Talker's Graduation

Talker's Graduation by Amy Lane Page B

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Authors: Amy Lane
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for nearly two years. He heard
    Brian’s groan and turned to watch as Brian rolled over and reached
    out a hand to his empty, cooling pillow.
    Most lovers would be grumpy or whiny. Talker imagined that
    almost anyone else in the world would groan, “Baby, come back to
    bed!” but not Brian. Instead he rolled over to his back and thrust his
    face up to catch the sunshine, smiling as it sank into his skin and
    eyelids.
    “We going this morning?” he slurred, as game to go out this
    morning into the cold of Northern California’s Pacific Ocean as he
    used to be to go running with Tate along the bike trail in the heavy
    heat of the Sacramento summer.
    Tate walked back to the bed and threw himself across,
    enjoying the way the box springs creaked on the mattress. Brian
    had been working late a lot, and he hadn’t heard that sound as
    much as he would have liked.
    Talker’s Graduation | Amy Lane
    7

    “Yeah,” he said, answering Brian’s question. “We’re always
    going, if you’re up for it.”
    Brian smiled and put his two good hands on either side of
    Tate’s chest, pushing them between the loose T-shirt and palming
    Tate’s skin. It used to be that Tate could feel that touch defining
    every one of his ribs, but not anymore.
    “I’m up to it,” he murmured, pulling the T-shirt up and kissing
    the tight muscle of Tate’s stomach. “But I’m up to something else
    first.”
    Tate groaned and lifted his arms, letting Brian pull off his sleep
    shirt altogether. He didn’t care about the chill of morning or the way
    his skin puckered. Brian would keep him warm. He hadn’t always
    trusted in their bodies together in the light, but he did now.

    “YOU didn‟t have to cook,” Tate said, coming home from his shift at
    Gatsby‟s and looking guiltily at the mac and cheese still on the
    stove. He was running late—he didn‟t like to do that. Every time he
    looked at the clock and saw that it was late, he flashed to those two
    weeks he‟d lived in the apartment while Brian had been in the
    hospital and shuddered. He hated being alone, and he didn‟t want
    Brian being alone, and now Brian was housebound without him. It‟s
    true, Brian could make his way down the stairs and across the
    street, but Tate was unused to thinking of Brian as vulnerable and
    the thought scared him. He didn‟t like to be late. He wasn‟t fond of
    walking outside under the streetlights (and he never did it alone)
    but he was even less fond of the idea of Brian there without him.
    So coming home for the third night in a row to find the
    apartment spotless and dinner on the table was sort of a revelation,
    really. He hadn‟t shopped, so Brian must have negotiated the stairs
    Talker’s Graduation | Amy Lane
    8

    and then come back up with a bag full of groceries. Neither of them
    had money—how had Brian paid?
    “I like to cook for you,” Brian said from his laptop, looking up
    and smiling. Nearly four months after the attack, most of the bruises
    had faded, but his eyes were still haunted by pain and
    sleeplessness. Not right now, though. When Tate walked through
    the door, they lightened, grew less weary, and warmed.
    Tate walked over to him and nestled his chin in the curve of
    Brian‟s neck. God, Brian was warm, and it was bitterly cold outside.
    “Whatcha doin‟?”
    Brian looked at him and smiled bitterly. “Selling my
    schoolbooks.”
    “ What?”
    “Just my old ones. You can get money for them on
    amazon.com—it‟s how I got groceries today. We didn‟t sell them at
    the end of the semester because….” He trailed off. Neither of them
    needed him to finish that sentence.
    “But Brian—you‟re going to need those, right? I mean, I
    remember you telling me that one of them was like a three-part
    book for a three-part class.”
    Brian grimaced. “I haven‟t sold that one yet,” he said quietly.
    “But….” He bit his lip. “Talker, you‟re skinny as hell. I know you‟re
    hungry—I sleep with you, remember?

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