āEvery time you kiss me, it feels like youāre holding your breath,ā Alfred says. His voice is shaky and Arthur glances up from his cup of tea. āLike youāre bracing yourself.ā
āIāve never really been a good kisser.ā Is Arthurās response. He snorts, lightheartedly. Alfred doesnāt return his smile. Arthur clears his throat. āDo you mind picking up some milk next time you get the groceries? Weāre running awfully low-ā
āI need to have this conversation,ā Alfred says. Heās looking at Arthur with those steely blue eyes and Arthur can barely hold contact. Alfredās hand is on his chin when he averts his eyes back into his teacup, tilting his head back up almost forcefully. Arthurās gasp is quiet. āPlease. Please, just look at me. Just talk to me.ā Alfredās desperate, it seems.Ā āItās been months since Iāveā¦ā His grip softens. That warm tanned hand of his takes to cradling the side of Arthurās face and Arthur flinches away, just momentarily, before a look of hurt flashes across Alfredās face and Arthur stills. āI told you I loved you three months ago and you havenāt said it back. Itās not that you have to, you donāt have to, but I just⦠I wish youād just talk to me. I keep bringing it up but you always deflect me, and⦠I wish we could talk about it. Arthur. Do you love me?ā
Arthur lies. He wishes he didnāt. āI donāt know.ā
Alfred sighs. Itās pained, but he seems relieved. āThatās okay. Thereās no pressure. You know Iād never pressure you into anything, Artie.ā
Arthurās chest burns. In the metaphoric sense, of course, because physically, heās perfectly fine. Alfredās attempting to chip at the concrete exterior of Arthurās heart and the shrapnelās embedding into Arthurās chest, so it burns. But heās physically fine. He feels no remorse, and that scares him. Because Alfredās on the brink of tears and Arthur should feel some remorse, shouldnāt he?
āBut we need to talk about these things. We need to communicate. We canāt keep these things under a lock and key, I need to know this is going somewhere. That Iām not āignoring the signsā like everyone keeps telling me I am- Arthur, I believe in this. Do you?ā
Arthur wonders what relationship column Alfredās read to make him think this way. He wonders if itās Alfredās friends again, telling him to stay away from Arthur Kirkland. Arthur thinks ruefully that Alfred ought to have listened to them. āI havenāt got the faintest idea what youāre on about.ā
Alfred sighs again. He closes his eyes. His brows furrow, as if thereās a pinching headache between them. āDo⦠do you trust me?ā
Arthur doesnāt lie. ā⦠no.ā
And Alfred doesnāt seem to be surprised. His tears, however, threaten to spill over. āWill you ever trust me?ā
This is Alfredās big character flaw. The only fault, it seemed, that he had, in all that beautiful loving body of his. Those big, beautiful, naive eyes. That he was willing to do anything to make this work.
Arthur doesnāt answer because he doesnāt know. But it seemed Alfred got all he needed from Arthurās silence. He stands up, palms soaking the tears from his eyes. āArthur, I⦠I love you. Will you let me help? I want to help, I know I can-ā
āYou canāt always be a hero. Save yourself the trouble and leave me,ā Arthur says. Alfredās eyes are wide but Arthurās tone isnāt aggressive. Itās calm. Itās advice. Alfred waits for more but Arthur turns back to his tea so Alfred gets up. He leaves.
Arthurās face is wet but he doesnāt move. He doesnāt sob. He lets the tears fall onto his lips where they leave a salty aftertaste, and when the taste becomes unbearable, he wipes them away.
He loves the way Alfredās arms wrap around him. He loves the way his name falls from Alfredās lips, the way those lips kiss him so sweetly, so gently. He loves Alfred Jones. He loves him when heās annoying, when heās loud, when they fight, but he supposes itās too late to say anything now.Ā
Arthurās always late. Heās late to cry, heās late to feel the remorse coursing through his veins. Heās trapped between barriers of his own construction, and he knows thereās something wrong with him.Ā He wants to take a pair of pliers and force himself open, to pull everything out from inside him and put himself in Alfredās warm, caring hands, because god, he wants to, but he doesnāt trust Alfred Jones. He canāt. He mustnāt. He tells himself that thereās no possible guarantee it can be safe.Ā
So he doesnāt tell Alfred he loves him. He doesnāt do anything because that would make it harder when Alfred finally leaves, finally tires of him. Of course, itās this vicious cycle of self-preservation that tips the scales, because now, Alfred is gone, and Arthurās stupid. Heās stupid. He doesnāt deserve a chance at happiness when he canāt stop ruining everything.Ā
Arthur canāt stop hurting Alfred Jones. He canāt give Alfred what he deserves, anythingĀ more than their shallow, aimless relationship. The shallow, aimless conversation, kisses, cuddles.
Ā So he does Alfred one last favor and watches him leave.