Authors: Jane Davitt,Alexa Snow
Tags: #Romance, #Contemporary, #gay, #LGBT, #BDSM LGBT, #erotic romance, #BDSM, #erotic romance; gay; LGBT; BDSM
once he was clean.
Questions he’d never have the chance to ask, never know the answers to.
The middle of the night was the worst time possible to get melancholy. Ben found
his eyes hot with tears, a painful constriction in his chest making it hard to catch his
breath. When he let the tears fall, it was for all three of them and what might have been.
He shoved the photos back into the box and put it away, out of sight.
Then he got back into bed and turned off the light, falling asleep without fear, a
measure of peace filling him, though he knew he’d wake with a headache.
It seemed a small price to pay.
* * * *
didn’t have to think about it. “Ben Lozier.”
“Benedict, Shane Brant here. Sorry to bother you at work. I won’t keep you; I just
had a quick question.”
It took long seconds for Ben’s brain to wrench itself from the task at hand to the
voice in his ear. “Shane. Yes, hello. Is Vin okay?”
“You’re far too young to think every phone call means bad news,” Shane told him.
“Yes, he’s fine, of course. I’m not sure how I feel about you letting him move into your
house, but that’s neither here nor there.”
“No, it’s not. You aren’t my boss, and you have no say in what I do unless the bar
is involved.” Ben tried to keep his voice pleasant, but Shane was rubbing him the wrong
way already.
“Vincent is an employee of the bar,” Shane pointed out.
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“Well, he’s not working at the bar when he’s at my house.” Ben leaned forward
and rested his elbow on his desk. “Look, this isn’t why you called. What did you
want?”
There was a short pause; then Shane said, reluctance clear in every word. “There’s
a bill due. Electricity. It’s not much, but I just paid a fucking fortune to the wholesaler,
and I’m going to go in the red if I pay this. Trouble is, it’s the final warning, so…”
“You want me to pay it?”
“I need the business to pay it,” Shane corrected. “Problem is, the business is you
and me.”
“Right.” Ben doodled absently on some scrap paper, sketching out a wall, solid
and high, each brick the exact size of the one beside it. “How much is it?”
“Well, they’re charging us interest, so it’s just over a thousand.”
Ben closed his eyes for a moment, feeling the weight of his legacy press down on
him. A thousand dollars wasn’t a lot as such, but if there was one unpaid bill, there
were bound to be more. “Why wasn’t it in the papers you showed me yesterday?”
“I was planning to pay it. It wasn’t something you needed to see. Then I went
online to check my balance and, well, yeah.”
At least Shane sounded abashed, but that didn’t stop Ben’s temper rising. “What
else is there in that dump you call an office you mistakenly think I don’t need to see?”
“Never mind,” Shane said, his voice clipped and sharp. “Forget about it. Sorry to
have bothered you.” Before Ben could respond, the sound of the dial tone was echoing
in his ear.
Swearing under his breath, Ben hit the buttons on the phone that would redial the
number Shane had called from and waited.
Shane answered after two rings. “If I’d wanted to talk, I wouldn’t have fucking
hung up.”
The Square Peg
35
“Yeah, well, if you didn’t want to have the conversation in the first place, you
shouldn’t have started it.”
“That’s the best you can come up with? Seriously?” Shane sounded both angry
and amused. “‘You started it’? I’d expect that sort of thing from a school kid, not a
grown man.”
“Coming from the man who just hung up on me, that’s pretty funny. I asked a
valid question, and since we’re stuck with each other—for the moment, at least—I’d
appreciate an answer.”
“I had a hard time hearing the question, what with all the nagging,” Shane said.
“You sounded like my mum. What was it again?”
Ben compressed his lips and controlled his voice, so his annoyance didn’t bleed
through. “The bills. How many are there?”
There was a long pause; then Shane said, “You saw most of them. It’s the electric
that’s the issue.”
“Yes, that’s exactly the kind of responsive answer I wanted.” Ben waited, but
Shane didn’t reply. “I’m coming over,” he said finally. “I want to see everything, Shane.
Do you hear me? Everything. How the fuck do you expect me to prepare any kind of
plan when you’re hiding—”
“Lozier? Is this a personal call?” Ben twisted around in his chair and met the
mildly disapproving gaze of the senior partner of Mulholland and Barnes, Justin
Mulholland.
Justin was well past retirement age, but he kept postponing the time of his
departure. Ben suspected once his ties with the company were severed, Justin would
have nothing to live for and would fade away, and Justin knew it. He had an incisive
mind, his ability to do his job undimmed by age. He was a kindhearted man on the
whole, but he expected a full day’s work from each and every one of his employees.
“It’s concerning my inheritance. Urgent matter I have to attend to.”
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Justin raised his bushy white eyebrows, his gaze flicking meaningfully to the
clock. Ben wasn’t expected to work nine to five—he wished—and his day could often
end alarmingly close to the time when the next day started. For Justin to cavil over a
few minutes spent on a phone call was infuriating given the hours Ben put in.
“Make it quick,” Justin said. “The Mallerton audit should be your top priority, not
this.”
Ben supposed that, from Justin’s perspective, a company that owned three hotels
and, somewhat bizarrely, a small chain of yogurt shops, did rank higher than a half
interest in a bar that was about to go under. But it didn’t rank higher from Ben’s
perspective.
He gave Justin a tight smile, and when the man had moved off, walking slowly as
if his body needed oiling, he turned his attention back to Shane.
Who’d hung up again.
The Square Peg
37
Chapter Four
“Vincent?”
“Yeah, boss?” Vincent was drawing a pint from the one tap that wasn’t leaking,
handsome as ever, and looking better for what Shane presumed had been a good
night’s sleep. Patrick was examining nails he’d painted a glittering pink, his pretty face
vacant. Shane would’ve fired his lazy arse a long time ago, but there was no denying
the customers liked him, and he responded well to direct orders with no possibility of
misinterpretation.
Terrible taste in men, though. Shane had lost count of how many times Patrick had
waltzed in, eyes sparkling, a well-fucked romantic glow about him, only to crawl
through the doors a few days later, crushed by a rejection he hadn’t seen coming. He
needed someone patient and steady, not the flashy posers he was drawn to.
“I’m going up for a bit of dinner. If that Benedict Lozier shows his face, tell him
I’ve gone out.”
“Okay.” Vincent’s tone was less than convincing. So it was like that, was it?
Loyalty bought with a bed and a hot shower. Charming.
Shane glared at his errant employee, ignoring Patrick’s stifled giggle. “Vincent.”
“Okay! When Ben shows up, you aren’t here. Got it.”
Shane made his way up the back staircase. The bar was quiet in the afternoons,
nothing Vincent and Patrick couldn’t handle. Benedict didn’t strike him as the type
who’d hang around waiting, and Shane had been careful to lock the office door, so
there’d be nothing to occupy him on the off chance Benedict did decide to wait.
He told himself he didn’t intend to avoid Benedict forever. He just needed a bit
more time to sort things out in his head. And it wasn’t as if this was his fault; he hadn’t
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realized what Craig had been doing behind his back. Maybe he should have known, but
he’d no idea. It made him angry at Craig for playing him a fool, treating him as if he
was a child to be coddled and protected from the harsh realities of life.
Treating him like…a son.
Shane froze in the middle of turning the door handle. “For fuck’s sake,” he
whispered, then went into the apartment and sat down on the nearest chair, which
happened to be half on the thin carpet that delineated the entryway and half on the
cheap linoleum of the kitchen.
It was starting to sink in that his life was about to change in ways he hadn’t yet
anticipated.
He was still sitting there when he heard footsteps on the wooden stairs—angry
footsteps. “Shane?” he heard Benedict ask. Then the man swung the unlatched door
open and stormed in. “You are the most annoying, high-blood-pressure-inducing
man…” Benedict’s voice trailed off, and he frowned. “What’s wrong?”
“You… Your dad…”He couldn’t get any words out past the tightness in his throat.
He turned his head to the side and stared hard at the kitchen table with the wobbly leg.
It was smeared with butter and toast crumbs at the place he usually sat, and that
morning he’d had cereal, so he was a slob as well as totally fucking stupid. Good to
know.
Benedict touched him, his hand light as it rested against Shane’s shoulder. “You
want to blame him for all of this? You think it’s his fault?”
He shook his head, blindly staring at that sheen of butter, that random scatter of
crumbs. There was meaning in everything, a teacher had told him once. He couldn’t
think of what that messy table meant beyond the obvious fact that he’d put a knife
down on it when it should’ve been put on his plate, nice and tidy, the way his mum had
taught him.
“My fault.”
The Square Peg
39
“Maybe.” Benedict didn’t move his hand, but it felt heavier, not weighing Shane
down, but keeping him grounded. “Maybe a little. You let him take control.”
“Easier that way.” He was so detached from it all. Craig’s death, the threat of
losing everything… It retreated, leaving him empty.
Benedict’s thumb moved, a slow rub Shane could feel through his shirt. How long
had that hand been on him, touching him? With a surge of panic that he’d been so easy,
and rolled over for the guy without a fight, Shane knocked Benedict’s hand away,
snarling up at him, not needing words to get his message over.
He stood, the light, rickety chair tipping over to hit the ground, and squared up to
Benedict, his body finding a fighting stance automatically.
Wide, calm brown eyes met his. Benedict didn’t seem worried or threatened, and
the anger that had been in his step and voice when he’d come in seemed to have
drained away. He exuded patience, understanding. “Tell me what you want to do,”
Benedict said quietly.
Shane was trembling with adrenaline, wanting to hit something—or someone, but
he wasn’t going to hit Benedict. He’d hit plenty of men in his life, always, he liked to
think, because they deserved it. Benedict didn’t like this situation any more than he did,
hadn’t asked for this any more than he had, and something told Shane he’d forever
regret it if he let his fist connect with Benedict’s face.
He realized Benedict was still waiting for an answer. “I don’t know. I don’t—
God.” He exhaled shakily. “Turn back time. I don’t suppose you know how to do that?”
Benedict shook his head, his lips twisted ruefully. “You look more like you want
to hit something.”
“Who are you?” Shane asked, incredulous. “Sorry, just… One minute you’re
shouting at me, and the next you’re like this.” He made a helpless gesture with his palm
upturned.
“Like what?”
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“This. Nice.”
“Oh great. That’s the kiss of death.” Benedict looked at him steadily. “I don’t want
to fight with you, okay? I want to see if we can figure all this out. But we can’t if you
aren’t on board.”
“I am. I’m on board.” Shane looked around him, at the small rooms, the tatty
furniture and dingy paint. “This is my home at risk, not just a paycheck, and yeah, I
know it’s a dump, but it’s mine. It goes with the job, or it always used to.” He bit at his
lip, welcoming the sting as punishment, however mild, for being such a fucking
dickhead. “That’s probably not fair now, is it? Should be paying rent or something the
way you have to.”
“Possibly in the future it’s something we can look at, but right now, that’s the least
of our problems. We should be uniting to pay off outside debts not creating new ones
between the two of us. We’re a partnership. One unit, our interests aligned. We’re not
competitors.”
“Makes sense.” Shane nodded, every brisk, matter-of-fact word calming him. He
grinned, trying to lighten the mood. “I’d say it’s like a marriage, but in my experience