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Authors: Heidi Cullinan

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Michael slid off, collapsed beside Wes on the bed and drunkenly pushed one

of Wes’s own hands to his cock. “Come, Albert,” he whispered wearily. With

three sharp strokes, Wes did, sending his own seed up to mingle with Michael’s

against his chest.

They lay there a long time, heaving for breath.

I love you too.

Wes shut his eyes and turned his head to place a kiss on Michael’s hair.

Michael drew himself closer and snuggled against Wes’s side.

Wes reached down without displacing him, drew up the covers and nestled

in close to his lover as they both settled into sleep. They lay together without

moving until morning was high and a chirping bird outside the cottage window

woke him.

Opening his eyes, Wes felt Michael hot and close beside him, their sticky

spendings dried and cold against his chest.

He smiled.

Michael had no nightmares, and when he woke, it was to find himself in

Albert’s arms.

Several times that day he wondered if he’d stumbled into a dream. After

making lingering, sweet love in bed until they could stand it no longer, they

made breakfast together out of the supplies they’d foraged from the cottage

larder and enjoyed quiet conversation peppered by comfortable silence over this

and their morning tea. After that Albert took Michael on a walk through the

neighboring countryside. It was as picturesque as a painting—indeed, everything

about Oxford seemed carefully crafted to be exquisitely charming and beautiful.

They meandered all the way back into town, where they shopped once more,

this time not just in bookshops but anywhere that caught their fancy. They

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revisited the bakery and the inn. They wandered down the narrow streets and

passages around the campus—Michael couldn’t get over how close everything

felt, like dangerous alleys in London that weren’t dangerous any longer.

The only part that brought him any pain were the boys. The bright, happy

boys laughing and joking with one another between classes. It didn’t matter that

he knew many of them weren’t happy at all. That the smaller ones were probably

fagging, both literally and metaphorically, for the bigger ones. That they had

overbearing or disinterested fathers, that they had nightmares of their own. He

couldn’t stop yearning after them, wishing he had been one of them. Because

much as their lives weren’t perfect, he also knew none of them would end up

whoring for a living. He’d told Albert he’d rather his life than that of a boring

clerk, but as he watched the boys, he admitted that boast was a lie.

He hated his life. Rodger was right—he wanted out of it. But where on earth

would he go?

Albert. I can go to Albert.
Yes, he could, because Albert loved him. Albert would do anything for him. In fact, he thought Albert often looked as if he were

working up to asking him serious questions, possibly ones that revolved around

spending much, much more time together on outings like this. In cottages like

the one they’d slept in the night before. Yes. Albert would take him in.

Until he learned about Michael’s connection to his father.

As Albert’s satchel and Michael’s purchases were loaded onto the train,

Michael tried to reassure himself that his confession might not go entirely awry.

Certainly Albert would be shocked, yes. But he’d hardly refuse to see Michael

any longer because of it. It wasn’t as if it was Michael’s fault. Nor was it Albert’s.

It was just a gruesome, unfortunate fact that it was Albert’s father who had

bought and raped him.

Of course, it was possible that Albert wouldn’t believe him.

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Also possible that he would be so disgusted he couldn’t stand to see him.

Truth be told, there were many unpleasant outcomes possible.

He barely noticed anything on the train ride home, he was so preoccupied

with how, even when, to tell Albert.
Two days.
He could put it off until tomorrow.

Or he could get it over with tonight. Instinct told him now was good. Now when

Albert was so soft and affectionate. Now when Albert kept holding his hand

beneath the lap blanket. Obviously not that very second, he shouldn’t tell him,

not on the train. But he knew men, and he knew Albert. He had the feeling

Albert would try to stay the evening with him. Perhaps that would be best.

Perhaps they could go back to Dove Street, and he would take Albert up to his

room. Show him his books. Ply him with wine. Light candles and open the

windows so the music from the ballroom drifted up. Tell his tale slowly,

carefully. Explain.

But when Albert looked at him all soft and in love, he said, “W-Would you c-

come to m-my ap-partment?”

Albert’s
apartment. Ah.

Michael gave him as seductive a smile as he dared in public. “I could make

you quite comfortable at Dove Street. In my room.” He squeezed Albert’s hand

surreptitiously. “I would love to show you where the lovely books you bought

me go.”

If anything, Albert seemed more upset. He stammered incoherently for

several seconds, then managed to get out his words. “Ap-p-pologies. I h-h-h-

have r-un out of m-m-medicine.” He paused for breath, glancing around at the

crowd.

Michael’s spirits sank. Yes, this had been quite the public airing for his

recluse. Which meant he shouldn’t even go home with him at all, let alone tell

him horror stories about his father.

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Before he could say anything, Albert took his arm, maneuvering him against

a wall behind a crowd of people lining up for a food stall. He leaned in close so

his lips brushed Michael’s ear as he spoke.

“St-stay with me.” His hand squeezed on Michael’s shoulder. “Please.”

Michael dared a brush of his lips against his collar. “Of course.”

Wes loaded them into a fine black carriage, Michael’s books and parcels

carefully packed inside too, and the coachman drove them into the heart of

Mayfair. As they made their way up the stately walk to Albert’s front door, a

smart-looking butler came out to greet them.

“Good evening, Lord George.” The servant bowed. “You have had several

visitors, and much correspondence has been left for you.”

Albert waved him off impatiently. “In a m-moment, in a m-m-moment.” He

hurried Michael down the hall to a room on the left, wrestled with the door, then

let them inside.

A fire waited in the sitting room, lighting his way as he fumbled to a side

table. It was burned down to embers, but they were hot coals and would rise

back to life with just a little fuel. As Albert fumbled with a wooden box and

Michael hovered off to the side, a mob-capped maid ducked into the room, built

up the fire and exited again without a word.

Now the room was brightly lit, allowing Michael to watch as Albert

withdrew a small glass bottle. His hands shook as he held a dropper over an

empty glass tumbler, measuring out seven drops with care. After replacing the

glass vial in the box, he produced a bottle of wine from the cupboard below,

pulled the cork and splashed a bit of red on top of his drops. His hand shook

mightily as he brought the glass to his lips and tossed the liquid into his mouth,

but when the tumbler came down again, he sighed in ragged relief.

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“M-my ap-pologies.” His voice was ragged and tinged with shame. “I l-let it

go t-too long.” His back still to Michael, he ran a hand through his own hair. “I

am t-t-trying, but I am st-still d-dependent on the st-stuff.”

Michael wanted to reach out and reassure him, but he wasn’t entirely sure

how. “It’s all right,” he said, feeling pat, but it seemed to work regardless, for

Albert came over and brushed a kiss against his cheek. Michael could smell the

sweetness of the wine and the laudanum when Albert spoke.

“I m-must go s-see to our b-belongings and h-hear my c-c-correspondence

from Rawlins. I w-won’t be long. P-please, make yourself at h-home.”

He left, and for a few moments Michael simply stood at the side of the room,

looking about idly, trying to decide what to do. He took in a simple set of chairs,

a desk, a cabinet.

The wooden box with the opiate inside.

Michael walked toward the box without meaning to. He didn’t open it, but

he ran his hand over the top. Then he meandered around the room, hushing his

footfalls.

He wandered down the hall and into Albert’s lavatory.

It was the most impressive bath he’d ever seen: grand copper tub, elegant

black tile. More beautiful was the display of plants that filled the place. They

stood on shelves, in corners, hung from the ceiling. Some were right in the

window and some were pulled back. Apparatus dangled from the ceiling, pipes

and tubes and valves that seemed to have nothing to do with the usual features

of a bath. Small spouts hung from the ends of some of the tubes. Whole pots of

nothing but soil stood on one side of the room.

A series of glass jars lined a long wooden shelf, with green twiglike plants

buried within rock inside clear, condensation-riddled containers. Michael was

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inspecting one as Albert came into the room. When he saw what Michael was

looking at, he brightened.

“Th-these are my orchids.”

“Oh?” Michael turned back to the plants, more than a little disappointed.

These were Albert’s prizes? They didn’t look terribly interesting. Nothing like

the ones at the Regent’s Park garden.

Albert stroked the side of one of the jars in the same way most men would

stroke their lover. “None of these are b-blooming yet, but they all w-will before

I’m through with them.” He nodded at the jar he was touching. “Th-This is c-

cattleya. They f-form in clumps—you can s-see this sp-specimen starting to do so

here, if you p-peer around the side.”

He lifted his hand to gesture to another on a higher shelf. “Here is a ph-

phalaenopsis. I h-have a blooming plant of this species, though not here. Th-

These two are the most p-prevalent species in England just now, though there is

also the d-dendrobium.”

Michael nodded in what he hoped was a sage gesture, though largely he saw

odd little green stems stuck in moss and rock. Albert smiled at him knowingly

and pulled a binder down from the shelf above.

“L-Let me show you what these orchids will become.”

He opened the binder and laid it on the counter, and Michael couldn’t stop

an intake of breath.

The colors of the illustrations themselves were half the beauty. Bright pinks

fading into white, deep purples, all outlined in charcoal and perched atop bright

green stems. The illustrations were works of art, done in expert hand. Beneath

each was a carefully inked title: DENDROBRIUM and CATTLEYA.

Michael looked up at him. “Did you paint these?”

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Albert nodded. “I h-have trouble still with scale, but otherwise I b-believe

I’m quite p-passable as a b-botanical illustrator.” He turned one of the heavy

vellum pages, giving Michael more minutiae of orchids than he could ever

possibly retain. Still, he loved hearing the passion in Albert’s voice. The more he

spoke of flowers the less and less of his stammer was present.

Turning one last page, Albert sighed. “This is the p-plant I want most of all.

It is l-leafless, you see. The f-flower hangs in the m-middle of the air. I’ve s-seen a few in London—one at L-Lady G-Gordon’s p-party the night we met. N-None of

them are blooming, however. This illustration is a c-copy of a c-copy.” He

stroked the page sadly.

Michael leaned against the side of the shelf behind him, feeling a tickle of a

bud against the back of his head. “Is that why you love orchids so? Because

they’re rare?”

“N-N-Not at all.” Albert stroked the page of the folio. “Orchids have no p-

purpose other than b-beauty. They provide n-no medicine, n-no food. They are

d-delicate flowers, difficult to g-g-grow. And y-yet they grow everywhere in the

world.” He traced a gloved fingertip over the curve of a drawn petal, his soft

gray eyes trailing the motion. “B-Beauty for b-b-beauty’s sake. G-G-God asks n-

n-nothing of them b-beyond that they b-be themselves. Th-That’s why they are

m-my f-f-favorite.”

Was it the yearning in Albert’s voice? Was it the way he stroked the image

with such love and longing? Was it the gentleness with which his lover spoke?

Was it Michael’s own pent-up fear simply choosing this moment to burst free?

Michael didn’t know. All he knew was that his mouth was opening and he was

whispering, “Albert—Albert, I have something to tell you.”

Albert’s expression changed to concern. “W-We should g-go sit d-down.”

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“No.” Michael grabbed at Albert’s hands and held them fast before him. His

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