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THE THINGS THEY DON’T SAY
Shawn
called at exactly 3:13 am. Corey remembered because, right before he grabbed
the phone off the cradle and mercifully stopped its high-pitched ringing, he’d
rolled his half-closed eyes toward his bedside table and groaned at the glowing
numbers on his alarm clock.
Of course, all thoughts about the time were wiped out of his head when he heard
Shawn’s panicked voice. “Corey? Are you there?”
“Yeah,” Corey said hazily, then, shaking himself awake, “yeah. I’m here, Shawn.
What’s wrong?”
“Do you think you could come over here? Like, right now? Please?”
Corey sat up. “Why? What’s wrong, Shawn? Are you okay?” It didn’t occur to him
until later how funny it was that they were both speaking entirely in
questions.
On the other side of the phone, Shawn drew in a long, shuddering breath. “No. I
mean…yeah. Look, can you please just get here? Please, Corey?” For a second,
all Corey could hear was Shawn’s shaky breathing. Then he heard Shawn say
quietly, “I need you.”
“I’ll be there in ten minutes.”
2
It took four knocks for Shawn to answer the door, and for Corey to get really
worried. He stood there, shaking on the doorstep in his thin t-shirt and
sweatpants, and wondered what was wrong.
When Shawn answered the door, peering around the frame like he was afraid of
what was behind it, it only worried Corey more. Especially when he saw Shawn’s
face. His best friend had a black eye, and his right cheek was all scratched
up, like a cat had attacked him. “Oh my God.”
The palpable relief on Shawn’s face did nothing to ease Corey’s worried mind.
Neither did the blood on his shirt. “Corey. Come in.” He ushered Corey in,
looking around the hallway to make sure no one had followed him.
“Shawn, what happened to you? Something is obviously very wrong he…” Corey’s
voice trailed off into the air. “Oh my god.”
There was a boy lying on the kitchen floor. He couldn’t have been more than
seventeen, maybe eighteen at most, dark-haired, and attractive in a rough sort
of way. And dead. Definitely very dead, judging from the kitchen knife sticking
out of his stomach.
“I know,” Shawn said breathlessly. “Corey, I’m sorry, I’m so sorry I had to get
you involved in this, but I just didn’t know who else to call—”
“How about the police, for one?” Corey interrupted.
Shawn’s eyes widened, and he grabbed Corey’s arms, hard. “No! We can’t call the
cops, Corey, we can’t.”
“Why not?”
“Because that guy is a drug dealer. Because I’m trailer trash, and we’re both
here in Turner’s apartment. It doesn’t matter if I live here or not, the cops
won’t see it that way. They’ll probably think I was trying to scam Turner out
of his money, and I called Chris over there to bring me some drugs. They’ll
never believe it was self-defense, and I can’t go to jail, Cor. I can’t become
what everyone thought I would.” Shawn was shaking, and his fingers were digging
bruises into Corey’s biceps.
Corey detached himself from Shawn, and pushed the other boy to a sitting
position on the couch. “Okay, calm down. I didn’t catch, well, any of what you
were saying. Explain it to me slowly, okay? Just calm down, buddy.” He stroked
Shawn’s shoulder as he would a spooked dog’s.
Shawn shuddered a bit at the contact, and then leaned against Corey, using the
other boy for support. He sucked in a long breath, then said, “Okay. Okay. I
can do this.” He gestured to the kitchen. “Chris…Chris is—was—this guy I knew
from the trailer park. He…protected me. And I mean, he’s a drug dealer, but I
didn’t think that necessarily made him a bad person, you know?” He looked at
Corey defensively out of the corner of his eye, then down at the floor. “We
used to…screw around. You know what I mean?”
“Horseplay?”
“Fucking, Corey,” Shawn said coldly. He used that jaded adult voice that Corey
hated. “We used to fuck. I mean, we didn’t actually get around to that part,
but we got pretty damn close. Okay?”
“Shawn…” Corey searched for words, for something that wouldn’t push Shawn
further away from him. He settled for, “Why didn’t you ever tell me?”
“Because you don’t know what its like. You don’t know what its like when you’re
twelve or thirteen and this big guy who everybody likes, who always had money,
says he wants to…do stuff to you. You don’t know what its like to…like it. To
want it.” He shrugged. “And I didn’t think you’d want to be my friend anymore.
If you knew I was…like that.”
“Shawn.” Corey’s voice was flat. “I’m sitting here in your living room and
there’s a dead guy in the kitchen. It’s a pretty damn safe bet that I’d do
anything for you. I wouldn’t stop being your friend over something so stupid.”
When Shawn looked up, his eyes were shining. “Thanks, Corey.” He sniffed, wiped
his nose. “Anyway. Then I moved in here, with Mr. Turner, and I stopped seeing
my trailer park friends. Because they were never really my friends, you know?
Even Chris. But then he called me. He said he wanted to come over, just to
talk.” He smiled, but it was awful, humorless. “He said he missed me.”
“Let me guess,” Corey said harshly. “He missed you a little too much.”
“Got it in one,” Shawn replied with faked brevity. “He just kept…touching me.
And I told him to stop. I went in the kitchen to make a sandwich, but he
followed me. He was too amped up on crystal meth to listen to a word I was
saying. And I picked up the knife…just to scare him, you know? Just to make him
back away. Just because it was there. But it was like it turned him on more.
And then he backed me into the counter, and I stuck the knife out in front of
me and he just…ran himself onto it.”
Shawn was staring off into space, caught up in what had just happened. Corey
put his hand on Shawn’s knee to center him, to bring him back, and Shawn shook
himself and finished talking. “When he started bleeding…it was like, unreal. It
just didn’t seem possible that his blood was pouring out all over Turner’s
kitchen floor. He fell and…and his breath made this little hitching sound. And
then his eyes went all flat, like when you shoot a deer.” Shawn
sounded…strangely unfazed. Blank.
“Shawn, what are we going to do about this? I mean, we can’t exactly wait for
Turner to get home, can we?”
“God, no.” Shawn’s face went absolutely white. “Oh my god. It he hadn’t been
gone tonight…Chris would have killed him. He would have fucking killed him.”
“Its okay,” Corey said soothingly. “Look, Turner wasn’t here. He’s okay. And
you’re okay, too. He didn’t kill you, he didn’t…rape you.” Corey had to swallow
harshly after saying those words. “That’s what matters.”
“No,” Shawn said, shaking his head vigorously. “What matters is, how do we get
the body out of here?”
Both of them looked simultaneously at the kitchen, but the dead boy provided
for them no answers.
3
Eventually they settled for the easiest—well, relatively easiest—method. They
wrapped the dead boy in garbage bags and carried him down to Corey‘s dad’s car.
At that point, it still hadn’t really gelled in Corey’s head. A boy was dead. A
boy who Shawn had known, touched, kissed. And Shawn had killed him. Shawn,
Corey’s best friend, had rammed a knife into the boy’s ribs, intentionally or
not.
Intentionally or not. That was the big issue here. Because there were parts of
Shawn’s story that just didn’t make sense. Like why the boy—Corey can’t call
him Chris, not even in his mind, that makes him too real—had two bright red
slash marks across his throat. Not deep ones, more like scratches, really. It
looked like someone had tried to slash his throat, and failed. Twice.
And who just ran into a knife? Corey didn’t doubt Shawn’s claims about crystal
meth, but still. The boy hadn’t even been anywhere near the counter. There was
no blood on the top of it, either, where you’d expect blood to fly if someone
was stabbed. All the blood was on the floor, and on the boy.
And on Shawn.
Corey was thinking all this as he drove down the dark, unpopulated back roads
of the city. Shawn noticed his contemplation. “Hey.”
“Huh? What is it, Shawn?”
Shawn smiled when Corey looked at him, big and beautiful, despite the bruises
on his face. “Thanks,” he said. “For helping me.”
Corey allowed himself to smile back, to enjoy a moment where he didn’t have to
think of his best friend as a murderer. “Hey, what are friends for?”
Shawn snorted a laugh. “Hopefully? Not usually this.”
4
When they got to the trailer park, Shawn started shaking again. “Corey, maybe
we shouldn’t dump him here.”
Corey looked at Shawn, noting his trembling lips and hands, hoping it denoted
something besides panic. “Why not?” he asked simply.
“I don’t want his mom to have to see him like this. And if we leave him here,
someone from the park could end up getting charged for it. I don’t like that
idea, Cor. I don’t want someone else to get blamed for what I did.”
Corey wouldn’t let himself think, Then why did you let me get involved?
Instead he said, “They won’t, Shawn. No murder weapon, remember? Besides…”
Corey hated having to say it, but he had to. “What you said before was right.
He’s trailer trash. He’s a drug dealer. Nobody’s going to miss him, and
nobody’s gonna try to hard to figure out who killed him.”
Shawn looked somewhere between hurt and relieved. But he let it go, laid the
dead boy on the ground and pulled the trash bags out from under him. The boy’s
eyes rolled back into his head, and Corey and Shawn froze, looking quickly at
one another, and then away. They arranged the scene silently—Corey lay him out
and Shawn pulled the little baggies filled with pot and coke and god knows what
else out of his pockets, and then they left him there. The dead boy lay on the
cold ground, and Corey and Shawn got into the car, and turned the heater on.
5
Once they were back in the car, in the warmth, in the dark, Shawn’s breathing
went harsh and choppy. His eyes teared up, and he bent over, clutching his
stomach like he was in pain. “Oh, god,” he kept saying. “Oh, god.”
Corey didn’t think, just reacted. He pulled Shawn into his arms and whispered
into his shoulder, “Shhh, shh. Its okay, Shawn. Its not your fault.” He could
smell an incongruous mix of sweat and blood and shampoo.
Shawn‘s tears were hot on Corey’s neck. “No, it is my fault, Corey. Because I
always knew that this would happen if I stayed friends with you. I always knew
I’d drag you into my fucked-up little world, that I’d totally screw you up…”
His hands clutched at Corey’s shoulders, curling into his shirt. “It’s like…you
were the only good thing in my world, and now I’ve totally fucked you. I’ve
made you like me.”
Corey reflected briefly on Shawn’s choice of words—I fucked you—but he shook
off the shiver it sent down his spine. “No,” he whispered into Shawn’s hair,
“no, I’m still me, Shawn. I’m still the same person. You haven’t…fucked me.”
Shawn laughed a little, bitterly, and pulled away. “Yeah? Well, tell me
something, Corey. What if I hadn’t grabbed the knife? What if I’d called you
up, and instead of a dead guy in the kitchen, I’d told you that he’d raped me?
What would you have done?”
“I would have killed him,” are the words that came to Corey’s lips, but he
didn’t say them. He didn’t need to. Shawn saw it in his eyes and pulled further
away.
He curled into a ball in the passenger seat. “Lets just go back to Turner’s
place. We have to…clean up.”
Corey turned the car around, and they didn’t say a word on the way back.
What Corey didn’t tell Shawn is that, even if he hadn’t just helped his best
friend dispose of a body, even if he didn’t know his best friend was a—say it, say
it—murderer, he’s pretty sure his response would have been the same.
He would have killed him, if Shawn had asked him to.
6
It took fifteen minutes to clean the blood up. Luckily, the boy didn’t bleed
much—not as much as Corey would have expected, anyway. Shawn and Corey took
sponges and scrubbed the blood off the floor, and Corey tried to ignore the
fact that, just an hour before, this blood had been in a human being. He tried
not to shudder as Shawn carefully picked the knife up, washed it clean, and put
it back in the drawer.
In some ways, Shawn was right. Things had changed. By calling him, by showing
him a dead boy with a knife in his stomach, Shawn had changed Corey. Corey
helped cover up a murder. He cleaned up a crime scene; he washed his best
friend’s hands clean of blood, both literally and figuratively. That changed a
person. He didn’t know if this would be one of those things they he and Shawn
discussed constantly, obsessively, or one of those things that they never
talked about at all.
Corey still couldn’t get the weirdness out of his head. The lack of blood on
the counter. The slashes on the dead boy’s throat. The way Shawn was acting,
cracking jokes one minute, tears sliding down his cheeks the next.
He didn’t know what happened. He didn’t want to know what happened.
Still, despite his suspicions, Corey stayed. Shawn looked at his through his
eyelashes and murmured, “Um, Cor…”
And Corey didn’t even wait for Shawn to finish his sentence. “Yeah,” he said.
“I’ll stay.”
When Shawn smiled like that, Corey could almost forget the sight of him
nonchalantly pulling a baggie of cocaine out of the dead boy’s jacket, and
shoving it in his own pocket.
7
While Shawn showered, Corey slipped into Shawn’s bed. The sheets were all
rumpled, and there was a condom wrapper, just beneath the comforter. Corey
stared at it a moment, then flicked it into the trashcan. It didn’t matter any
more.
Neither did the hickeys on Shawn’s chest, the bruises on his hipbones. Shawn
noticed Corey watching him dress, and shrugged. “Bumped into the sink,” he
said. “Hot water must have made me all red,” passing a finger over a purple-red
spot on his stomach.
Corey shrugged wearily and turned over on his side.
Shawn slipped into bed behind him. “Hey. Hey, Corey. Look at me.” Corey sighed
and turned over, looking into Shawn’s earnest eyes. “I had to do it. You know
that, right?”
“It doesn’t matter,” Corey said. “I would have helped you anyway.”
“I know,” Shawn said. His smile was bright enough to blind. “I know that now,
Corey. You’re my best friend. My best friend.” He cupped the nape of Corey’s
neck, bringing their faces close together. “I love you,” he said softly, and
then kissed Corey on the cheek, gently, as though he was breakable. When Corey
didn’t protest, Shawn kissed his nose, his forehead, his chin, and finally his
mouth.
Corey just shut his eyes and kissed back. He didn’t think about Shawn’s words—I
had to. You’re my best friend. I know that now.
Now.
He didn’t think about all the weeks before this night, all Shawn’s comments
about distance, ever since he and Topanga got together. He didn’t think about
what he was going to say to Topanga tomorrow.
He didn’t think about the condom on the bed, the hickeys on Shawn’s body, or
the stunned look on the dead boy’s face. The blood on Shawn’s hands.
He just kissed Shawn back, because there were things that Corey knew now, too.
Like how far Shawn was willing to go to keep him close.
End