apparently been given away, he had wandered around
instead, chatting with uncles and cousins—wishing he still
smoked and that he didn"t have uneaten donuts in his
pocket and a wooden duck in his luggage upstairs—and had
finally come out here.
The Faraday home was not as large a home as it
probably should have been, but it had a big yard and plenty
of thick, tall trees. There"d used to be one rather
conveniently located tree under Everett"s bedroom window,
but disease had taken it a few years back. The one in the
front yard was a similar size, currently frosted over and
without leaves, with an equally cold and bare bench beneath
it. He was frozen and shivering, but he hardly noticed. He"d
thought to bring his gloves at least, so all was not lost.
The sky had grown dark some time ago, making the
lights from inside glow brighter. Except for the lack of
blanketing snow, the house looked like a Christmas card,
but he didn"t think that with the venom that some might
have. He could still hear people talking inside, though the
children must have been sent to bed already, their fun with
what had once been a beautiful tree over. The adults were
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A Wealth of Unsaid Words • R. Cooper
having their time now, catching up, hearing stories, fighting
exhaustion in the name of spending time with loved ones.
It was stupid for him to still be out here, freezing his ass
off in full view of the neighbors who had never much liked
him anyway. Their disapproving stares had never faded, not
even after Everett"s parents had registered as fosters and
reported his father for his own good. His father had always
been back again before too long, momentarily medicated,
sometimes overmedicated, though everyone, the neighbors
included, had known it wouldn"t last.
This house hadn"t had enough room for four children
and two parents and the always visiting cousins, but the
Faradays had redone their basement to give Alex a place to
stay, something he knew had been partly a young Everett"s
doing. He"d been born a crusader, flaming sword in hand.
Unfortunately, as Alex had recently learned, the
basement room had already been promised to Aunt Gigi and
her children. Everett, just to further test Alex"s mad resolve,
had volunteered that they share his room.
Alex exhaled.
They had not done that since they truly had been
children. The temptation in doing it now was undeniable, so
he didn"t try to deny it, though he did run the thought
through his mind the way he always did, cursing therapists,
cursing checklists, cursing madness in general. He could
also curse fate, something he could believe in when he didn"t
believe in much else. He
was
crazy after all, and was never
quite sure about things like that. He"d also once believed
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A Wealth of Unsaid Words • R. Cooper
that his father"s long silences had been because of
something he had done to upset him and that his father
buying every single box of cereal in the store for him was the
kind of fun, happy memory that every child had of their dad.
Both had actually meant his father had loved him.
Sanity was a strange thing. Like distance, it offered
perspective, and with it, Alex no longer had to choose
between giving someone everything or pushing them away to
protect them, not if he didn"t want to.
And because there was fate, or because there was a god
after all and he loved the seething brains of lovers, poets,
and madmen, the door from the kitchen slammed closed
behind Everett as he came outside and crossed the yard.
He stamped his feet when he reached the bench, then
sat down and said nothing for a few long minutes. He hadn"t
bothered with more than his coat and finally coughed and
scooted closer to Alex, probably for warmth. Alex looked over
at him and the soft grin illuminated by hundreds of
twinkling lights.
“That"s enough of this for now, don"t you think?” Everett
remarked with the suspicious calm of a nurse—or a social
worker who had seen it all, but he was still smiling as he
turned to face the house again.
“Everett, you know not to interrupt a brooder when he"s
brooding. It"s like waking a sleepwalker,” Alex responded
seriously, but moved when Everett did, letting himself be
pulled to his feet, his cold hand in Everett"s chilled one as
they walked back toward the house.
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A Wealth of Unsaid Words • R. Cooper
It was another thing they had not done in years, but
when Everett did not let go, Alex chose not to comment. He
thought of inches again, of miles, and distance, and then
remembered that Everett was often a sneaky bastard, who
took inches as miles and then smiled so Alex would not
mind, not that he ever had.
achel and Molly were still downstairs with the
busybody roommate and some of the aunts and
R uncles, enjoying their adult time without the
children. Alex was invited to join them, but they
seemed used to his ways and didn"t press when he said he
was going to bed early. No one, save Molly, even commented
when Everett added he was tired as well, though Alex had
glanced at him.
A few years ago Ally had sworn she wasn"t going to
exhaust herself anymore baking and cooking for three days
when she had perfectly capable adult children to help her,
and of all of them, only Everett had shown any aptitude for
baking, so it was Everett who would be up early on
Christmas Eve to make all the sweet breads and rolls and
desserts for Christmas, leaving the others to help with the
cooking. He had every reason to collapse into bed while the
night was still young. Nonetheless, Alex sat on the edge of
the bed and said nothing while Everett stripped off his layers
and replaced them with blue pajama pants and a fresh T-
shirt.
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A Wealth of Unsaid Words • R. Cooper
His eyes met Alex"s in odd moments, so Everett had to
be aware of how Alex could not stop staring at him, yet there
was innocence on his face as he kicked off his jeans, as if
they were still kids. Perhaps that was how Everett thought of
him, but Alex couldn"t resent it, not when it was saving him
again. He was embarrassingly flushed, too tense to sleep,
trembling, and Everett was still
smiling
at him.
The heating vent to Everett"s room had never been fully
functional, but that wasn"t why Alex shook. For all their
closeness as children, as teenagers, it had been years since
he had seen Everett"s long bare limbs, or his stomach, or the
lines of his back as he moved. It was like seeing him for the
first time in his man"s body, patches of hair and unknown
muscle, enough to make Alex close his hands tight, as
though he was holding on to a scrap of wax paper again.
Everett had always been tall, though he had only filled
out toward the end of high school. His grace had been harder
to achieve, but there was no sign that he"d ever been
awkward as he bent and twisted and revealed almost every
inch of himself as he dealt with his dirty clothes and grabbed
his toothbrush to head down the hall.
Everett was a ridiculously brave child grown into a
ridiculously brave man, with a glow of faith in his eyes that
even Alex had failed to dim for long. It had been there by
that very window, and in a hospital psych ward, in Alex"s
apartment amid a pile of trash and stupid convenience store
crap, and after hearing stories of drugs and sex with people
Alex couldn"t even remember.
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A Wealth of Unsaid Words • R. Cooper
“If I drug my mind….”
If he
stayed
drugged was what he
had meant, but Everett had understood. They had finished
each other"s sentences often enough.
“What if I’m no longer
me, afterward? What if I won’t have anything more to say?”