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The Sunday roast chicken was dry, but I knew better than to say anything about it. My mother had spent three hours in the kitchen, rattling pans and humming along to an obscure 80s pop playlist, and if I criticized the food, I would never hear the end of it. I sawed through a piece of breast meat with my knife, the porcelain plate clinking loudly in the quiet dining room, and took a bite. It required a significant amount of chewing.
"Pass the gravy, please," my dad said from the head of the table. I picked up the ceramic boat and handed it to him. He poured a generous amount over his potatoes, completely ignoring the tension that was radiating off my mother like heat from a pavement in July. She was sitting across from me, her wine glass filled to the brim with Chardonnay, and she was watching me. She wasn’t eating. She was just watching me chew. "So," she started. I flinched internally. I knew that tone. It was the tone she used right before she tried to manage my life. I quickly shoved a forkful of green beans into my mouth so I wouldn’t have to answer immediately. "Finn, honey, how are things on campus?" she asked, leaning forward. Her elbows rested on the table, which was technically against the rules she had set when I was five, but rules didn't apply when she was on a mission. "You’ve been so quiet lately. Every time you come home for dinner, you just eat and run." I swallowed the beans. "I have a lot of studying, Mom. Junior year isn’t exactly a walk in the park. The professors are piling on the reading lists like they think we don't need to sleep." "Studying," she repeated, the word sounding flat in her mouth. She took a long sip of her wine. "You know, college is about more than just books, Finn. It’s about experiences. It’s about meeting people. Expanding your horizons." "I meet people," I said defensively. "I talk to people in my classes. I have friends." "I know you have friends. I love Sarah and David. They are lovely," she said, waving her hand dismissively. "But that is not who I am talking about, and you know it." My dad cleared his throat, keeping his eyes strictly on his mashed potatoes. He knew what was coming, and he had clearly decided that his strategy for the evening was complete neutrality. "I went to the grocery store yesterday," Mom continued, her eyes sparkling with a manic sort of energy. "And I ran into Mrs. Gable. You remember her? She lives three streets over. The one with the terrible garden gnomes." "Vaguely," I muttered, stabbing a potato. "Well, she was telling me about her son, Mark. He came out last year, remember? Well, apparently, Mark just started seeing a pre-med student. Very handsome, she says. They went to that new Italian place downtown for their anniversary." She paused for dramatic effect. "They have been dating for six months." I kept chewing, focusing entirely on the texture of the chicken. "That’s nice for Mark, Mom." "It is nice! It’s wonderful!" She threw her hands up, nearly knocking over the salt shaker. "It is wonderful that Mark is out living his life, finding love, and making his mother happy. Do you know what Mrs. Gable asked me? She asked me if you were seeing anyone yet. She asked me, 'How is that handsome Finn doing? Has he found a nice boy?'" I put my fork down. The appetite I had managed to scrounge up was rapidly disappearing. "And what did you say?" "I said," she emphasized, leaning in closer, "that my son is focusing on his academics because he is brilliant. But honestly, Finn, it is getting a little difficult to defend you when you give me absolutely nothing to work with. You are twenty years old. You are in the prime of your life. You are at a college with thousands of students. Are you telling me there isn’t a single gay man on that entire campus who interests you?" "It’s not that simple," I said, reaching for my water glass. "I’m busy. And honestly, most of the guys at school are… complicated. They want to party, or they’re not looking for anything serious, or they’re just not my type." "Not your type," Mom scoffed. "Finn, honey, your type is 'fictional.' You spend all your time reading those romance novels where the men are billionaires or werewolves. Real boys don't have fangs and private jets. Real boys have messy dorm rooms and awkward first dates, but you have to actually go on the dates to find that out." My dad let out a small snort of laughter, then quickly turned it into a cough when Mom glared at him."Do not talk to me about that stupid piece of paper," Finn interrupted and he shoved his hands into the front pocket of his hoodie."You stopped treating this like a business deal the night you showed up at my dorm room soaking wet and crying about your father.""And you gave up your only bed for me because you are too nice for your own good," I replied while staring at a smudge of dirt on his cheek."I gave you my bed because I care about you," Finn yelled back and the raw honesty in his voice made my chest ache."I sat on the floor and watched you sleep this morning and I realized I had absolutely nothing to offer you," I confessed while the bitter truth scraped against my throat."My father was right about me all along because I am useless without the Bennett family resources to solve my problems."Finn let out a frustrated growl and he closed the remaining distance between us until our shoes were almost touching in the gravel."Your father is a miserable old man who uses his check
I wanted to reach out and pull him up from the dirt but I forced my bruised hands to stay firmly inside my frayed jacket pockets."It is for your own good, Finn," I told him while my throat tightened and my voice broke on his name."No it isn't," Finn argued immediately and he scrambled to his feet so he could look me directly in the eyes."You are just panicking because everything went wrong today and you think you have to fix it all by yourself.""Look at us right now," I countered while gesturing toward the grime covering the brick walls of the dive bar behind me."I am bleeding in an alley behind a shady tavern and you are sitting here in your hospital scrubs with a suspended clinical license.""I literally just showed you the flash drive that will clear my name tomorrow morning," he reminded me while pointing a stern finger at my chest."That does not change the fact that my toxic history dragged you into this massive mess in the first place," I argued back while a deep sense of
Kyle stared at the small drive in my palm and his chest rose with a sharp intake of air."Are you sure the hospital board will accept a random video as proof?" he asked while keeping a wary eye on the flash drive."Quinn stamped the files with the digital metadata so the administration can verify the exact time and location of the recording," I promised him."I just need to drop this off at the director's office tomorrow morning and they will be forced to reinstate my hospital badge."I offered him a small and hopeful smile because we finally had the upper hand against the people trying to ruin us."We have proof now, Kyle," I whispered while reaching out to touch his knee."It is going to be okay."I expected him to let out a massive sigh of relief or maybe even pull me into a hug.I expected the crushing tension of the last twenty-four hours to finally dissolve between us.Instead, he just looked away from the flash drive and stared down at the dirty gravel surrounding my knees.He
I reached out and grabbed his wrists so I could pull his hands into the dim light of the alleyway.Dark blood smeared across his split knuckles and stained the frayed edges of his jacket sleeves.His skin felt ice cold beneath my fingertips and a violent tremor shook his broad shoulders.Kyle did not pull away or try to defend his reckless actions.Instead, he let out a weak and exhausted laugh that sounded like it scraped the back of his throat."I got a job," he mumbled while letting his heavy head fall back against the grimy brick wall.I stared at his ruined hands and a fierce wave of protective panic flared to life inside my chest."You are bleeding everywhere and you think this is a joke?" I demanded while tracing the deep cuts with my eyes.I dropped his wrists and scrambled back onto my feet without bothering to dust the dirt off my blue scrubs."Stay right there and do not move a single muscle," I ordered him before turning toward my parked sedan.I practically sprinted to th
"The background noise is incredibly loud and you sound like you just ran a marathon.""I needed to figure out a way to pay for our groceries since my father froze all my accounts last night," I explained while my adrenaline started to spike from the rising tension in the bar."I knew the campus dining hall would not pay me enough to cover our basic expenses so I walked off the main university property to find something better.""You walked off campus by yourself?" Finn asked and the genuine fear in his voice made me hate myself for worrying him."I found this place called the Rusty Anchor," I revealed while stepping away from the broken glass on the floor."Are you out of your mind?" Finn yelled into the receiver and the sheer volume made me pull the phone away from my ear for a second."The Rusty Anchor is a dangerous dive bar and people get stabbed in their parking lot all the time."The drunk guy stood up from his stool and he aggressively grabbed the front collar of my jacket with
I walked through the heavy wooden doors of the Rusty Anchor and the stale smell of spilled beer hit my nose instantly.The dim tavern was located twenty minutes away from the pristine university campus in a neighborhood where students rarely ventured.Neon beer signs buzzed loudly against the dark wood-paneled walls and the floorboards felt sticky beneath my leather boots.I approached the long wooden bar and I waited for the bulky man wiping down the counter to acknowledge my presence.He wore a stained gray shirt and thick black tattoos covered both of his muscular forearms."I am looking for a job," I told him while keeping my voice steady and ignoring the loud rock music playing from the corner jukebox."I need something that pays cash at the end of the shift with no questions asked."The bartender stopped wiping the counter and he looked me up and down with a heavy dose of skepticism."You look like a rich college kid who got lost on his way to a frat party," he chuckled with a g
Two hundred and twenty-five pounds. That was the number. It was heavy enough to hurt, but light enough that I could make it look easy. And that was the whole point, wasn't it? Making the impossible look effortless.I lowered the bar to my chest, feeling the familiar burn tear through my pecs, contr
By the time I made it back to campus later that evening, my mother’s voice was still ringing in my ears like tinnitus. “Your type is fictional.” It was unfair, mostly because it was true.I parked my beat-up sedan in the student lot, grabbed my duffel bag, and trudged toward the dorms. The campus w
"I am proud of you," she said, her voice softening just a fraction, though the intensity in her eyes didn't waver. "You know that, right? When you came out to us, I was so happy. I bought that flag for the porch. I went to the parade with you. I am the proudest mother of a gay son in this entire ne
The library provided the only genuinely relaxing environment on campus, whereas the dorms, the dining hall, and the lecture theaters demanded exhausting effort. Constant social interaction forced me to dodge eye contact and pretend to enjoy myself while I counted down the minutes until my solitude r







