Chris says, “So. Back to your obvious crush on Eduardo.”
There’s no point in hiding it when Chris is gay and honest. Mostly honest. Well, he’s really gay, too. “Yeah,” Mark says resolutely.
“I’d hit that,” Chris says.
Gay and honesty, right there.
The documentation of a relationship that’s more than a brief encounter, longer than a week in summer, and closer than any distance that words can’t cross.
A collaboration with renaissance
Once, you’d thought that the hardest part of work was the public speaking.
Since the depositions, it’s gotten a little more complicated than that.
Mark first meets Erica at a party.
When you paint enough layers, you begin to feel old.
He is visible through the throng of the crowd, and you are angled to the side, dark suit over your broad shoulders. You see him, in the corner of your eyes. Peripheral, like he is not really there.
The thrilling life of Chris Hughes
In this world, your words are supposed to mark the moment you know you are in love with your soulmate. But Eduardo already has Facebook, has Mark – has long fallen in love with him, now. He doesn’t need to feel the words to know it’s true.
In which there are battles to the death instead of basketball games. Except death isn’t real outside of comic books.
Or: To date Kuroko (in peace), Kagami defeats his five evil exes.
Cameron and Mark and Tyler and Eduardo go on a double date.