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Clang(29)

By:E. Davies


"Well, yeah. He has to hand in his notice soon if he's moving out in November."

"Right." Thomas was familiar with the cost of breaking leases. He'd done  it to move back here from Halifax in May, and that thousand bucks had  stung. "And?"

He turned off the frying pan heat and picked up his Coke bottle for a  sip. Normally it would be a beer, but he'd quietly switched to pop while  his big brother was around in solidarity. At least, he hoped it would  help Cam feel a little less depressed about all the things he couldn't  yet do.

"He's gonna do it." Cameron was smiling to himself, fidgeting with his  own bottle. "Um, he said he's excited, and... we're already planning out  where his stuff will go."

Thomas raised his eyebrows. "Oh! Nice..."

"We want him good and settled before surgery and recovery. It's gonna be  hard being around him and not being able to... you know."         

     



 

Thomas groaned. "My sympathies, but say no more."

Cam laughed. "Well, you know, it's been getting worse. I mean, before  they told me I wasn't allowed, I was already cutting back, but... we  slip sometimes. But, hell. Quickies now and then really don't--"

"No more," Thomas echoed himself, louder this time and laughing.

"Sorry," Cameron grinned, moving to the table as Thomas served them both lunch. "But, you know. Of all the shitty things."

"I bet." Thomas snorted. "Moving in will keep you distracted. He'll want to repaint and everything."

As Cameron laughed, Thomas's mind fixed on that phrase: moving in.

That was it: Chase was definitely moving in. Jackson had only been  dating him for, what, a week? Two? Jackson was being purposefully vague,  but it couldn't have been much longer than that. They hadn't seemed  involved when he'd met Chase at the barbecue.

Crap. His brother didn't usually move too fast. This was... not like him. They were gonna have to talk to him about this.





Chapter 27


Jackson


"So, you think we should put in rolling doors? Bilateral, so we can open them up to use as much space as possible?"

"That'd look best." Cam was leaning on the barbecue as he looked up and  down the length of their yards. "It looks awesome when it's open like  this, though."

Thomas cleared his throat. "We can always just... build out our own areas with landscaping to keep them separate."

Jackson glanced at their younger brother. That was a good point. "Why  have fences at all? Except for the outside of our three properties. I  mean, none of us want our own zones to defend."

Cam laughed. "Excuse you, I plan to keep a Super Soaker by my bed."

Do I make the joke? Nah... he's my brother. Jackson choked back a laugh  and just shook his head. "Okay, so... ditch the partial fences and go  for a continuous flow between our yards?"

"We have to keep it kinda resale-worthy, in case we decide to ditch these places," Cam reminded him.

"Right. Well, it doesn't all have to flow. We can still have separate  zones within our property boundaries. Thomas can put in a fish pond and  reading nook. I can have a massive grilling deck. Cam can have... I  don't know, whatever he wants."

"Noah wants a sunbathing area."

"Really?" Thomas asked.

Cam smirked. "Yeah. I'll screen that in."

"Oh, God," Jackson laughed. "Please do. But yeah, we'll each have our  own zones so each yard will feel different. We'll keep that landscaping  closer to the house and leave the back area free for one continuous  flowing lawn from end to end. We can even get a flower bed or something  down along the bottom fence to make it feel like it flows."

Thomas quirked a brow. "Flow isn't a real word anymore."

"You know what I mean," Jackson groaned.

"I know," Thomas laughed. "I like the idea."

"Me, too," Cam agreed, clapping his hands. "Almost the same plan with the landscaping, then, but minus the fencing."

"Makes it a lot cheaper," Jackson nodded.

Cam glanced at Thomas, then Jackson. "And the yards will be good and open until after the barbecue, right?"

"Oh, shit, right." Cam and Thomas insisted on organizing this  neighborhood barbecue. They said he needed to make better friends with  people around who might complain about the forge.

Jackson knew they were right: backyard forges were risky. Still, people  around here seemed nice enough. If not, he could always go threaten them  a little until they magically turned nice.

"So, is Chase gonna be around for that...?" Cam asked.

Oh, boy. Jackson sank onto the picnic bench and kicked out his legs. He  braced his arms against the table behind him. "Yeah, probably. He's  moving in."

Thomas's eyebrows shot up and his little brother stared at him.

Cam asked what Thomas was thinking. "Are you guys dating?"

Would Chase want him to say? Well... they had agreed to go out, exclusively. Jackson wasn't going to hide it.

"Yes."

Cam stumbled against the barbecue for a moment. He stepped forward to  slap Jackson's shoulder in a mix of scolding annoyance and pride.  "Congratulations. Jesus, you couldn't have hid it better, eh?"

"Sorry," Jackson laughed. He glanced at Thomas, too. "I was just...  nervous about what might happen. I wasn't sure he wanted to date."

"Aww," Thomas teased. "And he was shy."

"I wasn't," Jackson grumbled, his cheeks hot. What a warm August day it  was. He pushed himself up to his feet to start scrawling a new rough  plan for their yards.         

     



 

"He didn't want to tell you and Noah in case you made fun of his obvious  lovebird act." Thomas spoke loudly so Jackson couldn't ignore him.

Cam punched Jackson's shoulder again. "Dick. You pays your money, you takes your teasing."

"I know, I know," Jackson groaned and rolled his eyes. "Shut up, you  two. I gotta get my engineer buddy on the plans for the decks. Come on,  show me where you each want your decks."

He managed to distract them by walking and marking out the rough  outlines of where their back decks would go. They planned out how they'd  join them together so they never had to shovel between their back doors  in the winter or step on muddy ground when running between houses in  the spring or autumn. And for summer, there would be even more epic back  deck barbecues. They'd just have to build it carefully so they could  separate the decks later, if they resold the houses.

Cam didn't shut up for long, though. "So have you been dating for a while? I mean, you met at that show, right?"

"No, not at all. We were thinking about it for a couple weeks," Jackson  shook his head. "Dating officially for about a week now."

Cam tried to hide his worry, but it was plain. "And he's moving in...?"

"Oh, no, shit. It's not a relationship thing," Jackson hastily  explained. "It's... I don't know how much he wants to say, but he needs a  place to stay other than his place right now, so I offered him mine."

"Ohhh." Cam drove another stake into the ground and tied string around  it. He was marking the walkway to the sundeck Noah wanted. "Is he all  right?"

"He will be."

Cam smiled, and Jackson returned the smile with a sincere one of his  own. The worst had to be behind Chase now. Jackson could help him make  sure of that.



"Pork and... are those sweet potato fries?"

"Good nose," Jackson complimented, beaming as the front door closed.  "Welcome home." He was just overseeing the last few minutes of the green  beans cooking. He'd timed this meal just right.

Chase looked embarrassed but thrilled. He kicked off his shoes and  padded through the living room, his nose in the air as he smelled the  spicy, sweet pork chop rub that wafted through the kitchen. "You're  cookin' supper for me? You didn't have to. I should be cooking for you."

"Yeah, well, you can do breakfast or something," Jackson waved. "Or maybe lunch. I enjoy this."

Chase came around the counter and sidled up beside him to kiss him hello. "You do?"

"Mmhmm." Jackson transferred his spatula to the other hand. He slid his  arm around Chase's shoulders and pulled him in for a few slow kisses.  Then, he scooted them aside a little. "Watch out, the oil might splatter  you."

"I'll live," Chase promised with a quiet laugh. He moved where Jackson  guided him nonetheless. He kept his firm hold around Jackson's waist.  "Did you have a good day?"

Jackson had only once lived with a guy, and it had lasted four months  before he'd decided to pick up and move. That had been years ago. The  second shot at their relationship had gone miserably. He hadn't lived  with anyone since. Jackson had completely forgotten what it felt like to  welcome his boyfriend home after a long day of work.

It was a deep-seated contentment. "Very good," Jackson answered. "We're  getting plans drawn up for my master bedroom reno. And the back decks."