Pushing the Limits (Secrets Kept 2)
Page 23
I searched through the desk drawer and grabbed an old sketchbook and a pencil. With my back to him, I said, “You can be a real dickhead, you know that?” It had always been true about him. The difference was he never used to be one to me.
“It’s a talent.”
“You should work on a new one.”
“Why would I when I’m so good at it?”
I ignored him and pulled the chair over so I’d be in front of him. We were quiet as I opened to a blank page. I placed my feet on the small coffee table between us, book on my lap, before the tip of the pencil made its first scratch along the paper.
Scratch, scratch, scratch.
“I always loved that sound. I slept to it so many times over the years, when I’d come up here while you worked. It does something to me like…fuck, I don’t know. Like it’s a goddamned lullaby or something.”
My gaze snapped to him, but Isaac wasn’t looking at me. He never in a million years would have said that to someone else. I didn’t know what it was about me that made him lower his guard, but it always had, and I’d always reveled in it. The only time I’d ever felt special in my life was because of my art, and then because of who I’d been to Isaac. When someone who’s confident and bright enough to set the world on fire trusts you, it does something to a guy. I wasn’t sure I’d ever deserved it, but I wouldn’t walk away from it either.
“I don’t have one,” I finally replied, my gaze darting to him. Isaac was frowning.
“Have a what?”
“Boyfriend.”
“Shit.” He rubbed a hand over his face. “I know I should say I’m sorry, but I’m pretty sure I hate that guy, so it’s hard to get the words out.”
I chuckled. It was such an Isaac thing to say. Again, he was a bit of a dick, but I’d always loved him for it. “He’s not a bad guy.”
“He’s basically the worst.” I rolled my eyes, and Isaac, reading my silent response, said, “I’m not being dramatic.”
“I’ll give you that he wasn’t right for me and didn’t quite fit in with us, but he’s not the worst. That’s taking it a little too far.”
“He was jealous of time you spent creating art, Lane.”
He had a point. “Jayden is used to being the center of attention. And he’s been hurt in the past. He has pretty low self-esteem, though you’d never know it from the outside. Lack of attention makes him feel unloved.” Which I’d known from the start, but I hadn’t realized it would get to me as much as it had. And then adding in the cheating…
“Nope. Doesn’t help. Still hate him,” Isaac said, making me laugh. He was always so good at making me do that.
“You’re an asshole.”
“Tell me something I don’t already know,” he replied. Because sarcasm and being a jerk had always been easier for him than real emotions.
We slipped into a comfortable silence this time, nothing but the sound of our breathing and my pencil scratching against paper filling the space around us. I needed to explain things to him, but I couldn’t figure out where to start, how to get us back to where we used to be. I just knew that one day we were okay, and then we weren’t. My not telling him about being with men only made it worse. “I didn’t know,” I said without looking at him. “When you asked me if I liked men, I didn’t realize. And maybe that doesn’t make sense to you, someone who’s always been so secure in who he is, but it’s the truth.”
“Sexuality is a complex thing. I can understand that, but at some point over the years you figured it out, and you kept it from me.”
When I glanced up, Isaac was massaging his chest, right over his heart, as if he had an ache in the muscle there.
“Things haven’t been the same between us in a long time. We don’t talk like we used to.”
“That’s a bullshit excuse, and you know it. Yeah, sure, we grew up, shit changed, but there’s still no reason we wouldn’t know this about you unless you specifically tried to keep it from us. I take it Jayden isn’t your first, and you…what, conveniently never mentioned having a boyfriend? Why?”
“I don’t know,” I answered honestly. I couldn’t figure out how to explain it either. How could I, when I didn’t understand it myself?
“Again. Bullshit. It was me, wasn’t it? You didn’t want me specifically to know.”
I put the pencil down, ran a hand through my hair, scraping my scalp and messing up my already wild curls. He was right. It had been there, deep inside me, hiding, not wanting to come out. I hadn’t wanted Isaac to know, but I couldn’t sort out why that would be true.