Liam felt more like a person in Los Angeles than London, especially in February. He’d use the climate as an excuse if anyone asked him. But in truth, he needed an escape from his social circle more than the weather. Of course, the way Charlie and Sam were treating him now had always been wearing. It had made him angry all year, made him defensive and desperate to show how exactly-the-same he was in spite of their assumption that he’d become an entirely different man overnight. Until the press started doing it he’d been able to keep from swinging. But now he felt like the next awkward crack Charlie made about his mincing or hair product or silk dressing gown might get met with a stinging hex.
He was still himself, that was what he’d been telling everyone. But that wasn’t true either. He may not be the archetypal homosexual, but a great deal of his old self had been constructed to hide the parts of it he was. Now he knew if he admitted an inch his mates would assume a mile.
They all made fun of each other all the time, that was how their friendship worked. Liam disliked that this in particular crossed a line. He’d never had a problem with the lack of respect his friends had for him until now. Could he consider himself dehumanized if he hadn’t really been humanized before? To some degree he had always been a caricature. And he supposed it had always been confining. But… Confining himself had been different, he thought.
All of it was very messy, emotionally, and Liam had no interest in dealing with it. So he’d fled the country. His reputations weren’t gone in America, but they were diluted. He had a clifftop house to live on his own terms in. And it might not have been his main priority, but at least it wasn’t fucking
raining.He’d made a little music, drunk a lot of rum, and now he was out of things to do. In a committed relationship now, Liam had been forced to confront that he’d never done much for fun besides try to get laid. He wasn’t sure what to do at a club without a goal. Subtracting his debauchery friends left only the friends who sold him drugs. So he’d been spending a lot of time with Gabriel.
Don’t you have anything better to do? his friend had finally replied, once Liam had stopped bothering the iguana and asked to help brew.
Go read a book or something. He only had a few of those over here, but it was an idea. He brought home an armful of new releases and dropped them next to a pool chaise.
Out of Eden, by Dahlia Anthony. Liam had never
wanted to be fond of poetry, but as much as he admired lyricism he couldn’t help but be. And his literary muscle could use some toning—the kind of music he was writing these days wasn’t anything he trusted Charlie to set words to. Maybe Ollie, someday. But he wanted to give it a shot himself, to see if he could.
Ms. Anthony was clearly getting some romantic issues out herself. Liam thought about writing Charlie, sending him the one about the matching tattoos with her ex. He should give this whole book to Charlie, actually. Or make sure he never read it, given the way he was reacting to talk of Kate these days. Once Liam started reading through the lens of Baker/Duenas conflict, a lot of it started feeling very on the nose.
Even the music the first night they’d met. The color scheme at their wedding. A couple of other details that sounded right but he wouldn’t have been sober enough to remember.
Liam sat there for a while, wondering if he was losing his mind. There was no
way Kate would have the bollocks—no, that was stupid. Just because
he was a coward didn’t mean she would be.
He went back to the bookshop. “Dahlia Anthony†had no other books, and the staff hadn’t met her. Liam was now thrumming with energy, desperate to discuss this. Writing Charlie across the ocean would take too long. He tried a pay phone, but couldn’t figure out long-distance. Why had he wanted to isolate himself again? Of all the stupid ideas— Surely Gabe wouldn’t care, but maybe? No…
Whether Kate was still living at the house Charlie bought Liam had no idea, but he knew if he’d been her he’d have laid claim to everything. He stood outside and repeatedly rung the doorbell. How odd, to think how close Charlie had come to having a life here. He’d never been able to imagine it, but right now the thought sounded sort of nice.
Kate answered the door, and looked, reasonably, very surprised to see him. Liam had no good explanation. “Sorry—†He held up the book. “—Am I mad, or is this you?â€
@Kate Baker