“Don’t exactly feel like it right now, if you don’t mind.”
Lee pulled out the desk chair and sat. “Then listen to me.”
Gev let out a whoosh of breath. “You don’t have to say anything.”
Shit. “What the fuck is that supposed to mean?” Lee said, cursing the surge of frustrated
anger. His arm throbbed, he felt like hell, and if Gev didn’t look at him soon, Lee was going to
push him down on the bed, hold them there, and make him listen—injury be damned.
“It means,” Gev said in measured tones, “you can do what you want. I can’t stop you.”
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I can’t stop you from going back to Stef
. That’s what hung between them. Lee looked at
Gev, tense and ready to spring away the second Lee said the wrong thing. Dammit, he wasn’t
good at this sort of thing. He was no lyricist; he was a background man, the bass…the
foundation. Nick had told him once that without Lee, steady and strong beneath them, Dream
would’ve failed. He wasn’t used to putting himself out there, but now he had to. His life
depended on it.
He took a deep breath, pulling from that. “You really think that now Stef is back, there’s
instantly nothing between you and me anymore?” He could tell by Gev’s flinch that was exactly
what he thought. Lee couldn’t stand it. He stood and dragged the chair around the bed. Gev’s
face was tight, and he glared at the floor as if he’d burn a hole straight through to the basement if
given enough time and fuel. Lee aimed to give him neither.
“I want to tell you about something I’ve realized, ever since that first night.” He didn’t
have to tell Gev what night. “I’ve spent more than fifteen years holding on to something that was
never mine to begin with. Ever since Stef disappeared, I’ve blamed myself. Wrapped everything
I did around the cold, hard fact that it was my fault Stef was gone. Today, hearing the real truth,
it slammed into me what an idiot I’d been, putting that kind of responsibility on the kid I was
then.”
Gev said nothing, but his eyes flickered.
“I made it everything to me, thinking it was the right thing to do, because I thought I loved
your brother.” Gev tensed at that, his jaw twitching. “But we were
kids
. I was a stupid teenage
boy with raging hormones and a crappy home life, and I was blind to what was going on in front
of me. You read that journal. Stef liked me, but he also used me to cover up what was really
going on.” Bitterness leaked out. “I was too young and too stupid to realize it.
“I’m not very good at this sort of thing, but dammit, there’s one thing I know—since
falling for you, everything’s been so much better. You’re the one who made me want to look to
the future, not to the past. Because there’s nothing back there, and I’ve known it for a long time.
But I was scared, a coward.” He took a deep breath. “You make me feel strong. Like I can
handle anything, do anything, because you’re there. There’s things I want, things I never thought
I could have. Stupid things. Like…like my own house. A car. I haven’t bought a car in years. I
want a stupid dog. I’ve never even let myself have a dog.”
The anger seemed to be leaving Gev’s face. But he hadn’t said anything, and Lee was
starting to feel desperate. He ached to reach for Gev’s hand, so close to his own. So he did, his
fingers grasping Gev’s, his heart clenching so damn hard that it shocked him.
“When I saw you in there,” he said, voice faltering as he remembered that moment, “on
your knees, with that gun pointed at your head, a split second away from being taken from me
for good, I went crazy.” His heart leaped when Gev’s fingers curled around his. “If anything had
happened to you, I don’t—”
Gev looked up then, the hardness—but not all the hurt—gone. “I—” He licked his lips,
straightening, not taking his hand away but still hurt, so damn hurt. “I feel like a fool,” he finally
whispered. “I thought…” He closed his eyes. “I thought with Stef back… I know you told me it
wasn’t like that, but… Oh hell. You fell for me?”
Lee was confused for a second, then realized what he’d said. He hadn’t meant to say it, but
now he was damn glad he had. “Yeah, I did. Hard.”
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Carolyn Gray
The corner of Gev’s mouth twitched, and the last of the hurt was gone. Lee held his breath,
hoping to hell he’d finally broken through.
“You really serious? You want a house? That’s a weird way to try to convince me to come
back to you.”
Lee’s heart tripped at Gev’s teasing. “Okay, fine—two houses, then. One here and one in
Colorado. Or wherever you want to dance. I don’t care. As long as I can have a dog.”
“What’s wrong with a cat?” Gev said steadily.
Lee hesitated, his heart doing flip-flops. “How’d she get a name like Terror Screech,
anyway?”
“Chad named her, not me,” Gev said, spreading one hand. Then he sighed. “I’m such a
stupid fool.”
“I should’ve told you about Stef being alive.”
Gev winced. “Um, actually? Nina said you did the right thing.”
Lee was surprised at that. “She did? I don’t know,” he said. “I should’ve anyway. That was
as good as lying to you, and it won’t happen again. From now on, no more hiding things, no
more lies.”
“No more lies,” Gev whispered.
Lee wanted to push aside the next, but it had to be said. Now. No more putting things off.
“There’s still a lot to get through. Your brother’s probably in a lot of trouble, and he’ll need
help.” He tried not to notice the guarded look that crossed Gev’s face. “And, well, your mom
doesn’t exactly like me.”
“She’ll get over it.”
“And we’ll have to work things out about your dancing. If you want to stay here, okay, but
if there’s something else you want to do—”
Gev stopped him. “I’m not worried about that. I… It might take me a while to deal with
Stef being back. My mom—” He waved his hand, his mouth quirking up, but it was not to smile.
“Yeah. We’ve got a lot of crap to figure out.”
“I understand.”
“I mean, how to tell them and everything. About us.”
“Nina knows. Stef knows.”
Gev looked surprised. “Yeah, I expect he does.” He shifted on the bed. “I don’t know what
to expect. With Stef back, I don’t know.”
“I gave him the card of a friend of mine, told him I’d pay his legal fees.” Lee waited,
holding his breath, afraid to hope that it was really going to be okay. Gev’s eyes widened at that.
“You saw me give Stef the card, didn’t you?”
“Yeah. Stupid me. I thought… I don’t know. Stupid.”
“Not so stupid.” Lee’s cell buzzed then. He didn’t have to pull it out to know who it was.
The Dream ringtone made that clear.
“Nick,” Gev said, smiling.
Lee ignored the phone. “I’ll call later. They probably heard the news.”
“And are probably freaking out. What about telling Nick about us?”
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195
Lee thought for a moment. The last thing he wanted was to make a big deal about him and
Gev. He could imagine the explosion that would cause.
The phone stopped ringing. “Call him back,” Gev said.
“What?”
“Call him. Or better yet—” Gev pulled the phone out of Lee’s pocket and turned the
camera on. He looked at Lee, his eyes dancing. “We can send them a picture.”
“No. No way.”
“Why not?” Gev grinned. “Not
that
kind of picture. I’ll only send those to you. Come on.
Do you really want to talk to him right now?”
Hell no, he didn’t. He realized he liked Gev’s idea, though it scared the hell out of him.
Sending Nick a picture of them together would cause fireworks in Durango. He had no doubt
Nick would freak out, jumping up and down and screaming, “I told you guys! I knew it. I knew
it!” even though Lee had never said anything about his sexuality. He studied Gev’s face, the old
reticence and, well, the old Lee arguing with the Lee he wanted to become. Gev wanted this. Gev
needed
this. Needed Lee to share the truth with the people he was closest to, his bandmates and
friends—no, his
family
. “Okay.” He took a deep breath.
“Okay?” Gev said. “Wow. Let’s do it, then.”
Gev pulled him down on the bed, the heat from his body seeping immediately through to
Lee, making him shudder with want. Pure, hard desire rocketed through him as Gev leaned his
bruised, bandaged face close to Lee’s, not touching him otherwise. As if a magnet drew them
together, their cheeks finally touched. Gev turned his face to Lee’s. “Ready?”
Their lips met. Lee cradled Gev’s face, and Gev took the picture. Lee snaked his other
hand around Gev’s neck, pulling him closer. A muffled cry broke from Gev, and Lee’s entire
body reacted to that small sound, to Gev’s surrender as he let Lee kiss him, lips exploring Gev’s
with possessive force. He dropped his hand to Gev’s crotch, which pulsed hard beneath his
fingers, and stroked Gev through his jeans, his own cock hard, throbbing, almost painful with the
need for release. Gev spread his legs, thrusting against Lee’s hand, covering it with his own.
Finally, too soon, their chests heaving, they pulled apart.
“Damn,” Gev said breathlessly, then looked at the phone. He held it out to Lee.
Gev had somehow taken a good picture despite being suddenly ravished, and if a picture
could express a thousand words, this one did. It was perfect, Lee’s hand on Gev’s face, eyes half-
closed, Gev’s squeezed shut, Lee clearly devouring him.
“Send it,” Lee said, hardly believing himself.
Gev eyed him, still wary and unsure. “You mean it? You’re really ready for this.”
“Yes, I am. I promise. I love you, Gev Sinclair. And I plan to spend the next hundred years
making sure you never forget.” The happiness that broke out on Gev’s face shot straight through
to Lee’s heart, settling there, warm and bright and oh so right.
“I can handle that.” Gev kissed him. “I love you too—and fucking hell, that feels good to
say finally.”
Lee tapped the phone. “Send it.”
Trembling, leaning toward Lee to show him what he was doing, Gev typed:
see you guys
soon, we’re fantastic
. “Good?” he asked.
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Carolyn Gray
Lee took the phone, added,
love—G&L
, then hit Send.
He captured Gev’s mouth again. The phone rang immediately, but they ignored it. Then a
text message came through, chirping madly. “Think they got the message?” Gev asked.
“Oh yeah, no doubt about it.” All the hurt and uncertainty fell away then as Lee pulled Gev
closer and sealed his promise with his lips and hands and body. Clothes fell away, and their
bodies, naked and warm, came together with open honesty for the first time, all the horrors and
heartaches, the fears and doubts, the stranglehold of the past falling away. Now, Lee vowed as he
took Gev and made him completely his at last, with no shadows of the past between them, they
could both begin living again. Together. And nothing would tear them apart.
Nothing ever could.
Loose Id Titles by Carolyn Gray
A Red-Tainted Silence
Long Way Home
Carolyn Gray
Carolyn Gray lives in North Texas, where she makes her home with her two young adult
kids and two spoiled Siberian Huskies. She divides her time between work in the legal industry,
finally completing her education, traveling to the United Kingdom to be with her own knight in
shining armor, and creating suspenseful stories about everyday people caught up in more-than-
ordinary lives.
To learn more about Carolyn, visit her Web site a
t http://www.carolyngraybooks.com.