Chapter 13
The almost-moment happened at two AM on a Tuesday.
They should have been used to it by now.
The avoidance had been going on for, what?
A week? Longer? Seth had lost count. He counted everything.
But the days of circling Zain had blurred into a continuous ache, a low-grade fever that he couldn't shake because the cure was the disease, and the disease was three inches away in the kitchen at two AM smelling like soap and sleep and the warmth of a body that had been in bed and was now, inexplicably, maddeningly, here.
The counter was cold against Seth's hip where he leaned. The kitchen window showed nothing, just black glass reflecting them back to themselves, two men in underwear and insomnia, standing closer than the kitchen required.
"You can't sleep either," Seth said. Not a question.
"No."
"How many nights?"
Zain's jaw tightened. The honest answer was probably every night since the mat, but Zain didn't do honest when honest meant admitting that someone had gotten inside his defenses.
He did deflection. He did distance. He did cleaning weapons at three AM with the focused precision of a man who was very carefully not thinking about anything.
"Zain."
"What."
"Look at me."
He looked. And Seth saw it, the hunger. Not the controlled, compressed version that Zain showed to the world.
The real one. Raw and desperate and enormous, held back by nothing but willpower and the stubborn conviction that wanting something this much was the same as losing control, and losing control was the same as losing everything.
Seth was in the kitchen for water. Barefoot, boxers and a t-shirt, half-asleep and operating on autopilot.
Zain's eyes opened. Dropped to Seth's bare legs, then snapped back up. The muscle in his jaw tightened.
"Sorry," Seth said. Not sorry.
"You're fine." Not fine.
He moved to step around Zain. The kitchen was narrow, galley-style, built for function not comfort, and the space between the counter and the island was barely wide enough for two people to pass without touching.
They didn't pass without touching.
Seth's arm brushed Zain's. Just the back of his hand against Zain's hip. Just fabric and skin and the static shock of contact that shouldn't have felt like anything but felt like everything.
Zain inhaled. Sharp. Through his teeth.
Seth stopped moving.
They stood there. Inches apart. The kitchen held its breath around them. Seth could feel the heat radiating off Zain's bare skin, could smell the soap and the underneath, the warm, spiced scent that was just him, the thing Seth's body had imprinted on like a newly hatched bird.
"Zain." His voice came out hoarse. "This is stupid."
"I know."
"You avoiding me isn't going to make it go away."
"I know that too."
"Then..."
Seth registered the details with the hyperawareness of a man whose body had decided that this moment was important and was recording everything.
The way the streetlight through the kitchen window painted half of Zain's face in amber and left the other half in shadow.
The scar on his collarbone, old, faded, scar that came from something you survived but didn't talk about.
The rise and fall of his chest, faster than normal, faster than a man who ran five miles every morning and handled combat with the composure of a metronome.
Zain was breathing hard. Because of Seth. Because of this, this narrow kitchen and this stupid proximity and the gravitational field between them that neither could escape and both kept pretending wasn't there.
"I can hear you thinking from here," Seth said.
"I'm not thinking."
"Your jaw's doing the thing."
"What thing?"
"The thing where you clench it when you're trying not to feel something. It's your tell. You have three, the jaw, the thing where you clean weapons you've already cleaned, and the thing where you say 'I'm fine' in a voice that means 'I am the opposite of fine.'"
"You've been cataloging my tells."
"I catalog everything. It's what kept me alive." Seth paused. "You're also the thing that kept me alive. In case that wasn't clear."
Zain's hand came up. Cupped the side of Seth's face. His thumb traced the line of Seth's cheekbone, feather-light, barely there, and Seth's eyes closed without permission.
"You make it very hard to do the right thing," Zain murmured.
"Maybe the right thing isn't what you think it is.""
The kitchen clock read 2:07. Seth had been standing here for three minutes. He knew because he'd counted, the way he counted everything, the survival metronome that ticked behind every thought and measured every silence and refused to let him exist in a moment without quantifying it.
Zain hadn't moved. His hand was still on Seth's face.
Three minutes. In any other context, three minutes of a man cupping another man's face in a dark kitchen would be a decision.
Here, it was a stalemate. Both of them balanced on the edge of something, neither willing to be the one who tipped them over.
Seth could feel Zain's pulse through his thumb.
Fast. Faster than a man should register at rest. Faster than the composure suggested.
The composure was a lie, and Seth could feel the truth beating against his cheekbone, and the gap between what Zain showed and what Zain felt was the most maddening thing about him.
"Your hand is shaking," Seth said.
"No it isn't."
"I can feel it."
Zain's jaw tightened. The tell. Seth had three of Zain's tells cataloged and this was the primary one, the first to fire, the one that meant the containment was costing him.
"Days," Seth said. "Days of you pretending I don't exist. Days of you cleaning guns and running ops and looking through me like I'm furniture.
And now you're standing in the kitchen at two in the morning with your hand on my face and your pulse going ninety and you're going to tell me this is the right thing? "
"It's complicated."
"It's not. You want me. I want you. Everything else is noise."
"The noise is the part that gets people killed."
"People are already getting killed. Mercer is still out there. Levi is still circling. The world is already dangerous. The only question is whether we face it pretending we don't have this, or we face it knowing we do."
Zain leaned in. Close enough that Seth could feel his breath. Close enough that one of them just had to tip forward, just a fraction, just,
A door opened upstairs.
They sprang apart. Zain's hand dropped. Seth stepped back, his shoulder blades hitting the refrigerator. Footsteps on the stairs. Elijah, heading to the bathroom, half-asleep and oblivious.
By the time Elijah's door closed again, Zain was gone.
Seth stood in the dark kitchen and pressed his palms against the cold refrigerator and concentrated on breathing until his heartbeat stopped trying to crack his ribs.