Read A Boy and His Dragon Online
Authors: R. Cooper
Tags: #Gay Romance, #Gay, #GLBT, #Paranormal, #Romance, #M/M Romance, #M/M, #dreamspinner press, #Shapeshifers
Arthur watched him for another moment, thinking about the idea of selfish, jealous, miserly dragons and where it had come from. Then he got up to feed them both before he could ask Bertie.
He had no doubt that Bertie could tell him; he just wasn’t sure he could make it through the explanation without embarrassing himself even more.
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THE rain continued to fall for the next week and into the week after that. It meant late fall was starting in earnest, and earlier, darker evenings. It also meant more people ordering food in, which meant more work and more tips for Arthur on busy weekend nights.
The money was good. He rode fast so the food was always hot, and people appreciated that, but he wasn’t sure how much longer he could keep doing it, especially in the rain. It helped that Bertie insisted on feeding him whenever he got the chance, but the rain had soaked through his jackets last weekend and riding around in the damp ones was giving him what felt like a permanent chill in his bones.
Kate was not happy with him but did her best to dry his clothes out, even wasting quarters in the laundry room using the dryers.
They were only going to get wet again, but there was no reasoning with her. It was like trying to convince Bertie that a cup of noodles was an adequate lunch.
It turned out dragons, or at least his dragon, had a lot in common with his mother and weren’t able to stand watching people go without a meal. Arthur would have felt worse about it, but it was hard to feel guilty on a full stomach; and there was something about the sight of Bertie wearing an apron, of all things, and humming in the kitchen that shut Arthur up before he could protest. Bertie loved to cook but didn’t like to cook for just himself, or so he claimed.
Arthur didn’t believe him at first, but after seeing him in the kitchen, he changed his mind. It did make him wonder what Bertie did for A Boy and His Dragon
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food, or would have done in his dragon form when he wouldn’t have been able to reach the countertop.
Bertie also insisted they take time out from working to eat properly, setting up plates around the island in the kitchen while explaining that he’d converted the dining room to another room to hold his books years ago and there was no other place to eat. Arthur considered trying to convert some of the books to an electronic format, but he had a feeling Bertie used only the technology he had to and would ignore any eBooks. He was as old-fashioned about that as he was about eating rituals like dinner.
Of course, after eating he’d stay chatting in the kitchen forever if Arthur didn’t eventually get up and insist on washing the dishes or putting them in the dishwasher before heading back to work. Bertie would sigh but agree with him, slipping back into his study with long, forlorn looks in Arthur’s direction.
He also took to clearing his throat before entering the main room and glancing at Arthur before removing any book from whatever temporary pile Arthur had it in. It was as if he didn’t want to disturb anything and feared Arthur’s response if he did. Arthur couldn’t figure it out. He had never yelled or even snapped at him.
They were Bertie’s books. He could mess up Arthur’s increasingly complex system of stacks if he wanted to, and Arthur had no right to comment at all. It wasn’t as if Arthur would have shouted at him.
He’d really only ever gotten furiously angry once in his life and it hadn’t been over books, yet if he turned to see which book Bertie was taking, maybe raise an eyebrow as he considered where it might end up later, he’d get a quick “I just need to borrow it for a bit.
Sorry, Arthur” every time.
It would always be returned by the next day, too, which was better than however Bertie had put them away before. Now if only Arthur could convince him to switch temperature controls to something more reliable and steady than the fireplace—or whatever was going on with the heating that kept the house so hot. It might be a losing battle. If Bertie owned socks, he had yet to put them on that Arthur had seen.
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In any event, the antique books were definitely getting moved to a better room as soon as Arthur cleared this one. He had the shelves clean and a rudimentary system for keeping them organized that was, of course, dependent on the other books he was sure to find in the other rooms. He was going to wipe the layers of dust off the knickknacks he’d collected as well, as soon as he had time, because it was worth it to do the job thoroughly.
And maybe there was a part of him that wanted Bertie to see it and call him something sweet again. Any of his terms of endearment would do, though “pet” and “pearl” were the ones that haunted Arthur’s dreams.
He took his time finishing Bertie’s second book, mostly because as he read it now, he heard Bertie’s voice reading it to him.
Arthur had it bad and he could admit it, though it was probably just because he hadn’t had any kind of dating life in years and he happened to be working for someone who was incredibly hot. It didn’t help that Bertie’s books were fascinating in their own right.
The first had been large and ambitious in a dissertation-gone-out-of-control kind of way, a sprawling exploration of the witch and werewolf hunts carried out by humans, mostly on other humans, though Bertie had documented a few cases where some Beings’
lives had been lost too. It must have taken him years, though when Arthur finally finished it, he found himself wishing it had gone into more detail. The ultimate conclusion wasn’t terribly original; the more scared and abandoned humankind felt during the darkest of their dark hours, the more they turned on anyone different or with a perceived power they did not possess. But the way it was described was unlike anything Arthur had read before. It was no wonder the book was epic in length: Bertie brought everything to life.
After knowing Bertie two days, Arthur had expected to find sympathy for the victims, most of them innocent of any real crime, even the real witches that might have been considered something like doctors today. He was surprised to also find sympathy even for the humans doing the persecuting, the torturing. Their ancestors had destroyed their books, their centers of learning, and they lived in isolated, perilous conditions with pestilence, war, and famine A Boy and His Dragon
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lurking around every corner; and those in charge told them that the very ones who might have saved them, or at least helped them, were the causes of it all. It was tragic to think of what could have been.
Not that the beauty of the lines had blinded Arthur to the ridiculously packed index and bibliography that indicated exactly how many texts Bertie consulted in his research. Whoever
“organized” it had not had an easy job. Arthur could only imagine the mess, which made him resolve to go through the notes he’d already typed up and footnote and tag every source he could, to save time later.
He jumped into the second book after the first, wondering why someone like Bertie would choose such a serious subject matter, but unable to stop reading.
The Blood of Wolves
was a study of the massacre of wolves, and the subsequent flight of all werewolves from England during the Anglo-Saxon period. It had a detailed explanation of where many of them had ended up, with a few chapters at the end about the shifter Beings among the Native Americans and how they’d been mostly wiped out along with their human relatives before those European weres could ever really encounter them. It was a tragedy, and Bertie’s sympathy was with everyone; from the early farmers in those primitive forests who had encountered fearsome, giant wolves; to the weres who had faced first slaughter and then the slow deforestation that took away their homes.
This must have been what Bertie meant when he said dragons tried to look at the larger picture. There were no sides Bertie didn’t try to understand, though Arthur detected some anger in the later chapters that hadn’t been in the first book—anger at those who killed the wolves and weres and then tried to claim their power and strength by taking their names and wearing their pelts. It made Arthur think about dragons being hunted for the power in their body parts. People frequently compared dragons to weres, but Arthur had never really thought about why.
Bertie’s book or books on dragons had to be in the house somewhere. Arthur just hadn’t found any copies yet, and he was afraid to snoop around too much. Not that he’d encountered any R. Cooper
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locked doors. What he
had
encountered was dust in every room but the two most used, the kitchen and Bertie’s study, although the study was a mess too.
When he peeked into the study, he saw a desk with a large, obscenely comfortable-looking chair, a laptop, another couch, and the only TV he’d seen in the house. The couch and TV were both low to the floor—really low, as if Bertie watched TV in his dragon form. Arthur remembered Bertie’s dragon legs as being shorter, so Bertie probably couldn’t climb up onto a regular-size couch without difficulty. It still seemed decadent somehow, like a pile of pillows on the floor of a palace or something similar. Bertie would probably have worked that way too, if he could have used his laptop with those claws, but Arthur somehow doubted he could. It might be part of what took him so long to write, but perhaps he thought more clearly in his natural form.
The curtains were drawn, leaving the room dark except for the electric lights, and instead of bookshelves, there were end tables covered in magazines, journals, and paper notebooks. Arthur half expected to find a quill, but instead there were costly pens sitting next to dishes and jewelry boxes that had been used as ashtrays.
Arthur emptied them and put everything but the dishes with the other knickknacks he intended to clean, and then stopped on his way into work the next day to use the leftover money from his trip to the herbalist to buy more toilet paper and two cheap ashtrays.
He did it for the sake of cleanliness and his sanity first, and for the smile he got at the sight of them second. It didn’t take much to get a smile from Bertie anyway. Arthur just had to walk in the door and Bertie would be grinning and talking and giving him confusing orders that Arthur couldn’t seem to make himself mind.
He resolved to get more information on dragons before his own smiles got any more out of control. Though so far a deeper Internet search had only gotten him facts on reptiles and information from the last census. He mentioned that one to Bertie, asking why the U.S. population of dragons was so small compared to other countries—not that any country had a population of dragons that could be called large, unless he counted the Firesnakes in Finland—
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although in proportion to the population of the country, the numbers were about the same. Bertie stopped fretting over some bread he was making to huff at him.
“The numbers reflect those dragons who identify as ‘pure-blooded’, Arthur, which indicates how flawed that census information is.” It was a surprise to watch Bertie pop his dough into an electric oven: Arthur had expected to find something less thoroughly modern and more like charred bricks and wood fire.
“Not that there isn’t some concern amongst my kind about losing our species completely to interbreeding with humans. Dragons used to be much larger.”
It made Arthur pause. He’d been asked to slice onions, so he was slicing and trying not to cry. That idea was a new one. He hadn’t realized dragons were capable of having children with humans. A few of the Beings were; he didn’t know why it hadn’t occurred to him before.
“It’s a shortsighted, almost human view, since in my opinion survival of DNA means living forever, but I suppose it’s an understandable fear. Nobody wants to disappear.” Arthur wasn’t able to look over, not with his eyes stinging, but he had the feeling he was being carefully observed. “Soon enough my parents…. You haven’t met them yet, Arthur, but they are darlings. Perhaps not darlings…. They are quite difficult and concerned with the family name, and they think of me as their hopelessly fanciful son, throwing away his potential by not dominating some university with my genius, and they definitely identify as ‘pure-blooded’. Not that they hate humans, not at all. Of course not. They’ll love you… once they get to know you.” Bertie cleared his throat. “They’re both professors. I’m sure you can understand when I tell you their standards are high?”
Arthur nodded without looking over, mostly because he wasn’t sure where Bertie had been going with that, but he wanted to hear more.
“Soon enough, Arthur, my darling parents are going to start throwing willing, pure-blooded females my way to at least ensure that the line continues.
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“We’re a very old family on both sides,” he went on when Arthur must have visibly reacted. Arthur couldn’t be sure; his vision had suddenly gone blurry and wet. “And as long as I don’t have to marry the girl, I admit, it’s not entirely objectionable. I might enjoy being a father.”
Bertie wasn’t smoking, but Arthur imagined him drawing on a cigarette anyway, exhaling a moment later in a long, lazy spiral. He went on in a quiet, casual voice.