eyes at the sweeping
wildfires under his skin and the cold hollow in his gut.
“Little ears!” Rachel shouted. Alex opened his eyes in
time to see her sweeping her brother into a hug despite her
protests about his language. Alex adored Rachel, her steady
gaze, her self-assurance, but his stare bypassed her and
went straight to Everett as though Rachel momentarily did
not exist.
As his gaze flew to Everett, every atom of his only-too-
mortal body wanted to do the same. He was alight and could
only vaguely wonder that others could not see the glow. It
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A Wealth of Unsaid Words • R. Cooper
seemed reflected at a distance, as though Everett burned
from within as he turned, and for a second, their eyes met.
Alex couldn"t even fault himself for staring. Everett
commanded attention, not that he seemed to expect it. He
ducked his head at eyes on him and showed no sign that he
was aware of his attractiveness. Perhaps he wasn"t. He was
tall and built like an athlete, but the charm in his face came
from something inside of him rather than his individual
features.
Alex had been called handsome, even beautiful, but it
was Everett he"d never been able to stop watching, with his
short hair and slightly big ears, his curving mouth, and
those wide hazel eyes that always had faint shadows under
them, as though his nights were not easy. He had on a
winter coat and a scarf over a dark purple knitted sweater
that looked like a present from last year that he was wearing
to let someone know how much he"d loved it. His ears were
red from the cold, and he was shivering a little, but he
dropped everything he was holding to squeeze his sister and
say something to her that made her laugh.
Everett, who had never lacked boyfriends since college,
though they had never lasted long. Everett, who had kept
mysteries from him.
His mother ran over to Everett for her share of his
embrace, demanding to know why he hadn"t driven down
with Alex and getting an answer about work that was
probably at least a partial truth, though it did not satisfy
Ally. But she was quickly followed by some of the children
and had no chance to press the question.
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A Wealth of Unsaid Words • R. Cooper
The last time Alex had seen Everett in person had been
months ago at his birthday dinner in the city, safely
surrounded by others so he could stick to the promise he"d
made to himself, but Everett looked the same as he had
then, as he usually did, tired from his work but happy. He
hadn"t smiled as he"d blown out the candles on his cake, so
many more than there used to be, but he had locked gazes
with Alex as though he had caught him counting.
Or perhaps, Alex"s traitorous, hungry mind had
whispered, Everett had been counting too.
Just as he had then, Everett raised his head with no
warning, finally looking over to Alex while swinging around a
delighted toddler, and when he grinned, Alex pushed away
the whiskey so he could stand up.
He was as young as those children for a moment,
impatient and irritable, and then George forced his daughter
to move, and he was free. Everett left his bags on the floor to
come over to meet him, and the raw panic that took over
Alex"s body was something no amount of salts or liquors
could ever deaden, though for a moment he nearly wished
they could. He exhaled shakily into the collar of Everett"s
thick coat and could barely remember to keep the touch
light, his mind was so full of thoughts of Everett, the burning
chill of the skin of his face, the scent of aftershave by his
mouth, the held breath that Everett only released as Alex
came closer. His arms locked tight around Alex, holding him
up when his knees almost failed him.
Alex"s lips moved, but no sound emerged. He tried to pat
Everett on the back, aware that others could be watching,
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A Wealth of Unsaid Words • R. Cooper
but Everett didn"t bother with any pretense that he wasn"t
happy to see him again. He wrapped his arms around Alex
and crushed their bodies together, then sent Alex"s pulse
racing with one gentle, chiding whisper into his ear before he
let go.
“Hey, stranger, how"ve you been?” The question echoed
among Alex"s swirling, delirious thoughts while Everett
turned away to kiss his sister"s cheek and embrace his father
and meet Ty. Alex had the suspicion that he"d been set up by
the very public question; Everett only played a saint on
weekdays, and he was annoyingly mischievous when he
chose to be. When Everett turned back to him, Alex had
recovered enough to control his expression, though not
enough to stop his gaze from sweeping over Everett"s face.
“We live in the same city, but I never see you.”
Everett, the clever angel, spoke just loud enough for his
mother to hear.
“What do you mean?” Ally was frowning now,
concerned, and Everett turned back to him. He had one
eyebrow up, but on him the expression was more concerned
than arch. Alex looked him over again, noticing how carefully
he was being studied in return and trying not to react
externally, though his heart he could do nothing about.
Everett was probably searching for signs of trouble, and Alex
was very proud of the fact that he wouldn"t find any. He
couldn"t expect Everett to take care of him forever. Everett
deserved a life of his own.
But Ally didn"t know about his deal with himself, the
strangled proposition he"d put to Everett last Christmas,
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