Male/Male Mystery and Suspense Box Set: 6 Novellas

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Male/Male Mystery and Suspense Box Set: 6 Novellas Page 68

by Lanyon, Josh


  “Write your book, of course.”

  “But…”

  He waved his hand in one of those vague, graceful gestures. “If you feel you must inform the police, go ahead.” His smile was acrid. “It’s not as though I’m a danger to society.”

  I stared at him. “It’s not like you paid your debt to society either.”

  Mayfield said quietly, “You have no idea what I’ve paid. But if you’d like a price tag, I’ve contributed hundreds of thousands of dollars to charity—and there will be millions more upon my death.”

  “How…long have the doctors given you?”

  “Six months at the outside.”

  If that were true he’d be dead long before the book was published.

  I said, “Why are you leaving this up to me? I don’t want to have to make this kind of decision.”

  “This is the hand you’ve been dealt,” he pronounced, for all the world like the Sphinx delivering its riddle. “Sagittarius is the truth-seeker. Now you have the truth.”

  * * * * *

  Jasmine scented the twilight—as did the smell of pot roast escaping from Jack’s kitchen window. I knocked on his door and a moment later it swung open. He was wearing jeans and a white T-shirt that emphasized the strong brown column of his throat and the muscles in his arms.

  “I left you a couple of messages,” he said.

  “I know.” I handed him Bud Perkins’s file. “I thought you might want this back.”

  “Are you done with it?”

  “Yeah.”

  He studied my face. “Do you know who killed Eva Aldrich?”

  “Yeah.”

  “You’re kidding.”

  “No.”

  “Who?”

  “I guess you’ll have to read the book.”

  He didn’t say anything, just stared. Finally he said, “Did you want to come in?”

  “Not really.”

  His face did change then. He said, “I think we need to talk, Tim.”

  I said tiredly, “Maybe I can save us both some time. You feel like things are moving too quickly between us and we both need to take a step back. And I agree. It’s better if we leave it at friends.”

  He said, after a pause, “I see.”

  I risked a look at his face, and found I couldn’t read it easily. “Isn’t that what you were going to say?”

  “No.”

  “Oh.” I blinked. “What were you going to say?”

  “I guess it’s moot at this point.”

  He moved back as I stepped inside the doorway. I closed the door behind me and said, “What were you going to say?”

  He shoved his hands inside his jeans and offered a funny smile. “That I think I could be falling in love with you, and I’m not going to let that happen unless—” His eyes rested on my face. “It’s sort of beside the point now, isn’t it?”

  I shook my head. “I thought you were going to say—” I think I was more shocked than he was when my voice gave out.

  He didn’t move a muscle and I got control of myself and said, “I guess I was trying to beat you to the punch.”

  Jack frowned. “This is one of the things I don’t understand about you, Tim. It’s one of the things that worries me about getting involved with you.”

  I had that dizzy, breathless feeling, like when you’re a kid playing crack the whip, and you find yourself at the end of the whip. Things were moving too fast for me. I put my back against the door and said, “I’ve lost my nerve. I’m afraid to hope for too much, to trust that things can work themselves out. I thought you were—repulsed.”

  “By your seizures?”

  I nodded.

  “I’m not repulsed. They scare me. Not the seizures themselves, but—” He swallowed as though his mouth was suddenly dry. “You would have drowned the other morning, Tim. If I hadn’t been next to you, you’d have slipped back in the water and drowned. You don’t remember that, do you?”

  I shook my head. I couldn’t look away from Jack’s face. He looked…stricken.

  “You reached for me, and then you seized. I had to drag you out of the pool. You’re not dumb. You have to know the danger, but you swim out there morning after morning by yourself.”

  “Is that why you don’t want to take a chance on me?”

  “I am willing to take a chance on you,” he said, “but you’ve got to be willing to take a chance too, and stop risking your life for no good reason. You’ve got to commit to keeping yourself alive and well before I commit—”

  I interrupted, “You said you couldn’t stand me crying.”

  His brows drew together. Then he said, “It’s not what you think. It rips my heart out when you cry. I want to fix it for you, and I can’t.” He reached a hand out, brushing my jaw. “I can’t do anything but love you, and I’m not sure that’s what you want.”

  I found that I couldn’t meet his gaze anymore. “Yeah, it’s what I want.” I stared down at my hands knotted in fists on my thighs, and I consciously relaxed them. “I think I’ve…loved you from the first time we ever went out.” I smiled a little, but it still hurt remembering how he had cut me loose, how quickly and easily he’d dropped me before.

  As though he read my mind, Jack said, “Me too. I knew six months ago when I couldn’t stop noticing you, wondering about you. I told myself I couldn’t afford to get involved with you, that it wasn’t going to work, but I couldn’t help watching you, wondering how you were doing, if there wasn’t some way…”

  “You hid it pretty well.”

  “You just weren’t looking. I used to drink my morning coffee watching you swim, waiting for you to get into trouble. I kept trying to think what the hell I was going to do about you.”

  Those dusk-gray eyes met mine steadily, and something hard and dry and twisted inside me softened and let go. I muttered, “Okay, I’ll wear a Medic Alert bracelet or even a damn dog collar if that’s what you want.”

  It was a relief to be pulled roughly into his arms. “I think the bracelet is a good idea.” His mouth found mine. “While we’re on the subject of jewelry, how do you feel about rings?”

  About the Author

  A distinct voice in gay fiction, multi-award-winning author JOSH LANYON has been writing gay mystery, adventure and romance for over a decade. In addition to numerous short stories, novellas, and novels, Josh is the author of the critically acclaimed Adrien English series, including The Hell You Say, winner of the 2006 USABookNews awards for GLBT Fiction. Josh is an Eppie Award winner and a three-time Lambda Literary Award finalist.

  Find other Josh Lanyon titles at www.joshlanyon.com

  Follow Josh on Twitter, Facebook, and Goodreads.

  If you enjoyed these stories, check out the following titles, also by Josh Lanyon:

  Novels

  The Adrien English Mysteries

  Fatal Shadows

  A Dangerous Thing

  The Hell You Say

  Death of a Pirate King

  The Dark Tide

  Stranger Things Have Happened

  The HOLMES & MORIARITY Mysteries

  Somebody Killed His Editor

  All She Wrote

  Other novels

  This Rough Magic (A SHOT IN THE DARK Series)

  Fair Game (ALL’S FAIR Series)

  The Ghost Wore Yellow Socks

  Mexican Heat (with Laura Baumbach)

  Strange Fortune

  Come Unto These Yellow Sands

  Stranger on the Shore

  Novellas

  The DANGEROUS GROUND Series

  Dangerous Ground

  Old Poison

  Blood Heat

  Dead Run

  Kick Start

  The I SPY Series

  I Spy Something Bloody

  I Spy Something Wicked

  I Spy Something Christmas

  The IN A DARK WOOD Series

  In a Dark Wood

  The Parting Glass

  The DARK HORSE Series

  The Da
rk Horse

  The White Knight

  Snowball in Hell (Doyle & Spain Series)

  Winter (HAUNTED HEART Series)

  Mummy Dearest (XOXO FILES Series)

  Other novellas

  The Dark Farewell

  The Darkling Thrush

  The Dickens with Love

  A Ghost of a Chance

  Out of the Blue

  Lone Star (in Men Under the Mistletoe)

  Green Glass Beads (in Irregulars)

  Everything I Know

  Short stories

  A Limited Engagement

  The French Have a Word for It

  In Sunshine or In Shadow

  Until We Meet Once More

  Icecapade (in His for the Holidays)

  Perfect Day

  Heart Trouble

  In Plain Sight

  PETIT MORTS (SWEET SPOT Collection)

  Other People’s Weddings

  Slings and Arrows

  Sort of Stranger Than Fiction

  Critic’s Choice

  Just Desserts

  Merry Christmas, Darling (Holiday Codas)

 

 

 


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