more secure subject.
“Can I ask about their meaning? Those poems, how you
grouped them together. Why you didn"t title them.” Hearing
it from Robert, who had always been more comfortable with
numbers than words, startled Alex into looking over. “There
were these images you kept repeating. Distance and death
and sticky hands, always holding on, or trying to….”
Other people had titled the collection the Butterscotch
Series because the first poem had contained a few lines
about a wax paper-wrapped disc of mellow butterscotch.
Alex himself hadn"t titled them because there was only one
title that would do, and it had seemed too personal. He
supposed that was foolish, considering everything else those
poems revealed. His publisher had not been very happy
about it either.
“I"ve wondered too,” Rachel chimed in. Molly snorted,
like she thought her siblings were slow. Maybe they were.
She"d been younger and in the house more with the two of
them. She must have seen a lot.
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“Screw that,” Ty butted back in, now that the subject
was open. “I want to know what everyone else in the world
wants to know. Who those poems were about, or to, anyway.
They were clearly
for
someone. I mean look at the next line
after,
If (when) I live to be old, will I confuse dreams
…
whatever it was again.”
Ally made another noise, but said nothing. Alex had
never adored her more, not that he could look at her. There
was nowhere he could look, really, not with so many pairs of
eyes on him. Only two looked elsewhere. Molly watched her
brother pick the dough from his hands.
Ty could not stop, though his eyes were wide, and he
slapped a hand over his mouth once the words were out.
“You know, due to the years gone by hinted at in a lot of the
lines, like that, like everything was all far in the past, a lot of
people say that it was someone you went to college with, like
Strauss McKinney.” He paused and then attempted to regain
his composure. “You know, the painter.”
“I know who he is,” Alex murmured.
“You fuc—dated him in college?” Molly spun around to
gape at him. “Wow.”
Alex waited a few moments, then cleared his throat. “If
I"d intended for the world to know everything, I would have
written everything.”
“So there is someone?” Ty was young. Alex reminded
himself of that when his fingers curled into his palms and
his vision went bright.
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“That"s enough, Ty.” Molly was suddenly serious. “If Alex
told off real interviewers, what makes you think he would tell
you?”
Robert snorted a laugh.
“Maybe the mystery is the brand. Why it sells,” he added
in the next second, and Alex had the vague feeling that
Robert was trying to take some of the pressure off, though he
didn"t know why. Though he had graduated by then and
hadn"t been in school with them, he had once been on their
high school football team and had never had much in
common with Alex except for a willingness to physically
defend Everett whenever necessary.
“Mystery. That kept getting repeated too. Like it was
really all about secrets.” Ty seemed to be ready to write his
thesis on the topic. Alex didn"t feel especially flattered. He
did not know how Everett felt. Everett turned away, working
perhaps, but Alex now knew the lines of him and how they
looked under his clothes, with his eyes if not his hands. He
pictured the muscles of his back, the tension in his
shoulders, and the jut of his shoulder blades.
Ally stretched to take his hand again and perhaps to
draw his attention, and Alex"s throat tightened. He couldn"t
have answered Ty if he"d wanted to, not in that moment. He
thought, wildly, frozen, that if Everett was his, he would
have him naked every moment of the day, every moment that
was theirs, so nothing would be hidden from him ever again.
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Then he thought Everett had never hidden anything
well, and if he had wanted to know, he should just have
asked.
“I can"t always track the way my mind works.” Alex
dismissed the subject once he could talk again, and took
another cookie though his mouth was dry. “You liked the
poems, I take it?” He raised his eyebrows. “Our dear Everett
didn"t.” Everyone looked at Everett, which Alex hadn"t meant
to happen, but as Everett wasn"t the only tricky one here, he
was quick to take advantage of it. “He"s never said a word
about them, at least not to me.”
Everett raised his head and turned back. His frown was
for Alex.
“I liked them, Alex. They were….” He paused as though
his chest hurt and he couldn"t draw breath. He turned to the
side and went back to working with strips of dough. “They
were beautiful. I"ve read them many times.”
That was somehow worse than Everett"s silent rejection,
Everett rereading them to reason them out yet afraid to
speak to Alex about them,
Everett
afraid. But Everett didn"t
give him a chance to reflect, though Alex"s body was
pounding with tension.
“But they are… they"re too… sad.” From his hesitation,
Alex could tell Everett was altering what he"d been about to
say. Then he shook his head and said it anyway. “They"re
without hope.”
“Melancholy is the term preferred in academic circles,”
Alex informed him slowly. He meant it to lighten the mood,
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but the words echoed in all the empty space between them.
Everett lifted his head. Alex stared back at him.
“
Sweet seconds but stolen
,” Molly exhaled, bringing
Alex"s attention to her, bringing everyone"s attention to her.
Everett straightened with a jerk, and Alex closed his eyes,
just for a moment, at hearing those words.
“Of course they were sad,” she went on. “They"re about
despair, how it"s wanting what you can"t have, or think you
can"t have, or don"t deserve.” Molly was superior. English
majors often were. Alex should know, he taught enough of
them. “They"re about
love
, obviously. Well, and desire…
pressed against the wound / into you long beneath me /
inches waiting to be crossed by the span of my hands pull me
down / I am blind to stars /
you beg to see constellations
….”
Alex lifted his head and stared until his eyes burned at
the side of Everett"s face.
“Which is why they"re so popular, I suppose.” Molly
thankfully chose not to finish the poem and spared them all
countless lines of yearning for a trace more breath, the taste
of sweat at a swallowing throat, the stabs of pleasure at a
brave hand sliding over denim, and made a rude sound in
her throat. “That and who hasn"t wanted something they
haven"t gotten? Those poems are full of all the reasons why
he wants what he wants, which are also the reasons why he
shouldn"t have it,” she added.
“Shut up, Molly.” Everett"s voice went up before the
silence could grow anymore strained.
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“You can"t tell me to shut up, just because you"re the
great Everett who gets to do whatever he wants,” Molly
started in, doubtlessly giving Everett a hard stare. It lasted
until her mother told her to be quiet too. Then she turned
back to gasp at her mother. “Of course you take his side.”
“Molly.” Robert broke in, giving her a significant look,
and then oddly, an eye roll. “There"s no use fighting it, just
be quiet.” Molly made a sound, not really amused, more
frustrated, but Alex moved his gaze and his thoughts away
from her and returned to Everett.
He was looking, but Everett would not look back as he
went on. “Don"t be fooled, not all of that is his brain
chemistry or his tragic, romantic genius. He will revel in his