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Let's not try to figure out everything at once...
It's better. For the first time, it's better and he's sure it's not just wishful thinking, or adjusting to a situation that's just as shitty as it was before.
He's still not good. The morning he and Neil had spent in bed and curled around each other, he hadn't dreamed, but that night he had, and badly. And the night after. Neil touches him, and he still flinches instinctively away most of the time. The thought of going outside for anything--even the smallest task--feels like an exhausting ordeal. At times even getting up to bathe or eat is difficult.
But a few days later, and he's sure it's still better. As he makes his way up the stairs to he apartment, he's sure he feels less tired. Less battered inside.
Again, he's coming back from therapy, but he's feeling cautiously hopeful in addition to sore and tired. Donna had seemed entirely unsurprised when he had broached the subject--sidling around to it with an awkwardness that made him cringe and yet that he couldn't really stop--nodding and moving over to a desk and scribbling a name and a number down on a scrap of paper.
"There," she had said, tossing her long blond ponytail back over her shoulder and handing the paper to him. "Call that number. They'll take good care of you. Promise."
And he had thought that might actually be all she said about it, but as she pointed him back to the mat and his stretches, she had smiled, and it had been faint and warm. "I'm glad you said something," she said quietly. "'Cause I was about to."
Under the embarrassment, he was--and is--grateful. Because people care. They care without prying, without making themselves a nuisance.
Unless they have to. He thinks of Johnny and doesn't quite smile.
He turns the key in the lock, pushes the door open. Maybe it's better, but he's still tired and everything still hurts, and all he wants to do is curl up on the couch and doze.
Once it would have been with a drink. But now part of him--a louder part--is wondering if that might be the best idea.
He's still not good. The morning he and Neil had spent in bed and curled around each other, he hadn't dreamed, but that night he had, and badly. And the night after. Neil touches him, and he still flinches instinctively away most of the time. The thought of going outside for anything--even the smallest task--feels like an exhausting ordeal. At times even getting up to bathe or eat is difficult.
But a few days later, and he's sure it's still better. As he makes his way up the stairs to he apartment, he's sure he feels less tired. Less battered inside.
Again, he's coming back from therapy, but he's feeling cautiously hopeful in addition to sore and tired. Donna had seemed entirely unsurprised when he had broached the subject--sidling around to it with an awkwardness that made him cringe and yet that he couldn't really stop--nodding and moving over to a desk and scribbling a name and a number down on a scrap of paper.
"There," she had said, tossing her long blond ponytail back over her shoulder and handing the paper to him. "Call that number. They'll take good care of you. Promise."
And he had thought that might actually be all she said about it, but as she pointed him back to the mat and his stretches, she had smiled, and it had been faint and warm. "I'm glad you said something," she said quietly. "'Cause I was about to."
Under the embarrassment, he was--and is--grateful. Because people care. They care without prying, without making themselves a nuisance.
Unless they have to. He thinks of Johnny and doesn't quite smile.
He turns the key in the lock, pushes the door open. Maybe it's better, but he's still tired and everything still hurts, and all he wants to do is curl up on the couch and doze.
Once it would have been with a drink. But now part of him--a louder part--is wondering if that might be the best idea.
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I shove a wad of bills in his hand, probably over tip, grab the back and kick the door shut in his face. Moments later, I'm back in the bedroom, pulling out a wad of plastic silverware and cheap wooden chopsticks and dumping them on the mattress.
Sitting on the edge of the bed, I reach in and pull out the little bag of egg rolls and then pass the rest of the food over to him.
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Days from now they're going to be picking rice out of the sheets, and he doesn't give a fuck.
"He probably fucking knew," he says around a mouthful of rice, cocking his eye up at Neil, amused. "Just looking at you." Flushed like that, hair still damp, a total imbecile could put two and two together.
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"Probably thought I had a girl back here," I say, grinning and then tearing off half an egg roll in one bite.
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Neil is free in a way that he isn't. Or at least, if that's not true, it sure as hell looks that way.
He looks back down at his rice, shaking something off. "We order from there enough, though, I think they're gonna figure it out."
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I honestly don't know what he's talking about, but I can see when the smile drops off his face. People are finding out about us, or they will, and... I guess maybe I've always known he wasn't as okay with that as I am.
I've never really given a fuck what other people think.
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"Hiding shit is like a habit," he says shortly. He's not sure how else to say it. It's a habit, a bad one, and it takes a lot of breaking.
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Finishing off the egg roll, I grab a container of general chicken from the bag.
"I know it's weird," I admit, pausing to swallow, "I mean, I still haven't really told my mom."
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"Yeah," he mutters, reaching out and stealing one of the egg rolls. "I mean..." He falls silent again, part of him not wanting to even broach this subject--part of him wanting to run screaming away from it. But that's not going to work anymore, and though he practically has to clench his teeth to get the words out, he presses on.
"How do you think she's gonna react?"
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"It's not... It's not about you. Or us. I mean, that's not why I haven't told her," I admit, staring down into my food like it's the most interesting fuckin' thing ever, "I... I don't want her to start askin' questions. About me. How we met, or whatever. I mean, I know it'd be easy to make shit up, I just... I dunno."
I'm not used to telling her things. I dunno if I'd know where to start.
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He'd never had to tell his own mother that he was queer--and by the time he'd been sure, his father had fucked off and died wrapped around a tree. He can't even imagine saying what Neil has to say.
"You don't really have to make shit up," he says finally, once he's swallowed and worked some moisture back into his mouth. "You could... I mean, you could just say we met at a bar. That's not lying. It's just not telling her all of it."
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"Does Donna know? About me?" I ask curiously, 'cause it's not like she's really a friend or anything, but I know part of her job is to ask him questions about how things are going at home, so I just kind of... wonder.
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"I'm not sure," he says slowly. "It's not like... I mean, it's not like I've been hiding it or anything." Not on purpose. "But I don't know if I actually ever said anything about you. I think she knows I live with someone."
Questions about his body, his diet, his activity level and his sleeping patterns--and how much he fucking hates every second with her--these are all regular topics of conversation where Donna is concerned. But other things... Yes, but not in detail.
He's not sure how to even talk about those things with someone he hasn't already let in beyond that point. He's not sure what the words are, what vocabulary is involved.
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"Whatever," I say, sucking grease from the pad of my thumb and getting to my feet, "You want a drink?"
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You sure about that, Mike?
"I... shouldn't," he says, looking away again, feeling something tight settle into his chest. "I been doing too much of that the last few weeks. With the pills. I gotta cut back."
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"Water. Whatever."
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A thing he must get more comfortable with. Since it's so true.
He pops the last of the egg roll into his mouth, relieved that the taste of it has returned and there's room to like what he's tasting. He's sitting naked on the bed--on their bed--and eating Chinese food and he's actually been able to mostly relax while he does those things, and he's going to be damned if he lets go of what they had barely half an hour ago.
"Thanks."
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It's not gonna hurt me not to have a beer tonight.
When I come back into the bedroom, I've lost my sweats somewhere along the way, and I hand him a can and sprawl out on the bed on the bed beside him, naked, head propped against the headboard and reaching for one of the food containers.
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This could be life. This could be a thing that he has, if he lets himself.
"When did you talk to her last?" he asks, leaning down on one arm, pulling his fork out of the rice container and spearing a piece of chicken. "Your mom, I mean."
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Taking a sip of my own drink, I put the can aside, taking a few more mouthfuls of food and then putting the container down, too. Leaning up, I kiss him again, and it's off-center and closed-mouthed, but I do it 'cause I want to. For no other reason than that.
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"What've you told her?" he asks when he breaks the kiss. It's something he almost doesn't ask, something that he's afraid might be a reach too far in this direction, but he realizes--fucking tunnel vision--doesn't know and all at once he wants to. "What does she know?"
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About me?
The answer to both is practically nothing. And it doesn't seem worth interrupting a perfectly great kiss.
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God, just shut the fuck UP.
"I just realized, I don't... I don't even know." Like so many other things, he'd lost the energy or the interest in caring about them, back when he'd been content to let his own pain be the bright, brittle center of the world.
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"I... I told you. Nothing. I mean, I haven't told her anything." Didn't we already talk about this?
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And he still doesn't even know why he gives a shit.
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"I told her I gotta job outside the city. I told her the money's good, which it is. Things were... I wasn't even sure you wanted me here, half the fuckin' time, 'til a couple weeks ago. Hell, not until a couple fuckin' days ago. What the hell was I supposed to tell her?"
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