Read Before the Darkness (Refuge Inc.) Online
Authors: Leslie Lee Sanders
Tags: #erotic MM, #Romance MM
"Even after they abandoned me, I still
waited, hoping the next time I would get an
invitation. Later, when Sammy was helping me
and Jeff pack our stuff to move to Phoenix, I
found out there were other parties."
"That's—"
"Fucked. I know. And yet, I wish I never
would've left." Elliot turned his head and met
Adam's gaze. "I wonder if they missed me as
much as I missed them."
Adam didn't know what to say. He
dropped his gaze. How upsetting that must have
been to have a family that excluded him and
made him feel like he didn't matter, like he
wasn't important to them, to betray him, as Elliot
put it. Somewhere inside, his heartache for Elliot
was brie ly eclipsed by the awe he had for him
to stand up for himself. Even if Elliot felt his
brother was the favored son, Elliot had spoken
up about the unfairness between them
regardless of the consequences. If only Adam
was brave enough to confront his own demons.
He sighed as an invisible vise clenched and
churned his innards. The least he could do was
share
something
about himself. But he wouldn't
go too deep. He wasn't ready to go too deep.
"I don't have any brothers or sisters."
Adam said. "My father died at ifty when I was
still a kid, lung cancer. My mom was young, her
early thirties when he died. Still young and
stupid she got into drugs and ran off with a
boyfriend a few years later. I ended up living
alone until I inally graduated high school. Then
later, at twenty-one, I took a job at The Rodeo as
a bartender." There, that should do it. He
inhaled and tasted dust, exhaled and felt relief.
That wasn't too bad. He didn't go deep at all.
"You were a bartender too? Where did
you learn to tend bar?"
"Learned on the job. They only hired me
'cause the club manager wanted some 'hunky
guys' out front to bring in the ladies and the
bucks. They hired me only because I promised
to be a dancer for them when I learned a thing
or two. I met Jena there the year I started
bartending. She and her girlfriend were
regulars. Less than a couple weeks later we
were dating and about a year after that I started
dancing."
"Did you like dancing?" An innocent smile
curled Elliot's bruised lip.
The thought of helping Elliot's bruise heal
with a soft, wet kiss made Adam lick his own dry
lips. Then he looked away, tearing the image
from his mind. "It was okay."
Over the next few minutes of silence,
Adam's mind wandered, remembering the feel
of Elliot's hard body on his wet skin. The way
they moved in unison, rubbing their hard, slick
cocks together. Allowing the power of their
orgasm to pull them from their harsh realities
and transport them into heavenly bliss. If only
for a brief moment, it felt so . . . good.
"Do you hear that?" Elliot paused. "I
heard footsteps."
Adam paused and listened, looking in the
direction of the flashlight beam.
A shadow ran by. Elliot swept the light
across the dusty trail, following the shadow and
lighting up a fallen concrete wall that used to
serve as a divider between homes. Then the
bark gave it away.
"Damn dog is back," Adam whispered.
"Hand me the light." If the damned thing decided
to attack he would use the long, heavy, metal
lashlight as a weapon. Elliot gave him the
flashlight and the dog growled, peeking out from
behind the collapsed concrete divider. Adam
braced himself. "Get somewhere safe," he said,
while keeping the light glued to the dog.
"Where am I supposed to go?" Elliot said
quietly.
But before Adam could answer, the dog
came rushing forward. He lifted the lashlight,
ready to strike, but the dog stopped a few feet
ahead of him. Adam shined the light on it again.
"Get!" he yelled but the bleeding dog didn't
budge. He stepped forward and the dog moved
backward. "Go on. Get going!" The dog
whimpered, turned as if it was gonna leave but
made a full circle and cocked his head and
stared at Elliot. Then he sat down and licked at
the wound on its hind leg.
"It's scared." Adam said, relaxing. "It
doesn't want to hurt us, it's just being
defensive." He looked to Elliot, seeing a half-
eaten granola bar in his hand. "Try giving it a
piece of that."
Elliot raised his hand, staring at the bar.
"I forgot I even had this." He broke off a piece
and threw it in the dog's direction where it
landed on the ground near it. The dog stood,
sniffed at the granola bar and devoured it.
"Knew it. He's harmless," Adam said.
Elliot broke the rest of his bar into bite
sized pieces and tossed them beside the dog.
"Let's go."
They continued walking along the
isolated path, carefully making their way over
and through rubble, abandoned vehicles and
fallen trees guided by the lashlight. Adam
glanced over his shoulder at the rustling behind
them. The dog followed them closely. Its head
hung low and its dark eyes looked up at them
like a hopeless, begging child in need. It was
pathetic how much the mutt tugged at his
heartstrings. He was pathetic to allow it. "The
damn thing's following us."
Elliot turned to look behind him and then
swiveled to look ahead again. "It probably wants
some more food."
"Too bad." Adam pivoted, lashing the
light on the dog and lighting up its dirty brown
coat of fur. "Get, dog." He stomped his foot. "Get
the hell outta here." It whined and scurried
away behind what was left of someone's home.
They barely had enough food for themselves,
they had to ration it the best they could. He sure
didn't have enough granola bars to feed three
mouths let alone his and Elliot's.
He sighed at the realization. "We're
gonna need more food and water."
Elliot pointed toward the south. "Food
Plus is that way."
Adam could only make out the
silhouettes of buildings far in the distance. They
were nothing more than dark, odd shaped
remnants of structures that used to be twice
their size, and lit up with streetlights and
glowing signs.
"Do you remember if there's one that
way?" He didn't want to stray from the plan,
walking west. He wasn't sure where he was
going but it seemed to be the logical thing to do.
If angry, menacing darkness was approaching
from the east, escape them by traveling west. It
made sense.
"There's a gas station up here." Elliot
nodded excitedly, and then shook his head. "No
wait, that's on Roosevelt and Main. Damn it."
Adam paused, thinking. "If we head to
Food Plus it'll take us another thirty minutes or
so to get there."
"We could do it. Don’t worry about my
bum leg."
"It's not your leg I'm worried about. We'd
have to climb over and through all this junk and
who knows how long that'll take. It'll take
forever to get back on track." Adam looked
around, pointing the light as far as it would go to
the west.
"Let's go to Food Plus and stock up on
food and water. Who knows, maybe we can take
shelter there too."
"I wanna stay on track. We walk west
until we run into…something."
"Something?" Elliot dipped his brows.
"You mean someone. You really don't think
everyone's dead, huh?" The way Elliot looked at
him, scrutinizing with his eyes, doubting, and
judging made Adam a bit defensive. An uneasy
energy surged between them. Elliot was onto
him, he knew he was playing a role; the role of a
macho man that everyone, including his iancée
expected him to be.
Instead of answering, Adam ignored the
question. "Let's just keep walking."
"No, answer me." Elliot tugged his
shoulder, forcing Adam to turn and stare at him.
Challenging him to come clean. "You don't really
believe everyone's dead, do you?"
"What does it matter what I think?" His
voice raised an octave, stunning Elliot and
making him take a step back.
"I'm using both of our heads to make the
best decisions. You're the one who saw a news
report about this stuff. I trusted you. If you think
there are people still alive maybe we should ind
them."
Of course, everyone always counted on
Adam to know what's best, and when he failed
they blamed him. "
I'm
the one using both of our
heads. You asked me what the plan was and I
told you. I didn't ask you to trust me. I'm looking
out for myself and you should do the same."
Elliot backed down, voice lowering. "I
thought we were in this together. Two heads are
better than one."
"Look, I'm doing the best I can. I told you,
I'm not the hero you think I am." Adam had to
stop there. He couldn't go too deep. He
shrugged, looking into Elliot's hurt brown eyes.
His stomach ached. He wished he had the balls
to cradle Elliot's face in his palms and brush
apologetic kisses from one corner of his lips to
the other, but he had to think about his survival
and consider his iancée. Lusting after Elliot was
doing him no good. It was making him take a
step back, back to a place he didn't want to be.
"Look, I—"
"What was that?" Elliot stood still, looking
around with his big brown eyes.
"Huh?"
"Did you feel that?"
At that exact moment the earth beneath
Adam's feet began to shake. "An earthquake."
"Another one? Shit."
The vacant vehicles on the littered road
began to sway as the rocking got stronger.
Chunks of concrete and brick fell from what was
left of some of the buildings, and far in the
distance the screeching sound of heavy, hot
steel twisting and bending cut through the air.
Then like a bomb detonating, the sound of a
building collapsing tore through the night
behind them. Then unexpectedly, like a thief
caught red-handed, the trembling stopped.
"What was that?" Elliot asked. "You think
it was an aftershock."
"Maybe, let's keep moving."
A pained yelp cut through the silence,
sending a cold chill down Adam's spine. He
turned around facing where the sound was
coming from. Again, an agonizing howl tore
through the silence.
Elliot brought his hand up to his wide
mouth. "Oh, no. Something's happened to that
dog."
They stood silently, listening for proof
that the dog was in trouble. When the squealing
cry sounded again, Adam hastily made his way
to the crying where whining and whimpering
noises came from under a pile of wood and
rubble. "It's trapped in there." He sat his pack
and the lashlight down, angling the light to
illuminate the massive heap of concrete ruins,
and then he began lifting and throwing huge
blocks off of the pile. Elliot joined him, picking
up and clearing away as much debris as they
could.
They cleared as much as they could
manage. The only thing left standing in their way
was a big, solid slab of concrete. When Adam
lifted one end of the heavy slab it teetered. The
back end lowered allowing him to lift his end
only about a foot high.
"Crawl in there and tell me if you see it,"
he said through clenched teeth as he bore the
immense weight of the slab.
Elliot grabbed the lashlight and shined it
in the space under the debris. "I don't see
anything. Hold on."
Adam heard the heavy clunking as Elliot
moved away some more blocks. "This is really
heavy," he warned, hoping Elliot would hurry.
He couldn't hold it for long.
Elliot crawled nearly halfway inside. "Oh,
I see it!"
"Grab it."
"I can't. I think it's stuck."