Chapter 7
Sidney shuts the door and presses his back against it and stands there for a long time.
The apartment is quiet. The coffee maker is off.
Two mugs on the counter, Sidney’s empty and Erath’s half full because he’d left it there when he went, had just picked up his jacket and said thank you for the coffee and left his mug where it sat.
The kitchen light is still on. The living room is dark.
Sidney stands in the doorway between them and listens to the silence of a room that had two people in it a minute ago and now has one.
He fucked it up.
He replays it. He doesn’t want to, but his brain doesn’t give him the option.
The loop starts at the same place every time.
The conversation. The coffee. The way Erath had said I’m interested in you with the unhurried certainty of someone stating a fact, something that existed whether Sidney acknowledged it or not, and the way Sidney’s hands had tightened on the counter behind him and the way the flush had crawled up his neck and the way he’d thought, very clearly, I am going to kiss this man or I am going to die, and both of those things had seemed equally likely and equally terrifying and he’d chosen the kiss.
That’s the part the loop snags on. Sidney had kissed him first. He’d let go of the counter and walked around the island and crossed three feet of kitchen and put his mouth on the god of death and the god of death had gone still.
Had waited. Had kept his hands at his sides and let Sidney set the terms, all of them, and when Sidney hadn’t pulled away, when the question became an answer, Erath had responded.
His hand had come up to Sidney’s jaw, careful, light enough to leave, and Sidney hadn’t left. He’d leaned in. He’d opened his mouth against Erath’s and felt Erath open back and the kiss had become real, had become deep, had become something that had seemed impossible.
Sidney had felt it everywhere. His sternum.
His stomach. The low, heavy pull of heat that’s been living in his chest since the first night Erath walked him home, that inexplicable gravity, except now it wasn’t pulling him toward Erath.
It was pulling him into Erath, through him, like it wanted to dissolve the boundary between their bodies entirely, and Sidney hadn’t been afraid of it.
For the first time in longer than he can remember, his body had been doing what he wanted it to do.
Wanting what he wanted it to want. He’d pulled Erath closer by the front of his shirt and felt Erath hard against him through their clothes and wanted more, actually wanted more, and the want had been clean and simple and uncomplicated in a way that nothing about Sidney’s desire has been clean or simple or uncomplicated in three years.
And then Erath had pressed forward. Hands dropping to the counter on either side of Sidney’s hips. Arms bracing. Sidney’s back against the edge and Erath’s body against his front and the kitchen was very small and there was nowhere to go.
His body had decided for him. Not his mind.
His mind had been right there, in the kitchen, wanting this, knowing who this was, screaming yes at a volume that should have been loud enough to override anything.
But his body doesn’t negotiate. His body doesn’t parse context or intent or the identity of the person in front of him.
His body has one response to being pinned against a surface with weight in front and arms on either side, and the response is absolute, and it put him somewhere else.
Somewhere three years in the past. A studio apartment on the other side of Central.
A deadbolt he didn’t have a key to. A bed he couldn’t get out of, and weight on top of him, and a voice above him saying he was being dramatic, saying he liked it, saying he wouldn’t be here if he didn’t want it.
His hands are shaking. He takes them away from his face and looks at them and can’t make them stop.
Ivan. He was twenty-two. Ivan was thirty and charming and possessive in ways Sidney had mistaken for devotion because he was twenty-two and lonely and had never had a man look at him the way Ivan looked at him, with focus, with hunger, with the intensity that Sidney now understands is not the same thing as love but that, at twenty-two, he had no framework for distinguishing.
Ivan had cooked for him. Ivan had walked him home from the bar.
Ivan had put his jacket around Sidney’s shoulders when it was cold outside and the gesture had felt protective and it was only later, much later, that Sidney understood the jacket was not protection but territory. A flag planted. A thing that said mine.
The first time hands gripped too hard, Sidney told himself it was passion.
The first time he said stop and was ignored, he told himself he’d been unclear.
The first time he tried to leave and Ivan was between him and the door, Sidney told himself it was a misunderstanding.
He told himself a lot of things. He got very good at telling himself things, and each thing he told himself was a brick in a wall he was building around a truth he couldn’t look at directly, and by the time the wall was high enough to block the light he couldn’t find the door out.
Xela had shown up because Sidney hadn’t come to work in three days.
She’d knocked and Ivan had answered and Xela had taken one look at his face and then one look past his shoulder at Sidney, sitting on the couch in a t-shirt that couldn’t cover the bruises on his forearms, and she had kicked the door off its hinges.
Literally. She’d planted her boot against the wood and the hinges had torn out of the frame and the door had gone into Ivan and Ivan had gone into the wall and Xela had walked over the wreckage, taken Sidney by the hand, and walked him out.
He’d stayed at her apartment for three weeks.
She hadn’t asked him a single question. She’d given him a blanket and a toothbrush and let him sleep on her couch and brought him food he barely touched and sat in the chair across from him and read books and didn’t talk and didn’t push and didn’t ask him to explain himself and he’d loved her for that more than he’d ever loved anyone for anything.
That had been the end of his relationship with Ivan.
Not the end of what Ivan did to him. The damage stayed.
It moved into his body, invisible and permanent, took up residence in his nervous system and filed itself into the reflexes that live below conscious thought.
The flinch when hands move too fast. The freeze when weight presses him down.
The way his body recognizes situations rather than people: surface behind, weight in front, no way out.
It doesn’t matter who. It doesn’t parse intent.
It doesn’t care that the person in front of him is kind, or gentle, or has hands that know how to be careful.
It just reads the situation and pulls the brake.
He’d been with men since. A few. Quick, deliberate encounters in dark rooms that didn’t require trust and didn’t last long enough for the panic to find him.
He’d learned to manage it. He knows what positions work and what don’t.
He keeps things fast and impersonal and leaves before anyone tries to hold him down and it works, technically.
It functions. It’s not intimacy but it’s contact and sometimes contact is enough to stop the ache from becoming unbearable.
And then the god of death had kissed him with a thoroughness that made Sidney forget to be afraid, and the forgetting had lasted just long enough for the fear to catch up.
He’d frozen. Gone rigid. Stopped breathing.
His hand had switched from pulling Erath closer to pushing him away, flat against his chest, shaking, and when his vision had cleared and the kitchen had reassembled itself around him, Erath had already stepped back.
Already had his hands off the counter. He was standing an arm’s length away, hands at his sides, palms open.
And Sidney had looked at those open hands and the distance and the careful, level voice and known, with a certainty that went all the way through him, that Erath had moved before Sidney had finished pushing him.
That he’d read Sidney’s body faster than Sidney’s mind could form the words and he’d gotten off of him, immediately, without being asked twice.
Ivan had never moved on the first push. Ivan had required escalation. Volume. A shove hard enough to actually displace him, and then the anger, and then the guilt, and the cycle, always the cycle.
Erath had stepped back before Sidney’s hand had finished flattening against his chest. The god of death was navigating around Sidney’s pain with the same deliberateness that Sidney navigates around the alley, giving it room, not asking it to explain itself.
Sidney moves from the door to the couch.
Sits down. His ribs ache. His lips are warm.
His hands won’t stop shaking and the ghost of Erath’s body is still printed along the front of his, the heat and the weight and the press of him through their clothes and the taste of coffee on his mouth and the sound he’d made when Sidney had pulled him closer by his shirt, a low sound, a sound that had traveled through Sidney’s chest and settled behind his ribs and is still there, still warm, still resonating, even now, even after everything.
The pull is still there too. That’s the cruelest part.
The gravity in his chest, the one that started the night Erath walked him home, hasn’t loosened.
If anything it’s stronger. It’s pulling toward a man who is no longer in the room, no longer in the building, possibly no longer on this plane of existence, and it doesn’t care about the panic or the shutdown or the fact that Sidney’s body just vetoed what his mind and his heart were unanimously voting for.
The pull says: he’s yours. The pull says: go.
And Sidney is sitting on his couch with shaking hands and warm lips thinking, I know, I know, but I can’t.
There goes another one. Another attempt at something that didn’t get off the ground before it crashed.
Another man who showed up and showed interest and got close enough to touch the damage and now has to decide whether the damage is too much.
Twenty-five years old and broken in a way that doesn’t show until the worst possible moment and then shows so completely there’s no recovering from it.
What a prize. What a catch. A man who told the god of death about his history with bad men, practically handed him a warning label, and then kissed him anyway and panicked anyway and said I can’t do this while his hands were still shaking from wanting to.
He sits on the couch and stares at the wall.
He should go to bed. Turn off the light. Brush his teeth. Lie down. Pretend none of this happened. Add it to the list. Move on.
He goes to the kitchen instead. Erath’s mug is still on the counter where he left it, half full, and Sidney picks it up and holds it for a moment.
The ceramic is cool now. Whatever warmth Erath’s hands had put into it is gone, and the coffee inside is dark and still and there’s a faint smudge on the rim where Erath’s mouth had been.
Sidney looks at it longer than he should.
Then he pours it out and washes it and dries it and puts it in the cabinet next to the dog mug.
Sidney closes his eyes. The pull in his chest hums, low and steady and patient, pointing toward a staircase in Central that descends into the dark. He puts his hand over his sternum and presses down, as if he could quiet it, and it doesn’t quiet. It just keeps pulling.