Authors: Piper Vaughn
deal with everything, especially the panic attacks,
which were really bad at the time. Being near me
calmed her.” I drew in a shaky breath and released
it slowly, my eyes stinging. “I haven’t seen her in
six years.”
Asher took a brief moment to look at me, his
hand squeezing mine even harder. “I’m sorry,
hon.”
“It’s okay.” I made a sound that might have
been a laugh, though there was no humor in it.
“Well, not okay, but… I guess by now I’m used to
it. They kept me fed. Never abused me. Too
worried about how it would look, I think. But the
day—and I mean
literally
the day—I turned
eighteen, they told me I was an adult and capable
of fending for myself. And they asked me to leave.
They also said not to bother keeping in touch, and
that they didn’t want me to see Mandy again.
Ever.”
My chest tightened as I thought back on that
day. God, I’d been so terrified. There had been
nowhere to go, no one to turn to except for Rue,
and of course he’d taken me in. He’d stood by me
through everything—the tears and rage I felt at the
loss of my sister, the worry about how I would
support myself, how I’d pay for school or afford a
car. I didn’t know what I would have done without
him.
“After that, Rue was all I had for a long time.
The only person I could really rely on, you know?
Boyfriends came and went, but Rue never did. He
was
always
there, just like I tried to be for him.”
“I’m glad,” Asher murmured. “I’m glad he
was there for you.”
The smile that came to my face was
tremulous, but genuine all the same. My friendship
with Rue was one of the things I was most thankful
for in my life. “Me too. And now I have Erik and
Alice….” I brought our linked hands up to my
mouth and brushed a kiss across his knuckles.
“And you.”
Asher looked at me again. I could tell he
wanted to hold me, comfort me more than he could
with one hand on the wheel and most of his
attention on the road. “I love you,” he said. “You
do have me. Every part of me. I’ll be there for as
long as you let me.”
I nodded, not trusting myself to speak. I could
feel the moisture building in my eyes and tried to
blink it back. I didn’t want to start crying when
everything had been so happy and wonderful up to
that point.
“How old is your sister now?” Asher asked
after a moment.
I cleared my throat and managed to swallow
past the lump that had formed there, blocking my
words. “Eighteen,” I answered, grateful when my
voice didn’t waver, as I’d feared it would. “I think
about trying to contact her sometimes. She must be
in college already. I just… haven’t been able to
work up the courage.”
“Why not?”
I shrugged a little, like it didn’t matter much,
even as the tears I’d been holding back finally fell.
“I guess I worry, after all this time, she might not
want to know me.”
No hiding the emotion in my voice that time.
Ah, well.
I’d never been much good at pretending
anyway. One of my biggest faults, by some
people’s standards. But I wasn’t the sort of person
to equate sentimentality with weakness.
“She’ll want to,” Asher said, with such
complete conviction it made me smile despite the
tears. “You’re amazing, Dusty. You should reach
out to her. It wasn’t her choice not to talk to you. I
bet she’s missed you.”
I hoped she had. I’d certainly missed her.
“Maybe I will.” I couldn’t promise more than that.
Asher nodded, accepting the statement for
what it was. “And I’ll be there if you do.”
WHEN we got back to my house, we hung out with
Rue and Erik for a bit. Alice was battling a cold
and looking miserable, so eventually Rue got up to
give her a warm bath and put her to bed, while
Erik, Asher, and I finished the movie we’d started.
Asher made love to me that night, once the
house was still and silent, more tenderly than he
ever had. He whispered in my ear, telling me he
loved me, promising to stay with me forever.
There had been other guys who’d told me similar
things when they were inside me, caught up by sex
and lust. Promises were made and then promptly
forgotten. But I knew it was different with Asher.
His words, they sounded like a vow.
Asher
FAMILY.
The word had so many meanings. Yeah, it
was Mom and Dad and even Archer, as much as he
drove me up the damn wall. But it was also Dusty.
More and more every day. When he let himself
into my apartment on the days when I was out late
working, and had dinner ready for me, I melted.
When he rubbed my shoulders or sat in front of me
when we were watching movies so I could
massage his, it felt right. Just normal. Everyday.
Family.
On the way home from a run one night a
couple of weeks before Christmas, I noticed a
building in a neighborhood I’d always liked had a
“for rent” sign up in the front lawn. It wasn’t
something I’d been seriously considering… until I
slowed down to a stop in front of the plastic box
that had the flyers. Before I knew it, one of them
was in my hand, and I was thinking about how I
could make rent work on my own. By the time I’d
gotten back to my place, a thought that had turned
into a whim had worked its way into a real idea.
It was time that I moved out on my own. Had
a place of my own that Dusty could come home to,
with no brother or lovable but nosy roommates
who could easily hear every moan and groan. I
looked at the paper again before shoving it in the
back of my shorts and pulling my shirt over it.
Yeah, it was an idea. A good one. I’d have to talk
to Dusty about it. Even if we weren’t at the place
where we could move in together, I wanted him to
be part of my future. It was important.
Archer was in the kitchen pouring himself
some cereal when I went in to get water.
“Hey. How was your run?” His voice was so
friendly that I turned in surprise. We hadn’t had a
nice conversation in months, far before Dusty ever
came into the picture.
“Um, it was good. How was…?” I realized I
had no clue where he’d been earlier. Or even the
night before.
Archer chuckled. “Coffee. With Jericho. It
was fine.”
“I’ve heard that name a lot lately. Are you
two…?”
“You’re dumb.” And there was Archer again.
“Jericho’s just a friend. If I fucked him, things
would get weird.”
I nodded. “Cool.” Maybe my brother was
growing up a little bit. Didn’t mean I wanted to
keep living with him forever and ever, but it was
encouraging just the same.
I called the apartment building later that day.
The owner told me it had been taken just an hour
before. I didn’t realize how much I’d wanted it,
how the idea had gone from a dream to maybe, to
something I all of a sudden needed. So maybe it
wasn’t going to be
that
place. I wanted a place that
was my home… and hopefully Dusty’s too.
“HEY, hon.” I greeted Dusty with a brushing kiss.
He was on his dinner break. I’d been antsy all
afternoon, waiting to talk to him, so I’d asked him
to come meet me at The Banana Leaf. I wanted to
know what he thought about the apartment idea. I
figured maybe if he was excited about the
apartment in general, maybe someday soon he’d be
excited about moving into it with me.
“Hey. So what’s with the emergency dinner?”
Dusty asked with a joking smile after we were
seated with our drinks in my favorite booth with a
view of the street. I loved his smiles. Even when I
was nervous as hell, they managed to calm me
down.
“So, I was on my run earlier today, right?”
Dusty nodded. He’d bemoaned my runs more than
once when I’d dragged myself from bed and away
from him. “And I saw a ‘for rent’ sign on this
building I’ve always liked.”
“That’s cool.” I knew he was worried about
where I was going with my story. I knew Dusty’s
worried look.
“Don’t freak out.” I reached out and ran my
thumb across his lip to catch a drop of Thai iced
tea. “I was just thinking that I’m tired of living
with Archer, and it would be nice to have a place
of my own.” I smiled. “Where I can have guests…
and they can be as loud as they want.”
Dusty gulped. “Yes. That’s a good idea.”
“Since I have some cash in savings, I called
the building manager, but the place was gone.”
Dusty’s face fell. “I was disappointed at first, but
it doesn’t have to be that place. So I called a
property manager and made an appointment to go
view some of their buildings. How would you like
to go apartment hunting with me on Monday? It’s
important to me for you to like the place too.”
His smile came back, big and sunny. “Of
course. I’d love to.”
I FOUND a place during our search that fit me
perfectly. By the way Dusty’s eyes lit up when he
saw the place, I was thinking he loved it too. It had
probably been built in the thirties, only three
stories, Spanish style with gorgeous landscaping
and a pool. The apartment had two bedrooms, one
with fantastic light, and a great big kitchen that
someday, I hoped, would be Dusty’s little health
food laboratory. I was enchanted. I knew he was
too. I signed right there.
What I had to do later wasn’t so great.
“Hey, um, Arch?”
“Mmm?” Archer had a mouthful of (my) chips
and a bowl of guacamole that Dusty had made the
night before. Part of me wanted to get on his case
for eating my food again, but the other part of me
knew it wasn’t long before we were on our own,
and it would be so much easier to get along then.
“I think it’s time for me to get my own place. I
actually was out looking today. There was a place
I think will be perfect for me.”
Archer rolled his eyes. “Love nest?”
I didn’t mean to do it, but I smiled. “It’s just
me for now, not that it matters. Do you think you
can find a couple of roommates to take over my
part of the lease?”
“Whatever, dude. No prob.”
“You sure? I can cover next month too, give
you extra time.”
“No. It’s cool.”
Archer wandered into his room after that with
my chips and guacamole. I heard him talking on the
phone.
“… dork ass brother is finally moving out….
You in…? Cool.”
Archer was going to be fine. A jerk, but fine
all the same. I was a dork ass, apparently, but I
was going to be fine too. More than fine.
So three weeks later, when my new apartment
was available, I was thrilled to say good-bye to
living with my brother, and move my belongings
into my new place with the help of some movers, a
couple of friends, and one very excited boyfriend.
“I love this place already,” Dusty said with a
happy sigh as he collapsed on the bed we’d just
put together in my new bedroom, which had a
balcony with a view of the pool.
“Me too.” I flopped down next to him and
gathered him into my arms.
It felt
good
. Not just holding Dusty, because
that was always great, but holding him in my own
room in my own place with nobody on the other
side of the wall. It was more grownup somehow. I
liked it.
“You wanna get a shower before we go to
sleep? I’m exhausted.”
Dusty chuckled. “I’m glad you said that. I
can’t wait to christen every room in the place. But
not tonight. I’m beat.”
“Me too. Christening will have to wait.”
After a short, sleepy shower, Dusty and I
crawled into bed together and melted into what
had quickly become our customary position, him in
front of me, my hand on his belly, our fingers
twined together. I couldn’t wait for the day when
he was there every single night, and his clothes
were in the closet, and his life was woven with
mine.
Soon.