Chapter 23 #3
Nikolas saw him notice and just shrugged it off. “In case you forget who you are again.” Ben thought it was funny. It was just the way they were together.
Nikolas didn’t get his present from Ben until they went to bed that night. Ben insisted it was hidden and that Nikolas had to hunt for it. As Nikolas was horny and only willing to search one thing, he found it fairly quickly.
Ben had a tattoo on the small of his back. After eight years, he’d done what Nikolas had always wanted him to do. He’d labelled himself as belonging. He hadn’t been able to do it until it wasn’t true—until it didn’t define what they were anymore.
Nikolas ran his thumb over it, tracing the lines and angles.
It was a sharp letter M and out of this had been formed an N at the beginning, and with the addition of a horizontal line, an A at the end.
M, N, A. All the contradictions of Nikolas’s life contained in angular letters on Ben’s back.
A trinity of identities captured in simplicity. “When did you have this done?”
Sprawled naked upon the covers, Ben had to admit it was, at the moment, as with the N he’d worn upon his neck, only temporary—that he’d had Tim draw it on for him that day—or Nikolas would obviously have seen it. “If you like it, I’ll get it done permanently. What do you think?”
* * *
Nikolas eased down alongside Ben, looking up at their naked reflection in the glass, trailing one finger around the shapes.
“I think I don’t deserve you, Ben Rider-Mikkelsen.
” Nikolas occasionally expressed this sentiment at special moments and occasionally he actually meant it.
He usually said it because it got a very satisfactory response from Ben.
Ben worrying he wasn’t actually good at all; that it was he, Ben, who was lucky to have Nikolas, and other most reassuring things.
This time, however, Ben just laughed and agreed with him—he wasn’t worthy of him at all.
In fact, he’d better work a bit harder at earning him… and…where’s my present?
Which is something no one who claims not to do Christmas ever wants to hear.
Nikolas pouted, watching this with interest in the glass. “You know I don’t do Christmas, Ben.”
Ben propped himself up on his elbows so he could see Nikolas’s face. “You’re not doing Christmas. You’re having Christmas with me in my house. I’m doing Christmas, and therefore you have to do a present.”
“This is a little unfair as I haven’t bought you anything.”
“Seriously?” Ben’s face fell a little.
Nikolas tried another expression, and that one was interesting to watch, too.
“This is where you’re about to tell me you have a tendency to lie, isn’t it?”
“Ben! Seriously, I’m not joking or lying. I haven’t bought you a present! I couldn’t think of anything left to buy you that I don’t just buy you all throughout the year…”
This was obviously too true for Ben to refute, and Nikolas knew he’d be at something of a loss.
But surreptitiously, out of the corner of his eye, he studied the scrunched up disappointment.
He therefore saw the distinct moment when Ben shook off the man he had been—premorbid tendency Ben—and embraced new Ben.
Old Ben would have apologised, made a joke of it—accepted Nikolas just didn’t do Christmas.
That’s what he’d done for the last eight years. Not a single present.
But the other Ben, the Ben he now was, clearly thought fuck this, and said with a laugh, “Find something, now!”
“What?” Nope, not the wide eyes of horror necessary for that. Nikolas tried again, studying the result. Much better. “I can’t just find something to give you now! Here, would you like a cigarette?” Oh, I’m good at this.
Ben began to climb off the bed, this furious gesture completely undermined by the smirk he was trying to hide
Nikolas caught his arm. “Go look in the study. On my desk.”
Ben crowed in triumph.
Nikolas continued to ponder his reflection in the glass, impressed he appeared so calm, poised as he was on the edge of such a great precipice.
Ben returned to the bed with a box—a locked file box and commented ironically, “Nice wrapping.”
Nikolas grunted and handed him the key he’d held heavy and secret in his fist as he’d teased Ben.
* * *
Ben couldn’t think of anything he wanted for Christmas that would be contained in a file box, but he dutifully opened it. Nikolas sat up, cross-legged in front of him.
Ben began to pull out some folders, but then immediately found more interesting things and laid them carefully to one side.
Medals. Rows and rows of medals. He frowned at these for a moment as comprehension dawned, and then reverently emptied the rest of the box, revealing photographs.
Dozens of pictures of Nikolas, possibly a hundred, as a tiny boy on a beach with an identical boy alongside him in each photo, a teenager, many again with his brother, and then in uniform, serious, older, some with people, most on his own, some posed, some casual taken by friends, perhaps.
Skiing, swimming, riding, fencing, boxing.
A lifetime of photos of the man he loved.
He opened one of the envelopes and looked inside. The papers were all in Russian.
“I’ll have them translated for you. That one is the transcript of my trial, but the others are my military service records. And these…” Nikolas shifted a few from a lower bundle. “Are my school report cards. You might want a stiff whisky before you read those. Sergei always did.”
Ben raised his eyes very slowly to Nikolas’s face. Nikolas just shrugged and took a long drag on his cigarette, blowing some obscuring smoke between them. “It was all in another house I own in London. I thought you might like to have it. The medals particularly. Did you notice how many there were?”
Ben had. He didn’t know where to start. He picked up the photos again, wanting to study each one, to absorb every tiny detail, as if that would make this snapshot of Nikolas’s life—one which hadn’t included him—now part of their shared life.
He laughed suddenly. All this history before they’d met… all these memories…
Now his history.
His memories.
* * *
The Christmases Nikolas had spent passed around being the present for his father’s drunken friends had soured the holiday for him. He’d never woken on Boxing Day since then with anything other than relief it was over for another year.
This Boxing Day, he woke with a sense of lightness and anticipation he’d not experienced before.
The bed was empty, but when he went into the kitchen, led by the sound of voices, he had to stop for a moment and wonder if sometime in the night he’d been drugged and had now woken up in a slightly parallel life to the one they usually lived.
Their guests were sitting around the large kitchen table, one space left for him, and Ben and Emilia were cooking, passing heaped plates of sausages, bacon, and eggs to the others.
Emilia’s grandmother was knitting and chatting to Radulf in Russian.
There was mess everywhere, the wrapping paper detritus of the day before, outdoor clothes slung carelessly on the backs of chairs, wet boots hastily kicked off, a toboggan melting icy clumps of snow onto the floor.
Someone had given Radulf a new toy for Christmas, and he’d apparently mistaken it for a librarian overnight, for it was ripped and shredded around his basket, bits still sticking to his muzzle.
Ben saw him and came over, the pan with sizzling sausages in hand.
“Morning. We’ve been out tobogganing already.
” He kissed him with knowing amusement in his eyes, a challenge for him to complain, a statement as clear as if he’d said it out loud: “I love you and I want everyone to know it; don’t like it? Well, you can walk anytime you want.”
Nikolas quirked him a small, complicit smile in return, and kissed him back—just a quick brush of lips, but it was more than that to Ben, and Nikolas knew it.
He took his seat at the table and started to light a cigarette but almost cringed at the chorus of complaints.
He ate a sausage instead, slowly, relishing it, keeping his eyes firmly fixed on Ben.
He was busy the rest of the day, as was everyone else again, with the new horse. Who knew such an easy present could be so successful? He made a note to thank Philipa’s cousin for helping him select such a beautiful creature from her own stables. A queen’s horse for a princess. It was fitting.
When he wasn’t admiring the horse and making helpful suggestions to Emilia for names, he watched Ben. It was Christmas. Why shouldn’t he indulge his favourite hobby?
They’d still not talked about the mill, and Nikolas reckoned they probably never would.
Someday he knew the video would appear on a news programme, perhaps a documentary, and then that might be the time to lay it to rest for good.
Until then, he was happy to let it lie, for he genuinely believed Ben when he said he wasn’t troubled.
Ben had a lightness of spirit about him once more that couldn’t be faked, couldn’t be there if such dark memories were weighing him down. And this, of course, meant other bad events of his life had been reconciled too.
Nikolas knew things had changed. For the first time, anyone looking at them wouldn’t immediately assume all of this belonged to him—that he controlled everything and was the centre of all things.
In coming back to a memory of his life so suddenly, realising what was truly important in the life he’d forgotten, Ben had finally seen for himself how things were—that Nikolas only orbited around him, and he, in fact, held all the power. He always had.
Watching Ben as he and Squeezy took turns dragging Emilia and Radulf around on the toboggan, as Ben prepared a meal for everyone that night, pretending he’d cooked it from scratch and not just opened a number of boxes from the freezer, as he sat with Ulyana Ivanovna practising his Russian, and, of course, later that night as they made long and sensuous love in the hot tub, Nikolas reckoned Ben had indeed left all his darkness behind him.
Nikolas then had to admit to himself that perhaps he’d been wrong about something—a rare event, but apparently possible.
He wondered briefly, as he gripped Ben’s slick, naked back, marked now with the trinity of his names, whether there wasn’t more to this therapy business than he’d ever given it credit.
* * *
To Be Continued in
The Bruise-Black Sky
(More Heat Than The Sun #5)