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After his outburst, Demian grew quiet. Just lay in his bed, gazing out the window and saying nothing, for hours. Unmoving except to make use of the bedpan...which soon became unnecessary because he stopped eating or drinking. He had surrendered to the inevitable and now just awaited its arrival. Sometimes he would still weep, but that had no effect on Simon.
That was when he brought in his sketchbook, something he hadn’t touched since escaping Demian, and worked up lightly detailed images of the man. Cheeks sunken in more. Eyes more intense and wide. Skin drawn tight. Hands merely bones. Lips unable to meet. Each sketch capturing exactly what he looked like, though pen and ink.
Once, Demian had shifted to look at him, seen the pad and his pen at work, and sighed before returning his gaze to the window.
Simon just kept sketching.
He took his vacation time so he could be there constantly, and he kept in contact with Yolanda. He would need her for the final part.
Which came a week before Thanksgiving. That morning, Demian did not open his eyes. His breathing was ragged. His hands trembled as his fingers stretched out to grasp at nothing. Simon called Yolanda and she came to stay with him while he dropped by the store to let them know he would return a few days early. They were happy to hear it; the mall was already busy with Christmas shoppers.
Then when he arrived home, Yolanda greeted him with, “He be gone before two days. Maybe tomorrow.”
Simon nodded. “I’ll be up all night with him.”
She sighed. “I let coroner know to look for your call. Here is number.”
“Not a funeral home?”
“You know one to accept him?” He shook his head. She put a hand to his arm. “They will come for him. Do what it is they do for men like him...”
“Cremate him?”
“No, that you arrange. Does he have money?”
Simon chuckled. “I’ll pay for it.” And almost added, It will be worth it.
She nodded. “You are good man, Mr. Halloran.”
“No, I’m not,” was his instant reply. And he still believed that, even today.
Not that he had ever really been bad. He had just...had just kept himself separate from the world and its dangers. He’d wanted no chance of a repeat with another Demian.
The one positive aspect of the man’s suffering was, it actually did help Simon with those he tended to, afterwards. Other men who were slowly dying. Men who hadn’t been selfish monsters or sadistic beasts. Who had sought love...given love...and now were being destroyed by that love. His empathy went deep with them. Men whose families had cut them off. Like his own had. The very people who should have supported them.
He came to believe such families were cowards. Filthy, hateful people who thought more of their position in their tiny community than those who needed them most. Who chose to believe lies. Who gladly fell in with assholes who called this a divine punishment, and conveniently ignored how it was merely a venereal disease, like syphilis or gonorrhea.
Both of which had also once been fatal.
He tended to these men as gently as a mother might. Listened to their regrets. To the dreams they once had. The lives they’d expected. The men they’d loved. Or hated. Or both. What cut into him the deepest was how...no matter what they said, no matter what their condition or situation, they seemed to have lived lives far richer than he had ever allowed himself to. Been far more decent and human than he. Been who they wanted to be and built new families and made friends, despite the hate cast their way. Friends who were now showing up for them and helping them in any way they could.
These men had lived as human beings out in the open instead of just existing in the shadows, licking their wounds like a cat or dog after a fight. They could tell Simon anything and know he would keep their secrets. And if needed, know he would be willing to go to their homes, once they were in hospice, and saint their rooms so the family that had rejected them wouldn’t be too horrified at what they found. He brought cookies and cupcakes and light salads made of fruit or carrots or macaroni, along with old movies to watch on VHS. He also talked them through depressions and...and on two occasions, remained silent when they confided they could handle the pain and heartache no longer.
He was able to do all of this without judgement, thanks to having survived Demian’s hatefulness. With them, he felt a gentle coil of soft understanding make him part of each one. Until the day came where the disease was minimized in its horror and its death toll collapsed. When the world could accept it was nothing more than a chronic illness and begin to provide for them as it moved on to its next target of disapproval.
And when Demian had finally drifted into a stillness that almost seemed unreal, it was so simple and easy it took Simon a few minutes to understand he was gone.
Now he’d thought he could relax. And had. And all had been fine. So long as he’d been in his own little world. But the second he stepped away from it...
The second he’d come to this goddamned town.
Simon looked around the bathroom, which would have been considered out of date in the Eighties. So cold and uncaring. No character to it, unlike his bathroom at home. A home he never should have left.
He sighed...then drained much of the now cool water and refilled the tub with hot. He wasn’t ready to leave the tender feeling of lying there. Wasn’t willing to turn away from the thoughts that came to him. Questions he had.
Why had he photographed that bastard cop? Why let his guard down? It’s not like he needed the photo; he had plenty from his online searches, any of them good to work with...to paint.
True, Paley’s face was nice and he was well-built, but Simon had hundred...thousands of images of men who were better looking. Granted, the picture he’d made, posing under that street lamp...it had been truly elegant. And he could now acknowledge the man carried a vague resemblance to Demian. Very vague, Simon told himself, because Paley was far more muscular. And all of it was in proportion. And he’d sensed no warning signals. Had he been fool enough to think he could move freely in the world, now?
No...it had been that cold, cruel flash of condescension and disdain in the man's eyes when he’d noticed Simon looking at him. Like he was thinking, I know what you want, faggot. Make me an offer.
Which had caught Simon’s full attention...to the point he actually considered doing it just to wipe that self-satisfied smirk off the man’s face. He had cash with him, back at the hotel, and wouldn't mind feeling a man, again. And money always had a voice in negotiations with his type.
At least that was what he’d always thought.
But now he had to admit that hate could be just as great a motivator. That bastard's actions had proven it.
And Simon was self-aware enough to admit he had also proven that...with Demian.
He chuckled in the bath.
Perhaps this was karma from it, coming back on him.









