Adaeo remembered with a mingling combination of guilt and desire that he'd never met Jaerv in public without a cocktail, before. He would watch the door, lovesick, his great, fat heart growing restless, then draw on his lips with something sticky, one ounce at a time, as if to hold the intoxication there and give it to his lover as a sedative
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But of course it wore him thin to be so easily dismissed, and jostled sleeping things in him better left to slumber. He said it with a scoff, with a resurfacing of the buried snap of sophisticated aggression that came so naturally to those who'd grown up wealthy, "That is absolutely not true," as if Jaerv could be convinced by the words.
To his credit, Adaeo didn't flinch when Jaerv stood. He drew back at an even pace, trying to convince through a steady demeanor that his words had merit, but the lesson was lost in the sudden, intrusive, unacceptable movement of Jaerv's assault on the table. As instantly as attraction ever happened, the priest was transfixed, mouth open wide enough to let breath journey through undisturbed.
Alone, or in the company of the virtuous, he could convince himself without room for a crack that he'd severed off this ugly part of himself, the one that would indulge this, would delight in it, but when he said, lowly, hoarsely, beside himself with shame, "Stop that," it was not the command of an offended religious figure, but the breathless, unintentional submission to want that had been the motivating force in his Other Life. He needed, needed him to stop doing that.
"Heaven help me," he muttered, the same way he'd have said god after lovemaking, barely a whisper. "Wait, just . . . okay, you've got it. I can't say you're entirely wrong," he confessed, though Jaerv was. Adaeo had tutored himself over the past two years to say the same things; that their relationship was based on his own filthy need to be sinful, and involved no heart.
"We seem to've come to the same conclusion; we shouldn't have been together. I know that, I know. It wasn't . . . the right thing to do. That's what I'm trying to say. I'm not like I was when you knew me before. I'm not. You don't have to believe it right away, you can think I'm acting. But I've changed. I don't do things like this," the tart opening of each word was punctuated with his obvious and brand new distaste for the sexual, however faked, "anymore."
It was at once not at all and -exactly- how he'd pictured the encounter. Now that it was so far out of his control, he couldn't lead lightly to the punchline, couldn't break the tension by sharing a positive turnaround in life with his former lover. His lips felt heavy and awkward; the sentence got lost between them. He breathed out, committed himself to eye contact - now was not the time to play coy - and pried open three silver buttons from his overcoat to expose submission's emblem, crisp and white, fastened around his shirt's collar.
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It wasn’t the right thing to do, Adaeo was saying. Rage poured in splash to his wet-hot eyes, a glassy spit of boiled sensation. Usually violence came before the completion of its cycle. He hunkered and bulled through to meet anger, wielded it, but this was a darker and older kind, bitter, burned around its edges and not shaped for his handling. His eyebrows strained upward. This expression, usually one of freed concern and relaxed muscle on other people, was a gruesome pull on him, as if his brow wanted to rip loose from his eyelids. Down the long center of his nose his black eyes dropped, and his upper lip flicked upward with the force of a rattling, angry, sooty sniff.
Before he could bloodily dismember what Adaeo had tried to diplomatically unseam, he was faced with what seemed like a strange new gesture- the intent unfastening of coat buttons, what a strange function of fingers. Once Jaerv struggled out of confusion, he could only hastily wonder- what, would Adaeo want it here, now- he was hot between the legs at the same time as he planned to stonily deny him pleasure, as he had sometimes done when they were together, pretending for as long as he could to be bored and telling Adaeo he was spoilt and ‘all used up.’
What else would he have done? He stared. Silent, seeming almost for a moment at peace, even enlightened. Then he reached forward, hooked his finger into the white tab of cloth, and yanked.
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To say that he was caught by surprise shamed the sentiment. He expected Jaerv to quiet, to take in that moment of alteration with understanding and sit, let him speak, change the tone. He expected him to see that he truly hadn't come to fulfill some smutty hunger. They could speak as adults.
The brutal thievery left him dumbstruck, a hollow little sound pressed out between his lips that strangled itself into offense at the tips. He put his hand where the collar had come from, tugged forward by its momentum, and responded childishly in phrase, so childishly, so terribly unadvanced, but devastatingly sincere. He couldn't take that from him; it -meant- something!
"Give it back!"
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Jaerv held one end of the torn-free collar over Adaeo’s head like a lure, far enough away that he’d have to lunge for it. With a single, irreverent nod of wrist, he flapped it in taunt. “You want this? Is this what you think you’re all about now? Beg me for it.”
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At once the need to insist incorrectness was lost, his face, his form, his eyes all focused upward on the spectacle Jaerv made and the trick he wanted Adaeo to put on. He remembered with a visible flush of hot pink cheeks the first time he'd heard him say those words, pressed over him, stamping him down ragged and half-limp into his desk. Adaeo couldn't remember how he'd managed to convince him. What had he promised, what had he threatened, what had motivated his victim to plead for his own destruction? It was a sick, ugly magic Jaerv wielded, but had lost just enough of its potency that he didn't tearfully oblige, this time.
"I am -not- some silly circus creature to perform for you!" With sarcasm's scornful heat he accused the whole of Jaerv's affection for him as if that were what he'd wanted all along, a costumed monkey, an obedient dog with a red ball balanced on his nose, and he'd failed at making Adaeo entertaining enough. "Sorry to disappoint you." Then, more cooly, more eager, fixated so uselessly on an object rather than its significance and feeling for all the world as if Jaerv had stripped him of his ordination, "That belongs to me. I'm asking you politely to give it back."
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Now he was almost playful and certainly satisfied. He had won nothing, really, but the instant gratification of disturbing Adaeo seemed enough like happiness that that’s what Jaerv took it for. A book of Ashay’s he had once accidentally read, one of those that romanticized lovers’ arguments, had theorized that there could not be argument between people without passion. Adaeo was flushed; did it matter why? Jaerv felt closer to him, viscerally, perversely.
He crushed the collar up inside his hand, then buried it with a shove below the line of his belt. “It was never yours. And it never will be.” With a rough push forward of the table, he edged out into the open space beside them.
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