Authors: Jane Davitt,Alexa Snow
Tags: #Romance, #Contemporary, #gay, #LGBT, #BDSM LGBT, #erotic romance, #BDSM, #erotic romance; gay; LGBT; BDSM
thinking?”
The air was thick with smoke. Made it hard to breathe. Fuck, the bar. Shane
twisted, turning, and all he could see was fire.
“It’s gone,” he said, punctuating each word with a cough. “All gone.”
“Don’t talk.”
Shane lost a few minutes then, blacking out, and reviving when he felt the
pressure of an oxygen mask against his face. His world jolted, and he rose, helpless as a
turtle on its back. He struggled, but strong hands held him down. A stretcher. He was
strapped onto a stretcher, strange faces above him.
“They’re taking you to the hospital,” Benedict called out, his face drawn, smudged
with dirt. He looked exhausted. “You and one of the men who started this. I need to
talk to the police, but I’ll be there, Shane. I’ll be there as soon as I can.”
Questions, protests formed in his head, but never reached his lips. He was tidied
out of the way with a brusque efficiency, and the ambulance doors slammed, cutting off
his view of the scene, the wail of the sirens rising to drown everything out.
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Chapter Seventeen
Standing and watching the ambulance drive away with Shane inside wasn’t easy,
but Ben had done plenty of hard things in his life, and it was obvious he was going to
have to do more in the near future. He’d do this too.
“Sir, please move away from the building.” One of the police officers gestured at
him, and Ben went over to stand with Shelly and Vincent.
“Is he gonna be okay?” Shelly looked worried, the cloud of dark curls around her
face hanging limply, her blue eyes reddened. She hugged Ben tightly, and he returned
the embrace, grateful for it.
“They think he has a concussion, and he inhaled a lot of smoke. But he’ll be okay.”
Ben glanced in the direction the ambulance had gone.
One of the guys responsible for the fires had ended up splashing some gas on his
pants leg, and it had gone up in flames. He had some pretty serious burns and had been
taken to the hospital too, but the other three were still there and in handcuffs. They’d
hung around too long waiting for their friend to rejoin them, not knowing he was lying
on the pavement on the other side of the building groaning in pain.
“You the employees?” a cop asked, coming over to them.
“Yeah,” Vin said, jerking his thumb at Ben. “And he’s one of the owners.”
The cop sighed. “Any idea why they’d want to do something like this? Did you
have some kind of argument?”
“No,” Ben said. “I don’t even know them, except they’ve been in for a drink a
couple of times.”
“It’s a fucking hate crime,” Vin said hotly. “Bunch of straight guys burning up a
gay bar? They probably wish we’d been in there.”
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“They aren’t saying much,” the cop said.
“They’re probably waiting for their lawyer.” Ben rubbed at his eyes, stinging from
the smoke. He could smell it in his hair, his clothes. He should go home to shower and
change before he went to Shane, and spare Shane the reminder of what had happened.
He didn’t want to, though. It might be selfish of him, but he needed to be with Shane, to
see for himself that Shane was okay. The hell with how filthy he was.
He brushed at his shirt and saw ash flake off, white and gray. No hospital would
let him walk in like this. Weariness rose up in him as he struggled to decide what to do.
It wasn’t like him to be mired in indecision.
“Look, I need to go home, change, then get over to the hospital. I’ll come in and
make a statement tomorrow, as early as you want, but there’s nothing else I can tell you
now. Please. I need to see how Shane is.”
The cop nodded. “Okay. Just give me your details so we can contact you.”
“Sure.” Ben reeled them off automatically, cell, home number, work number…
“The work number—it’s not the bar?”
“No. Shane and I inherited the bar from my father, but I’m an accountant at
Mulholland and Barnes. I don’t think I’ll be there tomorrow, but you might need it, I
guess.”
There was a subtle shift in the cop’s expression, as if being an accountant meant
Ben suddenly deserved better treatment or was more credible as a witness. It was
ridiculous and wrong, but Ben had no compunction about using it to his advantage.
He pulled his keys out of his pocket. “Okay, I’m going then. Vin, do you need
a…” His words trailed off as he stared at the keys he held. The keys to a burned-out
piece of scrap metal. “Oh God.”
The cop patted his shoulder, some sympathy showing now. “Yeah, guess you’re
the one needing a ride, huh?”
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“I’ll take him home,” Vin said, stepping close to Ben, Shelly moving to Ben’s other
side. He felt their concern and loyalty warm him, but it was a distant heat. He was
shivering, chilled to the bone. Even knowing it was shock didn’t help. He ached for
Shane. The desolation in Shane’s eyes, the loss that was so much worse for him than for
Ben…
“Hurry,” Ben said. “Please. I need to get clean, or they won’t let me see him.”
“They will.” Shelly slid her arm around him, and the three of them walked to
Vin’s van, luckily parked on the street for once. “I’ll see you both at the hospital.”
“You don’t need to come, either of you,” Ben said.
Vin snorted. “Shane might be your boyfriend—and trust me; that wasn’t a big
surprise—but he’s been our friend for longer. We’re going.” He sniffed his sleeve and
grimaced. “Don’t use all the hot water. You’re not the only one who stinks.”
Ben felt as if he was in a daze as they drove home. He was glad beyond belief that
Vin had been living with him, had a key, and knew where everything was. He wouldn’t
have been capable just then of giving directions. Vin kept throwing concerned glances
in his direction, but he didn’t have the brain power to be reassuring. All he wanted was
to get the smoke and ash washed off him and to get himself into some clean clothes.
“Go,” Vin said, propelling him toward the bathroom. “I’ll be ready when you
are.”
The hot water pouring over him made Ben shake; all the adrenaline that had been
coursing through him had fled, leaving him numb. Low blood sugar, he thought. He
could barely manage shampoo and soap, but he concentrated on doing at least a
cursory job, then let it go. He couldn’t worry about any of it now—all that mattered was
that he pass for clean.
There was a scrape on his cheekbone, he noticed when he looked in the mirror.
He’d already let the towel fall to the floor after scrubbing it over his skin, and he walked
out into the hallway, then his bedroom without thinking about the fact that he was
naked. Vin was in the kitchen running water. Ben pulled on some clothes and went out
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to find Vin, who had left a couple of wadded dish towels in the sink and had a clean
face and hands and damp hair.
“I just scrubbed up here,” Vin said. “I didn’t think you’d want to wait. Here, take
this.” He pushed a granola bar into Ben’s hand. “Are you ready to go?”
“Yeah.”
The ride to the hospital and the walk from the parking garage felt like some sick
dream. None of this was real, was it? They stopped at the front desk, and Ben was
completely unable to communicate with the woman sitting there; thank goodness for
Vin, who took care of everything and led him upstairs to Shane’s room.
Standing in the doorway, looking at Shane lying pale and motionless but alive on
the hospital bed, Ben could finally breathe. He didn’t know how he got from there to
the bed, but he was sitting in a chair and holding Shane’s hand.
“Shane?” God, he sounded awful even to his own ears, and he should just let
Shane rest. But he needed some kind of acknowledgment.
“Benedict.” His name was a ragged whisper, separated into syllables, but it was
accompanied by a squeeze from Shane’s fingers that was reassuringly strong.
“Can’t…fucking…talk. Hurts.”
“So don’t talk. Jesus.”
“Hey.” Vin walked over to stand at the other side of the bed. “You’re going to be
okay, boss. Guess you’re feeling out of it now, but by tomorrow you’ll be fine.”
Shane turned his head away, managing somehow to convey a world of dejection
in the gesture. His hand slipped free of Ben’s.
“Shane? Listen to Vin. He’s right. They’ve caught the bastards who did this, and
God, I know you must feel like hell, but it could’ve been so much worse, Shane. You
could have died in there and—”
Horrified, he closed his mouth. He could feel the angry words boiling up, born of
fear, not true annoyance, because he’d nearly lost Shane, and they’d only just met, for
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God’s sake, and that would have been so fucking unfair… And maybe Shane did need
to know how dreadful Ben felt, but not now.
Vin cleared his throat. “I’m going to let you two just—yeah. I’ll call Shelly, tell her
Shane’s awake.” He slipped out of the room, but Ben didn’t watch him leave. He
couldn’t take his gaze off Shane, who was stubbornly looking the other way now,
averting his face from Ben.
Ben felt helpless. Under normal circumstances, if Shane had acted like this, he’d
have dealt with it easily, and yes, it would probably have been the kind of solution
where they ended up naked. With sex out of the question, he was floundering. God,
was their relationship so shallow they had no way to communicate that didn’t involve
heated—verging on violent—sex?
“I can’t do this.” He didn’t know what he was saying. He didn’t care.
Shane turned his head and looked at Ben, groped for his hand. “What?”
“God, don’t talk. Okay, just…just lie there and listen to me.” Ben laid his head
down on the mattress and left it there. “Please. Please, okay? I don’t know how to do
this, and you aren’t making it any easier.”
Shane’s fingers slipped free of his again, only to touch Ben’s hair tentatively.
“You don’t know how it felt. Seeing you run in there and then… I thought you
were dead. I thought you were dead.” Ben couldn’t manage more than a whisper. “Do
you know how that felt? I couldn’t… Time just stopped. I was so fucking scared.”
He was still scared.
“Please don’t do that to me again. Not ever. I think… I don’t know what I’d do. I
can’t live like that.” Ben finally found the courage to lift his face and look at Shane.
Shane was looking at him with so much warmth and acceptance, and Shane was
beautiful. The lines on his face, the light gray of his eyes, the way his bottom lip always
looked as if he’d been biting it.
Perfect.
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“I’m so fucking in love with you it hurts,” Ben breathed.
Shane looked surprised. That hurt somehow. It shouldn’t be a surprise to find out
someone loved you. They should have shown you in a dozen different ways, saying the
words with their hands, their eyes. If Shane didn’t know how quickly and deeply Ben
had fallen in love with him—
“Beat me to it.” Shane’s lips moved, the barest whisper giving their movement
meaning. “Wanted to tell you that. Wasn’t sure you—” He broke off to cough and
couldn’t stop, the paroxysm continuing so long Ben’s heart was thudding by the time
he’d helped Shane sit up, cradling Shane against him.
“You need to rest,” he said. Shane needed a shower. His hands and face had been
wiped clean, though there were traces of grime showing. But his hair reeked of smoke.
Even after his shower, it was all Ben could smell, as if the smoke had crawled inside
him.
“Need you.”
Tears, clean, salty tears, stung Ben’s eyes, but he blinked them away. “Well,
you’ve got me. They’re keeping you in tonight for observation, but you should be able
to come home tomorrow with me. Just rest now, Shane.”
“That an order?”
“Yeah.” He kissed Shane then, not the long kiss he wanted to give him, taking
Shane’s mouth with his, but a kiss all the same. “I’ll be back in the morning, okay? Go to
sleep.”
Shane nodded, his eyelids sliding closed, as if he’d needed Ben’s words to push
him over.
Ben stood, vaguely aware he still felt unsteady, but past caring. He had to find Vin
and reassure Shelly, go home to sleep, then give a statement. Find something for Shane
to wear, set the insurance claim in motion—thank God he’d kept copies of everything
important at his house—call work…
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He sat again and dropped his head into his hands, overwhelmed.
A hand touched his shoulder, and he jerked up. Shelly stood beside him. Her
voice lowered, but not whispering, she said, “You need to rest too, boss. Time to go
home. Vin’s waiting outside. The smell was getting to him. He doesn’t like hospitals
much.”
“You’ve never called me that before.” And now, there’s nothing for me to be the
boss of, he thought.
She shrugged. “I take a while to judge people. I like to get to know them first.”