Shiloh
He
began to notice little nuances that he hadn’t before shortly after they moved
in together.
Shiloh had always been
abysmally shy, quiet to the point he might disappear into a crowd if Aaron
parted with him and not be found again until after nearly half an hour of searching.
Aaron had never heard him raise his voice for any matter; he spoke in a quiet tone
and he appreciated when others did as well. If you were lucky enough that he
spoke to you at all, Aaron noticed, then it was done in quiet, polite tones
with little emotion shown. Of course with Aaron this wasn’t the case – he was
full of emotion around Aaron. But with others he was most often reserved to the
point of muteness.
He rarely made eye contact
with those he was conversing with, looking past them or over their shoulder as
he talked. When Aaron reminded him once that it was polite to meet someone’s
eyes when they spoke to you, he had looked like a spooked horse and had nodded
obediently but still refused to meet the man’s eyes.
He
didn’t like crowds – shopping malls, grocery stores, rallies that Aaron tried
to drag him to. They made him visibly cringe and he couldn’t focus on any one
thing. He abhorred any commotion or incessant noise, like a gaggle of children
yelling in the street playing at some game or the sound of the faucet dripping.
He would clutch at Aaron’s hand or he would clench his jaw and force himself
not to cover his ears in public, though Aaron had seen him do it in private on
a number of occasions.
Shiloh
also tended to obsess over certain things. He was especially interested in
anything mechanical that he could take apart and put back together, such as
watches, old computers, phones and motorcycles. He loved trains and he had the
daily timetables memorized for their local commuter train, even though neither
of them took the train to work. He sometimes tapped his fingers when things got
too loud or there were too many things happening at once, and a few times Aaron
had seen him rocking himself in a bid to calm down.
He
had at first thought perhaps the boy had some sort of general anxiety that came
out in obsessive or compulsive ways. He kept an eye on it but never brought it
up, unsure how Shiloh would react to his suggestion to see a counselor. As
their relationship lengthened, however, Aaron found himself rather more curious
than concerned – there were times he could see how visibly upset his partner
was but he did not know how to help him deal with things.
It
was nearly a year into their relationship before he understood what it was. A
friend of his was telling him about his nephew’s recent diagnosis and every
detail Beau explained to him fit Shiloh to a t. The shyness, not wanting to be
touched, the inability to make eye contact or maintain relationships outside of
theirs, the obsessions with seemingly random things like the train schedule.
Everything fit.
When
he had Shiloh alone one night on the couch with the boy leaning against his
shoulder, he brought it up. Shiloh hadn’t been sure what he meant when he asked
outright: have you ever been to see a
therapist?
“Like
a psychologist?” he questioned, blinking; he tapped his fingers on his knee.
Aaron hugged him hard for a moment and the tightness in his chest slackened a
little. “U-uh, no? I don’t think I need to, Aaron. Do you?” Aaron could sense
he was feeling trapped and he shook his head briefly, rubbing his palm up and
down Shiloh’s arm.
“No,
no. I don’t think you need to, Shy. I just wondered.” His parents had died when
he was young and he had spent a few years with his grandparents before they had
put him into foster care, unable to handle him. He wondered now if that was due
to the ways he had acted, rather than their excuse that they were too old to
raise a child.
“I
did see a lady about my hearing?” Shiloh said eventually, quietly. “When I was
seven? My grandfather claimed I must be deaf ‘cause I never listened to him,”
he said. “But I just couldn’t make him understand he didn’t need to shout
everything. It hurt when he yelled all the time. I didn’t know how to make it
stop, so I just…I made my own noise to block him out.”
Aaron
nodded faintly, playing with a loose curl, twirling it between his thumb and
forefinger as he listened to the boy. “There’s nothing whatsoever wrong with
your hearing,” he agreed softly, and Shiloh smiled up at him.
“That’s what the hearing lady
said too.”
“Will you tell me more?” Aaron
asked. “What else bothered you, Shy? Or still bothers you?” he asked. Shiloh
flushed, unsure he wanted his Top to know this stuff. But the open trust and
acceptance that he saw in Aaron’s face made his heart race and any tightness
that had lingered in his chest dissipated at the sight of those dark eyes
looking so kind.
“I don’t like noise,” he
muttered. “Sirens, the fire alarm, your car alarm? Why do they have to be so
loud, Aaron?” He felt the man squeeze his shoulders and he looked up at him
again.
“What does it feel like, Shy?
When you hear them?”
The boy seemed to consider it
and he winced as if drawing up the memory of an alarm was enough to make him
feel ill. “It hurts my teeth,” he said. “If…if I had a cavity, it would hurt?
It would be sensitive. It’s like that,” he tried to explain. Aaron thought he
understood – like nails on a chalkboard; certain sounds made him feel that way
too.
“Is it just loud noises that
make your teeth hurt?” he asked gently, and Shiloh glanced up at him.
“N-no?”
“Tell me, Shy. I would like to
know,” he said, gentle and low. Shiloh picked at a loose thread on his pajamas,
keeping his head down.
“Towels. Those hand towels
that don’t really dry anything properly? M-microfiber, I think? Wool. Yarn.
Fleece – I hate fleece, please don’t ever buy me fleece anything, I’ll just die,”
he said through gritted teeth, rocking himself a bit against Aaron’s side.
“Alright, okay babe. I’ll
remember that,” he promised, hugging him tightly.
“Styrofoam, too. I don’t like
those evil little packing peanuts. And… I really can’t stand it when you mow
the lawn? Can you do it when I’m not home?”
Aaron smoothed his hand over
his lover’s shoulders now; Shiloh had folded himself over his knees. He would
do anything to relieve his lover of the things that bothered him.
“It has never been my
intention to hurt you, Shy. I’m sorry I didn’t know this sooner; I never would
have been this insensitive if I’d known,” he whispered. Shiloh nodded faintly,
taking in a shaky breath.
“Why didn’t you tell me,
darling?” he asked gently, watching the young man’s fists clench to stop his
tapping. Aaron caught one of his hands. “If it helps, don’t stop yourself. I’m
not judging you,” he soothed, feeling Shiloh’s minute tapping continue seconds
later on his palm.
“I’m not a f-freak, Aaron. I
wanted you to see me as normal,” he said, sounding miserable. “You would never
have been with me this long if you knew. Everyone said, everyone always said. Nobody would be with me.”
Aaron shook his head fiercely.
“No, that’s not true, Shiloh,” he said, but Shiloh went on.
“Someone like you? Successful,
brave, smart – you’d never look twice at me if you had known. You would have
patted me on the head and asked me who let me out of the institution,” he said
with a hiss.
The anger in his lover’s voice
made Aaron cringe. “Shiloh, please,” he said. “You know I’m not like that. You
know I would never say anything of the sort.” He felt Shiloh’s shoulders slump
under his hand.
“It took everything in me to
let you touch me, Aaron – to hold your hand, to let you play with my hair. To
look you in the eyes when you talked. Because you think it’s rude if I don’t, I
know that. Because you’re such a gentleman and you have manners and its easy for you to do. It’s not hard now,
not with you now,” he murmured. “But it was at first. It was. But I did it,
because I can be normal,” he whispered. “I can be normal for you; I wanted you.
I would have done anything for you, for you to notice me and want me too.”
Aaron’s heart broke. He had
never known, never sensed it. His boy had done a very good job of hiding this
from him. He had done all the things he thought he needed to in order for Aaron
to believe he was normal, whatever
that meant, despite how much it had hurt him to do so. He wondered sadly how
often his boy’s teeth had hurt since they had been together.
He drew him over into his arms
for a tight hug as he felt his own eyes begin to water.
“Oh Shiloh. My sweet boy,” he
breathed, closing him in his arms in as tight a hug as he could manage,
something he had always known went right through to Shiloh. He could feel the
young man relaxing under his embrace and his racing heart began to slow once
more. Shiloh twisted in his arms to get around, flinging his arms around
Aaron’s neck to cling to him.
“I’ve got you, my boy. You
tell me what you need and I will do anything,” he promised. “I will never use a
towel again in my life if that’s what will help you – I’ll air dry every day,”
he said, hearing Shiloh’s sobbing chuckle against his neck. He hugged him hard,
trying to imprint the truth of his words into the boy’s bones.
“You are mine, kid, you got that? There is nothing whatsoever wrong with you and there never has been.
You are strong and smart and sweet; you make every day worth living, my boy.
Don’t you ever think I don’t love you
and want you, Shiloh. I would choose you every time. Every damn time.” It was
said quietly, close to his partner’s ear.
Shiloh let out a gasp as he
sobbed against his shoulder. He was making a horrible keening sound and Aaron
held the back of his head and rocked, slowly and steadily, until it began to
fade. Shiloh was clenching and unclenching his jaw, fists gripping and
loosening on the back of his shirt where he clung to the bigger man. It was
like a flood had been released and everything he had been holding back in the
last year and a half was being let go. The rocking helped; Aaron felt his
trembling diminish as he moved with him.
“I-I’m
sorry,” Shiloh wailed, feeling Aaron’s hands on his lower back. “I n-need help,
I need your help.” Aaron gave him another bone-crushing hug and Shiloh sat back
with a whine, letting Aaron wipe at his eyes as he bit into his wrist. It was
an urge he had been holding in and Aaron watched him with his ever-kind eyes,
concerned. He held out a hand, not forcing, and Shiloh shakily took it,
relinquishing the impulse to bite for his Top’s protective grip instead.
“I
know this feels like the end of the world, Shiloh,” he whispered, gripping both
of his hands now. “But it isn’t. Nothing has changed, nothing significant
anyways. The only thing that will change now is how we handle this. I love you
and I want you to be safe and comfortable, as often as I can make that happen.
I know I won’t be able to all the time; I can’t control everything. But I will
try for you. Please know I will always try my best.”
Shiloh
was sure Aaron didn’t have the capacity to lie; his face was so open, his eyes
were always so honest. If you looked closely enough, you could see right down
into his soul; he was pure and good and kind. He really was a gentleman. He
found himself nodding, looking into his lover’s eyes, transfixed by him.
“We
can make this easier for you, my boy. I will
make this easier for you,” he promised, kissing both of his palms. “You tell me
when it’s getting to be too much, or when you need me to help you. Understood?”
Shiloh
nodded, believing him. He could picture his handsome firefighting Top, riding
towards him on a white horse, sword wielded – coming to save him from the
packing peanuts and the woolen sweaters and the microfiber dishcloths that gave
him sensory overload.
“I
love you,” Shiloh whispered. “I love you, Aaron.”
Nobody
before had been willing to go to bat for him, to take on his social and
personal issues caused by his Asperger’s and fight for him. He had heard people all his life, talking over him as if
he didn’t understand – that he should be institutionalized, that he would never
live a normal life, that he was an aberration. That nobody would ever love him.
And
here was Aaron, holding him with such strength, such feeling, who was unafraid
to say he didn’t understand but he wanted to and it wouldn’t change how he felt
in the slightest; that he wanted to help him. And he knew, he felt in his
heart, that Aaron didn’t mean help heal
him. He knew Aaron didn’t want to cure him, or help him cover it up now that
his façade was slipping. No, Aaron wanted to help him make it easier to deal
with things, to reduce the threats so he wouldn’t be uncomfortable.
Because he loved him.
Aaron
was warm and strong as he drew him into his arms once more. Shiloh settled
there, feeling his broad chest rise and fall. He was safe. The sense of relief
he felt was immense.
Aaron was going to keep him
safe.
…
It was surprising to Shiloh
how quickly Aaron learned every trigger and tic and compulsion; it was also
surprising how relieved he was to know he didn’t have to hide anymore, not with
Aaron in control.
Aaron went through his closet
and without even a second thought discarded every item that Shiloh so much as
sneered at. The microfiber dishtowels disappeared too, along with some of the
old raggedy towels that Aaron used to use for cleaning. Shiloh never heard the
lawnmower but he would come home to the lawn freshly cut, something he
appreciated.
Coming home from work one day,
he was surprised to find that Aaron had installed a wooden swing on the
wraparound porch. It was made of pretty red maple and it was suspended from the
overhanging roof by thick chains. It swung slowly when he sat down to test it,
and Shiloh found himself smiling as he slid his feet along the porch boards
under him.
“Like it?” Aaron asked when he
found Shiloh on the swing some time later. The boy had his feet tucked under
himself and he accepted the cup of lemonade that Aaron handed him, shifting
over a bit for his Top to join him.
“This is for me?” he asked
quietly, blinking as he sipped the cold drink. Aaron touched his hair, tousling
his curls. He smiled fondly at the wide-eyed look his lover was giving him.
“Yes, I thought we could use a nice place to sit out here in the summer. I love
swings,” he informed the boy.
Shiloh subsided into his side
and he slid his arm around his shoulders, moving the swing slowly as Shiloh
told him about his day at work. Any tension he had been holding began to slip
away.
“Ryder and Duncan came to the
shop today,” he whispered, arm slung over Aaron’s waist lazily. “Ryder’s got a
new bike and his helmet matches it,” he explained, enjoying the feeling of
being off the ground and swaying slowly. He nuzzled Aaron’s hand in his hair.
“He said maybe I could ride it
one day, when I finish the customization. You think so? Can I ride with him?”
he asked, hopeful.
“Of course, darling. If Ryder
has another helmet, I don’t see why not. As long as he doesn’t try any tricks,”
he added. He was busy twirling one loose curl around his fingers, enjoying how
it became a small, perfect ringlet under his ministrations. He moved on to a
different strand.
Shiloh pushed his head up
against his hand and Aaron smiled, ruffling his hair like a dog. “Ryder’s
nice,” Shiloh muttered. “He always says please and thank you to me. Duncan
swears a lot,” he said, adjusting himself so he was lying with his head in
Aaron’s lap. “They’re pretty nice. Ryder’s new bike is black, Aaron. He wants
me to paint symbols and stuff, white and silver. Think that’s cool? I think
that’s cool,” he shrugged.
Aaron rubbed his side. “Maybe
you should ask if Ryder wants to hang out sometime?” It was just a quiet,
inconspicuous suggestion. He felt the boy’s body tense under his hand and
Shiloh shook his head against his lap.
“No, no Aaron. Ryder’s too
cool. And he’s older than me.”
Aaron chuckled. “I’m older
than you and I’m your friend!” he said, tickling the boy who let out a tiny
squeal and elbowed him fiercely to get away. Aaron’s hand smoothed over the
affected area apologetically.
“No. I’ll just paint his
bike,” he decided, sighing softly as he sank back down to hug Aaron’s waist
again. Aaron went on rocking slowly, unfazed, and told him about his day.
Ryder
Aaron was a bit surprised a
week or so later when he came home to find there was a beautifully hand-painted
Ninja in his driveway. He raised a
brow as he parked alongside it and headed inside with the groceries.
“Shy? Can I get a hand?” he
called softly. He heard the familiar sound of his brat coming in off the porch
and the swing’s chains creaking as he left it.
When
he looked up, Shiloh gave him a small smile, abashed. Behind him came a
dark-haired, tanned young man, a few years older than Shy, with a confident
swagger. He flashed a handsome grin at Aaron and held a hand out, and Aaron
shook it firmly.
“You
must be Ryder,” he greeted. “Nice bike, kid,” he said, and Ryder’s dark eyes
twinkled.
“Hey
thanks. Nice to meet you, sir,” he said. “Shiloh’s only mentioned you a few
dozen times,” he teased the young blond beside him. “Can I help you with those?
Are there more in the car?” Ryder asked, peering around him.
“Yes,
a few. Shy can grab them for me,” he assured the newcomer, and Ryder flushed as
the man’s gaze swept over him. Shiloh obediently went out to the car to get the
groceries and Ryder, torn for a moment, turned and followed Aaron. Something
about the man exuded command.
“So,
what do you do for a living, Ryder?” he asked as he began to put the groceries
away. He appreciated that what he could see of the house was tidy enough to
have a guest over, and he reminded himself to thank Shiloh for tidying when he
got him alone.
Ryder
leaned against the counter across from Aaron, arms crossed. “I’m out of work
right now, actually. Just uh, between jobs,” he said, sounding a bit uncertain
of himself.
“Ah.
I know how that feels,” he said with a smile. “Something will come up sooner or
later,” he said, sounding reassuring. Ryder matched his smile, only looking
away when he heard Shiloh coming in with the bags.
Aaron
dropped a kiss on the blonde’s forehead when he passed him to put the milk
away. “Have you tried out the bike, Shy?” he asked him, and Shiloh shook his
head, looking back at Ryder, who was watching them curiously.
“Can
I?” he asked his Top, rising up on tiptoe, hand on his arm. “Ryder brought
another helmet,” he told Aaron. He turned around to catch Ryder’s eyes.
“You
have your license, I’m sure?” he asked the young man. Ryder nodded quickly,
pulling his wallet out of his back pocket to show him his card. “Yes sir, got
it years ago! I wouldn’t ride without it,” he promised, hand on his chest in a
solemn way, and Aaron found himself smiling at his gesture.
“Alright.
No tricks. To the end of the street and back,” he said, kissing Shiloh gently
once more. The boy flashed a grin at Ryder and hurried to the foyer to pull his
sneakers on; Ryder followed to pull his combats on.
Aaron
heard the rumble of the bike’s engine as Ryder revved unnecessarily and then
the bike took off down the street. He glanced out the window to watch it go,
pleased to see that when they reached the stop sign at the end of the road the
young man turned back and drove it home.
He
was also pleased to see that Shiloh was laughing openly as the bike pulled back
into their lane, his arms tight around Ryder’s waist, his chin on the young
man’s shoulder.
…
He began to see a lot of
Ryder, which he didn’t mind. His shifts varied week to week and he knew Shiloh
didn’t like to be alone when he had to work – especially the weeks that he
worked the night shift at the station. He was happy that his young lover had
found a friend.
He leaned over the back of the
couch to drop a kiss in Shiloh’s hair. “Have a good night, Shy. I’ve left money
on the counter if you boys want to order a pizza or something,” he informed
him, making Shiloh wriggle excitedly to get around to hug him properly. Ryder
pumped the air with a fist.
“Ryder, I don’t mind if you
stay the night but I expect Shiloh in bed at a decent hour,” he warned him,
seemingly uncaring how silly it was to send a grown man to bed at a set time.
But Aaron had a routine set with Shiloh that worked well and he didn’t want him
to slip out of it.
Shiloh was a bit red,
embarrassed, but he hugged his Top one more time and promised him he would go
to bed on time before he shooed him away. Aaron took that as his cue to leave.
Shiloh flopped back down onto
the couch with a grin at Ryder. “Sorry,” he said, motioning absently. “Aaron
has a thing with sleep.” He ducked his head at the look Ryder was giving him,
curls bouncing. Ryder grinned and sat back on the other end of the couch,
stretching a leg out towards Shiloh.
“You got a new game, huh?” he
asked. “How ‘bout I order that pizza and we play?”
When Aaron came home that
morning at four, he snuck into the house as quietly as he could. He was very
good at not waking Shiloh – he’d had lots of practice – but he had seen the
bike out front and knew Ryder was still there.
He went through to the kitchen
to get a glass of water. He could see Shiloh asleep on the couch, sprawled on
his stomach in nothing but an oversized sweater, the blankets tangled around
his legs. Across from him Ryder was asleep in the glider, still wearing his
dark-washed jeans, his jacket thrown over his chest.
Aaron slipped silently into
the living room, taking a throw blanket from the back of the couch. Despite his
efforts, Ryder’s eyes flew open as he covered him with the soft blanket, and he
motioned for him to keep quiet. He looked younger in his sleepy state and he
noted the laugh lines around his eyes as Ryder took the edge of the blanket
from Aaron with a smile.
“He didn’t want to sleep
alone,” he whispered, peering over at the still-sleeping Shiloh. “He wouldn’t
go up to bed, sir. I’m sorry.” He caught Aaron’s gaze and the older man
returned his smile.
“He’s alright there; a night
on the couch isn’t going to hurt him,” he said softly, gathering up the dishes
on the coffee table. “Go back to sleep, kid. You’ve got a few hours before the
sun is up,” he said, and Ryder didn’t take much more encouragement than that –
his eyes closed and he sank down under the warm throw blanket.
By the time Aaron went up to
bed, Ryder was snoring in the chair.
…
“Aaron,
can Ryder stay with us?” Shiloh asked one morning at breakfast. He was stirring
his eggs on his plate absently but he took a bite when Aaron tapped the table
in front of him warningly.
“He
hasn’t got anywhere to go? Duncan and Beau told him he couldn’t stay there
forever. Well, I bet Duncan wouldn’t care, but Beau doesn’t like him living
there,” he explained. This of course was all secondhand information, told to
him by Ryder; and of course Shiloh took it as the absolute truth from his
friend.
“How
long would he be staying, Shy?” Aaron asked as he placed the sausage that had
mysteriously rolled under the edge of his plate back onto the boy’s plate with
the other ones.
Shiloh
shrugged. “Uh, a couple of months maybe? Just until he gets on his feet,
Aaron!” he explained. “He’s very neat and he always helps clean the dishes when
he comes over, y’know. And we have the guest room but we never have guests;
it’s just going to waste up there!”
Aaron
didn’t need much convincing. Something about the dark-haired boy pulled at every
Top instinct he had; he was unable to say no to a brat in need.
Ryder
moved in a week later, bringing with him not much more than the clothes on his
back, his bike and a few personal possessions. Shiloh “helped” him unpack
upstairs in the guest room, stretched out on the bed watching Ryder fold his
shirts and put them in the chest of drawers in the closet. Shiloh went through
his stack of a dozen or so books, interested in an old copy of Frog and Toad.
“Aaron
reads this to me sometimes!” he told him, grinning as he flipped through to
look at the familiar pictures. Ryder’s copy had coloured pictures, which
intrigued him. Ryder watched him with a smirk.
“Maybe
I’ll read it to you sometime; I can do the voices,” he boasted.
Shiloh looked up at him with his eyes wide,
innocent as always. “Really?” he asked, propping himself up to put the books on
the shelf by the bed neatly. “Aaron does them too; it's funny,” he said with a
secret smile as he imagined Aaron and Ryder reading together, each of them
performing the silly characters that he loved so much.
Ryder
sat down on the edge of the bed to collect up the last bits and pieces from his
rucksack. Shiloh sat down close to him, much closer than most people would find
comfortable, and peered into the bag with him.
He
put a small collection of rocks and stones on the nightstand along with an old
silver pocket-watch that he told Shiloh he was not allowed to take apart.
Shiloh nodded obediently, touching it only once before he turned his attention
back to Ryder, who was pulling out the last items. He added an arrowhead and a
silver ring to the stone pile and he slipped a colourful, woven bracelet onto
his wrist. Then he shook out the bag to make sure he hadn’t missed anything,
folded it up and went to tuck it away in the bottom drawer.
“You
don’t have a lot of stuff,” Shiloh said quietly, brow furrowed. Ryder’s room
was almost Spartan in comparison to his! It didn’t seem to bother the young
man, however, as he stretched by the bed and then dropped onto it to roll over
and tickle Shiloh, eliciting the desired giggle.
He
stopped when he heard the knock at the open door, and he looked up with a grin
at Aaron.
“All
settled in?” the man asked.
Ryder nodded, sitting up to
ruffle Shiloh’s hair affectionately. “Yes sir, thank you.” Shiloh stretched out
on the bed beside Ryder, who patted his hip absently. Neither one of them
seemed to think it was out of the bounds of their friendship.
“I’d like to run our house
rules over with you later, Ryder, when you have a moment,” Aaron informed him,
and Ryder nodded eagerly. “We don’t have many, and they aren’t anything out of
the ordinary,” he assured him with a smile. Ryder grinned up at him.
“Sweet. Thanks Aaron,” he said
again, standing up and holding his hand out. Aaron gave him a quizzical look
but clasped his hand firmly. He hesitated a second before he pulled the kid
into a warm hug, clapping him on the back.
When he pulled back, Ryder
flashed him a smile that wrinkled the corners of his eyes, flushed faintly. The
effect made him look rather sheepish and five years younger. “I’ll let Shy show
you where we keep towels and things. If you need anything, let me know.”
…
Ryder had been with them for
almost three months – he was working odd jobs now, but still wasn’t ‘on his
feet’ enough to move out on his own. He was quite comfortable in their home,
and Aaron didn’t really mind the addition.
The first time Aaron really noticed
it, he told himself he was imagining it. He walked into the living room to see
Ryder, shirtless, in some sort of meditative pose on the carpeted floor and
felt his heart quicken. Caught, he was unable to look away until Ryder’s eyes
opened and he flashed his familiar grin at the man.
Mortified,
Aaron stammered an apology for interrupting his session and he hurried out of
the room. He convinced himself he hadn’t been admiring the hard planes of
muscle that had been the young man’s chest and shoulders or the way his long
hair hung almost to the middle of his back when it wasn’t tied back in its
usual way. He must have been walking quickly; that explained his fluttering
heart.
Only
it kept happening and Aaron wasn’t able to quite convince himself it wasn’t
real. He was able to keep the flush from his cheeks with an effort when Ryder
would grin at him; he could get his heartbeat back to normal quickly enough
after the young man called him ‘sir’ in that delightfully devilish way. But
paired with the sight of the crow’s feet at the corners of his dark eyes that
made him look so damn handsome, he
found it hard to catch his breath. And the sight of Ryder with Shiloh, his dark
head bent with Shiloh’s blond curls over a game or a book or a shared snack –
it was hard not to think they looked damn good together.
He
began to keep his distance, avoiding shared rooms if he knew Ryder was there,
leaving rooms if Ryder came into them alone. Without Shiloh as a buffer between
them, he found himself getting increasingly flustered around the young man. He
hated to admit it; he had a middle school crush on the handsome young man.
Shiloh
didn’t seem to notice anything strange, and for that Aaron was grateful. He
could just imagine what the boy would think of him if he knew. But he remained
oblivious; innocent as always of any social cuing that went on around him. He
didn’t find it odd in the least to snuggle up with Ryder on the couch or the
swing outside; he didn’t mind when Ryder would hold his hand or walk from the
bathroom upstairs to his room without a towel on. While Aaron would look away
and busy himself with something else, Shiloh would simply watch his friend with
interest.
He
came home late one night to the stillness of the house. The lights were out and
the kitchen was clean; Ryder was very quick to pick up on the way Aaron liked
things to be kept. He glanced at the clock over the dining room table – it stood
at 8:15. He didn’t usually send Shiloh up to get ready for bed until 8:45.
He
went up the stairs quietly after he had locked up for the night. Their room
stood empty, so he moved down the hall to glance into the guest room. The young
men were sprawled out together; Shiloh was on his stomach like a lazing cat,
his face pressed to Ryder’s armpit, and Ryder was rubbing his back in slow,
lazy circles. The older man was awake, skimming through something on his phone,
and he glanced up when he heard the floor creak outside the door.
Aaron
took a step into the room, motioning for Ryder to stay where he was when the
man started to sit up. “He’s not feeling well,” Ryder told him in a whisper
when Aaron had sat down on the other side. He smoothed a hand under Shiloh’s
shirt and up his back; he was radiating heat and he could hear the wheeze in
his breathing.
“Has
he taken anything?” he asked quietly, feeling Shiloh turn over into his
touches. Ryder shook his head faintly, resisting the urge to brush Shiloh’s
hair from his damp forehead.
“No,
he said he wasn’t allowed to until you were home,” he said, concerned. “I tried
to get him to take some cough medicine but he was adamant.”
Aaron
sighed softly. “It’s one of our rules; I keep the medicine cabinet locked. If
you had texted me I would have told you to give him something,” he said, but he
wasn’t upset. Shiloh had followed their rules and Ryder hadn’t known any
better.
Ryder
sat up and set his phone and the book he had earlier read to Shiloh aside on
the nightstand while Aaron woke Shiloh gently. The boy was pliant and sleepy in
his arms as he was sat up and he mouthed a yawn against Aaron’s shoulder before
he erupted into a round of coughing.
“Why
don’t you come with me to get something that’ll help you feel better?” he
suggested, helping the boy to his feet. Shiloh yawned again and allowed himself
to be led by the hand out of the guest room to the bathroom where Aaron unlocked
the medicine cabinet. He took two capsules out for him and filled a cup with
water and watched while Shiloh obediently took the pills.
Ryder
was lingering in the hall when they finished. Aaron shuffled Shiloh past him to
go to their bedroom; Shiloh twisted around to hug Ryder tightly on the way. The
older man smoothed his hands up Shiloh’s back. “Sleep well, kid. Feel better,”
he advised. Shiloh wandered to bed then and Aaron watched him from the hall as
he slid under the covers and stretched out.
“Are
you feeling alright, Ryder?” he asked, turning back to the dark-haired young
man. “I hope he didn’t bother you too much,” he added quietly.
Ryder smiled faintly, shaking
his head. “No sir, not at all. I feel fine. He didn’t bug me; we just read for
a while and then he fell asleep,” he told the man. “I think he was too tired to
do much pestering,” he smiled, teasing.
Aaron
smiled back at the young man. “Thank you for keeping an eye on him, Ryder. He
doesn’t do ‘sick’ well,” he explained. He remembered the first time Shiloh had
been sick with him – he had locked himself in the bathroom and refused to come
out for almost twelve hours, used to being left to do things on his own.
“Would
you like to come get a snack with me?” Aaron offered. Ryder’s eyes lit up and
he followed the older man down the stairs to the kitchen, where Aaron set out a
late-night snack of cheese and crackers.
Ryder tucked himself into the
far end of the couch, sitting crisscross diagonally from Aaron. The older man
set up the plate between them on a cushion and he watched the deliberate way
Ryder selected which pieces he wanted.
“I
appreciate how gentle you are with Shy,” Aaron said after a while, breaking the
silence. Ryder looked up at the comment, catching Aaron’s gaze. “He finds it
hard sometimes to be himself, but I don’t worry that he’s trying to hide when
he’s with you. You’re good for him,” the man said.
Ryder
swallowed his bite, nodding slowly. “Shiloh is…exceptional,” he said quietly,
looking away from Aaron. “He’s told me how much you’ve done for him. He’s
fortunate to have someone like you,” he flushed. And, he thought, Aaron was
blessed to have someone like Shiloh sharing his heart.
Aaron
let the silence lapse, leaning back against the arm of the couch. Ryder watched
him discretely, a smile quirking the corner of his mouth. “I can see your aura
as plain as day,” he whispered after a few moments had passed in comfortable
silence. “You move between reds and oranges depending on the day – you’re
grounded and strong, courageous and outgoing and full of energy. It’s
enlivening.”
Aaron caught his eye, curious.
“Shy…I’ve
never been able to see one colour. It changes every time I look at him – muted
yellows and pinks, sometimes violet or blue. It is never one true, solid
colour; I always see it as faded or pastel. I’m intrigued by him. I’ve never
seen anything like it before. He’s very special,” Ryder explained, catching
Aaron’s eyes.
Aaron
held the boy’s gaze. He wanted to say something, to fill the silence. But he
couldn’t think of anything to say. Ryder broke their eye contact with a
suddenly shy smile, looking away out the patio door. Aaron felt himself flush,
glad of the darkness of the living room.
“I
would never hurt him, Aaron. He has a child’s naivety; it’s very endearing,” he
smiled. “I hope you don’t feel I’m stepping on your toes with him. He sparks
every protective urge in me. I just want to keep him safe,” he admitted
quietly.
Aaron
could sense that there was more he wanted to say, but Ryder had decided that he
had said enough. He hugged his knees to his chest, looking out at the dark
yard, cheek resting on his knees. Aaron watched him carefully, admiring the
high bones in his cheeks and the slender length of his fingers as they clasped
his opposite elbows.
He
sat with him a while longer before he stood and took the plate to the kitchen.
He set the dishwasher to start and checked that everything was locked up for
the night before he padded up to bed.
…
There
was a growing tension between the two men, Aaron and Ryder, as the weeks wore
on. Shiloh didn’t appear to notice, ever ignorant of these sorts of things.
Ryder didn’t make it obvious; he was too cool and collected even in the face of
the strained atmosphere. Aaron was having a harder time of things.
It
went on for almost two months before Aaron realized it was starting to affect
Shiloh too. The boy was in turns grouchy and distant, not wanting to be with
either of them and then suddenly clinging to whichever one of them was
available. Aaron tried everything with him; getting him out of the house for
walks in nature to ground him, rocking on the swing on the porch, using his
weighted blanket at night.
Shiloh remained fussy and
reticent despite his efforts, and he worried that perhaps it would be best if
Ryder moved out soon. He needed to run it by Shiloh first, but ultimately he
would make the decision if he thought it best.
However
Shiloh was not interested in that as an option – and he made himself very clear
about that one night. Rocking on the swing with Aaron, his eyes wet with tears,
he sat up and subsided into Aaron’s arms with a heavy sigh. Aaron hugged him
hard, a bone-crunching embrace that made Shiloh’s shoulders slacken and his
breathing even out as he relaxed against his Top.
“Ryder
is going to leave,” he whispered. “He told me so, Aaron.” He twisted in his
Top’s arms to look up at him, hands flat on his broad chest. His eyes were
large, wet and full of sadness. “Please, please don’t make him go, Aaron.”
Aaron
smoothed his hands down the boy’s back gently, sadly; he kissed his temple
soothingly but Shiloh wasn’t willing to concede defeat. “Aaron, please?” he
whispered again, bottom lip trembling. His brow furrowed deeply, making him
look as if he were very seriously considering something. Aaron could
practically hear the gears turning in his boy’s head as he tried to get his
words straight before he said them out loud.
Failing
to do so, he blurted out seconds later: “Aaron, I love him!” Mortified, his
face reddened from neck to ear tips and he broke into keening sobs, balling his
fists and hitting Aaron’s chest weakly. “I w-want him t-t-too, I n-need him,”
he wailed, sinking down in Aaron’s lap to cling to his waist. Aaron went on
rocking, slow and steady, his palm firm on his back.
He
wasn’t sure how he felt about Shiloh’s admission. He could feel his own face
flushed red as the young man’s words sank into him and he worked them into his
own experiences of Ryder recently.
Shiloh
stilled under his repetitive circling motions, breathing evening out a bit. It
was punctuated every so often with a sniffle or a hitch in his breath as he got
himself under control. Aaron played with his hair absently.
“Shiloh,”
he started after a while, when his boy was much calmer. “Do you love Ryder the
way you love me?” he asked. He didn’t sound angry; there were no jealous
overtones in his voice. He sounded merely curious, calm and collected.
Shiloh
didn’t answer for a while, obviously chewing over the question. He let Aaron
pet him for a while in silence, as if gauging how his partner would react. He
could sense no anger, no upset in the way Aaron was stroking his soft hair. As
always, he radiated calm and quiet.
“I
love you differently,” he said after a while. Aaron could feel his brow
furrowed against his stomach. “I know the sun is going to come up every morning;
even on a cloudy day I know the sun is there, just behind the clouds. The same
way I look at you and know you’re always going to be there, every day for a
hundred years. You’re always going to be with me, Aaron,” he said, remaining
where he was, clinging to his waist.
“That’s
not how I feel about Ryder,” he explained. “You’re constant and steady like a
river. He’s…he’s like a wave. It came out of nowhere,” he said quietly. “I
didn’t mean to fall for him, Aaron,” he added, sounding as if he was close to
tears again as he sat up.
Aaron held him in place,
adjusting him so the boy’s legs were on either side of him. He ran his thumb
gently under his eye to clear the dampness there and he pressed a firm kiss to
his temple.
“What shall we do about this,
Shy?” The Top asked him, bouncing his knee a bit. Shiloh’s pout began to fade
at the movement and he clutched the front of Aaron’s shirt. His nose wrinkled
up and he shrugged.
“I can’t have you both,” he
finally said, so low Aaron almost didn’t hear him. When he felt Aaron’s grip on
his waist tighten, he looked up at his lover sadly. “I want you both,” he
mumbled.
Aaron tugged his arm until he settled
against his chest and he hugged him as tightly as he could. He had never seen
the boy so full of emotion, or so willing to try to express himself like this.
He rocked the swing slowly, wrapping him up in his arms securely.
After a quiet few minutes,
Aaron pressed a kiss to his curly hair and let out a small sigh. “Shiloh, I
don’t know how this would work and I don’t know if Ryder would even consider us
as an option,” he said with his voice soft and low. “But I have felt what you
feel for him, kid; I am drawn to his
shores,” he whispered.
Shiloh smiled faintly at the
imagery, clutching Aaron’s shirt.
“Shall we ask him to consider
us?”
…
When
Ryder came home and saw them together in the living room, he tried to
de-escalate what he assumed was an intervention to tell him to move out. This
is what had happened with Beau and Duncan months ago – Beau had been tired of
him sticking around; he had even used the words abusing their kindness. Duncan had sat silent, arms folded.
But
these two didn’t look quite so serious. And when Aaron suggested he sit down,
he did so quickly with a quiet “yes sir”. He looked between them, but Shiloh
wasn’t giving anything away other than a quiet nervousness.
“Aaron,
look, I know I’ve been here almost six months,” he started, holding up a
placating hand to the man before he could interrupt. “And I know mowing the
lawn and helping with dinner and tidying up isn’t much of a contribution. I can
start paying rent if you want; I can probably even pay you back rent money from
these last months,” he offered.
Aaron could practically smell
the panic he was feeling. “Josiah Campbell,” he interrupted, and the
boy’s eyes snapped up at the use of his legal name. “Ryder. We don’t want you
to leave,” he soothed, holding a hand out to the boy. He hesitated a moment and
then stood and made his way around the coffee table to sit on the floor in
front of Aaron, slipping his hand into the man’s warm grasp.
Aaron covered his hand with
both of his; Shiloh watched them calmly, appearing unfazed by the way Aaron was
acting. Ryder pulled his eyes away from Shiloh and back to Aaron when the man
cleared his throat.
“Shy and I have been talking,
Ryder. We’ve been together for almost two years now and we love each other very
much,” he said.
Ryder flushed at the comment,
afraid that Aaron had seen through him to his deepest, most secret places.
Could he know all those nights he had laid awake, thinking of Shiloh’s sweet
smile in the dark? Or the days he’d dreamed of Aaron holding him as tightly as
he held Shiloh when he was upset? Had he given it away somehow?
He
felt Aaron’s warm hand on his cheek and he blinked, coming back to the present.
A gentle thumb traced the lines around his dark eye, reading in them openness,
a want. Ryder’s mouth opened in a soft sigh at the affection in Aaron’s
touches.
“I
don’t think either of us expected for this to happen, Ryder,” he said quietly;
beside him Shiloh gave an exasperated sigh and mumbled something about turning
this into a three act play and when was intermission going to happen? Aaron
smirked despite himself.
“Ryder,
if this is something you would be willing to consider – we want you to stay,”
Aaron said, lamely. Ryder looked between them again, brow furrowed. Shiloh
bounced up on his knees and shoved Aaron’s shoulder, clearly unhappy with how
he had worded things. Aaron was red in the face, and he had averted his eyes
from Ryder.
“Y-you
mean…? With you?” he stammered.
Aaron
chuckled, nodding. “Yes, with us. I know it’s not exactly typical,” he said,
obviously embarrassed and uncertain how this sort of thing was supposed to
proceed. “And if we have gone way over the edge, I’m so sorry,” he added.
Ryder
shook his head with force, squeezing Aaron’s hand hard. He took in Shiloh’s
patient, wide-eyed face and he smiled with such affection at the younger man,
breathing deeply. Rising up on his knees, he drew the boy into his arms and
hugged him; Shiloh nuzzled his hair roughly and planted a chaste kiss in his
hair.
He
pulled away after a moment, flashing a handsome, eye-wrinkling grin up at
Aaron. The older man didn’t hesitate before he leaned down, tilting Ryder’s
head up to kiss the corner of his mouth.
Ryder melted and flung his
arms around Aaron’s waist, burying his dark head into his stomach. Aaron
smoothed his hands over the boy’s back, feeling him trembling. “It’s alright,
Ryder,” he breathed. “It’s alright.”
The boy clung to him, unable
to do much more, and after a few minutes of his quiet crying Aaron leaned down
and hauled him bodily into his lap. Shiloh pressed close against his side and
stroked Ryder’s hair as the Top rocked him steadily. It didn’t take long for
Ryder to calm down in his arms.
“You’ve caught us, kid. We
don’t want you to go anywhere else. Will you be ours?” he whispered against his
dark hair.
Ryder nodded heavily, pulling
back a bit to look up at him, eyes wet. “Y-yes sir. Yes,” he whispered before
he subsided back into his warm embrace. Aaron hugged Shiloh close against his
side and kissed the top of his head as the young man stroked Ryder’s wet cheek.
He had always thought that
Shiloh was enough for him with his intricacies and his innocence and his
radiant smile. But he knew he simply hadn’t gone close enough to the water’s
edge to feel the waves against his feet to know what he had been missing before
now.
With a strong rush of emotion,
he hugged the two young men in a bone-crushing way and let the waves crash over
him.
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