Chapter Twelve
~ Caleb ~
I hummed something tuneless while the coffee dripped and the eggs sizzled. The wood stove ticked in the corner like it was counting seconds, patient and unhurried, holding the night’s heat against the March cold that pressed against the east window in pale, insistent light.
Flour on my forearm. A dusting across the counter I’d wipe up later, probably not completely, because that was the kind of morning it was—the kind where precision mattered less than the warmth of it, and warmth was winning.
Sterling had come to bed late. Very late.
I’d been half-asleep when the door opened, the hall light cutting a thin line across the floorboards, and he’d stood there for a moment like a man deciding whether he was allowed inside.
Then he’d crossed the room in three long strides and slid under the blanket I’d lifted for him without a word.
He’d smelled like Mitch. Pine and soap and something that was just him—the scent that lived on Mitch’s skin after a day of fence work and tool handling.
I’d breathed it in, eyes closed, and filed it under its own category: Evidence. Sterling Callahan, coming to bed with another man’s smell on him, and choosing to lie down beside me anyway.
He’d been stiff at first. Rigid along the spine, the way Sterling got when he was thinking too hard about something his body already knew the answer to.
Then, slowly, the tension had drained out of him.
His breathing had deepened. His shoulder had settled against mine under the blanket, warm and solid, and I’d fallen asleep with the weight of him against me.
The coffee finished dripping. I poured a mug for myself, left Sterling’s empty on the table in front of his usual chair.
The eggs were almost done. I flipped them with the spatula, one-handed, the way I’d been doing since I was twelve and sharing a kitchen with Mitch meant you learned to do everything one-handed because your other hand was usually defending your plate.
The door opened. Boots on the porch, heavy and familiar, and the sound of someone who moved through the world with the long, unhurried stride that covered ground at a pace that still surprised me.
Sterling.
He stepped into the kitchen and the room shifted. Not dramatically. Subtly. The way a space changed when Sterling Callahan entered it—quieter, sharper, the air suddenly carrying the weight of a man who noticed everything and gave back nothing until he decided you’d earned it.
He wore yesterday’s jeans. Boots laced tight.
The gun on his hip caught the morning light, metal dark and serious, and his eyes were the particular shade of green that meant he’d been awake for a while, probably since before dawn, doing whatever Sterling did when the rest of the world was still deciding whether to exist.
He didn’t say good morning. Sterling didn’t waste words on greetings. He crossed to the table and slid into his chair, his bad leg stretching out to the side where the stiffness didn’t show.
I filled his coffee cup and then slid a plate in front of him.
Eggs, over easy, yolks intact. Toast buttered while hot.
Bacon crisp at the edges. No fanfare. No loaded pause.
Just breakfast, delivered the way I’d been delivering it for weeks, because feeding him had become a thing I did whether he admitted he wanted it or not.
He looked at the plate. Then at me. His jaw was set, his eyes doing that thing—the full read, cataloguing, assessing, the same focus Sterling brought to situations that confused him.
“You’re doing a thing,” he said. His voice was low. Flat. The tone he used for observations he wasn’t entirely comfortable making but had decided, reluctantly, were necessary.
I turned back to the skillet. “I’m making breakfast.”
“You’re making breakfast and doing a thing.”
“Those aren’t mutually exclusive.”
A beat.
Sterling picked up his fork. He ate the way he did everything—methodical, focused, treating food as fuel rather than pleasure, though I’d caught him enjoying things more than he wanted to admit.
The scrape of metal against ceramic filled the quiet.
Butter melted into toast. Coffee steamed in his cup.
I watched him from the corner of my eye. His forearm flexed as he cut into the eggs. The tattoos there caught the light—something Cyrillic, a date, ink that meant something to the man wearing it and nothing to anyone else.
He ate every bite. Didn’t comment on the quality. Didn’t need to. The fact that he was sitting here, in this kitchen, eating food I’d made, was commentary enough.
The silence between us wasn’t empty. It was full. Sterling forking eggs. Me wiping down the counter that didn’t need wiping. The wood stove holding the heat. The east window turning gold as the sun cleared the ridge.
He finished. Set his fork down with the same deliberate care he applied to everything. Looked at the empty plate for a second too long, like he was deciding whether to acknowledge it.
Then the door burst open.
Mitch. Hat sideways, grin wide, moving through the kitchen with the energy of a man who had decided that mornings were for enthusiasm whether the world had earned it or not.
He dropped into the chair beside Sterling, close enough that their arms touched, his shoulder warm against Sterling’s, and reached unhurriedly across for the coffee carafe.
His arm stretched over Sterling’s shoulder.
Not around it. Over it, the casual invasion of personal space that Mitch treated as a constitutional right, and Sterling didn’t flinch.
Didn’t move away. He sat perfectly still, his eyes tracking Mitch’s hand as it closed around the carafe handle, and his face did something complicated—not quite a smile, not quite exasperation, something in between that lived in the crease beside his left eye and spread outward in slow, reluctant warmth.
Exhausted affection. That was the term for it. Sterling Callahan, looking at Mitch Pruitt reaching across his body for coffee, with the tired, fond neutrality of a man who had given up arguing and discovered, to his mild surprise, that he didn’t miss it.
Mitch poured. Drank. Set the mug down with a satisfied exhale. “Morning,” he said, to both of us, like it was the most ordinary thing in the world to sit between two men he’d spent the night with in different rooms and drink coffee like nothing had changed when everything had.
Sterling didn’t answer. He didn’t need to. The look on his face was answer enough—that firm set of his jaw, the slight softening around the eyes, the way his body had oriented itself toward Mitch’s warmth without his permission.
I watched them from the range. Mitch’s shoulder against Sterling’s. Sterling’s hand on the table. The morning light catching them both, turning the kitchen gold, and the wood stove ticking like it approved.
I filed the look on Sterling’s face. Added it to the collection.
That made ten. Ten almost-smiles in four months, and three of them had happened in the last twenty-four hours, and the trend line was pointing firmly upward, which was either statistical noise or evidence of something fundamental, and I was leaning toward the latter.
The day would come. The ranch would wake. The cut fence and the boot prints and the dark truck on the county road would demand attention, and Sterling would give it to them with the same flat precision he brought to everything.
But right now, in this kitchen, with the eggs finished and the coffee hot and Mitch’s arm brushing Sterling’s every time he reached for the salt, none of that mattered half as much as the fact that Sterling was sitting at a table with two men who loved him, and he hadn’t run.
And that, right there, was worth every second of the wait.
The back door clicked shut behind Mitch when he left twenty minutes later, and the kitchen went quiet in a different way.
Not the warm, full quiet of three people sharing space.
The other kind. The kind where one person left a vacuum, and the person still sitting at the table was staring into the middle distance like the middle distance had answers he wasn’t sure he wanted.
Sterling’s coffee sat untouched. Full. Steam long gone, the surface gone still and dark.
His plate was clean—he’d eaten everything, the way he always did, treating food as fuel rather than pleasure even when the pleasure was objectively present—but his eyes were fixed on something beyond the east window.
Beyond the ridge. Somewhere I couldn’t follow because Sterling’s mind was its own country, and the borders were strictly enforced.
I dried my hands on the dish towel. Folded it. Set it on the counter. Crossed the kitchen in three steps and dropped into the chair beside him, close enough that our knees almost touched under the table.
Then I propped my chin on my hand and stared.
Sterling’s jaw worked. The muscle in his cheek jumped once, hard, like something had landed that he hadn’t planned to feel.
He didn’t look at me. Kept his eyes on the window, on the ridge, on whatever tactical problem was occupying the part of his brain that hadn’t shut down since approximately 2003.
“What,” he said. Not a question. A statement delivered in the flat, declarative tone Sterling used when he wanted something to stop and wasn’t entirely sure how to make it stop himself.
I held the silence. Let it stretch. One beat. Two. Three. The wood stove ticked. Somewhere upstairs, a pipe groaned. The kitchen held its breath around us.
“I’m busy,” Sterling said finally.
I glanced at the table. His nearly empty plate. His full, cold coffee. The salt shaker. The pepper grinder. Nothing else. The tabletop was barren in the particular way that suggested its occupant had been sitting there doing absolutely nothing for several consecutive minutes.
“With what, exactly,” I said.