hands needed for last minute gift wrapping, but he couldn"t
make himself mind.
“Will you be drinking tonight too? I didn"t know you
could.” Ty turned to him, a whole new curiosity in his eyes
that meant he"d either done some research last night or had
asked Molly for more dirt. Alex shot her a glare. She waved
her hands with false innocence.
The Faradays were family. His readers were, in a
strange way, also family, considering what he shared with
them, but Alex paused to stir his coffee and then chose not
to answer.
“If you don"t mind me asking,” Ty went on to cover the
pause, maybe to apologize. “I"m just a big fan.”
“Of my work or of the stories about me?” His coffee was
still too hot. He chose a cookie instead. No icing yet, just how
he liked it. Icing dozens of cookies had given him a distaste
for frosting that he laid at Everett"s door, though he already
knew that Everett had only to give him a look through his
eyelashes, and Alex would right in this spot turn bell- and
tree-shaped sugar cookies into bright, sugary blobs.
51
A Wealth of Unsaid Words • R. Cooper
He glanced over again and thought Everett might be
smiling to himself. Alex had to remind himself he was
speaking to someone else.
“They"re mostly true, or I assume they are. They"re a
blur to me.” He must have spoken too loudly because Ally
looked up, and Molly and Rachel went quiet. Robert was on
the other side of the kitchen; he must have arrived earlier.
He was listening too.
Ty seemed flushed. “I meant your work. I read your
stories for class. Then those poems that just came out.
Where did those come from? They seem like a complete
turnaround from what you"ve done before. The old-fashioned
language and everything… it made them seem almost
dreamy. Wistful, in addition to being sexy.”
Ally made a distressed face at her plate, but then offered
Alex an unhappy smile. Hot or not, he sipped his coffee and
smiled back at her. Those poems were the most explicit work
he"d ever done, about his sexuality, about his mind and what
it felt like to lose it, about death. They were about everything
he"d ever wanted, and unlike with his other works, he
couldn"t pretend that they were fiction.
He"d known Ally would read them, even if George would
claim he didn"t care for poems. It had probably been a shock
for her. It was one thing for her to love her son and know he
was gay, but it must have taken some adjustments for her
and George to accept Alex into their home as well. He would
have told her not to read them if he"d thought it would have
worked.
52
A Wealth of Unsaid Words • R. Cooper
“I think they"re just like what Alex has always done,”
she pushed out finally, clearing her throat, and Alex blinked.
“He has always told the truth. I thought they were lovely.”
Her voice was strained, but she gulped down some air and
then turned toward Alex as her usual serene expression
replaced her anxiety and embarrassment. Alex had a feeling
that lovely wasn"t how she would describe them to anyone
except someone outside the family. It was her way of closing
ranks and being supportive.
Because he was an idiot and something of a masochist,
he also wondered if she"d understood what those lines had
really been about. Judging from her nervous twitching, he
was assuming she had.
“I heard someone bought the rights to one for a song or
something,” Robert spoke up as a nice distraction.
“Ah, not quite.” Alex tore his gaze away from Everett"s
mother and those kind eyes she shared with her youngest
son. “Someone asked for the rights to my story to make a
movie.”
“A movie!” Molly was almost out of her chair. Everett
stopped what he was doing without looking up. A few of the
others made remarks Alex couldn"t distinguish from the
general chaos.
“It"s not a big deal. They buy up anything, sometimes
without ever producing a film. I haven"t said yes.” The
cookies were warm on his tongue, sweet with his coffee. He
chewed and kept his eyes down. “I"m not sure if I will. I don"t
know if they realize how much of my sex life they would have
53
A Wealth of Unsaid Words • R. Cooper
to put onscreen.” There"d been women here and there,
mostly when he"d been younger, but he had a feeling that
unless the movie went for the artistic, independent route,
there"d be more women onscreen than men, which would not
only be inaccurate but insulting. “You know how it goes.”
Molly was voicing indignant outrage on his behalf. “Like
it"s even a big deal that he"s gay. How are they planning on
avoiding it? There"s no way they could even tell your story
without talking about E—”
“Are you sure you want to do that?” Everett interrupted.
Alex turned to him, and Everett looked down at his hands
and whatever he was making. Ally made a noise, her anxiety
obviously still present.
“There are some things I don"t want the world to know.”
Alex took in the straight, tense line of Everett"s shoulders
and then swung his gaze back to Everett"s mother, then to
his father who was now in the doorway behind her and
scowling. “But it might help some people out there, to know
what it"s like. Some people still think I"m acting, you know.
Playing the role of the crazy artist. That I was, am, this way
on purpose.”
George"s scowl grew deeper.
“That"s a load of sh—crap!” Ty unexpectedly came to his
defense. Alex had forgotten he was there, and stared at him.
“You could tell from your books you were… not well.” His
aura of discomfort was almost amusing.
“The current popular, technical, term is bipolar, but I
prefer manic-depressive. It sounds more interesting and
54
A Wealth of Unsaid Words • R. Cooper
doesn"t get nearly as many frightened stares.” Alex drew out
the sarcasm, and then drank some more coffee. Ty
straightened up with a frown, only to lean in with even more
interest obvious in his expression now.
“When you tried your first medications, weren"t you
worried about the side effects? Uh… if that"s not too nosy.”
“He was more worried about ending up dead.” Everett
sounded good and pissed off now, and was scowling down at
his bread. That fierce expression was what the troubled boys
he worked with must see whenever they crossed a line. It
made him seem more like his father for a moment, when
George had been setting up rules and curfews and
punishments for a teenaged Alex to show him what a safe
environment looked like, though it hadn"t seemed that way
at the time.
Ally reached across the table to grab his hand, and Alex
nearly flinched. He"d recovered here in their home, in
Everett"s room at his own weak insistence, and every
morning on the days he"d come downstairs, Ally had taken
his hand, just like that. Then George would cough
uncomfortably and order him to his feet, only to take his arm
and help him with exhausting decisions like what to wear
and what to eat and then drag him from the house on trips
to the car parts store, the local library, to get groceries,
anything and everything to keep him up and distracted, to
keep him moving, to give him something to write to Everett
about.
He"d had to write to Everett. It had been his goal, every
day, even if only a few words, scattered memories about high
55
A Wealth of Unsaid Words • R. Cooper
school and that convenience store and kneeling on the floor
of Everett"s room by his open window.
Everett had his hands on the counter, the skin up to his
elbows white with flour and bits of sticky dough. Even across
the distance, Alex could see he was shaking.
“Anyway….” Alex deliberately lightened his tone and
moved on. “It keeps most of the bats out of my belfry, and
despite my fears, I"ve written since then.”
Everyone seemed grateful to make the leap to a slightly