Read Don't Read in the Closet: Volume Four Online
Authors: Various Authors
Tags: #Don't Read in the Closet, #mm romance, #gay
and turned to face his Gustav. They shared a comforting kiss. Tahir
pulled free and sank down against the cushions tossed before the open
balcony doors.
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Gustav bit his lower lip. They had developed odd rituals; when
Tahir wanted to reveal a crucial memory, he retreated to his cushion
oasis. Gustav had tossed the cushions there in order to embrace, sip
wine and watch the changing sky pass judgment. He never realized
their nest would become Tahir’s private confessional.
The king poured them more wine and settled onto the cushion
next to his lover. Gustav allowed himself one swift caress against
Tahir’s tense back. He waited. What evil memory tainted this night?
Minutes spent watching the sky’s freedom passed. Tahir’s left
fingers grasped Gustav’s right hand. Gustav gave his lover’s flesh a
loving squeeze. Good, physical contact had been re-established.
Another confessional rule; no devoted embraces. Touches, yes, but no
hugs, not during the telling. Gustav detested the rule but he abided by
it. Tahir claimed if Gustav held him close, he escaped into physical
passion, not spiritual healing.
Gustav understood his precious lover was unusual, perhaps a
touch mad. Never dangerous, no, except to himself. If Tahir had been
dangerous, Jan would have warned Gustav. The king accepted this
truth. Jan sensed emotions like ripples wafting across a pond. Jan
understood Tahir’s need for solace.
A light breeze, hinting of fall, ghosted in and stirred the vibrant
blooms. The touch forced spent flowers to the balcony grate. Their
delicacy fluttered down to the city below. The fresh breeze wafted
Tahir’s earthy aroma to Gustav’s nostrils. He waited. Faint throat
clearing made him tense.
Tahir’s voice rasped free. “My mother owned sweet soft hands,
black hair and comforting softness. She smelled like rare white lilacs,
clean and crisp. She was my f-f-fa…” Tahir’s lips twisted. Never again
would Tahir use the word father to describe the monster. “…his third
wife, young, innocent, barely more than a child when she carried me.
He was much older. By classic bad luck, my birth injured my dainty
mother. She miscarried four times after my arrival.
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“Aside from my grandfather, mother was the only human who
cared about me. She taught me to read and write. She taught me love.
She rescued me from the punishment chest and endured beatings for
her daring actions.”
A hard wintry tone crafted from suffering and hatred fell upon
Gustav’s ears. He hoped someday Tahir’s voice could banish that
bitter tone. The vocal tone more suited a world-weary man, not a
young man with his entire life ahead of him. Tahir’s many torments
shadowed his life.
“The Curamians embrace harsh rules for their women. Wicked,
unjust rules. A male noble can enjoy a harem of lovers, but if his wife
looks at another man with a hint of desire, the husband owns the right
to kill her.
“Obviously mother bored him or I suspect her contribution of one
sickly son displeased him. Imagine, I was a frail waif, always one
breath away from death.” A hard laugh rang free. “I’d please the
monster now, eh? One morning, late summer like this, I waited in my
mother’s small sitting room. We were to have a reading lesson. I was
six. Instead of my mother, a guard fetched me. The second I viewed
the guard’s distraught face I realized something wrong. He remained
silent against my pleas. The guard took me into the grand hall and
everyone, except my grandfather, gathered there. The monster sat in
his grand chair. My poor mother stood before him. Coarse rope
cruelly bound her wrists. Tears drenched her pretty face but she
remained silent.
“I broke free from the guard, ran to mother and tried undoing the
rope biting into her wrists. I didn’t understand! She whispered she
loved me above all and smiled at me. Her warm tears fell on my face.
The monster rose from his seat and slapped me across the face. A
retainer saved me from falling and held me secure.
“The lying monster declared my mother was a w-w-whore who
dallied with guards and noble guests. I didn’t understand his words
but I sensed he lied. I tried screaming in protest but the retainer kept
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his hand across my mouth. Mother stood silently trembling. She made
no attempt to beg or plea. She knew her words useless.” Tahir halted
and allowed a shiver to sweep through his own body.
Gustav shook his head in disgust. “Tahir, please, I… you need not
tell me more.”
Tahir offered Gustav a hollow stare. His words rasped from his
tense throat. “Do you know how the monster killed mother? He
herded her down into his dungeon, stripped her naked and hung her by
her wrists. He heated his sword over a brazier and… and…he… thrust
it…ahh….” A gagging choke halted Tahir’s words. His body spasmed
in anguish. “He made me watch! I watched the monster kill my
mother! Once she ceased screaming, the monster beat me. He beat me
until I collapsed. He kicked my face and broke my nose. During his
attack he called me nothing. He told me since I was the son of a whore
I meant nothing to him. Better I die than foul his home. He locked me
down there with her dead body. My grandfather, who had been out
hunting that day, rescued me and arranged for my mother’s burial. He
took me under his protection until he died and the monster reclaimed
me. You remember what happened next.” Chains and sexual
degradation.
Gustav moaned in pain and gathered Tahir close. Gods, Tahir’s
body shook in grief. Gustav feared if he released him, Tahir might
vibrate into sorrowful pieces. “No more, my lover, tell me no more.
Wait, tell me this demon no longer walks the earth.”
As he buried his face in Gustav’s neck, a mad laugh escaped
Tahir’s lips. “Worry not; he’s banished from the living. The foul
demon holds court with his fellow Curamian warlords.”
Coldness passed through Gustav’s heart. Had Tahir killed the
monster? His strong intuition told him yes. He felt the truth in Tahir’s
tension. His lover could kill demons. Appropriate. Gustav would not
ask for a name. He sensed he did not want a name. The warlord
reference confirmed his suspicions. Tahir’s father had supported
Hainal Thane, the dreaded Usurper.
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Tahir’s father had fought to destroy Gustav.
No matter whom his lover’s father had been, Gustav refused to
hold the fact against Tahir. Never. If Tahir had killed the beast, good
riddance. Gustav ran his fingers through Tahir’s thick hair. He spun
bright beads. He hated to ask this question. “Tahir, what did my son
say to prompt this horrific memory?”
“No.”
“Your words go no further than these cushions.” Gustav expected
the next grim silence.
After releasing another deep sigh, Tahir leaned up and gazed into
Gustav’s concerned face. The hard wintry look swirled in his black
eyes. Gustav could hardly accept those eyes, normally warm and
giving, could look dead. “He claimed I was nothing. He claimed I
meant nothing to you.”
Gustav gasped in fury until he swallowed his rage. For the first
time in his years of happy fatherhood, he wanted to slap his own flesh
and blood. Useless reaction. Cast it aside. He pressed a long, adoring
kiss against Tahir’s lips. “My lover, you know the truth.”
“I do, my king. Trust me, I do. Although I have lived without
affection or… love for long years, I still recognize the gentle grace.”
Tahir kissed Gustav again. He curled back down into his lover’s
secure embrace. “You are indeed the finest man ever.”
No wonder this man saw shadows and threats in every corner. A
true monster had destroyed his life. “My fresh love for you banishes
your past. I know you, I trust you. Come, release the pain. Stop
holding in the anguish. I suspect Jan advised you to do the same thing.
Let go. Purge.”
Tahir blinked in disbelief. A lone sapling caught in a blizzard
probably shook as hard as Tahir. He inhaled a deep breath. Tears
formed in his eyes. He hadn’t cried since his mother’s death. At times
he wondered if, as he huddled in the foul dungeon, he had sobbed all
the tears from his life. Tonight the feeling of something breaking
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slammed through him. Years of torment and sorrow broke apart. This
King’s love helped him heal. Tahir released sorrow tainted by years of
suffering.
The sobs shaking Tahir’s muscular frame made Gustav hold him
close enough to feel the blood pulsating through veins. His fingers
stroked and healed. Comforting nonsense noises escaped his lips.
Evening fell across the land. Gustav watched sun-tinted clouds
wander across the proud sky until they darkened into dusk. After a
pained eternity, Tahir’s choked gasps descended into silence. Gustav
realized Tahir fell into healing sleep. He continued stroking his
lover’s damp hair. As he gazed into the purpling sky, the King
wondered if evil would ever leave Swenendia’s vast lands.
He doubted it.
THE APPOINTMENT
Six days later Gustav grimly glared at the documents sprawled
across the small council table. Tension disturbed his chest. He needed
to calm down and stop emoting all the time. “This complete lack of
disrespect toward me is intolerable. I…”
“I thought the same thing when I read this ridiculous accusation. I
have no idea why the Reglardian council refuses to listen to reason.”
A short hard laugh escaped Ainar’s throat. “The impossible Lord
Tuberclain withdrew from Stormhelm without permission. He and his
staff left earlier this morning without giving advance warning. What a
blatant insult to us! I received a message claiming Tuberclain refused
to stay when he fears for his city’s safety. The fool declared he plans
to rouse his army and march on Tovania.”
Gustav reared up to pace back and forth. His wooden chair almost
hit the floor. He wished he could kiss his Tahir and drink in his
succor. “The arrogant fool thinks Reglard is in danger from Tovania,
my second capitol city? Why? Because I repaired their castle? Have
those Northern dolts learned nothing? They glare at each other and
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point fingers. I swear that reconstructing Tovania was the most
reckless act I ever performed. I won’t endure such nonsense.”
Wait. Why sit back and negotiate? The King swung his stare
toward Ainar’s carefully expressionless face. “What say you to a little
northern jaunt?”
“To what end, my friend?”
“To frighten the dolts into compliance. I believe if we arrive with
a few hundred troops behind us, the Reglardian’s stupid behavior will
cease. Don’t look sour, Ainar. I am not declaring war on them, merely
showing them who rules this land. What do you think, send a rider
ahead of simply show up?”
“Send a small host to announce the King honors Reglard with his
presence.”
“My thoughts exactly. Select ten properly threatening-looking
guards and bid them to ride hard. We will leave tomorrow morning.
Once we arrive, I plan to sit everyone down and bang sense into their
thick northern skulls.”
“Excellent, Gustav.” Ainar clapped his King’s shoulder. “How
many divisions?”
“I don’t want to leave the city without a standing army. 300 men
sounds adequate.”
“I’ll make sure all is prepared. Will Edvin ride out with us? He
recently returned from Tovania, correct? Odd he didn’t tell you if
anything seemed amiss in the city.” Ainar almost stepped away from
his friend’s furious glare. He watched Gustav swallow in control.
“We did talk but we quarreled and departed on ill-terms. Sir