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Authors: Craig Lightfoot
Louis lets out a great lungful of air and falls backwards onto the stage,
closing his eyes against the stage lights. He feels somebody flop down
on top of his stomach, and he can tell by the volume of hair brushing
against him and the faint smell of a two-paycheck bottle of Gucci
cologne that it‟s Zayn.
“Louis,” he says, grabbing a fistful of Louis‟ jumper sleeve.
“Looouuuuuiiiiiiis.”
“Zaaaaayn,” Louis says back.
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“Louis,” Zayn whines again. “Do you have any idea how good you‟ve
got it? I would kill to have somebody who looks at me the way Harry
looks at you.”
Louis feels his face go hot, but he keeps his eyes shut, smiling up into
the rafters.
“I swear to God, Louis,” Zayn goes on, rolling over dramatically so that
his face is smushed into Louis‟ chest and kicking his feet against the
stage, “I‟d give anything. Don‟t let that shit go to waste, all right?
Fucking tell him how you feel, man.”
“Mate, Zayn is being an obnoxious cunt, but I‟ve got to side with him
on this one,” Niall agrees from somewhere amid his nest of pizza
boxes. “This is getting ridiculous.”
“Thanks, man,” Zayn says. “I guess.”
And for once, Louis doesn‟t immediately recoil at the thought. Because
the thing is, things have been so good lately, and it‟s started to seem
like it might not be the absolute end of the world if he just sort of... let
himself. If he let himself fall into this, if he maybe moved things
somewhere more like relationship territory. He‟s been thinking about it
a lot lately, more than he‟d ever admit, and he‟s started to wonder if
maybe he‟s finally, finally ready to try again.
It‟s all just been theoretical up until now, just hypothetical little scenes
in his head when he‟s not being careful, but he lost all control hours
ago and there‟s nothing to stop him now. Eyes shut and sprawled out
on the stage, it all plays out in his head, anniversary dinners and Harry
with Daisy on his lap Christmas morning and himself three years from
now wearing one of Harry‟s jumpers, little snapshots of a life that he
just might be lucky enough to have. And right now, it‟s hard to
remember exactly what part of this is the part that scares him so much.
He doesn‟t know how he feels about Harry, not for sure. He hasn‟t been
anywhere close to where he needs to be to process those things long
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enough. But soon, he thinks. Maybe after the play is over and he has
some time to clear his head and figure some things out, maybe he can
talk to Harry. Maybe it could be okay. Maybe it could be amazing.
“Yeah, yeah,” Louis says. “All right. Maybe I will.”
He bites his lip, and Zayn gives up a weak, “Yaaay.”
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Despite all of Louis‟ prayers, despite his cries to the heavens and
sleepless nights and serious considerations of making an offering to
Satan, it finally arrives: tech week. One week until opening night, and
there‟s so much to do that he can‟t run more than halfway through the
list before getting a sudden urge to drink himself into a stupor. There‟s
not enough time. There is mathematically not enough time to finish
everything before the curtain has to go up. This is the show he‟s wanted
to do since he knew he wanted to put on shows, and nothing is finished,
and he has a week. It‟s a constant presence at the back of his head,
buzzing around his brain when he‟s supposed to be lecturing on
Chekhov and reminding him that he can‟t relax.
He can‟t fall into a blind panic, though, at least not in front of his cast
and crew, because teenagers can smell weakness. The second he cracks,
they‟ll all scatter, and the musical will fall apart—possibly literally in
the case of the set decoration—and he‟ll never be able to set foot in the
school ever again. And then he won‟t have a job and he‟ll have to move
back in with his mother and even Duchess will think he‟s too pathetic
to spend time with and all right maybe he needs to stop shotgunning
Red Bulls.
He has to end the first dress rehearsal on Monday at nine, sending the
kids home, but he stays late organizing costumes and fixing prop
furniture that‟s one misplaced kick away from collapsing into a heap.
Harry stays with him, and to be honest he‟s not much actual help, but
his voice is soothing and keeps Louis from ripping out his own hair, so
he‟s useful even if he occasionally gets in the way.
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Two hours pass, and Louis is seriously considering pulling an all-
nighter when he feels arms wrap around him from behind. “You‟re
done for the night,” Harry rumbles into the back of his neck.
“Am not,” Louis says, squirming a little but finding Harry‟s arms
unyielding. “I‟m fine, Haz, let go.”
“You‟re not fine,” Harry says, squeezing tighter. “You were just
mumbling to yourself about outlawing poodles.”
“Fucking poodle skirts,” Louis growls. “Make no sense. Terrible
animal. Let go of me.”
Unfortunately, Harry doesn‟t seem to follow his logic, as his response
is to lift Louis off the ground and start carrying him out of the
backstage area and into the theatre. “You‟re definitely going home.”
“Put me down, you ruffian!” Louis yells, flailing ineffectively.
Normally he only has lovely things to say about Harry‟s arms, but this
is not one of those times. The futility of his situation becomes clear,
and he finally gives up, going limp and pliant. “Okay, Styles, you win.
If I promise to leave in fifteen minutes, will you let go of me and let me
close up before you drag me out of here like a caveman?”
Harry sets him down on his feet. “I‟m starting a timer now. Fifteen
minutes exactly, or next time I‟m knocking you out first.”
So that‟s how Louis finds himself leaving school with not nearly
enough done on Monday night, feeling like he should panic but not
quite being able to fight through the fog of his exhaustion long enough
to feel much of anything at all. He and Harry walk through the carpark
together, but when he starts to head towards his own car Harry grabs
him by the wrist.
“Not a chance,” he says, pulling him away. “There‟s no way I‟m letting
you drive when you‟re like this. You can crash at mine.”
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“But—” Louis says, trying to remember how to use words in order to
articulate all of the things that are wrong with this. “What about—”
“We‟ll get up early tomorrow,” Harry says, pulling Louis towards his
car. “I‟ll drive you to yours, you can change and feed Duchess, it‟ll be
fine.” He lets go of Louis long enough to open his passenger side door.
“Get in the car.”
And Louis doesn‟t know if it‟s because he likes the attention or because
he‟s too bone-tired to fight back or because Harry might actually have a
point, but he gets in the car and lets Harry take him home.
Harry makes him an omelette and prods him into the shower and
doesn‟t complain when Louis shamelessly steals all the blankets in the
middle of the night, and Louis honestly doesn‟t have the energy to
worry about what it means that he‟s falling asleep in Harry‟s bed
wearing a pair of Harry‟s boxers with Harry‟s head on his chest. He‟s
working himself to death, and if leaning on Harry means that he doesn‟t
actually die, well, that‟s better than the alternative, right? Plus, he likes
it, and it‟s nice, so fuck everything else, honestly.
So this becomes part of tech week routine, too. Louis works as long as
he can get away with before Harry takes him home to his flat. Harry‟s
place is so small that Louis should get bored within five minutes,
especially since he barely has the energy for goodnight kisses let alone
for sex, but somehow it works. Harry cooks something simple and they
eat together quietly, maybe kicking each other under the table, and then
they curl up in Harry‟s bed—well, on his mattress—and pull up
something on his laptop to watch until they fall asleep.
And then it‟s the morning and coffee and frantic driving and Louis
running into his flat for ten minutes to put on clean clothes and pacify
his cat while Harry sits with the car idling outside. Harry lives closer to
the school anyway, and he drops him off early enough that nobody‟s
around to notice their arrangement, and it works.
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If Louis is honest, it‟s nice to have a routine even just for a couple of
days, to not have to think about what he‟s doing for a few hours out of
the day, even if he‟s hideously behind on his marking and his car has
been sitting in the school carpark for days. Rehearsal is still a
nightmare even with a cast that mostly knows what they‟re doing, a
constant barrage of questions he either doesn‟t know how to answer or
shouldn‟t have to, and he deserves not to be losing his mind every
single waking moment of the day.
And truth be told, it‟s kind of nice to hang out with Harry again and
just be mates. Sure, sometimes Louis thanks him for dinner with a kiss,
or maybe Harry will give him a smack on the arse when he gets out of
bed, but it‟s mostly the two of them just… being together. They shoot
the shit and watch funny videos of cats and argue about whose radio
station to listen to in the car, and it‟s good. It‟s nice, that the sex hasn‟t
ruined the friendship. Thing. Whatever it is. Louis‟ kind of surprised,
when he thinks about it, but he‟s glad. That doesn‟t mean he isn‟t
planning on fucking Harry‟s brains out the second the show is done, of
course, but it‟s still cool that sex isn‟t all they know how to do. Their
relationship, whatever it is between them—it‟s not just a sex thing.
Given the sappy, speculative thoughts that have been running through
his brain lately, that‟s a very good thing.
It‟s like Harry‟s flat is insulated from all the static of worry that buzzes
in his head, like it‟s a safe place, just for them. Louis doesn‟t realise
how accustomed he‟d gotten to it—after only three days, Jesus Christ—
until Wednesday night, when Harry gets a call on his mobile while
Louis is doing the dishes.
Harry‟s face lights up when he looks at the screen, and he leaves off
from drying a bowl to answer it, mouthing an apology at Louis.
“Claire!” he says down the line, sounding thrilled. “What time of night
do you call this, then?”
Louis keeps working on the dishes, trying and failing not to eavesdrop.
From what he can tell, Claire is a friend from uni, another photography
student if Harry‟s complaints about their module today are anything to
go by. “Like, I know critique is supposed to be brutal, right, but today
was ridiculous. I felt so bad for Gary, he looked like he was going to
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cry,” Harry says, walking in slow circles around the flat. That‟s the last
thing he says that Louis really understands for a while, as Harry falls
into a string of photography jargon that he can‟t make heads or tails of.