by J. V. Speyer
“I got the job back here in Boston, and I didn’t even think about you. I was just—I didn’t. It’s a big place, and I knew you were a Statie, but it’s not like you share your patrol area on Facebook or anything. Then I woke up in this old house, and the first thing I saw was your face.” His voice had gone all soft, like it used to. He’d always had this uncanny ability to make Ross melt, with his voice alone. “And all of a sudden everything came rushing back. It was like that day from junior year, all over again.”
Ross covered the lower part of his face with both hands. He didn’t know if he felt horror, or dread, or shame, or what. “Ash?”
* * * *
Ash tried not to be hurt when Ross covered his face with both hands. There was no pleasure in Ross’ expression, none at all. And why would there be? He’d dumped Ash like old garbage. He’d had his reasons, or he’d felt like he had. It wasn’t like Ash had been completely blameless in the whole breakup. Ash had wanted to be monogamous, Ross had not. Ross had demanded Ash come out. Ash wasn’t ready to do that.
But when Ross slowly lowered his hands, to reveal a snarl of anger, Ash was more than happy to push his acceptance of his own fault aside.
“You son of a bitch.” Ross took a few steps forward. “I can’t believe you would show your face in Boston again. You absolutely broke my heart, and now you come waltzing back in here like you own the place? That takes balls of solid steel.” His face was bright red, and his eyes shone in the weird ancient light.
Ash curled his lip. “Who’d have thought you could have so much emotion for one guy, huh? Do you say that every time you run into the other four guys you were dating when you were seeing me, or do you reserve that for the one who wouldn’t adjust his needs to suit your whims?” His pulse thundered in his ears, and for a second, he thought he caught the scent of gunpowder in the air. It was an illusion, of course, the past creeping back where it wasn’t wanted. Porthos would have reacted if it was anything else. It was just a memory, a shadow on his brain.
“Excuse the hell out of you?” Ross drew himself up to his full height. “I loved you!”
“Oh, sure, and half the rest of the Gay Men’s Chorus at Northeastern!” Ash threw his hands up into the air. “Come on, man, you very specifically refused to get ‘tied down.’ Let’s see if I can remember the specific quote. ‘It’s college, nothing we do can be all that serious, why limit ourselves if we don’t have to?’”
Ross gaped at him. “You said okay!”
“You’re quoting selectively. I agreed to it because it was the only way I could be with you at all.” Ash took a breath. He had to be an adult about this. “And I did accept it for a while. Then you started pressuring me to come out, even though you knew goddamn well my mom had been a nun and my uncle was a priest and there was no way in hell I could get away with that, and ever set foot in their house again.”
Ross rolled his eyes. “They would have come around, Ash.” He shifted his weight and crossed his arms over his chest.
Rage welled up inside of Ash, fire and bile and pain. Then he let it go. He was angry. He’d always be angry on some level, but it wasn’t Ross’ fault. “Know that for a fact, do you?” he asked, shifting position. He couldn’t make himself look Ross in the eye, so he looked at the wall.
“I don’t know any guys whose family didn’t eventually have to accept it.” Ross sucked his cheeks in for a moment. “You just didn’t love me enough to admit we were together.”
Ash let that one slide. “Well, I got my dream job in my first year out of college. I was a correspondent for NBC, right? And after my first time on TV—well, I was young, Latino, I guess some website decided I was something to write home about. The guy I was seeing at the time decided to out me. My family didn’t just ‘get over it.’ They had a memorial service for me. There’s even a tombstone in the cemetery back home in California.” Ash gave a thin little smile. “So, accept that, and remember it the next time you try to pressure someone to come out when they don’t have the financial security to do so.
“Oh, and you want to know what ISIS does to gay men? It ain’t pretty. You think I could just…not cover areas where ISIS operates, when I double majored in Arabic, specifically so I could cover those areas and those people? Fuck you, Ross.” Porthos lay his head on Ash’s leg. He scratched behind his dog’s ears, the rhythm soothing his brain just a little bit.
Ross had gone pale, and he turned his face away. “You want me to believe they never reached out again?” He scoffed, and his lip curled, but he couldn’t look Ash in the eye.
“They didn’t. The Army called, after the blast in Raqqah. They claimed the Army must have the wrong number, because my mother’s son had died years earlier. But if the Army did manage to find my family, they were sure they wouldn’t want me either.” Ash pursed his lips. He was visited by a chaplain after that, because no one else from the Army knew exactly how to tell him. He heard a lot of bad things about the Army, and maybe some of them were true, but he’d never met with anything but kindness from the soldiers of the 101st. “So maybe you can tell yourself there’s still time or some crap like that, but I’m not going to be there to listen. It’s too late.”
“I guess it is.” Ross sat down, back against the wall perpendicular to Ash’s. “Wow. I guess I just…I never would have expected that. Not from your mom and your uncle. I mean they were so proud of you!”
“Well, now they’re not.” Ash shrugged. Then he looked up. “That part’s not your fault. I don’t want you to think I blame you for it or anything. I just—it’s kind of galling to hear people, anyone, sitting there and getting all self-righteous about people coming out when it’s not something that’s safe for everyone to do. It’s just not feasible for everyone. If Tony had outed me while I was in Iraq, for example, I’d have been killed. No question. I was deep in ISIS-held territory, and there is no question I’d have been killed. And no one would have mourned. That’s the reality so many of us are living in right now.”
Ross bit his lip. “Thing are so much better though. They’re better than they used to be, and they only got better because people refused to be afraid anymore. People refused to hide. Don’t you get that?”
Ash tugged on his own hair with his good hand. What would it take for Ross to understand? “They got better for some people. For guys in eastern Massachusetts, sure. For a guy whose job involves traveling to places where American laws don’t reach, not so much. And there’s still a long way to go here, too. You can legislate penalties. You can legislate actions. Hearts and minds take longer, and not all of us have the luxury of just…forcing people to accept us. We don’t all get a gun and a badge.”
Ross lost his discomfort with Ash’s story quickly, just as Ash had expected him to. Ash had kind of wanted him to, if he was being honest. He hadn’t told Ross what had happened with his family to make him feel guilty. He’d spoken out of a desire to make him understand a one size fits all approach wasn’t going to work for everyone when it came to coming out.
“What, you think it’s easy being an out gay cop?”
“I think it’s probably easier than it was twenty years ago. Or isn’t that what you’ve just been telling me?” Ash glanced at the window. He couldn’t see anything outside. Snow had blown over every window he could see, covering it. “I don’t miss nor’easters.”
“Better than sandstorms.” Ross folded himself up into something like a fetal position.
“Sandstorms end eventually. But you also don’t get too many of them in Syria. Yemen, yes. They suck.” Ash made a face. “Keeping your equipment safe is hard to do.”
“I’ll bet. It’s probably harder for the actual soldiers.” Ross squirmed. He wrapped his arms around his knees.
“No doubt.” Ash let himself go limp. He didn’t have the energy to fight about this stuff. He was too old. They both should be too old at this point. It was all water under the bridge, and none of it mattered anymore. Ash wasn’t going to convince Ross he’d been right, a
nd Ross was never going to convince Ash he should have come out back in college. Rehashing it would just frustrate them both and make this stay more miserable than it had to be. “So. State trooper, hm?”
“Yup.” Ross lifted his chin, almost daring Ash to say something negative about his chosen profession. “I’ll be patrolling these highways until the day I retire.”
“You must really enjoy it. Good for you.” Ash reached for his bag again. He’d weaned himself off the opioids as soon as he could, because they were addictive as hell and he couldn’t afford to get hooked, but ibuprofen was a poor substitute.
“Hey—it’s a living. Wait—really?” Ross narrowed his eyes as Ash counted out tablets into his hand.
“Really.” Ash huffed out a laugh. “I don’t wish you any harm, Ross. It killed me when you left, but your reasons were valid for you and I accepted them. I still do.”
“But you’re still mad.” Ross blinked, like Ash had just been speaking Arabic.
“Yeah. Like I said, it hurt. I wasn’t ever enough for you, and it hurt. But whatever, you know? I can’t obsess about that when I’ve had my dream job. I’ve survived so much more than so many people will ever even see, and I’m starting a whole new chapter in my life.” Ash dry-swallowed his painkillers and hoped they’d at least take the edge off.
“You would have been.” Ross turned away again. He seemed to like talking to the wall.
“Huh?” Ash struggled to his feet. “Don’t mind me, I’ll go into the other room. I’ve got some exercises to do so I don’t stiffen up too bad.
“You would have been enough.” Ross rose gracefully. Ash tried hard not to be jealous. Those days were most likely long behind him. He tried harder not to get turned on, because those days were most likely long behind him too, and they were longest behind him with Ross. “If you’d been out, if you’d been willing to be public about who you are, about us, I’d have split up with those other guys in a heartbeat.”
Ash had lived through having his insides partially rearranged by a percussive blast wave. He recognized the feeling again. This time, all he could do was laugh. There was no humor to his laugh, but he couldn’t hold it in either. What was he supposed to do here? Jump for joy? “That’s cute. That’s real cute.”
Ross stepped forward, hands out like he was dealing with a wounded animal. Maybe he was worried about Porthos biting him, who knew? “You okay there, Ash?”
“No. But I’m not losing my grip or anything. I just can’t help but think it’s hilarious that you’re trying to put it all on me for not having been willing to risk everything to come out, when I’d have probably been more willing to take the risk if you had been more interested in me and less insistent on an ‘open relationship.’” Ash was laughing so hard he found tears leaking from his eyes, and even Porthos was giving him a funny look now. “That’s rich, I’ve got to say.”
“I don’t know about rich,” Ross said, drawing back. “Ironic, maybe. Convenient, for sure. I mean why wouldn’t you say something, back when this was all relevant?”
Ash picked his head up. The laughter died inside of him. It usually did these days. “Are you kidding me? You don’t think that’s a little weird? Holding coming out over your head like that, like there weren’t a thousand other issues? Besides, color me weird, but I wanted you to choose monogamy for me, not because I’d finally jumped through the right hoop. Because I was enough for you. I never was.”
“You were. You always were. You just didn’t have faith.” Ross shook his head and turned away.
“You’re right. I didn’t have faith that a guy who’d already refused to commit was going to change his mind after already saying no.” Ash headed into the kitchen. “I sure as hell wasn’t going to risk everything, school and my career and everything, for a guy who had me in a damn rotation.” Porthos followed him into the other room. Ross did not.
Ash tried to convince himself that was exactly what he wanted.
Chapter 3
Ross checked in with headquarters while Ash went through whatever exercises he was doing in the kitchen. He didn’t follow Ash into the other room. He wanted to. Lord knew, he wanted to check up on Ash and see just how bad things were for him, physically. Maybe a little bit of massage therapy would help with the pain he was so clearly in.
Ross didn’t chase after Ash, even though his feelings were still so strong for his former lover. Maybe he didn’t chase after Ash because his feelings were still so strong for Ash. He’d thought about Ash often over the past few years, and he’d hoped Ash remembered the time they spent together with something like fondness.
Apparently, he didn’t. Apparently, what he remembered was resentment about their open relationship—something Ash had agreed to, whatever he said now—and anger about Ross’ pressure to come out. Ross didn’t regret either. Okay, he understood why Ash might be upset about being pressured to come out, and he understood it better now that he knew exactly what had happened when Ash had been outed.
But damn it, Ross had gone along for years being the bad guy in someone else’s drama. Ash had been just as much at fault as he was, if not more. After all, Ash had been the one who refused to acknowledge their relationship in public. He had his reasons, but Ross had his for insisting on full publicity. They were either together or they weren’t. Ash’s reasons were valid, but Ross’ need to be acknowledged in public was valid too. And there was nothing morally wrong with an open relationship if everyone involved was aware and willing.
If Ash hadn’t been willing, but said he was—Ross could hardly be expected to read his mind.
Ash took his time about coming back from the other room, over an hour. When he returned, he didn’t even look at Ross. He just walked over to his pile of things—the pile of things Ross had brought in—and started setting things up. He had some kind of digital camera with a tripod. That came with a microphone, both of which fed into his laptop. It all looked terribly complex to Ross, but Ash set it up one handed while Porthos looked on.
Finally, Ash sat back and Ross felt comfortable speaking. “What’s all that?”
Ash glanced over at him. His eyes were red-rimmed, but he looked otherwise about the same. “My boss wants me to film a small segment and send it, since we’ve got a signal. You can feel free to be in it or not, it’s up to you. Not everyone’s keen to be on TV.”
He adjusted the camera angle and then moved around to sit in front of the camera. He frowned at his laptop screen and typed something. Then he brightened up, smiled into the camera, and sat up straight. “Hi, welcome to WILL—13, Boston’s best resource for news and weather. This is Ash Machado coming at you live from…somewhere…under a heap of snow. I’m probably somewhere in Maynard. In case you hadn’t noticed, there’s a little bit of snow out there. The governor has declared a state of emergency, all motorists are required to be off the roads, and if you’re out on the roads you’re going to have a real problem.
“Me, I didn’t know about the state of emergency until I was halfway to my destination. That’s when I skidded into a snowbank. WILL-13 Boston has created this handy guide to help you prepare for, and stay safe in, an emergency so you don’t end up having to be rescued by state troopers like I was.” He continued to smile into the camera for a second, and then he slumped into his familiar slouch to type.
A few seconds later, he nodded, typed something else, and signed off. Ross stared. “That’s it?”
“That’s all for now. They want me to do a few other spots for as long as we’re here.” Ash slumped back against the wall. He looked exhausted.
“Four years of college for that?” Ross couldn’t help but laugh. “Dude, you got cheated. I think they have robots doing that in Japan now.”
Ash glared up at him. “Actually, four years of college was for me to learn my craft so I could go out and report on what was happening all over the world, thanks. Recording that, as trivial as it might seem to you, was so I could be seen to have started my job yesterday as opposed to whenever
we get out of here. That way I’m eligible for insurance coverage and not on the hook to cover everything myself when we have to get checked out at the hospital after we get pulled out of here. Whenever that might be.” He closed his eyes again. “The radar has shifted again. It might be another day after tomorrow.”
“Fuck.” Ross sat back down. He sat a little closer to Ash, but he tried not to crowd him.
“Yeah. Fortunately, we can just eat snow if we run out of water.” Ash made a face.
“The place still has running water,” Ross reminded him, and looked at the window. The window, solid white, didn’t help him. “Are things really that bad, that you’re concerned about health insurance?”
Ash blinked at him in surprise. “Everyone needs health insurance. And I got bounced from the national network because I couldn’t do the war correspondent thing anymore, so yeah. I have to worry about these things. They covered me while I was in the hospital, but now that I’m out I’m on my own. Thank God I had enough contacts to get me in here, right?” He grinned wryly. “I’m sure no one ever expected me to wind up back in Boston, but beggars can’t be choosers.”
“No.” Ross frowned. “Were you very badly hurt? I mean, I noticed you’re a little stiff, but I thought it might just be from sleeping wrong.”
“Oh, I’m messed up.” Ash stared straight ahead. “The whole right side took a lot of damage. I’ll live and everything, but I can’t do things like run for cover anymore. And some of the injuries are kind of ‘iffy’ when it comes to healing. Tendons and bones and stuff. So, I’m stuck stateside when most of the people I know are in the military or in the press corps, over there.” He grimaced, and then he plastered on a mask of bland acceptance. “But hey, at least I made it back, right? Still got most of my parts and everything.”