Read i 0d2125e00f277ca8 Online
Authors: Craig Lightfoot
because I feel like you don‟t trust me.”
“Zayn,” Louis says, scrubbing a hand through his hair. “I do trust you.
You know I trust you. God, do you think—there‟s nobody else I want
helping me clean up all my messes, okay?”
“As if anybody else would,” Zayn says, but there‟s affection in his tone
and it‟s the best thing Louis‟ heard all night.
“Trust me, I know. And it means a lot to me, I swear,” Louis says. “It‟s
just... that shit, I don‟t talk to anyone about that. I don‟t really even talk
to my mum about that. I don‟t even like to think about it. It‟s not your
fault, it‟s mine, because I‟m a fucked up emotionally constipated
weirdo, all right? But if I was going to talk to anybody about it, it‟d be
you. And you sure as hell have gotten closer to it than anyone else, if
that‟s worth anything.”
Zayn nods a little but stays quiet, so Louis continues.
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“And I‟m gonna work on that, okay?” Louis says. “I‟m gonna tell you
everything, the whole sordid story, start to finish, when I‟m ready. But
I‟m not ready yet.”
He holds Zayn‟s eyes for a minute, then reaches out and tugs on one of
his hoodie strings.
“All right?”
At last, Zayn smiles a little, and Louis feels some of the weight on his
chest lift. “That‟s fair,” Zayn says.
“Excellent,” Louis says, taking a deep breath and deftly hiding his eyes
with a glasses cleaning maneuver. He picks up the glass of whiskey and
dumps it down the drain. “Can we not fight anymore right now? I hate
it.”
“Yeah, me too,” Zayn says. He comes around the counter and catches
Louis by the sink, hauling him into a rough hug. “We‟re still good?” he
says, muffled by Louis‟ shoulder.
“Still good,” Louis says as he squeezes back. Neither of them lets go
and Louis feels it, so powerfully all of the sudden, how much he‟s been
missing having somebody‟s arms around him lately, how much he‟s
needed somebody to take care of him, and he‟s not going to bother
hating himself for it tonight. Zayn rubs one hand through the hair on
the nape of Louis‟ neck and it‟s not nearly enough to fix everything
else but it‟s enough that for the moment, Louis doesn‟t feel alone.
Because Zayn‟s here, and Zayn‟s always going to be, and Zayn‟s heart
is hurting for somebody else too.
“Love you,” Zayn says.
“Love you too,” Louis says back, and it feels good to say it to someone,
honestly. Feels like home.
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They break off finally, and he‟s pretty sure he‟s got Zayn‟s snot on his
shirt, and that‟s okay. “So,” Louis says brightly. “We need to find you a
rebound, eh?” Zayn punches him on the arm and Louis punches back
and then they‟re laughing and climbing onto the couch with half-melted
ice cream and making fun of the late night adverts on telly, and it‟s all
right. Everything may be terrible, but this, at least, is all right.
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Harry‟s leaving at the beginning of July.
His internship doesn‟t start until halfway through the month, but he
wants to head down to London a couple of weeks in advance so he can
have time to get settled. He‟ll be working in central London, so he‟s
hoping to find a flat somewhere near a tube stop that isn‟t terribly
expensive and getting some help from his parents. He won‟t need a car
there, so he‟s shipping most of his things over ahead of time and his
mum and sister are going to come collect his car from Manchester and
keep it for him in Holmes Chapel.
Louis knows all of this clinically, just information tacked up inside his
head that he chooses not to process. Harry rattles it all off one
afternoon over a sandwich on Louis‟ couch, and Louis waits until he‟s
done speaking and then pushes him onto his back and ignores the
whole thing completely.
That‟s the only kind of sex they have anymore, and it‟s starting to feel
like the only kind of conversation they have anymore either. It‟s not
anything definite. It‟s not like the first time Harry ever kissed him, or
the look on his face when he told him about the internship, some sharp
thing pinning down a point on the map of his life to mark exactly when
and where something happened. There‟s not a moment when Louis
knows for sure that they‟ve fallen apart. They just keep drifting.
Harry hardly ever sleeps over anymore, and Louis isn‟t sure whose idea
that was. He imagines he can‟t have seemed particularly welcoming the
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past few weeks, immediately rolling off of Harry and onto the far side
of the bed as soon as they‟ve both gotten off. So okay, maybe he started
it, but still. What is he supposed to do, let Harry hold him when they
both know that they‟re just killing time? Louis‟ not willing to play
make believe, but that doesn‟t make him the bad guy. He remembers
the first time Harry went back to his own flat in months, two fingers on
his tense back for half a second and then the sound of Harry pulling his
jeans back on and letting himself out, and the dull ache in the back of
his throat.
He hates how much he misses small pieces of Harry. He misses Harry‟s
hands around his waist and his lips against the side of his neck in the
mornings when he‟s making his tea. He misses Harry‟s stupid voice
mumbling nonsense about pop music and art and vinyl records at all
hours of the day and night. He misses fairy lights on the ceilings and
the way things felt when they were good, misses the way Harry‟s face
used to light up when he saw him. He wishes he didn‟t miss any of it.
Mostly, he wishes he‟d never let himself get used to it. Or that at least
he hadn‟t known better. Because he had, he‟d absolutely known better,
and now that means he doesn‟t even have the right to be upset, because
he brought this entire goddamn mess upon himself. If he hadn‟t known
better, at least he wouldn‟t make himself nauseous every time he was
self-indulgent enough to miss something he knew wouldn‟t last.
And this is what he wanted, wasn‟t it? He wanted things to fade out, he
wanted Harry to let him get away. He wanted to move on, right?
Fuck. It doesn‟t matter what he misses or what he wants. It never
mattered. He was an idiot to think it did.
Harry goes hunting for a flat in London and doesn‟t mention it to Louis
until he‟s already there, just a text from Victoria Station that he won‟t
be around that weekend. So that‟s that, Louis assumes. There‟s
officially future for Harry somewhere else, another flat all picked out
and signed for, and he‟s not invited. It‟s not an outright rejection, he
guesses, but it‟s enough. It sure as hell isn‟t an invitation. It‟s enough to
sting, and it‟s enough to make it inescapably real.
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Whatever. He slept alone for twenty-six years, he can do it for the next
twenty-six too.
He figures he should start preparing now, as much as he can. The first
step is to start cleaning out his flat. He doesn‟t have to get rid of
everything that reminds him of Harry; he probably couldn‟t without
burning the place down, anyway. He just needs to get rid of the things
that remind him of Harry-and-him.
There isn‟t a huge amount of physical stuff, thank God. The one major
thing is the bear. He still has the stuffed bear Harry won for him at that
carnival a million years ago stashed away in the back of his closet, and
he can‟t stand its glass eyes staring at him every time he gets dressed
anymore. He can‟t bring himself to throw it out, though. He tries, but it
just looks at him all accusingly from the bin.
His rescue comes in the form of a toy drive at the school for the local
children‟s hospital. Early one morning, Louis lugs the bear into the
school and drops it off in one of the big colorful collection boxes in
front of the cafeteria. He pats it on the top of the head once before
walking off, and then feels like a complete twat. At least no one saw
him.
What he doesn‟t count on, though, is that he has to walk to the
computer lab during his free period, which takes him by the cafeteria.
And Harry decides to come with him.
Louis hopes like hell there have been enough donations to cover the
bear up, but he curses inwardly when he sees that the head is still
poking out of the box. Harry is in the middle of a rant on the terrible
management of the England national football team when he spots it.
“Is that—“ he starts, and then trails off, his pace slowing a bit. He
doesn‟t stop, though, just catches up to Louis and walks next to him in
silence. They only get a few more yards before Louis can‟t endure it.
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“Figured a sick kid would get more use out of it than I would,” he says
quietly.
“Yeah, no, it makes sense,” Harry says quickly. “I just—no, you‟re
right.” He‟s quiet for the rest of the hour, though, and when they walk
by the cafeteria again on their way back to Louis‟ classroom Harry
stares at his phone the whole time.
Hopefully Harry thinks that Louis can give the bear away because it
doesn‟t mean much to him. Hopefully he never figures out that it‟s the
exact opposite.
Once his flat is clear of incriminating objects, Louis starts cleaning out
the rest of his life.
He starts with weeding out Harry‟s music from his iTunes, which is no
small feat, since there‟s so much of it. He deletes almost all of it,
because even the stuff that he really likes has become unlistenable
because it all reminds him of Harry. He doesn‟t think about there being
consequences for that until Harry is in his classroom during his free
period and gets an itch to listen to a particular song.
“Pull up that album I gave you last month,” he says absentmindedly.
“The folky one with the female singer.”
Louis knows which one he means, but it won‟t do any good. He
searches for a lie, can‟t find one, and gives up. “Oh, um. I don‟t have it
anymore.”
Harry looks up at him, expression unreadable like he‟s waiting for
Louis to say something else. Louis doesn‟t. “Oh,” Harry says. “Okay.
What about Ed Sheeran‟s new album?”
Louis winces internally, but there‟s nothing to be done. “Don‟t have
that one either.” He‟s not going to apologize.
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“Ah,” Harry says. He doesn‟t say anything else for a long time that
afternoon.
The next day he doesn‟t come by Louis‟ room at all during free period.
Louis spends that hour berating himself every time he glances at the
door, half-expecting him to rush inside with flushed cheeks and some
excuse for why he‟s late. It doesn‟t happen.
Harry‟s in the teachers‟ lounge for lunch like always, though. He greets
Louis with poorly-hidden nervousness in his eyes, but Louis doesn‟t
ask. Harry can do whatever he wants with his time. It‟s fine. Louis just
got used to it, is all. Harry wove his way into Louis life long before