What Remains

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What Remains Page 4

by Garrett Leigh


  “It’s not a good night to ask me that, mate. We lost three to a house fire. That’s why I was late. Had a lot to sort before we clocked out.”

  Rupert said the words like such horrors happened to him every shift. Perhaps they did. Jodi didn’t know much about the day-to-day life of a firefighter. “Bet that shit stays with you.”

  “Sometimes,” Rupert said. “You get used to it, though, even the scary stuff.”

  Jodi wasn’t sure he wanted to know just how scary Rupert’s job could be. He chanced a change of subject. “So, have you been seeing anyone since I saw you last?”

  “As in going out with someone?” Rupert cringed and rubbed his palms on his thighs. “Fat chance. I wasn’t taking the piss when I said I was new to this. Tonight was only the second time I’ve ever been in a gay bar.”

  Jodi chuckled. “That’s not something to be ashamed of. Being gay isn’t all about shagging and raving, you know.”

  “That’s just it, though, isn’t it? I don’t know. I don’t know fuck all about how to be who I am. You’re the only gay bloke I’ve ever spoken to.”

  “So? You don’t have to be like every other gay bloke, mate. You’ve just got to . . . be, I guess. Be you. Fuck anyone else.”

  “Chance would be a fine thing.” Rupert grinned. “Not that I’m propositioning you, or anything.”

  Jodi winked and poured them both another rum. “Never say never.”

  A little while later, he was quite happily, and quietly, drunk. Rupert seemed to be in a similar state, slouched on the couch, one hand behind his head, the other resting idly on Jodi’s legs that were sprawled in his lap. Jodi wasn’t sure how they’d ended up entangled on the couch, but he had no desire to question it. Relaxing with Rupert felt right. He didn’t need to know any more than that.

  “So,” Rupert said. “You’ve heard all about my sordid past. What have you been up to the last year or so?”

  Jodi shrugged. “Not much. I left my job in the city eighteen months ago and set up my own company. I’ve only had time for a few friends with benefits. Nothing serious.”

  “Benefits, eh? Sounds interesting.”

  “If you say so,” Jodi said. “I went through a phase of whoring it up when I split with Sophie, trying to out-gay my imagination, you know? But I settled down when I moved in here. Found my own company more fun than I thought.”

  Rupert smirked and waggled his fingers. “Even I’m familiar with my own company, mate.”

  “Ha-ha.” The idea of Rupert having a wank was enough to derail Jodi’s train of thought. He lost himself in the tickle of Rupert tracing absent patterns on his jean-clad thigh until the bellyful of rum got the better of him, and he yawned so hard his jaw cracked.

  Rupert stirred and looked at his phone. “Jesus. It’s nearly three. I should go.”

  “Go where? Home?”

  “Yup. I’m off for a couple of days now.” Rupert lifted Jodi’s legs and stood. “Shit, fucking Tube’s shut, isn’t it? I need to catch the bus.”

  “The night bus? Fuck that. Do you have anywhere to be tomorrow?”

  Rupert shrugged. “Not really. Just the gym and getting my barnet chopped.”

  “Screw it, then. Stay here.”

  “On the couch?”

  “If you like.” Jodi stood too and held out his hand. “Or you can kip in with me.”

  Rupert didn’t strike Jodi as a man who made rash decisions. Perhaps it was the rum, but it wasn’t long before he abandoned his plans to leave and followed Jodi to his bedroom. He stared at the minimalist decor and neatly ordered shelves that contained nothing but alphabetised DVDs.

  “Jesus. It’s like an IKEA showroom in here. Where’s all your stuff?”

  “Where it should be. I can’t sleep in clutter,” Jodi said. “It’s gotta be neat, or I lose my fucking marbles. Do you want something to sleep in?”

  Rupert shot Jodi a smirk that made it clear he thought it was too late for Jodi to be worrying about his sanity. “I’ve got about a foot on you. I reckon your skids are gonna look pretty bloody daft on me. How about I sleep in my T-shirt and boxers?”

  Getting Rupert out of his jeans was all kinds of okay with Jodi, but he silenced the horny devil dancing in the back of his mind. He’s new to this, remember? “Fine by me, mate. Wanna pick a DVD?”

  He gestured to the categorised collections at the end of the bed, then turned his back to change his clothes, leaving Rupert to ditch his jeans and socks in peace. When he looked again, Rupert was crouched by the shelf, in his boxers, as promised, running a finger along the titles. “You like epics, eh? The Last of the Mohicans, Braveheart, The Last Samurai.”

  “I don’t like The Last Samurai.” Jodi crawled onto the bed in a pair of worn tracksuit bottoms and stretched out on his stomach to peer at Rupert’s selection. “Tom Cruise is a dick.”

  “I know. It’s a shame. The film would be awesome without him. What about Gladiator? I’ve never seen it all the way through.”

  Jodi nodded. “Russell Crowe and Djimon Hounsou? Sold.”

  Rupert slipped the disk into the DVD player, then joined Jodi on the bed. In spite of his hesitance earlier, he seemed at ease now, and Jodi was glad of it. Seeing Rupert mirror the contentment in his own soul was beautiful. Like Rupert.

  Jodi scooted back and held up the duvet. “Get in, mate. I don’t bite.”

  “Never mind, eh?” Rupert smirked, warm and wonderful.

  They wriggled under the covers. Jodi turned off the lamp, and the TV came to life, bathing the room in blue light. He lay back. Rupert did the same, and it felt so familiar Jodi almost cried. Huh. Perhaps it was him who’d been craving the company of a man—real company . . . companionship, not just a bedmate to roll around with, then kick to the kerb before the sun rose.

  The film opened with the Germanic battle scene. Rupert rolled onto his side, facing Jodi. “I’ve seen this bit, and the end. It’s the middle I keep missing. I’ve never quite worked out how Maximus gets to Rome.”

  Jodi mirrored Rupert. “The buildup to that is the best part. It’s all a bit melodramatic after he takes his mask off.”

  Rupert looked mystified. Jodi made a mental note to divert his attention back to the film by the time Maximus was bought by Proximo. He opened his mouth to ask Rupert what he wanted for breakfast in the morning, but Rupert’s hand on his face silenced him. The touch was light, just his palm on Jodi’s cheek, but Jodi was mesmerised.

  “Thanks for this.” Rupert smiled shyly, like he had no idea of the effect he was having on Jodi. “It sounds strange, but being with you makes me feel so much better about myself, about everything. I feel normal.”

  Most folk would probably reckon there was nothing normal about spending the night in the bed of a man you hardly knew, but it made sense to Jodi. “I’m glad you’re comfortable here. For what it’s worth, I don’t find you strange at all.”

  Rupert dragged his palm softly down Jodi’s cheek, brushing his scruffy jaw with his fingertips. He hesitated at Jodi’s neck, before continuing his gentle exploration, drawing invisible pictures on Jodi’s bare chest.

  Jodi sucked in a subtle breath. The sensation of Rupert’s fingers was maddening, reminding him how caught he was between his charged attraction to Rupert, and the very real desire to be his friend. Dressed and drinking on the couch, the distinction had been clear, but huddled up in bed, face-to-face, toes touching, it was hard to ignore the urge to put his lips on Rupert.

  It turned out not to matter, because, as had become their routine, Rupert kissed him first. The kiss was gentle and sweet, a brush of a kiss like the ghost of a feather. A ghost that sent Jodi reeling, had him gasping for air and desperate for more. He let Rupert draw him closer, and they kissed again, harder this time, reigniting the fervour of the night they’d met, but instead of the crazy heat of before, a slow, smouldering burn began, like they both knew there was no need to rush, that they had all the time in the world to stoke this fire.

  Rupert pushed his t
ongue into Jodi’s mouth, teasing and dancing, like a cat with a string, and nothing like a man who was new to the art of snogging blokes. He put his hands on Jodi’s chest, palms flat at first, until his devilish fingers went to work on Jodi’s nipples.

  Jodi broke away with a low groan. “Fuck yeah. I like that.”

  “Yeah? I’m not hurting you?”

  “You are, but I like it. Do it harder.”

  “Like this?”

  “More.”

  Rupert tightened his grip, twisting until the stinging pain became almost too pleasurable to bear. He watched Jodi gasp and writhe with a curious gaze. Jodi took the hint and returned the favour, lightly, testing the waters.

  But there was no need for caution. Rupert’s eyes rolled the moment Jodi pinched the sensitive flesh, and his gravelly moan went straight to Jodi’s cock. “God, I see what you mean.”

  “Good, eh?” Jodi squeezed a little harder, studying every facet of expression on Rupert’s beautiful face. “It goes well with a fuck-hot blowjob too.”

  Rupert smiled wryly. “I’ll bear that in mind.”

  “Don’t think on it too much. You’ll drive yourself mad, second-guessing yourself.”

  “You sound like my mate Briggs at the station. Only fella who doesn’t think I’m after his nuts. Total pisshead, but salt of the earth. He keeps telling me to go get a fucking shag and be done with it.”

  Jodi chuckled. “He’s kinda right, though it’s better with someone you’ve got some kind of bond with. This life gets lonely, sometimes, you know? Sex is easy to come by, but it’s hard to make it mean something.”

  “Does this mean something?” Rupert stilled Jodi’s twisting fingers and entwined their hands. “To you? Or do you feel sorry for me?”

  “I don’t feel sorry for you. I’d shag you in a heartbeat, but to be honest, mate, tonight, I just want to put my arms around you.”

  Rupert squeezed Jodi’s hand. “I’d like that.”

  October 26, 2014

  “I brought your iPod from home today. It’s got a full battery, and I downloaded that Blur album you thought you’d lost.” Rupert waited for a response, but as usual, there was none. Jodi stared blankly for a moment, before his gaze drifted back to the TV, the only thing that seemed to hold his attention for any length of time.

  Rupert sighed and dropped the iPod on the table with a clatter, letting his frustration get the better of him for a moment. Jodi had been “awake” for a month now, but he’d yet to utter a word, or focus on the world around him with any real cognisance. He obeyed commands—sit up, hold this, rest your head—but his actions were robotic, like he’d been preprogrammed before the accident to come back and subject Rupert to the world’s cruellest trick.

  “Rupert?”

  Rupert glanced around. Sophie hovered by the curtain rail, biting her lip. Rupert schooled his features and raised a half smile from the pit of his stomach, beckoning her forward. Sophie had found it even harder than him to reconcile herself with what remained of the eccentric, witty man she’d called her best friend. Some days, it was all Rupert could do to persuade her to hold his hand.

  “But he’s so cold, Rupert.”

  “Then help me warm him up.”

  Sophie touched his arm. “Sorry, Rupe. Have I come at a bad time?”

  Rupe. Only Jodi called him that. Rupert’s slowly crumbling heart fractured again. For months, he’d believed he wanted nothing more than for Jodi to be awake and alive, but fuck, it wasn’t enough. It was nowhere near enough, and Rupert couldn’t bear it.

  “Rupert?”

  Rupert stared at Sophie’s pretty blue eyes and flaxen curls. At her kind smile and honest gaze. It was easy to see why Jodi had loved her for so long, and why he continued to love her, long after their relationship had come to an amicable end. “Yeah?”

  “Have you eaten today?”

  “Erm . . .” He honestly couldn’t remember. His days had fallen into a routine of working, sleeping, and sitting at Jodi’s bedside while Jodi fixated on the TV.

  Sylvester, the physical therapist who coaxed Jodi from the bed three times a day, teaching him to stand and walk again, appeared around the curtain. “Evening, Jodi. Are you ready to go back to bed and do some work on your arm?”

  Jodi held out his hands without looking at Sylvester, even when Sylvester took them to help him stand.

  Rupert had to turn away. Watching Jodi struggle to perform such simple tasks was too much on the best of days, but today it hurt more than ever.

  Sophie tugged his arm. “Come on. You need a dirty burger.”

  Rupert let her drag him across the street to the dodgiest McDonald’s in South London. She parked him at a sticky table and went to the counter. She returned with four Big Macs and enough nuggets to feed an engine crew.

  “Eat.” She stuck a straw in a large milkshake and slid it across the table. “I don’t care how much, just humour me, yeah?”

  Rupert knew better than to argue. Sophie reminded him of his long-dead gran back in Dublin—gentle, sweet, and thoroughly terrifying. He picked up a burger and peeled away the greasy paper, swallowing his apprehension as the scent of fat and spooky processed meat invaded his senses. The first bite tasted far better than it should have. He took another, and another, until the burger was gone.

  Sophie passed him a second and the stern worry in her gaze faded a touch. “Should we get something for Jodi?”

  Rupert shook his head. “They’re still weaning him on soup and toast, not that he’s eating much. I don’t think he understands why he has to.”

  “Or maybe he does, and he can’t make his body do what they’re asking him to do?”

  Pain lanced Rupert’s heart. Though Jodi’s gaze had remained hollow since he’d opened his eyes, the thought of the real Jodi—the Jodi from before—trapped behind that blank stare, haunted Rupert every moment he wasn’t worrying that Jodi still might die. “I don’t know . . . I don’t know anything about anything. Just gotta take each day at a time, eh? Trust him to get better.”

  Sophie said nothing for a moment, her expression distant. “What’s going to happen to him, Rupe? If he doesn’t get better? How are we going to look after him?”

  The junk food in Rupert’s mouth turned to dust. The answer to Sophie’s bleak question was complicated; Jodi’s physical recovery was slow, but tangible. Despite Rupert’s pessimism, there was no denying the daily improvements—improvements that left Jodi’s damaged brain far behind. What would happen if he became too well for the hospital, but too vulnerable to come home?

  Rupert squeezed his eyes shut. He hadn’t believed there could be anything worse than what they’d lived—ha—through already, but that would be a whole new nightmare, and his grotty dinner had long gone cold by the time he found the words to answer Sophie. He opened his eyes and glared at her like she was the one who’d mowed Jodi down with a stolen car. “I’m taking him home. Whatever happens, he’s coming home with me.”

  March 26, 2010

  Jodi did put his arms around Rupert that first night, and the one after, and it wasn’t long before they fell into a comfortable routine. Rupert stayed over three or four nights a week, sometimes more, and, eventually, Jodi found himself unable to sleep when Rupert went home to his bedsit.

  One morning, a few weeks after their bar date, Jodi awoke just before dawn to find him still sleeping. He rolled over and studied his companion, stretched out on his front, naked, because they’d ditched their clothes the night before and slept bare and open, facing each other, hardly daring to touch. Rupert’s body had seemed perfect in the darkness, his pale skin flawless in the shadows, but now, with the sun rising through the blinds they’d forgotten to close, Jodi saw that what he’d glimpsed the night before hadn’t done Rupert justice. Jesus fucking Christ, the bloke was beautiful. Skin, muscle, and bone, all melded together with a wry, warm innocence that made Jodi’s heart ache.

  “Stop staring. You’ll give me a complex.”

  Jodi came back
to earth to find Rupert wide-awake and grinning. “Caught me, eh? Sorry, can’t help it. You’re too cute.”

  “Cute?” Rupert pulled a face that made him look like a young boy. “That wasn’t the effect I was hoping for, lying here in my birthday suit.”

  “You don’t want to know the effect your birthday suit is having on me.”

  “Wouldn’t bet on that, mate.”

  “That right?” Jodi leaned in and kissed Rupert full on the lips, letting Rupert’s strong arms engulf him in the embrace he’d come to crave when Rupert wasn’t around. The kiss deepened, and it wasn’t long before they were pressed together and gasping for breath, the point where Jodi usually put the brakes on, mindful of pushing Rupert too hard and too fast.

  The wait for Rupert to make the next move had seemed endless, but Jodi forgot all about it as Rupert took Jodi’s cock in his hand and brushed his thumb along the length, his lips still fused to Jodi’s. Jodi jumped and let out a strangled groan, breaking their kiss. “Bloody hell. Do that again.”

  Rupert repeated the gesture. “I don’t really know what I’m doing.”

  Jodi begged to differ, but rather than scoff, he passed on the best nugget of wisdom he’d ever been given about pleasuring another man. “Treat my dick like your own and we’ll be just fine.”

  “Yeah?” Rupert laughed and the nervous tension in his face eased. “Makes sense. I’ve had plenty of experience making myself come.”

  Jodi found Rupert’s hand, which had drifted away while they’d been talking, and moved it back to his cock. “Haven’t we all. Now, show me what you do to yourself when you’re alone in bed.”

  “That hasn’t happened much recently.” But Rupert gripped Jodi’s weeping cock all the same, squeezing and twisting, building up to a teasing rhythm that barely scratched the surface of the simmering heat between them.

  Jodi bit his shoulder. “More.”

  “More?”

  “More.”

  Rupert hesitated a moment, then threw the duvet aside, exposing them both to the early morning draft. But Jodi barely felt the chill in the air as Rupert scooted down the bed and took his cock in his mouth, enveloping it in a firm, hot suction that sent Jodi’s eyes into a rolling spin.

 

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