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Broke Deep (Porthkennack Book 3) by Charlie Cochrane (9)

If time was going to bring wisdom, it needed to get its skates on.

Dominic kept in touch, not too eagerly, and didn’t chance his arm. He said he’d taken an option on a hotel for the days after the bank holiday, so he could progress his research without imposing on Morgan’s hospitality, an arrangement which suited them both. If things took a turn for the better, the hotel could be cancelled.

Morgan still couldn’t decide whether the fling with Dominic had been a good idea or one of his worst. Irrespective of the challenges a long-distance relationship might present, the long term was an issue too. He didn’t want to lumber anybody with taking care of him the way he’d had to take care of his mother. James would have legged it at the first sign of illness—perhaps that was what he’d already done—but Dominic was too nice a guy to do that.

Their reunion took place early on the Friday evening of the bank holiday weekend, Dominic having, literally, got a flyer. He’d rocked up to the door of Cadoc while Morgan was dealing with a local client who’d dropped in unexpectedly to arrange a contract extension. Morgan apologised, asked Dominic to make a cup of tea—and make himself at home—and by the time the lucrative customer transaction had been completed, the potential for awkwardness had dissipated. His guest was ensconced at the kitchen table, looking every inch like he belonged there. Morgan couldn’t take that as a sign.

“Thanks for putting up with me again. I’ve brought a thank-you present.” Dominic picked up his backpack, then rummaged in it.

“You didn’t need to, although—” Morgan stopped, gingerly accepting the object he was given. “Um, what is this?”

“It’s an old toy cannon. Ship’s one, as you can tell from the gun carriage.” Dominic’s eyes danced. “I saw it in the market and thought of you. It’s real copper. Used to fire little cartridges or something, once. In the days before health and safety ruled the world.”

“It’s lovely.” Morgan meant it. An exquisite item, shined up, surely, by Dominic’s own hands. “I’m not sure ‘thank you’ from me says enough.”

“Would it ease your conscience if I said it was far less expensive than a hotel room for the weekend?” Dominic suddenly seemed to find his hands the most interesting thing in the world. “I put my bags in the spare room. I didn’t want to presume.”

“Come on.” Morgan stood, offering his guest his hand. “What will be cracking at the moment is a trip down to the cove. Before the light goes. If you fancy it?”

Dominic grabbed Morgan’s hand and leaped up. “What do you think?”

As they headed for the cliff path, Morgan tried to order his thoughts; Dominic’s bag in the guest room now, Dominic in his bed last time, that little cannon presented to him so tenderly. None of it was helping get his mind straight.

“I haven’t had that dream again,” he ventured. “Not since the night you were here.”

“That’s good. I didn’t want to ask, in case it turned out I’d been the one who’d caused the recurrence.” Dominic studied the road. “It seemed like it was.”

“No, it wasn’t you. Honest.” Morgan was suddenly sure of that, although he couldn’t say why. “I was getting recurrences before I first met you.” They’d all coincided with emotional turmoil, of course. Dad’s death, Mum going into the home, first signs of James cooling off.

“You’re remarkably chipper about it.”

“Compared to last time? Yeah, well it’s easier to be chipper on a sunny evening than in the middle of the night. Anyway, I’ve built up coping mechanisms.” Morgan ran his hands through his hair, thinking of all the occasions he’d had to learn to muddle through. “Used to be that if the sea got up and the wind was blowing from the north, I kept the curtains shut until it had blown through. Changed my bedroom as soon as I could. It all helped.”

“Come on, let’s chase all the bad thoughts away!” Dominic broke into a trot, tugging Morgan along with him.

“Steady on, you’ll come a crop—” Morgan grabbed at Dominic’s arm, just as his foot caught in a rabbit scrape and sent him flying. “I said you were a bloody idiot. I was right.”

Dominic sprang back onto his feet, dusting off his trousers. “It was only a trip.”

“A trip? You could have slipped on the wet grass and gone over the sodding edge.” Morgan remembered taking a tumble down the cliff path, when he was barely out of short trousers. He’d got away with it lightly, nothing worse than a sprain and a mass of scrapes and bruises, but his mother had flayed him with her tongue when he’d expected sympathy and relief. At last he understood why she’d been so cross.

“I’m all right. Only got a few scratches.”

“Because I caught you. You could have broken your fucking neck. Maybe you should have done, to teach you a lesson.”

Dominic turned pale, much paler than he’d been as he’d been hauled up from the cliff edge. “You don’t mean that. Please say you don’t.”

Morgan took a deep breath, the sudden, totally incongruous need to laugh sweeping over him. Was it relief? The fact that Dominic looked so scared? Whatever the reason, he wouldn’t give the bloke—or his own conflicting emotions—the satisfaction of lightening the moment. “No, I don’t. Sorry. That was the shock talking. But I do wish you’d grow a brain. You really could have got yourself killed.”

“You don’t need to tell me that.” Dominic’s wide-eyed fright had turned into a grimace. “The twinge in my back’s making it plain.”

Oh hell. Another bank-holiday dash to the hospital? “I’ll call an ambulance. Can you move everything?”

“Yes, I can. And no, there’s nothing broken, so don’t call anybody. I’m fine.”

Morgan drew breath. Dominic didn’t deserve a tongue-lashing simply because he was clumsy. Or was he overreacting because of the falls his mother had suffered? Back there again.

“You’d better have a rest anyway, just in case.” He led them, almost unspeaking, up to the house and through to the lounge, awakening memories of that night spent in front of the fire.

Dominic eyed the settee, warily. “Should I go? I always seem to make you angry.”

“No, it’s not you, it’s me. I shouldn’t have got so arsy.”

“You were. I know I could have hurt myself, but you were out of order.”

“I said I was sorry.” Morgan drew his hand across his forehead. “I seem to get arsy all the time, now.”

“Maybe you should have a word with the doctor.” Dominic eased himself onto the sofa. “See whether it’s to do with your celestial action replays.”

“My what?”

“Your recurring nightmares.”

“Do you really think that’s what are? Some sort of rip in the continuity of space and time that’s giving me a window into the past?” Morgan strode across the room to where he could gaze out into the garden; he didn’t want to risk another argument. “Maybe I’m just going loopy.”

“You don’t believe that any more than I do.”

“Don’t I?” Morgan shrugged. “Aren’t the family genes coming out? I’m already forgetful—I couldn’t recall who Lawson was, remember?”

“That was probably stress. Don’t be so hard on yourself.”

“Hmm. Be that as it may, I wish I knew what the dreams were about.” Morgan hadn’t wanted to discuss the nightmares, but here they were, making themselves felt again.

“Don’t ask me. I’m all theories and no concrete answers.” Dominic, wincing, slipped a pillow into the small of his back. “Like this pulled muscle, your dreams will have a simple explanation.”

Morgan snorted. “Will they? I suppose it’ll be stress-induced delirium, or hallucinations. Sleepwalking, haunting. I’m sorry, but they feel way too scary to analyse too closely.”

Dominic stroked the arm of the settee. “When I was here before, you had a nightmare. You didn’t go wandering or sleepwalking or anything similar. Not that time.”

“I know. It’s odd. I only ever went wandering the once. That first time.” Morgan dropped into a chair. “Since then, when the dreams come back, I relive the whole thing. Dream within the dream, the phone not working, leaving the house, the sudden blast of cold air on my cheek when I reach the cliff edge.”

“Do you dream you’re shouting? You made a hell of a noise.”

“Yes, I suppose I do. I wouldn’t know.” And that was another awful thing to impose on a lover. Disturbed nights for all the wrong reasons.

“Recurring dreams aren’t that uncommon.”

“Recurring dreams of an event I couldn’t have witnessed but seem to have an accurate knowledge of? Because that’s the truly scary bit, isn’t it?”

“Maybe your brain simply churns out a storyline based on what you heard as a child, so young that you’ve no conscious memory of it. Your family must have discussed the wreck.” Dominic—so nice, so trusting—didn’t he deserve better? “Elements of that account that got locked away deep in the cerebral vaults, as much a part of your memory as the beams are part of your house. Until something freed them.”

That made a bit of sense. Morgan’s great-grandmother had died when he was only four, and it was exactly the sort of tale the old lady would have recounted to him as he sat on her knee. “But what could have prompted it to break free from the vaults? And in such a dramatic fashion?”

“Like I suggested earlier: stress, perhaps. About twice a year it’s manic at work and I find myself so frazzled I end up doing weird things. Even weirder than normal, before you make any smart-alec remarks.”

Morgan couldn’t help but laugh. “Not a word was going to cross my lips. I don’t think I was that stressed when I was a teenager, though. And if this is all about stories I heard at my great-gran’s knee, why are the dreams so vivid? And don’t give me any reincarnation-theory crap. I don’t believe I was a little lad on the shore two hundred odd years ago.”

“Reincarnation? Who mentioned that? Has someone given you that crap already?” Dominic frowned.

“No. Yes. Bugger.” Morgan exhaled, loudly. “It’s not exactly true that I’ve never talked about these dreams before. Just not to anybody who mattered.” He rushed on, before Dominic spotted mattered. “I got drunk one night in a bar in London and poured my heart out to this random bloke. Exposed my soul, although that was all I exposed.”

“Glad to hear it. Strange blokes in London bars! You could have ended up having your kidneys sold.”

Morgan sniggered. Trust Dominic to make exactly the right joke and steer them through such a difficult passage. “That’s too near the truth to be funny. It was a damn close run thing with that particular guy; someone else picked him up two nights later and ended up wallet-less and bruised like an overripe banana.”

Dominic screwed his face up. “Nasty. We’ve all been there, done that though, on the hunt for sympathy when we’ve been rat-arsed.”

Morgan wasn’t sure Dominic had ever done any such thing, but it was nice of him to pretend. “Anyway, this nasty piece of work told me I must have seen the wreck of Troilus from the cliffs, in a former life. And I was going through a process of reliving it, taking myself back to the original place.”

“As a theory, it has no scientific merit. Although maybe there’s a strange element of truth there. Not you in some former life, but a previous member of the Capell family could have stood on that cliff and witnessed the wreck. Then later on, he or she would have told their daughter, or their sons, or whatever. Handing the story down, father or mother to child until it reached you.” Dominic’s eyes shone. “Like the story of the beams and the boulder. Equally grounded in truth.”

“The beams don’t scare the crap out of me. Or give me nightmares.” Morgan stared at the unlit fire; it suddenly felt like some idiot had gone and dropped the air temperature ten degrees.

“So have you ever talked to a doctor about it?”

“Have I hell.” Morgan snorted. He’d probably not seen a doctor since he was a boy, with pneumonia. “I’m not ill.” Maybe if he kept telling himself that, he’d believe it.

Dominic frowned. “Better somebody who knows what they’re talking about than a guy in a bar. You need to get those dreams out in the open where you can examine them and see they’re nothing to be frightened of.”

“Right.” Morgan smiled, despite his uneasiness. Dominic and his wonderfully pragmatic and logical approach to any problem.

“A problem shared is a problem halved. Perhaps you could describe all of what you saw in your dream. If I could pick out any substantial mistakes, then that might prove it must have been based on childhood tales. A real ghostly manifestation wouldn’t get the details wrong. Like stigmata. If they really were the marks of Jesus’s crucifixion, wouldn’t the nail imprints be on the wrists?”

“I have no bloody idea. If you say so.” It made sense, though. Everything Dominic said seemed to be making sense at present. “But what if history’s got the details wrong, like artists have done with the pictures of the crucifixion and the painters in the museum did with the wreck? We wouldn’t be able to tell, then.”

“Don’t complicate matters unnecessarily.” Dominic jabbed at him with his hand. “Maybe it’s not such a good idea, anyway. If it turns out you’re spot on, with the level of detail you couldn’t have known unless you’d researched the wreck as much as I’ve done, which you obviously haven’t . . .”

“If? Yes? If it turns out I’m right, then what?”

“Then we’re liable to scare the pants off you. Not that I don’t like you with your pants off, but I’d rather find another way of doing it.”

“Daft sod.” Morgan shut his eyes, took another deep breath. “I refuse to discuss those dreams any further. Not here, not now, but thank you.”

“My pleasure. Except what have I done to be thanked for?”

“Cheered me up. Talked sense. Made the unbearable bearable.” Morgan leaned over, just able to reach Dominic’s hand as it lay on the arm rest. Making a romantic overture seemed wrong, given all his worries about dragging a good bloke into sharing his mess of a life, but he needed the comfort. “Everything seems so ordinary when you’re around.”

Dominic flushed. “While we’re talking old family stories, you don’t happen to remember any relating to John Lawson? Nothing lurking about the dank recesses of memory?”

“If I had, I’d have said. Unless they’re buried so deep I need a hypnotist to unlock them. No,” Morgan shook his head, “I didn’t volunteer for the experiment. And anyway, wouldn’t that be a ridiculous coincidence?”

“A bigger coincidence than you having the Troilus beams in your house? That ship’s woven into the fabric of your family history, isn’t it?” Dominic patted Morgan’s hand. “I’m glad I came back. Not simply to run John Lawson to ground.”

“I’m pleased you came back, as well.” Morgan smiled. They sat in silence for a while, as the light outside the window ebbed, until a growl erupted from Dominic’s stomach. “I want my dinner; my stomach’s grumbling away like mad.”

“And there was me thinking it was thunder. I—” Morgan stopped as Dominic’s mobile rang.

My mother, Dominic mouthed, on answering. Morgan watched and listened while Dominic explained that he had remembered his aunt’s birthday, that a card and present had been sent, and that he’d definitely make the big family do in June. He’d glanced across at the mention of that, so Morgan had shrugged and turned away, suddenly envious at the fond intimacy on show. He’d never again be able to talk to Mum like that, unless they both ended up gaga and found they understood each other again.

Why the hell couldn’t Morgan summon up the courage to find out once and for all what was going on with him? Was it only because he was scared the medical opinion would be that he was indeed going mad? Or was he worried they’d say he was fine and he’d have to find the real reason he was in such a state?

Dinner turned out to be a success. They’d gone nowhere fancier than the local pub, but that was a place which could turn out a rare seafood platter, most of it locally caught. Morgan had felt too lazy to walk, and so his guest’s pulled muscle gave a ready-made excuse to take the car. Dominic had insisted on both driving and paying, saying that he’d also be the one to take one for the team and avoid alcohol; they had to safely negotiate the potentially treacherous lanes in the dark.

Once they were home, they hit both the sauvignon blanc and the sofa.

“Our last family holiday here was when I was eighteen,” Dominic remarked, out of the blue and halfway through his first glass of wine. “I vowed I’d come back on my own—which I did—but it’s never the same, is it?”

“Nope.” Morgan sipped his wine. It would be very easy to say, Would you think about doing a re-run of your childhood holidays? What about having a week here in the summer? but that would be committing both of them. He had to remember how he’d felt that early May Tuesday morning, how confusing it had all been. How confusing it still was.

“Maybe this week will feel like it used to. I’ve got a focus now. Lawson, I mean,” Dominic added, hurriedly. “I’m not assuming you’ll be at my beck and call the next few days.”

Morgan smiled. “I knew that. You’re okay.” He took another drink. “Can I ask a really personal question?”

“As long as I don’t have to guarantee I’ll answer,” Dominic replied, in an unnaturally airy way. They were back to walking on eggshells.

“You don’t need to answer. You can punch me in the jaw if you like. It’s just that you’ve not mentioned any boyfriends. I wanted to be clear in my mind.” Was that too close, to me and you and what sort of relationship we have—or haven’t?

“No punch required,” Dominic said, before draining his glass, then reaching for the bottle to refill it. “There’s nobody pining at home who thinks I spent my last visit here solely on ship’s business.”

“That’s good. It’s good that I’ve not queered anyone’s pitch.” Why wouldn’t Morgan’s mouth behave itself?

“You haven’t. I admit I’ve had my moments, some really good ones. But the guys who tend to hang around aren’t all that great, and nice guys don’t seem to want to stay.” Dominic rolled his eyes. “Oh God, I sound a total snivelling idiot. I’m not trying to talk myself back into your bed by making you feel sorry for me. And I know long-distance relationships are hard work.”

“Yeah, they are. And I know you’re not. After years of putting up with James, I appreciate your honesty, believe me.” Morgan topped up his own glass.

“Well, if I’ve got free rein to be honest, I’ve got to tell you that what happened last time was brilliant. At the risk of still sounding like a loser, I have to say that blokes like you don’t usually look twice at blokes like me. Too many other tempting cakes at the Waitrose bakery counter.”

“I bet they’d look twice if you smiled more often.” Morgan stroked his arm. “Your whole face changes when you smile.”

“That’s what I’ve been doing wrong, then,” Dominic replied, grinning.

“See? You’re material for Rugby’s Finest now.”

“Sorry?”

“It’s a calendar. Like Dieux du Stade. Well, a bit like it—fewer naked backsides.” Morgan was gabbling again. Flirting. Doing all the things he’d had no intention of doing; that grin of Dominic’s had hit him straight below the belt line.

“Nope.” Dominic shrugged. “No idea what you’re talking about. I’ll take it as a compliment, though.”

“You do that. And search for those calendars up on Google sometime, only not at work.” Morgan smirked. “You’re a disgrace to the gay community, not knowing about all that eye candy.”

“I should be taken onto the parade ground and have my copy of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert ripped from me.” That smile again.

Morgan took a deep breath. They’d reached a watershed, the conversation and the exchange of glances well into the field of flirtation exactly as they’d been in the car with the fish and chips. If he made a move, Dominic was bound to respond; if he didn’t make a move, would the bloke understand? He opted for the coward’s way. “I’ll be back in a mo. Need a slash.”

It had to be done, and not simply to ease his bladder. Relieving himself, his thoughts whirred around his brain.

Why shouldn’t he get into bed with Dominic again? He was a genuinely decent bloke, good in the sack, good to be around, somebody with whom Morgan didn’t have to put on any pretences or put up any barriers. He knew about the dreams—and the Capell family problems—and he was still here. And he’d probably be here for as long as Morgan wanted him to be.

So what was really the problem? The obvious difficulties of a long-distance relationship, or not wanting to lumber Dominic with a boyfriend who might need a carer a couple of years down the line?

Finish off. Zip trousers. Wash hands. Stare into the mirror. Give self a talking to about overthinking things. Keep overthinking them.

When Morgan got back to the lounge, Dominic appeared to be lost in thought.

“Penny for them?” Morgan asked, which was always a risky question.

“They’re overpriced at a penny,” Dominic replied. “I was wishing I’d not been such a wimp over dinner. Should have had that apple pudding.”

“Is that all?” Morgan hoped he didn’t sound too relieved. “That’s soon sorted. Want to go and raid the kitchen?”

He grabbed his guest’s hand and gently pulled him up. If they did share a bed tonight, against all Morgan’s better judgement, he’d have to be careful the bloke didn’t pull that muscle again. They also needed to walk up those stairs sober, knowing exactly the decision they’d made; dessert would help soak up the alcohol too. In the end, while they couldn’t match apple pudding, they put together a decent plateful—toast, jam, strawberries, and some nice chocolate—and took it back to the lounge.

“That was cracking,” Dominic said, when they’d had their fill. Then he smiled, which was fatal for Morgan. Good wine, comfort food, that smile, all the things which had been brewing had bubbled up, and no amount of talking to himself in the mirror was going to keep the lid on them.

He reached over and straightened Dominic’s collar. “This has gone all skew whiff.”

“My collars never behave.” Dominic fiddled with it himself, his lack of the expected reaction frustrating. Morgan’s earlier thought that he wouldn’t be fussed if they didn’t have sex was rapidly becoming irrelevant.

“I met a friend of your ex last week, although friend might be breaking the Trades Descriptions Act.”

“Oh.” Where was this going?

“He told me James was a right bastard.”

“He was.” Morgan wished James wouldn’t keep reappearing, like a spectre at the feast. He had enough apparitions to get his head around. “Water under the bridge.”

“Like the water you drink abroad and end up with Montezuma’s revenge.” Dominic laughed, grabbing Morgan’s hand and bringing it up to his face. “Anyway, you deserve somebody who’ll treat you with honesty and decency.”

Morgan hadn’t misread the situation, then; it sounded like Dominic was applying for the job. Shame it might not be a permanent appointment.

“Blokes like that don’t grow on trees.” Morgan leaned closer, taking the next step in the complex dance they’d seemed to have decided, without conscious agreement, to embark on. “In the meantime, would you compromise?”

“Compromise?” Dominic’s voice had grown huskier, rich velvet tones emerging, as they had last time, up in Morgan’s bed.

“I can’t promise that I’m perfect, because I know I’m not. And I can’t promise you anything, really. I’m too confused about what’s going on in my head for a start. But I like you a lot, and if you don’t mind me vacillating, we—” The state-of-Morgan’s-nation speech got cut off with a kiss.

“Don’t sell yourself short,” Dominic said, once they came up for air. “And please don’t say anything you’re going to regret later. I’ve ordered myself not to fall for you hook, line, and sinker.” He produced yet another devastating smile. “So long as we can stay friends of some sort, I’m happy. And if it’s one in the eye . . .” He stopped, smiling sheepishly.

“One in the eye for who?” Morgan could guess, but it would be fun to hear Dominic say it.

“For James. Is it a problem that I get a kick thinking I’m here with you and he was too blind to see what a great bloke you are?”

“Not at all,” Morgan almost purred, until his catlike contentment was suddenly broken by a horrible thought. “Did he try anything on with you? Kind of thing he does.”

“What, pick up lost waifs like me? Good grief no. He had his eye on this Old-Etonian rugby-player type he had tagging along. I guess that’s why he was spouting the historical stuff. Trying to impress him with his vast knowledge.”

No wonder James had been so keen to make it plain that the Cornwall connection had been severed. And maybe the Old Etonian had been about to be given the obligatory “You might just be Mr. Right” speech. Fat lot of good it would do him.

“Let’s not talk about James. He’ll put a total damper on the evening.” Morgan pulled Dominic close for another kiss, a long, lingering one this time. Forgetting about James took precedence for the moment over any other worries. “You do this bit better than he ever did, anyway.”

“Do I? Well, there’s a turn up.” Dominic returned another kiss, which couldn’t have been easy when Morgan had started to chuckle. “What’s so funny?”

“You.” Morgan stroked Dominic’s cheek.

“I suppose I am. And you’re not much better.” Dominic drew the fingers to his mouth. “When I first spoke to you over the phone, I thought you had a poker up your backside. All that stuff about ‘your first task is to find my address’ and the rest of the crap. That was like a red rag to a bull. I hate being told I can’t do something. It made me twice as determined to get in touch.”

Morgan groaned. “Was I that up myself? You’ll have to forgive me. I’d only that morning received the ‘Dear Morgan’ letter from the bloody rat who doesn’t deserve his name used.”

Dominic slipped his hand round the back of Morgan’s head, caressing his hair. “I like ‘Bloody Rat.’ That suits him down to the ground. Or to his rat hole.”

“Nice one.” Time to forget James, no matter how much he kept wanting to be remembered. Time to cut the words and get into action. “Come on.” Morgan didn’t want to do it here, on what had been his parents’ sofa, in full view of the family portrait on the wall. He eased himself out of his seat, stopping himself grabbing Dominic’s hand again to pull him up. “I’ve got a nice bed upstairs. Trouble is it’s too big and too empty.”

“Is that a clumsy way of asking me if I’d like to fill it? Oh, do grow up.” Dominic grinned at Morgan’s laughter. “Must you find the smut in everything? It’s like being in an episode of Round the Horne.”

“Nothing wrong with that. The repeats were favourite listening in our house.”

Dominic’s grin widened. “I never understood the jokes, not until I was in my teens. They got away with filth.”

“Of course they did. Innocent days, nobody got the slang. The average little old lady listening as she washed up the Sunday-lunch things wasn’t going to get the significance of a cottage upright.”

“Talking of which . . .” Dominic’s hand swept against something which was pretty well upright beneath Morgan’s trousers.

“Come on.” Morgan took Dominic’s hand, edging him towards the door. “We’ve talked too long.”

Dominic wound his arms around Morgan’s waist, pulling him close for another kiss. Morgan enjoyed the sensation of his tongue’s explorations, savouring the sensation when his fingers started exploring the small of Morgan’s back. They progressed towards the door, snogging as they walked backwards in some strange, crablike variation on ballroom dancing that needed mouths as well as arms and legs.

When they reached the stairs, Morgan broke the clinch. “We’ll never get upstairs in one piece if we try to like this.”

“Spoilsport.”

“Don’t blame me—blame gravity.” As soon as they hit the top stair, they went back into the walking hug, Morgan relieved that he’d had the foresight to change his sheets, so the duvet cover, as they rolled onto it, felt smooth and cool. Time to keep it simple: soft and slow and sensual.

Dominic tugged gently at Morgan’s shirt. “This needs to come off. It all needs to come off.”

The view from the window, lights twinkling up the headland, was usually enchanting, but it was wasted on them. Dominic had slipped his hand inside Morgan’s boxer shorts, so even the Mona Lisa, lit up with Christmas lights and dancing the hokey-cokey, would have been wasted on them.

“Ease up—there’s no hurry.”

“That’s not what this is telling me.” Dominic’s hand played havoc down below, having found its target and showing no signs of deceleration. “Does it really have to be ‘Frankie says Relax’?”

“Frankie can go to hell,” Morgan said, giving in.

Despite all Morgan’s misgivings, it was as good as before, and when Dominic came, eyes open wide and looking more ecstatic than Morgan had ever seen him—happier than when he’d been head down over his research, which was saying something—it was the icing on a pretty considerable cake.

“I feel like I want to say thank you,” Dominic said, much later, as he caressed Morgan’s head in the postcoital glow.

“For what?” Morgan stroked Dominic’s chest. Smooth skin, sweet smell of some classy cologne; the bloke got better and better.

“For giving me a second chance. It felt like we’d made a mess of things somehow, last time. Got into a right state the morning after.”

“We had. I had.” Maybe they were still in a bit of a state. But if he was building Dominic up for a fall at some point, he wasn’t going to worry over that now. “Don’t let’s dwell on it.”

“Okay.”

“I have a proposal for tomorrow.” Morgan felt the need to be generous. Maybe it was that after-sex glow talking, or wanting to compensate Dominic in advance for whatever crap he was bound to drop on him later. “I need to go and visit Mum. You could come with me. Say if you think it’s a bloody awful idea.”

“I hate to disappoint you, but I think it’s a great idea.” Dominic smiled, eagerly. “It sounds phony to say ‘been there, done that’ but I have, with my grandmother. I’m under no illusions; I know what to expect. I can’t imagine what it would be like always having to make that trip by yourself.”

“Why do you have to be so bloody reasonable?” Morgan sighed, in contented bewilderment. “Promise I don’t have to pretend I’m brave or that things are okay when they aren’t?”

“Do you really think you have to pretend anything with me?”

Pointless to reply: they both knew the answer.

“Curl up in here tonight, if you want.” The guest bedroom seemed a long way away and Morgan’s bed was going to feel empty without Dominic in it.

“Sounds good to me. Have to use the facilities. Sorry to be so unromantic.”

“You bloody well said sorry again.” Morgan punched his lover’s arm. “I’m going to thump you every time from now on.”

“Not fair! I was brought up to be polite.”

“Then you better learn to be rude or you’ll be black and blue.” Morgan snuggled down again, trying not to think of the mess of food and crockery downstairs that needed tidying away or entertain guilty thoughts about boring matters like not having cleaned his teeth. Or important things like his mental well-being. He wanted to stay nestled here until morning, in a dreamless sleep, with no decisions to make and nothing emotional to mull over. It had been too long since life had felt uncomplicated.

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