Loyalties
as just plain strange. If Roger wanted something, why wasn’t he saying something? Dougie put the bowl back on the tray a little harder than he’d intended and said, “What?”
    Roger made a sort of half-shrug, and his smile turned rueful. “The master thought you might find it helpful to talk with me.” When Dougie said nothing to that, he added, “Seeing as I’ve . . . you know. Been where you are.”
    He looked a little uncomfortable. Dougie hadn’t seen very much of Roger, but he’d never seen him even hint at unsteadiness. Did Dougie remind him of something he didn’t want to think about? Was he worried that he couldn’t give Dougie what he needed because he’d been faking it for the last twenty years or however long he’d been stuck here? Oh God, was he—
    Dougie flinched so hard from the hand landing on his knee that he almost knocked the tray off the bed. “Hey,” Roger said. “Hey, it’s okay, you don’t have to talk to me if you don’t want to.”
    Dougie was panting, could feel his pulse pounding at his temples and throat. And Roger’s hand, stroking soothing little circles right above his knee. “Sorry,” he mumbled. “I . . . Sorry.”
    “It’s all right.” Roger’s hand stopped stroking, patted Dougie once. “I’ll just . . .” He hooked his thumb toward the door, began to stand.
    Dougie lunged forward and grabbed his wrist. “No!” He was on his knees somehow, his blanket-shield fallen away, the empty tray clattering on the floor. Completely naked in front of this stranger, making a mess of everything, and he didn’t even care. “No, I mean . . . please, stay.” He didn’t know why he wanted that so much— needed it so much—but he did. He did.
    And thankfully, Roger sat back down. Offered him that patient smile again. Not patronizing, not condescending, not even mad about the mess on the floor. Just . . . kind . Understanding, too.
    I’ve been where you are.
    Dougie let go of Roger’s wrist, settled himself back against the headboard, pulled the blankets back up to his waist. All easier things to do than giving voice to any one of the jumble of questions rushing to the forefront of his mind. But he could only fidget for so long while Roger sat patiently by, and who knew how long Nikolai would let the man stay. So Dougie sucked in a deep breath and forced himself to start talking before he could overthink himself into a corner. “What, um . . .” His eyes darted to Roger’s—pretty, bright green like the kind you read about in romance novels but never see in real life—and back down to the blanket bunched in his lap. Had Nikolai chosen him for those eyes? The rest of him wasn’t so bad, either.
    Off topic, Dougie. Stop stalling.
    Yeah, okay. “When you . . . before , I mean, you know, before . . .”
    “Nikolai saved me?” Roger offered.
    Dougie nodded, desperately searching for the sincerity in that statement, for any hint of artifice. He found none. “What was it like? I mean, what did you want to be? What did you dream about? Who did you love?”
    “Ah.” Roger said nothing else for a long moment, but that Ah spoke volumes. Like he knew the question Dougie was really trying to ask— How did you leave it all behind? —but wasn’t brave enough to articulate. “It was . . . confusing. Messy. Not very nice.” Roger shifted, tucked one leg up beneath him and scrubbed a hand through his dirty blond hair. It stuck up endearingly—still cute, even at his age. And since when had Dougie started to think about other guys as cute ? “My mom died when I was little. I don’t remember her at all. My dad . . . well, he loved me, but he wasn’t very good at the whole father thing, you know?” He looked down at his hands, examining his knuckles. Did he have his father’s hands? “He worked a lot. We never had much. He drank. I was fourteen when I ended up in foster care.”
    Foster care. Just like Dougie had been.
    No point to thinking about it, though. Trying to

Similar Books

The Winter Love

April Munday

Buried In Buttercream

G. A. McKevett

How to Lasso a Cowboy

Emily Carmichael, PATRICIA POTTER, Maureen McKade, Jodi Thomas

Desperate Acts

Don Gutteridge

More Than Willing

Laura Landon

Bluish

Virginia Hamilton

A Hunger Artist

Franz Kafka

Rue Allyn

One Night's Desire

Torch (Take It Off)

Cambria Hebert