Hi guys!
Alright, Rachel's seriously meddlesome, a lot more than I had originally realized she was. But considering how seriously bad Erik and Ryan are at communicating with each other, perhaps they need the "facilitation"? Short chapter this week, and short chapter next week to set up for the grand finale!
Thanks for sticking it out with me so far!!
Yours,
Hudson
Copyright Β© 2018 by Hudson Bartholomew. All rights reserved. This story or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express written permission of the publisher except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.
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Embracing the Tension - Chapter 9
"Hello?" A tentative voice, young and uncertain answered the phone. That definitely wasn't Ryan.
"Chloe?" Erik guessed. "It's Uncle Erik."
"Hi, Uncle Erik!" The hesitation dissipated into thin air, and Erik could just imagine her bouncing up and down. "Where are you?"
"Tell Uncle Erik I'll be there in a minute!" The phone picked up Ryan's voice as he shouted from afar.
"Uncle Ry says he'll be here in a minute." Chloe dutifully reported.
"Thanks, sweetie." Erik smiled into the phone, wishing he could give Chloe a hug. "I'm in New York."
"New York," she repeated, testing out the sounds on her tongue. "Why are you there? Why aren't you here?"
"Because I live in New York." Those words had never felt so uncomfortable coming out of his mouth before.
"Oh." Chloe obviously didn't understand the implication. "Come back."
"I will, sweetheart. I'll be there for Christmas."
"Oh, yay! Christmas! I love Christmas!"
Erik had no doubt. What little kid didn't like Christmas?
"So, tell me, Chloe, did you go to school today?" Erik asked.
"Yup! And we painted our families! Caesar! Come here!"
Erik heard something that sounded like a cat yelping, and he wondered what kind of torture she was subjecting the animal to. Probably something only a child's mind could dream up.
"And what did you put in your painting?"
"Mommy, daddy, me, Uncle Ry, Caesar, and you! And I drew our house in the back so everyone knows that we live together."
A rush of emotion that Erik hadn't anticipated rushed up and hit him smack in the middle of the chest. He blinked back tears and tried to take a breath against the weight pressing on his lungs. "You drew me?"
"Uh-huh, you're my Uncle Erik. And Caesar, too. Even though he's Uncle Ry's cat. But he's family, you know."
"Yeah, I know."
"Thanks for keeping Uncle Erik company, Clo." Ryan's voice was closer now, clearer. "Why don't you go downstairs. It's almost time for dinner."
"Okay! Bye Uncle Erik! Love you!"
Erik tried and failed to stop the strangled sound that escaped his throat. He ran his hand over his face and leaned his head back on the couch, wishing with everything he had that the couch was in a different living room, in a different city, in a different country.
"Chloe, walk down the stairs. No running!"
The pattering of running footsteps echoed through the phone, right before a heavy sigh, then, "Hello?" Ryan's soothing baritone, a salve to all the aches and pains the day threw at him.
"Hey." Erik put everything he felt into that one word, all the weariness and fatigue, the longing and loneliness.
"Hey." Ryan's response echoed back everything he needed: support, understanding, love. "Long day?"
Erik sighed. "Every day is a long day."
"I'm sorry."
He chuckled but didn't try to stop Ryan from apologizing for something that wasn't his fault. "I miss you."
"I miss you, too."
"I love you." Erik said this in almost a whisper, because to say it any louder would send him down a whirlpool of longing for things he couldn't have. The words were too powerful, and he wasn't strong enough to resist.
"I love you, too." Ryan was marginally louder because he was stronger; he had always been stronger. Erik knew that now. Even years ago, when it looked like Ryan was falling apart under the pressure of New York and their porn careers, Ryan was the strong one who recognized his limits and had the courage to step out before it destroyed him. Did Erik have the same courage?
He cleared his throat, but the ball of emotion remained. "So, I'm all booked for Christmas."
"Great. Send me your flight details. How long are you staying?" Ryan's voice was a little thick with emotion.
"Up on the 23rd, back on the 2nd. Is that okay?"
"Yeah, you're always welcome here. You know that."
"Thanks."
They chatted until Ryan got called away for movie night with Chloe, and Erik dropped his phone onto the couch. He rubbed the heels of his hands into his eyes as he leaned his head back.
It was getting harder every day, this long-distance thing, feeling like he was only half-present because the other half of himself was miles away in another country. He was in limbo, not fully here and not fully there but trying to make it through each day, living for the next time they can be in the same room.
And all the while, that conversation replayed in his mind, the one they had in the car when he had word-vomited his fears about leaving New York, and Ryan heard it all as an accusation that Ryan wasn't strong enough to cut it in the big city. Erik hadn't been thinking about Ryan when he said those words, but maybe that was the problem.
Ryan was happy in Toronto. Erik had seen it with his own eyes. Hell, he'd experienced it himself. And all the other friends and acquaintances who had left New York looked happier wherever they happened to settle. So why was Erik so goddamn reluctant to admit that he could have that for himself? Why was he so set on soldiering on in a city that didn't give a damn about him?
Because making it in New York is a sign of success, a sign of being at the top of his game. But what good was being at the top of his game when his heart wasn't with him? When he felt like a shell of a human, just going through the motions without knowing why?
God, he was tired. So tired. A bath. That's what he needed, a long soak in scorching hot water to sear off whatever fatigue had latched on to him and would let go. He was about to stand from the couch when his phone rang. A 416 number from Toronto, but not Ryan. Weird.
"Hello?"
"Erik Fischer?" A tinny, male voice floated over the phone line.
"Yes, it is. How can I help you?"