Read Before the Darkness (Refuge Inc.) Online
Authors: Leslie Lee Sanders
Tags: #erotic MM, #Romance MM
"Let me take a look," Adam said, the
weight of the slab tiring his arm muscles. Just as
Elliot crawled out Adam dropped the slab and
took a few deep breathes. "Can you lift that?"
"I can try." They exchanged positions and
Elliot lifted the hefty slab, testing. "I can't hold it
for long."
Adam took his cue and grabbed the
lashlight. He crawled into the hole and shined it
in the direction of the whimpering. The dog's
head stuck out from a smaller pile of crumbled
concrete blocks. Adam crawled closer and
carefully dislodged a block, freeing the dog,
except it didn't come out of the rubble as he
expected it to.
"Think it's really hurt." He called out to
Elliot. "I'm gonna pull it out."
"Just hurry. This thing is heavy."
Adam crawled forward, breathing in dust
and dirt as his face grazed the ground. He
reached into the smaller crevice and carefully
took hold of the scruff on the back of the dog's
neck. He gently yet quickly pulled the dog out of
the narrow opening and into the cavity with him.
He tried to back up out of the hole and pull the
dog with him, but there wasn't enough room
and he didn't have a tight grip. His heart raced
as he felt the concrete slab slowly weigh down
on the back of his thighs, pinning him to the
dusty ground.
"What are you doing? You're gonna
crush me."
Elliot grunted. "Hurry. Too heavy."
"Elliot, don't drop that on me." As he
talked he managed to wiggle and squirm, slowly
backing up out of the hole; one hand gripping
the lashlight, the other pulling the injured dog.
The slab of heavy, ragged concrete scraped the
back of his thighs and ass.
"Hurry," Elliot cried. He grunted again,
sounding like a muscle man lifting three
hundred pounds. "Damn it, Adam. Hurry!"
The slab rose, allowing Adam to better
slide out with the dog. As soon as they were
clear, Elliot dropped the slab. It teetered, the
back end lifted rapidly as the front end crashed
to the ground. Dirt and dust pillared up around
them. The sound of rocks settling on the pile
rushed around them for a few seconds.
Elliot slumped forward, hands on his
knees as he breathed heavily in an attempt to
catch his breath.
"You were close to dropping that on me."
Adam shined the light on the rubble pile,
imaging the dire consequences if that very thing
had happened.
Elliot inhaled sharply. "No. I was
not
gonna drop it. Not until you were out of there."
He coughed. "I swear."
The sincere look in his quick blinking
eyes told Adam he was telling the truth. That
and the fact that he hadn't dropped it. He looked
down at his feet where the dog lay. It rested on
its side motionless, looking up at him with
blinking, sorrowful dark eyes. Adam saw that
the dog was male and most likely a cross breed.
His brick-like head, thick muscled neck, stocky
body and tapered tail suggest that it was a Pit
Bull Terrier.
He kneeled beside the dog. Blood seeped
from a ilthy two inch tear in his left hind leg.
Instinctively Adam glanced at Elliot's leg. The
similarities in their injuries were uncanny. "I
think he was crushed." He shook his head, ran
his hand through his own dusty hair and sighed.
"He's dying."
Elliot frowned. "So we just leave him
here?"
"Or put him out of his misery." He met
Elliot's eyes with a questioning look.
Elliot's eyes widened. "I can't do that."
Adam huffed. "I'll do it." He knew since he
brought it up he would have to be the one to
carry it out. He sat the lashlight down, angling it
to light the area as best as possible. He picked
up a cinder block from the pile he just crawled
out of, and while standing over the dog, he lifted
the hefty block above his head.
"I can't watch this." Elliot closed his eyes
and turned around.
Adam's heart pounded so fast and hard
he felt it in his thumbs as he gripped the cinder
block. He looked down at the dog. The dog
looked up at him and let out a hoarse bark as if
to protest. Adam's bottom lip trembled and his
grip tightened. Sweat trickled down the back of
his neck and the environment suddenly grew
deathly quiet. For a second he thought he had
gone deaf. He bit his bottom lip to keep it from
quivering, and the muscles in his arms began to
ache from the weight of the cinder block in his
hands. He closed his eyes, trying to calm himself
when a pair of strong yet soft hands overlapped
his own, removing the cinder block from his
grip.
"Don't do it." Elliot whispered in his ear.
He felt the warmth of Elliot's body as he
pressed against his back. Elliot gently sat the
block down on the ground and Adam dropped
his hands to his side, thankful that Elliot had
stopped him from doing what would've been on
his conscience for days and maybe weeks to
come.
"You went through all that hell to save
him and now you're just gonna turn around and
kill him? No, I won't let you do that to yourself
or him."
Adam stared at the dog, too ashamed to
look at Elliot. "Thank you."
Elliot chuckled. "Why are you thanking
me? You're the hero. I knew you were."
"You helped." Adam said, inally looking
up. He smiled slightly, already feeling guilt mixed
with a bit of relief.
"I did," Elliot said proudly. "So that makes
me your sidekick, huh? What should our names
be?" Adam sat down beside the dog, watching as
Elliot thought, admiring how he could take a
devastating moment and turn it into something
comforting, relaxing. "I know," Elliot continued.
"You can be Midnight Man. In the darkness or
the mid of night, Midnight Man prowls the
destruction, with double M's on his sexy chest,
to rescue anyone and any dog in need."
Adam blushed at his
sexy chest
reference
and was glad Elliot couldn't see his red cheeks in
the poor lighting.
Elliot grinned. "And his sidekick Dark Lad,
with the ability to lift anything no matter the size
—"
"Dark Lad?" Adam snorted.
"Yeah, you know, Midnight? Dark?" He
gestured at the ominous dark sky above them.
"Dark Lad stays true to the word sidekick by
never leaving Midnight Man's side no matter
what."
Heat gathered in Adam's chest. "Thanks."
"No need to thank me." Elliot reached
down and placed a hand on Adam's shoulder.
"You'd do the same for me, huh?"
They stared at each other silently for a
moment. Adam focused on the soft outline of
Elliot's jaw and the fullness of his pouty bottom
lip. His stomach hurt from the knots that
gathered in the pit of it. He swallowed, his
mouth salivating at the thought of tasting the
tongue of the sensual-looking man who stared
back at him.
The dog's panting took their attention
away from each other and brought Adam back
to reality. Elliot knelt beside the dog and patted
its head. "Maybe he's thirsty and hungry."
Without a second thought, Adam grabbed
his pack and dug inside for his bottle of water
and a granola bar. He drizzled the water into the
dog's mouth, watching as it lapped at the stream
frantically. The dog lifted its head from the
ground in an attempt to get more water.
"Easy. Easy." Adam caressed the head
and then opened the granola package. He held a
piece of the bar in his palm and offered it. The
dog sniffed at it, and then suddenly gulped it
down once he realized it was food. Adam fed it
the rest of the package and watched as the dog
struggled to stand. It shook its body, shaking off
a layer of dirt, and sat. It stretched its injured
hind leg and licked at the bloody wound.
"He looks better already." Elliot smiled
widely. His smile lightened the mood. "Let's
clean up the leg like you did mine. You have
some more gauze and antiseptic?"
Adam grabbed some sterile gauze and
the bottle of antiseptic from his pack. He'd taken
some from the dental of ice for Elliot's wound,
so he had plenty to spare for the dog. Elliot
helped hold the dog still as Adam cleaned,
covered and wrapped the hurt leg. Once
inished, the dog stood and sniffed around in his
backpack, probably for more granola.
Adam yawned. "Let's rest here a while."
He cleared the area of litter with his feet. "We
can use some of this trash and stuff to build a
fire for light."
Elliot huffed, frowning. "Like camping, but
not really."
"Come on, Dark Lad." Adam tapped
Elliot's shoulder. "If the superhero doesn't
complain, the sidekick doesn't either."
Elliot scoffed, rolling his eyes. "I never
said you were a
super
hero." He helped gather
some wood pieces. "But you're not far from it."
4: Denial
Elliot watched the lames dance around
in the makeshift stone-walled pit, and the dog
limp about snif ing at the litter around them.
Elliot stretched his legs out on the ground near
the fire. "I think he's still hungry."
"He's had three bars already." Adam
reclined back against the slanted slab that rested
on the pile of concrete blocks he had crawled
under. "Be completely out of bars before you
know it. Might have to make a trip to that Food
Plus."
Their camp ire illuminated the area
around them enough for Elliot to make out
Adam's handsome features. Everything else
outside of their close circle was cloaked in
blackness. He couldn't make out anything
beyond ten feet, which he didn't mind. The
limited light source made him feel protected. He
imagined relaxing inside a small bubble that
included Adam and their new four legged friend,
safe from the deteriorating world outside the
bubble.
The dog limped over and lay down on the
ground next to Elliot. "Look, he likes me."
"I see that." Adam smiled, causing the
parenthesis lines around his mouth to deepen.
"Since he's gonna stick with us, maybe we
should name him." He ran his hand along the
dog's short, dark brown coat. Something caught
his eye. The hairs around the dog's neck lay lat
in a uniform ring as if he once wore a collar.
Also the dog's ears were cropped. "Looks like
he's had a name before."
"Huh?"
"He used to wear a collar, and someone
took good care of him. His nails are trimmed
and he seems pretty healthy other than the leg.
What do you think his name is?"
"Don't know."
"Come on, guess."
"Uh, Spot, Max, Titan?"
Elliot called to the dog, "Titan. Titan?"
When the dog didn't respond he frowned. "No,
it's not Titan."
Adam shrugged. "Just make up a name."
Elliot stared at the dog, thinking. "Titan
sounds pretty good."
Titan was a good name. It signi ied
strength, importance, and power. Kind of like
Adam. Elliot watched Adam relax, rocking his
head back against the slab. There was no
denying he was a good-looking man. It took
everything Elliot had to keep from jumping him
like a sex-starved maniac. He admired his self-
discipline. Thinking of discipline, he realized he
hadn't looked back east since they left the dental
of ice. He was stronger now, ready to do
whatever he had to do to survive. But although
the darkness completely blanketed them, he just
couldn't commit to looking above at the murky
clouds. So he settled on staring at Adam.
Dirty thoughts of hot, wet sex entered his
mind. He knew his thoughts were mostly out of
desperation; desperation to escape reality, but
they were welcomed.
Seconds of silence slowly rolled by. In the
midst of the calm, Elliot encouraged his fantasies