of anger that had used to mean bruised knuckles and black
eyes. Even if he"d felt it, that rage had no place in this house,
especially not now. It was Christmas, and Everett Faraday
was sharing a smile with him.
His throat tightened. Those people invested in his
reputation for dark wit could go fuck themselves. With one
compliment Everett had him speechless.
Everett squeezed his shoulder and then leaned in again,
for a hug or so Alex thought, until there was the faintest
brush of lips against his cheek and then his ear. It could
have been an accident, Everett misjudging the amount of
space between them because he was speaking. Accident or
not, Alex could no longer focus on anything else but the
place where Everett"s lips had been and Everett"s voice,
rumbling through him.
“I"m so glad you"re here,” Everett murmured, squeezing
him again to give the words a new weight, as though
anything short of commitment papers could have kept Alex
from this house. It was Christmas at the Faradays, and Alex
had waited a year for this. More, but he couldn"t count those
now with his skin wet and Everett"s hopes so near. He could
not even open his mouth to give his answer. He only shivered
and did not move. After another pause, Everett released him
and slowly stepped back to go get his things. Alex raised a
hand.
“Everett.” Alex had held the words back so long they
refused to come out as they should. It was Everett"s mother
who turned.
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A Wealth of Unsaid Words • R. Cooper
“Forget those, Everett. I am going to need some things
from the store. You and Alex can go together.” A juggernaut
of surprises and her son"s sneaky tricks. “Take our car.” Alex
was twisting to face her before he could think better of it.
“Ally, it"s freezing outside.” He hated the cold. He"d
hated it his whole life, and he was only more sensitive to it
now.
“Mom, I just got here,” Everett complained at the same
time. Ally did not seem impressed with either excuse.
Minutes later they were both bundled up again and out the
door with a list in hand. Everett gave him a chagrined look
that said it all.
Christmas
. It meant many things, the least of which was
being under the Faraday roof and Ally"s unquestioned
jurisdiction. The other things, tradition, closeness, an
impatient longing for presents, though they each already
knew or could guess what was waiting for them under the
tree, were bigger.
Three days, Alex"s mind reminded him, as though his
body was not poised to leap, and his heart was not in his
mouth as he considered this Christmas, and the wanting
and not having that was love, and desire, and despair.
But Everett"s smile was excited as they headed out, and
the fresh air put a youthful shine in his cheeks. Alex had a
feeling there was a similar expression on his face, even with
the cold.
22
A Wealth of Unsaid Words • R. Cooper
e"d left his gloves in the house, but kept his hands
over the central heating vent in the car and shivered
H as the car warmed up. Everett didn"t turn on the
radio because there was no messing with George"s
preprogrammed buttons set to terrifyingly conser-
vative talk radio stations, but he cranked up the heater. For
a few moments before they left the driveway, the loud whirr
was all Alex could hear. Then Everett carefully reversed
down the driveway past all the other cars parked on the lawn
and the street. He lowered the temperature as he did, until
the escaping hot air was just a whisper.
He didn"t glance over as they reached the corner, but
Alex did. He"d already seen his old house when he"d driven
up, but being a passenger meant more time to study the
changes the new owners had made. The yard was neat, the
thin layer of snow on the sidewalk had been cleared, and
there was an electric menorah in the front window, though a
closed curtain prevented him from seeing the family inside.
Everett"s hand left the steering wheel and came to rest
over his. Alex had never met people more inclined to touch
than the Faradays, and it wasn"t as if his father had been an
unemotional man. Everett in particular was fond of these
gestures and others like them, soft, brief reminders that Alex
was not alone, at least that was how he liked to think of
them. Sometimes he wasn"t certain that was Everett"s intent
at all, but uncertainty was a dangerous thing, and he hadn"t
allowed himself to dwell on it much for a very long time.
“How are you really doing?” The question was inevitable,
but this time Everett had been kind and not asked it around
23
A Wealth of Unsaid Words • R. Cooper
his family. Alex had done nothing to feel guilty about, and
yet the slightest hint of worry in Ally"s eyes was enough to
have him begging for forgiveness, which Everett damn well
knew.
He could put that same fear in Everett"s eyes, and
probably had by limiting their contact for all these months.
Whatever his therapist—and his editor for that matter—said,
he couldn"t keep pushing himself on Everett forever. A year
was what he"d given himself, and year, more or less, minus
birthdays, was what he had done.
“So far my experiment has been successful. I think I
might be cured, doc.” Sarcasm was only effective with other
people. Everett curled his fingers between his, and Alex was
a shameful hypocrite because he didn"t protest. A sound only
emerged in the next moment, when Everett pulled his hand
away to steer.
“That"s good.” Everett looked away though the streets
were nearly deserted, and kept his attention there, so Alex
looked out the window as they went by their high school,
empty for the holidays but otherwise exactly the same.
“That"s good,” Everett said again, and that he"d need to
repeat himself at all made Alex turn to study him. For far too
long, Everett wouldn"t look at him, and then he bent his
head to acknowledge something he wasn"t saying, and
smiled.
Everett was terrible at lying for someone who should
have had a lifetime of experience in masking his emotions,
but maybe he had always been terrible, and Alex had never
let himself see it. He"d
wanted
to fall for the honest little
24
A Wealth of Unsaid Words • R. Cooper
dares, to paint Everett"s fences for him and drift off on
adventures together, and would have used any excuse to
follow Everett"s lead.
“I still missed you, though,” Everett admitted. “In fact, a
few times I almost dropped everything to come find you.”
“Really?” Alex had done the same nine or ten times and
had settled for texts and short phone calls instead. “Why,
Everett, I didn"t know you cared.” He glanced over, but his
sad lie became more of a soft laugh when Everett rolled his
eyes.
“Luckily, I think you were out of the country at the time,
and I came to my senses. But one of your poems ended up
on some strange website, and I wanted to tell you.”
“Out of the country? Ah, I had a reading in Canada. Not
too far away.” He couldn"t quite manage a straight face for
that. Distances had a way of seeming greater than they
actually were, as he"d learned at eighteen. Everett had gone
to a state school, but Alex had gotten a scholarship to a
school out of state, light years away from Everett and his
family with the holidays and summers spread so far apart.
It was no wonder that with that and a new school with
new pressures and his jobs and his escalating illness that
he"d broken. He wasn"t to blame, and certainly Everett had
never blamed him. Not even during the roller-coaster years of
bad meds and wrong meds and good meds that he"d refused
to take.
Letters had kept him sane at first. Until one letter to
Everett a week had become seven, then eight, then too many
25