Cliff goes back to soccer practice too early after the flu. Emeto fic. 1,910 words. Prev
It had been a week since Cliff came down with the flu. He had been back in classes since day 3, much to his classmates’ chagrin because he was still coughing every few seconds. The professor of his honors class even took him aside and suggested maybe he should stay home a few more days, that the nurse could excuse him, but Cliff didn’t see why he’d do that when he was perfectly capable of functioning just fine. Sure he was so exhausted that he could barely keep his eyes open, and his voice was completely shot, and each round of coughing ended with Cliff holding back making any noise that reflected how sore his ribs were. But he didn’t have a fever anymore and therefore, he would just get through his classes and sleep as soon as they were over. And he’d stayed out of soccer for an entire week before returning to practice.
Theo took one look at him and snorted. “Go home, Barrows,” he said. “Nobody wants that.”
“I’m not contagious anymore,” Cliff said. “I just need to get moving again.”
“You look like the only place you should be moving is to bed,” Theo said. But Cliff stayed stubborn, so Theo sighed and shook his head. “We’re running two miles, eight loops around the track to warm up. You really think you can keep up?”
Cliff pursed his lips, knowing even the walk from the dorms to his classes had been winding him. “I’ve got it,” he said.
“Suit yourself,” Theo said. The way he looked at Cliff like there was no way he could do it just added fuel to Cliff’s determination. “Alright guys, let’s try to finish in under fifteen minutes, come on.”
Cliff had been running since middle school and he was pretty fast. Sports had always been his one excuse for staying at school as late as possible and doing something other than studying on the weekends. His parents had made digs about it being a waste of time, but Cliff had never let his grades slip so they didn’t truly have a reason to yank him either. All through high school Cliff had maintained a steady 4.0 GPA, something that was as looming as it was an achievement. He didn’t expect it to be any different now - he should be able to keep up his 4.0 in college classes and play sports, right? He could handle it because he had always handled it. In fact, so far Cliff’s freshman intro classes were a lot easier than his senior year all-AP schedule - but the teachers were more strict about attendance. It was not permitted to miss any class more than three times per semester, and the flu had knocked out strike one. So he had to get back in the swing of things, otherwise he’d get too comfortable being complacent to this illness, skip more classes, drop out of his courses, get kicked out of college, end up on the street and die.
Ok, maybe a little dramatic, but Cliff’s anxiety rarely cared about how realistic the threats it made were.
After the first lap, Cliff’s chest was burning fiercely. Every inhale felt rough, like the spiked stem of a flower rubbing against his lungs. He was trailing behind the pack several feet behind the second to last guy. Cliff tried to keep moving, but it hurt. The distance between him and the group just kept getting wider. Soon he began to stumble over his own feet, his pace slowed to a sloppy jog, and all he could hear was his own heartbeat in his ears. He wasn’t going in a straight line anymore. In fact he was barely moving at all.
“Barrows!”
Cliff came to a complete stop, his vision swam, and he was confused why two Theos were suddenly standing in front of him with their hands on their hips. “Captain?” Cliff answered, stumbling backwards a little.
Theo snorted, shaking his head. “Go sit on the bleachers,” he said.
“But-“ Cliff started.
“Go,” Theo barked. “Now!”
Cliff flinched and headed towards the side of the track as ordered, but as he walked his feet stopped feeling attached to his body. “Barrows,” he heard Theo say in a warning tone.
“I’m going,” Cliff whined back. Just as fast as his legs would carry him… were his legs even moving anymore? The rush of blood in his ears just got louder and louder, black spots filling his vision.
Right before he lost consciousness, he heard Theo shout, “Cliff!”
He woke up to someone patting the side of his face too hard. “Wake up Cliff. C’mon buddy.” It was Theo, Cliff realized slowly. Why was he getting slapped? “Cliff, eyes on me.” With great effort, Cliff dragged his gaze from the sky to Theo's freckled face. “There you are. Do you know where you are?”
It felt like he was back in swim club, when he pushed himself too hard and got dizzy on the turn at the wall. A feeling of nausea rose in his throat, and Cliff barely had time to pitch to the side before he threw up the waffles he’d had for breakfast. He could hear it slapping the granite track beneath him and multiple teammates exclaiming in shock. “Goddamit kid,” Theo was saying, slapping his back. “I told you you shouldn’t have been up yet.”
In his head Cliff reluctantly agreed, although it was too little too late. Another wave of hot, lumpy vomit came up with a loud gag, followed by some bitter coughing. He groaned thinking about how the whole soccer team was right there watching him, the new guy, spill his guts after ignoring the warning from their captain.
“It’s alright,” Theo sighed. Somehow, the show in front of him didn’t seem to be bothering him much. “Deep breath, in and out. One more.”
“M’okay now,” Cliff managed to moan.
Theo snorted. “Sure you are, just like before we started running eh?” He asked. Someone passed Theo a bottle of water which he opened for Cliff. “Can you try and drink something?” His voice was gentle, unlike how he’d be barking the team around normally.
Cliff took the water bottle with a shaking hand and took a small sip.
“Good man,” Theo said. “Can you get back to your dorm okay?” Cliff nodded yes, but as Theo helped him stand up a rush of dizziness came over Cliff and he swooned like a freaking maiden. “Hey!” Theo exclaimed, grabbing onto his shoulders and just barely keeping Cliff from crashing to the ground a second time. He threw Cliff’s arm over his shoulders and started to walk with him to the bleachers, which was a little awkward given Theo was significantly taller. “Alright, that’s a no. Let’s call that boyfriend of yours.”
“My what?” Cliff gaped, suddenly more with it than he had been two seconds prior.
Theo paused. “In my boyfriend’s club. Elliot?”
“He’s not my boyfriend,” Cliff said, face hot.
“Oh, sorry,” Theo said. He didn’t seem to realize he’d just made Cliff’s dizziness twice as bad. “Al said you guys were close. So who do you want us to call? We have to call someone,” Theo said before Cliff could insist on going back to his dorms alone again. “That or one of the guys will take you.”
“…Elliot,” Cliff mumbled. Theo chuckled and dropped him onto the metal bench. Cliff shivered as his gym shorts did little to keep out the cold that was clinging to the bleachers.
Apparently Theo had Elliot’s number, because he was on the phone with him already. Cliff tried not to listen to their conversation, he was humiliated enough knowing they were talking about him at all. “Alright, he’s coming,” Theo said. The perks of living on campus - nothing was ever more than ten minutes away. “You just hang right here, okay? No getting up.”
Cliff wanted to complain that he wasn’t an invalid, but he hadn’t exactly done himself any favors towards proving that. He nodded reluctantly, and the guys went back to practicing on the field. Cliff watched them glumly, sniffling and coughing into his elbow every few seconds as the cold air got to him. Someone brought his bag over with his jacket, but it didn’t seem to keep him any warmer. This was so pathetic, Cliff thought. Could he even come back to practice ever again after this?
Elliot arrived a few minutes later, striding confidently across the field like he owned it. Cliff had no idea how he always held himself so high. “Hey Cliff,” he said cheerfully. “Dare I say I told you so?”
Cliff let out a wheezy laugh. “Yeah, you did,” he said. “I’m okay now, but Theo thinks I need a chaperone back to the dorms.”
“Well clearly you do, or you might try and go to the gym next,” Elliot smirked. “You got everything? Alright, let’s go.” Elliot didn’t immediately put his hands on Cliff - he knew by now that Cliff was jumpy and disliked being touched - but when Cliff swayed on his feet he slung an arm under Cliff’s arms. “We’ll take it slow,” he said.
“Sorry you had to come get me like a kid,” Cliff said quietly. He allowed himself to lean on Elliot though and they began to walk off the soccer field.
“I wasn’t doing anything anyways,” Elliot reassured him. “Besides, being right is always uplifting.”
“Don’t let him come back for at least another week!” Theo shouted after them.
Elliot raised a hand in acknowledgement. Cliff felt his face grow warm with embarrassment. Not only was Elliot seeing him a mess again, but the whole soccer team had, too. And who knew when it would rain and clean that mess he’d left up? Cliff hated to even think about people running by it and curling their lips in disgust as they avoided - or even worse, didn’t - the puddle of puke. He resolved to come back and clean it up tomorrow if it didn’t rain. God he hoped it rained.
Elliot’s body was so solid and warm holding him up.
It took a while to get back to the dorms since Cliff was still dizzy, but they made it eventually. Cliff was shivering, the cold air sticking to his sweaty skin. He was pretty sure it was just the temperature though and not a fever, because everything didn’t ache including his toenails like they had last week. “Almost there,” Elliot said in that patient, encouraging voice he so often used with Cliff.
“I’m gonna shower,” Cliff told Elliot once they were in the dorms. “Thanks for your help. Sorry you had to come get me like you’re my keeper or something.”
“It doesn’t bother me,” Elliot said smoothly. How did he just say things like that? “You can always call me for anything.”
Cliff felt something flutter inexplicably in his chest. It had been happening a lot lately, and Cliff wondered if he should have his dad check his heart out. “Well, thank you.”
“See you later,” Elliot said and headed down the hall to the elevators.Cliff waited another few minutes for his heart to stop beating so hard before he went to the bathrooms. He just needed to rest a bit longer, he thought begrudgingly. Then this cough and his pounding heart would calm down.
Cliff gets the flu and Elliot insists on being there for him. Overhaul of this story. Contains emeto. 3,840 words. Prev | Next
Cliff had managed to go eighteen years without ever getting the flu. So when he woke up during the first week of October feeling like someone had taken a baseball bat to his head and shivering so hard that his teeth clicked together, well, he was pretty sure he was dying. He had yet to be late for a class in college, let alone skip one, but if this was the end he would at least allow himself to spend it in bed. Not that he thought he’d be able to get up in the first place.
What could have been an hour or twelve later, Cliff woke with a start to someone banging way too loudly on his door. He groaned and tried to ignore the loud noise. He just wanted to sleep, didn’t anybody respect that around here? Maybe if he just stayed still it would stop, or at the least he'd fall back asleep.
But it didn’t stop, and then Cliff heard a voice that he recognized. "Cliff? Are you there?"
Elliot. Cliff's heart sank. He couldn’t let his closest - and only - friend in college see him like this. Surely he was a mess, in bed for who knew how long, his forehead slicked with sweat and his hair tangled and greasy. "Go away," he croaked out, but speaking brought on a cough that seemed to suck the air right out of Cliff’s lungs.
"Cliff! Open up before I go get the RA!"
Cliff groaned, tempted to tell Elliot to bug off again but not wanting the RA to get involved. “Hang on,” he said, forcing himself to get up. He wobbled the few steps to the door, shivering as his bare feet hit the cold linoleum floor, and opened it. "Why are you knocking so hard?" He rasped, leaning on the door frame as he glared at Elliot in defeat.
A very indignant Elliot stood in front of him with one hand on his hip, his lower lip sticking out in a pout. "Because you're clearly dying, duh."
"Not dying." The string of harsh, deep coughs that came straight from Cliff's lungs at that very moment did him no favors to support this.
"Uh huh,” Elliot rolled his eyes. “Get back in bed.”
“I was there before you tried to break into my room,” Cliff muttered, but Elliot didn’t miss a beat. He ushered Cliff back to bed and threw Cliff’s duvet over him, as brazen as ever when it came to taking charge. Cliff shivered miserably and thought great, now he was sick and humiliated. “No offense, but why are you here?” He asked weakly.
“Because you haven’t answered me all day and Perry said you weren’t in class,” Elliot said smoothly. Perry? “My friend who’s in your lit class,” Elliot added. Right, her. “Do you have a first aid kit or a thermometer?"
"No,” Cliff said dizzily. Elliot was talking too fast, his words wrapping around Cliff’s aching head like a rope and squeezing. Usually Cliff was happy when they were together, but right now he just wanted Elliot to go away. He knew he was a basket case when he got sick, fevers always slamming him at full force. "I'm fine, you should go back to your room,” he said.
Elliot frowned. "You don't want me here?" He asked indignantly.
Cliff clutched his sheets tightly, trying to come up with a way to say no without actually lying. “I don’t want you to catch whatever this is,” Cliff said. “And I’m not good company right now. It’s just a cold, I’m really okay.”
He jumped when Elliot slapped his hand to Cliff's cheek, which elicited an unwillingly needy sound because of how good Elliot's cool palm felt against his burning skin. "A cold doesn't feel like that," Elliot said pointedly. "It’s fine, I’m not here to be entertained, just let me take care of you.”
Cliff blinked in confusion. Was he hallucinating right now? "Take care of me?” He repeated slowly. “Why?"
“Because we’re friends,” Elliot said, like it was the most simple explanation in the world. Cliff felt the strange flutter in his chest that he always felt when Elliot said that so easily.
"What if you get sick?" Cliff asked weakly, but Elliot had clearly broken his resolve.
"I've got a good immune system," Elliot said with a confident grin. "Besides, I got my flu shot.”
“I probably just have what you had,” Cliff said tiredly, thinking back to Elliot’s cold last week.
Elliot snorted. “Nice try. I didn’t have a fever.” Well, that was true. “I’ll be fine. I just don't think you should be alone right now."
Cliff felt his eyes suddenly get teary and he jammed them shut so that Elliot couldn’t see. This was embarrassing enough without him crying like some loser baby. But the truth was, no one had ever wanted to be around him when he was sick. His parents thought every illness was just a pain in the ass and the most caretaking he could remember after he had outgrown a nanny was his mom shoving a bottle of cough syrup and a packet of antibiotics through the door at him. His dad was a doctor, but if anything that seemed to contribute to the opinion that a sick kid was far beneath caring about. The general consensus among all of them was stay in your room and don't bother anyone or spread whatever it was to anybody else. End of.
"I'm going to grab the first aid kit in my room, I'll be right back," Elliot said. Cliff nodded and waited to hear the door shut before he opened his eyes to wipe them dry. He noticed Elliot had shoved a sock in the door so that he could get back in without Cliff having to get up. Seamlessly considerate as always, Cliff thought. He didn’t know why Elliot stuck around him, whose own prom date had accused him of having the emotional intelligence of a goldfish when he hadn’t bought her a corsage. He was always just waiting for the other shoe to drop and Elliot to get sick off him. It was nothing short of a miracle he hadn’t already, Cliff thought wearily.
Elliot came back with a plastic box that had a big red cross on the front. "I'm back,” he announced. He caught Cliff ogling the first aid kit and laughed. "Remember my mom’s a nurse? She wanted me to be well stocked," he explained. He opened the kit up on Cliff's desk and pulled out a thermometer which he handed to Cliff expectantly.
Cliff accepted it but didn’t use it. It felt too embarrassingly self indulgent and Elliot was just staring at him like this was totally normal. "It goes under your tongue," Elliot said helpfully. “What’s wrong?”
“...It’s weird,” Cliff said in a tiny voice, unsure if this was going to make Elliot mad. Instead, Elliot just nodded in recognition and turned away to rummage through his first aid kit for something else. Cliff popped the thermometer in his mouth and waited, watching cross eyed as the number on the tiny screen climbed up and up before finally settling on 102.5 with a shrill beep.
Elliot turned around and took the thermometer back with a concerned frown. "Have you taken any medicine?" He asked, brow furrowed in what Cliff was pretty sure was worry. Cliff shook his head no, shivering and pulling his duvet closer. He just wanted to lie down, his head spinning. “Here,” Elliot said, tapping out two Tylenol from a bottle and holding them out to Cliff with a bottle of water. Cliff clumsily tried to open the water with shaking fingers, but every movement was jerky and uncoordinated. Upon breaking the seal, water immediately leaked onto his hand and bed. He cringed, knowing this was only going to further convince Elliot that he was an absolute wreck who should either be intensely pitied, abandoned or both.
“You got it?” Elliot asked. His voice was soft, not berating. Cliff nodded and swallowed the Tylenol, the chalky pills passing painfully through his sore throat. "Good. You should feel better in a bit," Elliot said. “Think you can go back to sleep?”
“Are you going to stay here?” Cliff croaked, finally allowing himself to lie down and pull his covers all the way up to his neck. “This is boring,”
“You’re not boring,” Elliot said. Cliff wanted to point out that he hadn’t said he was boring, but that watching anybody sleep was. But his head felt heavy and full of cotton - cotton soaked in something disgusting, like cooking oil. He didn’t understand how he’d gotten sick this fast, but maybe that was the flu after all.
At first, Elliot told himself he’d only stay for ten minutes. But apparently the Tylenol was not agreeing with Cliff’s empty stomach, because a few minutes later Cliff was throwing his blankets off with one hand clasped over his mouth. He looked positively white. Elliot realized what was about to happen and quickly shoved Cliff’s wastebasket into his lap.
“Can’t… it’s too gross,” Cliff groaned.
“I’ve seen you throw up before, it’s fine,” Elliot said.
“That was different,” Cliff panted, face twisted in pain as he clutched the waste basket tightly. An unwelcome gag bubbled up and Cliff burped into the can, a bit of saliva dripping against the plastic liner. “Please.”
“I’ll wait in the hall, but you aren’t getting up,” Elliot bossed. With that he shoved the sock back into the crack of Cliff’s door and waited in the hall. It wasn’t like being outside of the dorm room hid much. Elliot could hear Cliff starting to throw up with a loud gag the second he was outside. So much for the Tylenol, Elliot thought grimly.
Vomit didn’t bother Elliot much. In school he’d been the default mom of the friend group, always the one to bring somebody to the nurse’s office and wait with them until their parents arrived to pick them up. He understood Cliff was embarrassed, but he was also so sick that Elliot was afraid to leave him to his own devices. How long had Cliff been here, boiling by himself in bed without even a water bottle within arms reach? Would he have ever asked for help? Something told Elliot probably not.
After a minute the loud gagging became just a quiet heave every few seconds, and then eventually ceased. Elliot poked his head through the doorway. “Better?” He asked.
Cliff was slumped over the trash can, his red hair soaked with sweat. He grunted, which Elliot interpreted as a reluctant yes. He stepped inside and tried to take the trash bin from Cliff, but Cliff groaned and didn’t let go. “Don’t clean up after me.”
“I’m not gonna clean up. I’m just going to throw the bag in the bathroom trash, I promise.” Cliff loosened his grip on the wire bin and Elliot brought it to the bathrooms down the hall, tying the bag and tossing it into the large trash. It wasn’t a lot despite all of the gagging Cliff had done - leave it to Cliff not to eat or drink enough when sick, Elliot thought grimly. Cliff had empty trash bags at the bottom of the bin, predictably organized as usual, and Elliot wrapped one around the bin anew before scrubbing his hands clean.
He returned to find Cliff slumped over the side of the bed, one bad move away from falling right on the hard linoleum floor. “Hey, lie down,” Elliot said, pushing him away from the edge by the shoulders.
“Wanna brush my teeth,” Cliff mumbled.
Elliot handed him his water bottle. “Just rinse for now,” he said. He was sure if Cliff got out of bed he was going to keel over immediately. Cliff accepted a sip of water, making a face as the acidic taste in his mouth moved around, before swallowing. “Think you can go back to sleep?” Cliff nodded and lay down.
“You really don’t have to-“
“Go to sleep, Cliff.”
Elliot waited for Cliff’s labored breathing to settle down in a pattern of sleep. If he was convinced Cliff shouldn’t be alone before, he was positive now. He sat at Cliff’s desk and watched a movie on Cliff’s laptop to pass the time as Cliff slept. He probably should have asked for permission, but Cliff was asleep and he’d typed his password in front of Elliot a hundred times by now. He didn’t think Cliff would mind.
Honestly, Cliff didn’t seem to mind much in general. He was nervous, always acting like he might say something wrong, but other than that he was easy going. He never had an opinion on what movie to watch, he just seemed happy with whatever Elliot picked. He didn’t care that Elliot always showed up ten minutes later than he said he would. And despite the fact that they hadn’t talked about the whole being gay thing again since the first time it had come up, Cliff was acting the same as he had before.
Elliot didn’t know what to think of it. Cliff had to be gay, right? Straight guys wouldn’t say they “didn’t know” if they were gay or not. And Cliff was so gentle and soft spoken for a guy. Not that that alone tipped the scales, but it was combined with how he held himself in general. The way he talked, the way he looked at Elliot’s lips too much, the way he seemed to have zero interest in presenting himself as buff in front of girls. Elliot just knew, even if Cliff didn’t.
“Nooo.”
The movie was nearly ending when a loud moan from bed snapped Elliot out of his thoughts. He realized Cliff was thrashing around in bed, tangled in his own sheets. “Hey, Cliff, it’s okay,” Elliot said, standing up. From there he realized how violently Cliff was shaking, his teeth clicking together with chills.
“C-cold,” Cliff said, barely making the word out. He looked so pathetic and small, hugging himself fruitlessly in bed. Elliot leaned forward and attempted to tuck Cliff’s blankets around him. However the second his hands touched Cliff’s skin, he was startled by Cliff flinching away from him. “D-don’t touch me,” Cliff said through chattering teeth.
Elliot frowned. “I’m just pulling the covers up,” he said and tried to do it again. This time, Cliff pushed his hand away and gave him a look of… fear?
“I didn’t do it,” Cliff said.
Elliot took a sharp breath in, realizing that Cliff’s fever had to have gotten worse for him to be so out of it. “Cliff, it’s just me. Elliot,” he said slowly. Cliff didn’t answer, but kept staring at him with watery hazel eyes that squeezed Elliot’s heart in his chest. "It’s okay," he said as gently as he could. “Take a deep breath man, come on."
"C-can't," Cliff gasped. Elliot was alarmed to find he could hear a wheezy whistle every time Cliff sucked in a breath.
“Yes you can,” Elliot said, pretending to be confident because the alternative was freaking out. “Try again. In through your nose… that’s it. Good job. Slow down. It's okay..."
It took several cycles of Elliot's guidance, but eventually Cliff stopped hyperventilating even if the wheeze was still there. “Cliff, do you have asthma?” Elliot asked carefully.
“Used to,” Cliff said.
“Do you have an inhaler?” Cliff shook his head no. Of course not, Elliot thought bitterly. “I think maybe you need to go to the doctor.” He jumped when Cliff desperately grabbed onto Elliot’s arm and shook his head desperately. “Cliff! What-“
"Don't," Cliff begged, eyes filled with tears. "I can't go to the hospital. My dad - my dad works there."
“Not the hospital, the student health center or something,” Elliot said. Cliff’s grip on his arm was so tight that it hurt and he tried to detach himself.
Cliff let out a tiny sob, which just scared Elliot more. "He'll be so mad if I embarrass him again," Cliff whimpered deliriously. "I can't, don't be mad at me, please. I don’t want to get in trouble.”
Elliot's heart broke. This was too much, too sad and scary, and Cliff would never want Elliot to hear this normally. “Okay, no hospital," Elliot said against his better judgment, just wanting to calm Cliff down. "But we need to get your fever down now. Do you think you can take a cold shower?" Cliff shook his head no. "Okay. More Tylenol, and I'm gonna go get ice and hope for the best. If it doesn't work we need to get help tonight though."
Despite his haze of fever and not being all the way there, Cliff realized this was the best deal he was getting and nodded. Elliot helped him take two more pills and then dashed to the floor’s kitchen to fill a few cups up with ice, the fastest things that had stood out to him as potential buckets in Cliff’s minimalist room. When he got back to Cliff’s room, Elliot poured the ice into one of Cliff's trash bags and wrapped it around Cliff’s head and shoulders the best he could. Hoping for the best didn't seem like enough, but unless he gave up and got outside help it was going to have to be. Cliff shuddered violently, an automatic reaction to the ice, but he didn’t make an effort to escape other than some uncomfortable wiggling either.
Cliff looked up at Elliot, eyes clouded with fever. “Is the flu always like this?” He asked with a little whimper of pain.
Elliot grimaced. “It always sucks,” he said. “But it would suck less if you got your flu shot.”
“It’s too late to get one of those now, right?” Cliff groaned, which finally cracked the serious mood and made Elliot laugh.
“Yeah, too late now,” he said. “Next year.”
Cliff sighed, the whistle in his breath faint now. “Are we still going to be friends next year?” Cliff asked.
Elliot carefully adjusted the ice around Cliff’s neck, which was glistening with water as condensation covered the outside of the bag. “Of course,” Elliot said. True unless otherwise proven, right? “Try and get some rest.”
“It’s too cold,” Cliff said, but even so his eyes drooped closed and he began to snore.
Elliot sighed, hoping that meant Cliff’s fever was going down and the Tylenol was finally working. “You’ll feel better soon,” Elliot said softly, brushing Cliff’s damp hair out of his eyes with the back of his finger.
Elliot went back to watching movies on Cliff’s laptop, and Cliff slept for over two hours this time, another entire movie. It occurred to Elliot that maybe he should go back to his room and just check on Cliff later. Maybe it was weird to stay here, staring at his friend he’d only made last month while he was incapacitated, but he didn’t trust Cliff to get help if he took a turn for the worse again either. Elliot tried not to think about the stuff Cliff had said - the look of fear that was in his eyes as he’d told Elliot not to touch him - and it made him feel all mixed up inside. Elliot could be pushy, but this was something delicate. He couldn’t push this, just like he wasn’t pushing the gay thing.
“Why am I so wet?”
Elliot found Cliff sitting up, the soggy plastic bag in his hand and dripping all over the also soaked bed. “Makeshift ice pack, sorry,” he said, coming around to Cliff’s bedside. “How’re you feeling?”
“Okay,” Cliff said. He looked pretty far from okay, but Elliot could sense in this case, okay just meant not-dying anymore. “Ugh, this is gross.”
“Think you can go take a shower?” Elliot asked. “Not a hot one.”
“Yeah,” Cliff said. Elliot grabbed Cliff’s shower caddy from under the bed and handed it to him as Cliff detached himself from the bed, grimacing as everything squished around him. He shuffled down the hallway to the bathrooms and Elliot stripped Cliff’s bed. It was truly soaking wet - next time he needed to get some actual ice packs, he thought. Next time...
“Oh, you didn’t need to change my sheets...” Cliff had returned, fresh pajamas on and a towel draped over his shoulders. He looked much better, some actual color in his face again.
“It’s not a big deal,” Elliot said casually.
“Yeah it is,” Cliff mumbled, hanging his towel over the back of his desk chair and sitting on the bed.
Elliot glanced at his watch. It was getting late, and he still needed to eat dinner. “Do you want anything from the dining hall?” He asked. Cliff shook his head no. “Alright, well, I’ll come check on you later, okay?”
“You don’t have to.”
“I want to,” Elliot said. “And I don’t trust you not to die here by yourself either.”
Cliff made a face and pulled his covers over his face. “You think I'm crazy now, don’t you."
"What? Why would I think you're crazy?" Elliot asked, genuinely confused.
"...Coz of that stuff I said about my dad," Cliff said, so quietly that Elliot almost didn’t catch it. His heart clenched in pity and he pulled the covers down to reveal Cliff's ashamed face. Cliff braced like he was just waiting for Elliot to say something terrible to him.
"Cliff," Elliot said gently, but firmly. "Of course I don't think you're crazy.”
"It's stupid," Cliff said quietly. "I'm eighteen. I shouldn't be scared of... Of that anymore." Of him.
"It's okay to be scared of whatever you're scared of," Elliot said. “And parents can really mess you up, believe me, I know.”
Cliff lowered the blankets just enough to peek shyly at Elliot. “Yeah?”
“Uh, hello, transracial adoptee here? I was practically born with a complex.”
Cliff laughed hoarsely, finally letting the blankets drop. “Sorry for laughing,” he coughed.
Elliot smiled at him and reached towards Cliff’s face without thinking to cup his cheek for fever. Cliff froze, but didn’t pull away. His skin was so soft and smooth, Elliot thought to himself. “Your fever broke,” Elliot said softly. Cliff blinked at him slowly, all big, tired hazel eyes. “Just so you know? I promise I’ll never hit you.” Cliff’s chin quivered in Elliot’s palm and he closed his eyes. Elliot knew he was trying not to cry. “We don’t have to talk about it again, I just wanted to tell you,” Elliot said. Cliff nodded and Elliot finally dropped his hand.
Several seconds of silence stretched between them. Elliot wondered if he went too direct. “Do you want me to go?” He asked quietly. To his surprise, Cliff quickly shook his head. The nervous squeeze in Elliot’s chest eased a bit. “Want me to stay?” This time, a nod. Elliot smiled. “In that case, there’s an episode of Gossip Girl I need to catch up on so scoot over.”
Elliot has a cold and is grumpy. They talk about the gay thing. 3,044 words. Includes brief Cliff anxiety puking. Prev | Next
Ever since they’d met and spent hours at the town’s all-night diner together, Cliff and Elliot had seen each other every day. It turned out they lived on different floors in the same dorm, so they usually met up for lunch or dinner together. Cliff was sure that at some point Elliot was going to get sick of him, but so far that hadn’t happened. They’d even run into other friends of Elliot’s while together and Cliff had expected Elliot to ditch him for better company, but he didn’t.
Elliot was so easy to talk to, a significant feat for someone as quiet as Cliff. Even without the fuel of alcohol powering his confidence like the night they’d met, Elliot was so relaxed and nonjudgemental that Cliff found himself sharing a lot with his new friend.
They’d already learned the basics about each other. Elliot had grown up in Brooklyn after being adopted from Guatemala when he was a little kid, he said. His mom was a nurse, his dad a car mechanic, and sometimes Elliot worked in the shop with him. He had an older brother, a dog, and he was majoring in musical theater. Cliff was not usually one to offer up much personal info, but Elliot always said, “What about you?” So Cliff shared that he had grown up in the New Jersey burbs and had a much older sister. His dad was a plastic surgeon, his mom a model, and he was majoring in business with the intention of being accepted into law school.
“Wow, impressive,” Elliot said.
“It was that or a doctor,” Cliff shrugged, sounding indifferent because he didn’t consider it something that was really his choice. “And I don’t have the stomach for that.”
“Fair,” Elliot nodded earnestly. The reaction was refreshing to Cliff, who knew law was still considered second best to medical in his parent’s eyes. It was as refreshing as the fact that his Barrows reputation did not precede him at Isherwood University - it was only the third week of school, but Cliff was pretty sure he liked college. He felt so anonymous in comparison to the tiny private school he’d gone to since kindergarten. There weren’t eyes everywhere, waiting to report back to his parents every time he moved. No well-established reputation - good or bad - to drag around behind him.
They were meeting for an early dinner tonight. Cliff spotted Elliot already at a table in the dining hall when he arrived, his friend slouched in his seat and his chin in his hand. “Hey,” Cliff said cheerfully.
Elliot sat up slowly. He looked off to Cliff, but Cliff couldn’t pinpoint why. “Hey,” Elliot said back.
“Should we get in line?” Cliff asked.
“I guess so,” Elliot said. The indifference threw Cliff for a loop. Elliot was always the more enthusiastic between the two of them, so to have him be so sullen was confusing. As Elliot stood up, he coughed into the crook of his arm and it clicked for Cliff. Oh, Elliot was sick. How bad was it that he was relieved to realize this, versus Elliot being pissed at him?
“You’ve got a cold?” Cliff asked sympathetically.
“Al gave me his, really nice welcome to the club,” Elliot muttered. “Theo’s boyfriend? The one who runs GSA,” he supplemented when Cliff clearly did not remember who Al was.
“Oh yeah,” Cliff said. Right, GSA. Gay straight alliance. Cliff still didn’t know what to think about that. “The chicken soup is pretty good here.”
“Yeah,” Elliot said. His cheeks were flushed pink and Cliff could hear the congestion in his voice now. They split up to get their meals - Elliot indeed heading for soup and Cliff going for the day’s entree, which was chicken in some kind of brown mushroom sauce. The food wasn’t bad at Isherwood, although it didn’t seem to be the healthiest either.
Once reunited at their table, Cliff ate his meal and watched as Elliot disinterestedly pushed his soup around with a spoon. “It looks good,” Cliff commented, trying to encourage Elliot to eat in a roundabout way. To his dismay this earned him a scowl from Elliot, who pushed his tray towards Cliff.
“You eat it then,” Elliot grumped.
Cliff didn’t know what to do. People being mad at him was not something he handled well, and it turned on all the alarm bells in his head. Was Elliot mad at him after all? Was Cliff annoying him? “Sorry,” he stammered, glancing towards the nearest exit out of habit.
Elliot sighed and put his head down on the table. “Sorry, I’m an ass when I’m sick,” he said. “I just don’t feel good.”
It was messed up, but Cliff felt another wave of relief come over him. “It’s fine,” he said quickly. “You know we didn’t have to meet up if you’re sick.”
“But I wanted to see you,” Elliot said. At least that’s what Cliff thought he said, improbable as it was, but maybe he misheard between Elliot talking into the table and the noise of the dining hall. Regardless, Cliff felt his heart skip a beat.
“I’m not that hungry either,” Cliff lied. “Let’s go back to the dorms, you should rest.” He collected Elliot’s bowl without another word and carried their meals to the window for cleaning. Elliot clearly conceded with this plan, because he was waiting by the exit for Cliff.
The walk from the dining hall to the dorms wasn’t that bad. It took about five minutes, eight if you walked slowly or three if you ran. Elliot huddled in his jacket, sniffling. “It feels like everybody is sick,” Elliot muttered. It was true, it seemed half of campus had caught the beginning of the year cold if the amount of sniffling, coughing and sneezing Cliff could hear during classes was any indication. As if on cue, Elliot sneezed loudly with a wet, “Excuse me.”
“Bless you,” Cliff said politely.
They got to the dorms and Cliff badged them in, holding the door open for Elliot who was shivering. Warm inside air welcomed them inside, and Cliff ushered Elliot to the elevators. He hit 2 for Elliot’s floor, Cliff living on the 3rd floor himself. Elliot opened the door with his key and Cliff followed him, thinking he ought to make sure Elliot was okay before he left.
He hadn’t seen much of Elliot’s room before. Usually they hung out in the dining hall or library, but when they did stay at the dorms it was usually in Cliff’s room because Cliff’s Macbook was a lot better for watching things on than Elliot’s tiny HP. Plus, Cliff’s roommate was never there, already swept off his feet by some girl he’d managed to nab within the first week of classes.
Elliot’s room was messier than Cliff’s, but considerably homier. On his side of the room there was a comforter with pastel squares on it, band posters, and fairy lights strung above the bed interspersed with pictures of what Cliff assumed to be friends and family. “Will you be okay?” Cliff asked hesitantly. The dorm rooms were so tiny, essentially only two beds and two desks with about five feet between them.
“I doubt I’m going to die,” Elliot said flatly.
Cliff wasn’t sure if that was a dismissal or not. His eyes wandered to Elliot’s desk, where he saw textbooks, a fluffy purple pen, and a little rainbow flag in a cup. A strange feeling came over Cliff - the same one that had come over him when he realized Elliot had a bunch of pins on his backpack that were for ‘The Human Rights Campaign’ and ‘The Trevor Project.’ He’d felt it that day Cliff had answered Theo’s phone and Elliot had picked up, too. “My boyfriend is starting an LGBT club this year and insisted on tabling outside even though he’s already sick,” Theo had complained between throwing his things together to leave.
Cliff was rarely one to pry, but as Elliot flopped onto his bed with a tired groan, Cliff got a bit of courage since Elliot wasn’t looking directly at him. “Hey Elliot?” Cliff asked cautiously.
“What?” Elliot grunted, his forearm flipped over his eyes.
“Are you gay?”
Elliot moved his arm and shot a glare at Cliff. “No, I’m just sick,” he snapped. “Why?”
“Just asking,” Cliff said quickly. “Because of the flag and your pins and you were at that club.”
“Wow, you’re so smart,” Elliot said sarcastically. “Yes, I’m gay, thought that was kind of obvious.” It hadn’t been obvious to Cliff. Had it crossed his mind? Yes, but it wasn’t something he was comfortable just assuming about anyone because so far in Cliff’s life, gay hadn’t really been something that was okay to be. “Is that a problem?”
“No!” Cliff exclaimed. “Really, it’s fine. I mean of course it’s fine, but also I’m fine with it, I just didn’t know.”
Elliot looked at Cliff like he was clearly contemplating whatever else was on his mind, but instead just coughed into his elbow and turned on his side facing the wall. “You don’t have to stay,” he muttered finally. “I’m just gonna sleep.”
Cliff stood up, an automatic response at being dismissed. “Okay, well, if you need anything text me,” he said awkwardly. “Um... bye, Elliot.” He left feeling like they’d had a fight that he wasn’t even sure what about. It was definitely Cliff’s fault, though. It always was.
Elliot kept his eyes closed until he heard the door click behind Cliff. He let out an exhausted groan and flopped on his back, staring regretfully at the ceiling. He shouldn’t have been so aggressive to Cliff, he thought. He’d just been so convinced that there was a mutual understanding that they were both gay that having Cliff ask him had made his brain short circuit. He couldn’t believe he’d thought they were flirting all this time, but it turned out Cliff was just another straight guy.
No, he couldn’t be, Elliot’s inner voice insisted. There’s no way in hell Cliff Barrows was straight. But maybe he was still in the closet, if he even knew he was there at all. God, did he just give Cliff a complete existential crisis? He looked so shaken when he’d left. Now Elliot not only felt sick, but he felt guilty too. What a shitty day.
Cliff hurried back upstairs to his third floor dorm room with his head spinning. Elliot was gay, and Cliff had ruined their friendship with his less than enthusiastic support. He hadn’t even had a chance to prove to Elliot that he wasn’t a bad guy, and instead he was back where he started with Milo. Anxiety burned Cliff’s stomach in a way he hadn’t felt in a few weeks, not since he’d left his parents house for Isherwood. Stupid, he was so stupid!
Cliff tried to spend the evening studying, but he couldn’t concentrate on anything. The pain in his belly kept getting worse, even though he’d chewed some Tums.
Elliot hated him. He was never going to talk to Cliff again because Cliff was stupid, stupid, stupid-
His phone vibrated on the desk next to him. Cliff glanced at the screen and stopped breathing when he saw he had a text from Elliot. This was it, he thought in horror as he unlocked the phone. It 100% had to be Elliot texting him to never talk to him again, that he was a disgusting person and certainly not a friend anymore.
‘Do you have tissues?’
Cliff stared at the short sentence in confusion. Was this a test? Was it actually supposed to be passive aggressive and Cliff was supposed to understand that it meant ‘never talk to me again’? Cliff grabbed the only box of tissues he knew of in his room - his roommate’s - and dashed downstairs before he could change his mind.
He knocked on Elliot’s door a little too hard, and a few seconds later Elliot opened the door with a face of concern. “Cliff what the heck? Don’t knock like that!” He said. Cliff had the decency to look sorry, but he couldn’t seem to get any words out right now. What did he say now? Did he beg for forgiveness?
“Are those for me?” Cliff looked down at the box of tissues in his hands, which he was clutching so aggressively that the cardboard was creasing. He nodded. “Thanks, I ran out,” Elliot said, then motioned for Cliff to come in.
Cliff hesitated. Did Elliot just want a more private setting to yell at him in? Fine, he deserved it. He braced himself for impact as the door automatically closed behind him.
Elliot sat on the bed and utilized one of the tissues with a long, wet blow. “Ugh, gross,” he muttered and tossed the used tissue into his trash can. He coughed into his elbow and then said, “This cold blows.”
“I’m sorry!” Cliff blurted.
Elliot stared at Cliff like he had two heads. “I’ll survive, it’s not that serious,” he said in confusion. “Why are you apologizing?”
“B-because,” Cliff stuttered, face red in embarrassment and stomach throbbing with anxiety. “You told me you’re,” he hesitated, swallowing before forcing himself to continue, “Gay and I didn’t know what to do but I didn’t react right.”
Elliot laughed, which quickly became a round of dry coughing. Once he recovered, he said, “Cliff it’s fine.”
“It - it is?” Cliff asked, too nervous to believe those words just yet. “I thought you were mad.”
Elliot shook his head. “I’m not mad. You just brought me tissues, of course I’m not mad.”
Cliff attempted to gulp down the giant weight in his chest down, but it refused to budge. “Then why’d you - you told me to go.”
“Uh yeah, I didn’t need you to watch me nap,” Elliot said. Then less smoothly, “I know I got kinda weird, I’m sorry. I was just surprised.”
“Why were you surprised?” Cliff asked, head spinning. What was there to be surprised about?
“Well, I just thought you knew,” Elliot said awkwardly. “Because I thought you also were… but you’re not.” he trailed off, looking at Cliff expectantly.
It took several seconds for Cliff’s brain to fill in what Elliot was implying. When it did, his face turned several shades of pink. “Oh,” he near-gasped. He took a step back, shaking his head. Now he was short circuiting in a whole different way than before.
“Cliff?” Elliot said worriedly. “I didn’t mean anything bad thinking that, don’t be mad. I’m not going to be weird about it or anything, we can still be friends, right?”
“I’ll be right back,” Cliff said, then dashed out of Elliot’s dorm room before Elliot could say anything else. The mystery of why was then immediately answered when Elliot could hear Cliff throwing up in the bathroom directly across the hall. Elliot cringed, because this really couldn’t have gone worse, could it? Well, short of Cliff having an entirely homophobic response, but Elliot wasn’t actually sure this wasn't what that was yet either. Cliff was either disgusted or he was sick too. Elliot propped his door open so Cliff could get back in and sat back on his bed, knee jiggling worriedly as he waited for Cliff to return.
After several minutes, Elliot could hear the toilet flush, water running, and then Cliff appeared in his room again. He looked sweaty and worse for the wear, but not aggressive. “Are you okay?” Elliot asked awkwardly.
“I don’t know,” Cliff said shakily.
“You don’t know? Maybe you should go to the health center,” Elliot said, genuine concern on his face.
“No, I mean I don’t know if I’m…” Cliff stopped, sucking in a breath before saying in only slightly above a whisper, “Gay.”
Oh. Elliot hadn’t been expecting him to say that. He slowly got off of his bed, reached into his mini fridge and handed Cliff a bottle of water. “Here,” he said. “Drink, you’ll feel better,” he encouraged when Cliff just stared at him in confusion.
Cliff took a tiny sip, which did feel good on his stomach but did not make him any less confused. “Are you breathing?” Elliot asked. Cliff nodded. “Good. Look, I didn’t mean to freak you out. If you don’t know you don’t know, and that’s fine. I shouldn’t have assumed anything anyways. We don’t have to talk about it if you don’t want to.”
Cliff swallowed. “What if I want to?” He asked, his voice small.
For a second Elliot smiled before he forced it away in case it was insulting. “Then we can talk about it,” he said simply. “But only if you want. I care more that we can still be friends. Are we okay?”
Cliff nodded enthusiastically, then winced when the movement made him feel woozier than he already did. “You sure?” Elliot asked.
“Yes,” Cliff said. “I really want to be friends.” It was the only thing in this whole situation he was sure about. “I’m sorry I threw up in your bathroom. I just get freaked about this stuff. Because of me, and… whatever I am, not because I’m homophobic,” he explained haltingly.
“I know,” Elliot said gently. “It’s okay. I’ve been really lucky, my family has always accepted me and high school wasn’t that bad, but I know that’s not a universal experience.”
Cliff nodded, throat too closed up to verbalize how very accurate that statement was for him.
“Alright, cool,” Elliot said. “I’m gonna go back to sleep, but… see you later?”
“Yeah,” Cliff said. “See you later.”
Cliff walked back to his floor in a daze. He had a lot to think about, stuff he’d shoved down so deep trying to forget that having it brought up turned him all upside down. But he and Elliot were still friends, that was the bottom line that mattered. Cliff hadn’t lost his first friend in college, and the only friend he’d ever made outside of private school in his life. If he wanted, he had someone to talk to about it. But not today, Cliff thought. Today he’d officially run out of energy to deal with himself any more.
Fall 2010: Cliff and Elliot meet on Cliff's 18th birthday. Includes parts originally from the drabble "Experiment.” Cliff and Elliot both get drunk, emeto. 2,399 words. Next
This is the beginning of my attempt at (mostly) chronologically reimagining my modern OCs as a group of friends who all go to the same school in the Hudson Valley. Some stories will include parts from old drabbles, which I’ll be slowly working out of my masterlists. All parts will include sickfic! I really hope someone enjoys.
It would be Cliff’s first and last time at a frat party. On the first weekend that students at Isherwood University were back for the Fall semester, excitement was high and parties were easy to find even for those who had never gone out in high school. The house was so crowded that it was impossible to walk in a straight line, while the music blared so loudly that Cliff could feel his chest vibrating. So far, he wasn’t understanding the appeal. But when it’s your eighteenth birthday, you’re supposed to celebrate, right? And he hadn’t made any friends yet, so… Strangers it was.
So far, Cliff had learned two things about life after high school. One, people in college seemed to care less about everything and anything - for good and for bad. And two, he was never going to make friends here. At least, Cliff was worried he wouldn't. It wasn't like he'd had many friends in high school either, but he had people he liked and talked to every day. Here, he felt surprisingly lonely for someone who was sure he was an introvert. He'd even started texting his older sister sometimes just so he had someone to interact with. She was the only person who had texted him for his birthday, and Cliff had replied with a ‘Thanks!’ that was overtly enthusiastic by his standards.
Cliff had been passing through the dorms last night when he heard several people discussing an open house party that one of the fraternities held every year. It wasn't exactly recruitment, maybe pre-recruitment. Cliff didn't think that was his scene, but that's how he ended up here. He had gotten maybe ten steps in when a girl far taller than him bounded up and said, "Aww, he's so cute!” and shoved a Four Loko in Cliff's hand.
“Oh, I never…” Cliff trailed off as she threw an arm over Cliff’s shoulders and grinned.
“My own pet freshman!” She exclaimed. It was uncomfortable, but there was also a touch of satisfaction at being approved of even if it was only by a drunk stranger. She led him to a game of beer pong and announced she and Cliff were a team. “You take a drink every time you make the shot,” she explained to him. “Sometimes they put beer in the cups but that’s just nasty, so it’s water and we just have you take a sip of your own drink.”
“Alright,” Cliff said. He still hadn’t taken a sip, but after making his first point he tried it. The flavor was sickly sweet and bitter at once, and Cliff tried not to make a disgusted face. His reaction didn’t escape a round of laughter anyways. Somebody said he was adorable. Cliff didn’t love that description of himself, but at least they weren’t making fun of him. Well, not too much.
As the game continued, and a second and then third round started, Cliff lost track of how many sips he’d had. The flavor got less terrible the more he drank, and his reserved nature began to melt away. Cliff found he was surprisingly decent at beer pong and began cheering along with the others when he and the girl made a point. He realized he hadn’t even gotten her name, and when he asked she laughed and told him only for Cliff to forget immediately after. He wasn’t good with names at baseline, let alone right now. He also had no idea that drinking on an empty stomach wasn’t the best idea, not that he could do anything about it now.
The fun was interrupted by whatever-her-name-was’s shrill voice saying, “Stop it! Don’t touch me!” Looking up, Cliff realized the game had paused because one of their opponents had crept over to their side of the table and was trying to feel the girl up.
“C’mon Linds, don’t be a bitch, you’re embarrassing me,” he said. Right, Lindsey, that was her name, Cliff thought.
“I’m serious, you better get your hands off me this instant,” Lindsey said, but she’d been backed against the wall and looked scared now.
Cliff had never been a proactive bystander in his life - just the opposite really. But being drunk apparently brought out a new side to him because he slid between the two upperclassmen with his hands up. “Hey, she said stop,” Cliff said awkwardly.
“What’d you say? Did you hear what this kid said?” The upperclassman snorted. The good news was, this gave Lindsey enough time to dash. The bad news was, the guy threw a punch squarely into Cliff’s cheek. Cliff had never been punched in the face before and wow it hurt a lot more than he expected. He was knocked to the floor, dazed and one hand to his smarting cheek, but made no move to fight back. Fighting, like getting drunk, was not on Cliff’s list of experiences before today. “You’re lucky I don’t beat the crap outa you, kid. Get outa my house,” Cliff heard. By the time he looked up, the guy was nowhere in sight.
Cliff stayed on the floor for another minute just clutching his face before he pulled himself up by the beer pong table to leave, swaying slightly on his heels. The game was very much abandoned. Did getting punched have anything to do with how hard the alcohol was hitting him suddenly, Cliff wondered? He looked for Lindsey, but she really did seem to have gotten away from that creep. Good. Satisfied by the outcome even if it had resulted in getting punched, Cliff turned to leave - and ran straight into another body. He heard a sharp yelp and the feeling of liquid being poured down the front of his shirt.
"Oh my gosh, I'm sorry!"
Cliff looked up in shock as a red plastic solo cup clattered onto the floor. A boy with curly dark hair and shiny green eyes was across from him and clearly the reason Cliff's shirt was now soaking wet. He was trim but sturdy - handsome, Cliff thought drunkenly - and began frantically looking for something to wipe the mess up with. The nearest thing that met this description happened to be a random piece of loose leaf paper on the ground, which blotted basically none of the liquid up as the boy pressed it to Cliff's shirt.
"I don't think it's working," Cliff said faintly, startled by the openness with which this guy was touching him. Not that he had moved away. The taller male looked up from his task, paused and then cracked up laughing. Cliff couldn't help but smile too, although it hurt his cheek.
"Jeez, you’re right," the boy said, still giggling. "I'm really sorry. Want my shirt?"
"Your shirt?" Cliff repeated incredulously. "I can't take your shirt, you’re wearing it.”
"I meant my jacket," the boy blushed. "Sorry, I'm kinda drunk. I don’t drink much. Ah, crap, I don't think I'm supposed to tell people that, that's not really cool."
The awkwardness was endearing to Cliff and he could certainly relate to being uncool and awkward. "Okay, sure, your jacket,” Cliff accepted the offer. He turned away and quickly tore off his wet t-shirt, not liking to be exposed in public even while drunk. He slipped his arms into the jacket that the boy was holding up and zipped it up immediately before turning back around. The dry jacket felt warm and smelled good, Cliff thought. "What's your name?" He asked, shoving his wet t-shirt as far into the back pocket of his jeans as they would go.
"Elliot," the boy said with a grin. "You?"
"Clifford Barrows," Cliff said, automatically reciting his full name as he was accustomed to back at his stuffy private school where last names meant as much as grades. But Barrows signified nothing to Elliot, and that was refreshing. A relief Cliff hadn't anticipated. “Just Cliff is fine though,” he added.
"Cliff, like Clifford the big red dog?" Elliot asked. "You've even got the red hair to match!" Cliff had heard this before and usually didn't appreciate it, but Elliot didn't seem to be unkind in saying so. In fact, he seemed earnest and sweet and Cliff felt drawn to him. He had a dopey, genuine smile. And he’d literally given Cliff his jacket off his back, even if he’d ruined Cliff’s T-shirt first.
"Yeah," Cliff said. "Like that."
"That’s awesome," Elliot grinned. His eyes wrinkled at the corners and he had dimples on either side of his mouth. "So... Do you know anyone here?"
Cliff considered lying. But then he remembered he was actively being kicked out anyways and shook his head. "No one. Do you?"
"My roommate invited me, then ditched me," Elliot sighed. "Why'd you come if you don't know anybody?"
Cliff hesitated, but Elliot had admitted his drunkenness so Cliff figured he would admit his intentions. "Don't laugh," he said. "It's my birthday."
Elliot's eyes widened in shock. "Seriously? Wow! Happy birthday!"
"Thanks," Cliff said. Elliot opened his mouth and took a deep breath. "You're not going to sing, are you?" Cliff asked quickly.
Elliot looked at him sheepishly. "Not anymore," he said. "But we have to do something to celebrate. You must have wanted to. Why else would you be here?"
Cliff shrugged. "I don't know. Experimenting or something. I already got kicked out though.”
“Yeah, I saw that,” Elliot said, causing Cliff to blush. Good thing it was dark in here. “That was pretty cool.”
“Getting punched was cool?” Cliff repeated incredulously.
“Well, no, but sticking up for that girl was,” Elliot answered. “But I guess we should get out of here before you get punched again.”
“We?” Cliff repeated with a smile he couldn't help. Even though the room was spinning a little, he felt more himself while talking to Elliot than he had all night.
Elliot lead Cliff to the door, then paused and said, “Wait one second.” He darted away to the kitchen, then came back with a chunk of ice from the beer cooler in his hand. “For your face,” he explained. “Let’s go.”
The two boys stumbled off the frat house porch and headed down the dimly lit street. Cliff had no idea where they were going, or if Elliot lived in the dorms like he did, but apparently they were headed in the same direction for now. Cliff held the quickly melting chunk of ice to his cheek, which did feel nice but made him cold.
“Woah,” Elliot said suddenly, stopping and grabbing Cliff’s forearm. “I think I’m drunker than I thought I was in there.”
"Me too," Cliff said. Now that they were out of that weird cramped environment and trying to walk, he was more aware of his own drunkenness and the sense of nausea bubbling in his stomach.
“Hey, you said you came as an experiment, what kind? Elliot asked, his hand still on Cliff’s arm. His fingers were warm, the opposite the crisp Fall evening.
"To see if I could make a friend,” Cliff admitted woozily. He wasn't sure why he was telling Elliot this, it sounded pathetic and weird. It must be the alcohol, he thought to himself. Making him brave and warm all over, or maybe it was Elliot.
To his surprise, Elliot didn't call him strange. He just grinned. "Well, I think you succeeded," he said. "Friends?"
Cliff blinked. "Us?"
"Yeah. If you want," Elliot said, suddenly a little shy. "Do you want to?"
Cliff nodded quickly, eagerness winning over any reservations. "Yeah." He just couldn't believe it.
"Perfect,” Elliot grinned. "Now… we could hit up another party, but I have a feeling this frat party stuff isn't really either of our thing. Wanna go to the diner instead?"
It sounded ten times better than a noisy party, and something about being alone with Elliot - just having the opportunity to get to know his enthusiastic and mysterious new friend - made Cliff's stomach flutter with excitement. "Definitely. Let's go."
They made it another block before Cliff stopped them this time. The dizziness was getting more intense and he didn’t think he was walking in a straight line anymore. The taste of acid rose in his throat. “You okay?” Elliot asked.
“Uh huh,” Cliff said, right before pitching forward and throwing up on the curb.
“Oh, shit,” Elliot said, scratching the back of his neck, “Uh… It’s okay. Get it up, buddy.”
Cliff didn’t have to be told twice. There wasn’t a ton in his stomach since he’d skipped dinner, but there was plenty of fluids which left a decent puddle in the road. It tasted even worse than the drink had going in which cause more heaving, and Cliff swore he would never drink Four Loko again. A few cars and people went by seeming to pay him no mind, but Cliff was embarrassed regardless. By the strangers, but more so for making a fool of himself in front of his new friend. Every time he tried to choke out a “Sorry,” he would end up puking more. Mortifying.
“Maybe you should stop trying to say sorry,” Elliot suggested. “It’s okay, really. I - ugh.” He turned around and Cliff assumed it was for privacy before Elliot suddenly spewed his own wave of vomit right onto the pavement.
Hearing someone else throw up triggered Cliff to get going again, which in turn seemed to get Elliot, and so on... Cliff didn’t dare look at Elliot throwing up, not when the sound alone was setting him off, but he could tell it had significantly more volume than what he was getting up. Elliot had probably eaten dinner, Cliff thought vaguely. The back and forth vomiting lasted for another minute before Cliff was empty, and Elliot seemed to be slowing down at the same time. Cliff felt responsible for setting Elliot off and was so embarrassed that he couldn’t look at his new friend - if Elliot still even wanted to be his friend when he was so gross.
“Cliff?” He heard Elliot’s voice. God, he was going to tell Cliff to fuck off, wasn’t he?
“Yeah?”
“You still want to go to the diner?”
Cliff was so surprised that he couldn’t help but laugh. "Yeah.”
He finally looked at Elliot, who was grinning again despite his pale, sweaty face. “Me too,” Elliot said. “Let’s go.”
Fall 2010: Al tables for GSA club while sick and meets Elliot. Cliff joins Theo’s soccer team. Sickie Al, cold, coughing. Caretakers Theo, Elliot. 2,449 words. Prev | Next
Theo was not in a good mood for the first day of intramural soccer practice. He was captain this year so he obviously couldn’t miss it, but Al had already dragged home some freshers flu. Theo had spent a good portion of yesterday pounding his boyfriend’s back and chest to get him to cough up all the extra mucus. Today was also the outdoor club fair, and Al had insisted on tabling for the Gay Straight Alliance club that he’d decided to start this year - even though he was already sick and it was chilly for September. Theo tried to convince Al to get his vice president Juliet to do all the tabling, but she had class halfway through it. “So? The table’s empty for an hour, she can come back,” Theo complained.
“Theo, it’s my club. I’ve gotta do stuff too,” Al said before falling into another round of coughing. He was sitting up in bed because he was too uncomfortable to lie down.
Theo rolled his eyes. “Yeah, because you look like such a good poster boy right now,” he said. Al’s cheeks were red from so much coughing and Theo really thought he was being too stubborn about this.
“I promise I’ll be fine,” Al huffed, shaking his head.
“Right, just like you were fine this summer at the pool party,” Theo snorted.
Al groaned. “That wasn’t my fault, it was too bright!” He exclaimed. Theo just couldn’t let go of the fact that Al had gone to the party with a migraine - and then got so bad he’d started vomiting in the grass.
“Totally unexpected in July, obviously,” Theo agreed sarcastically.
“I told you the forecast said it was gonna be cloudy.”
“And we all know the weather channel is never wrong. Ever.”
Al shook his head and coughed wetly into his lap. “Baby, I can’t start a club if I don’t even show up to the event where we debut the club,” he croaked stubbornly. “Just relax, it’s not a big deal. All I have to do is sit there.”
Theo narrowed his eyes at his boyfriend, who was not the healthiest looking person at baseline but especially looked rough right now with his red rimmed eyes and runny nose. “Fine, but you better call me if anything happens,” he said. He had set Al’s ringtone to a loud horn so he’d know to stop whatever he was doing and pick up. Even so, Theo worried he’d miss a call even with his BlackBerry on full volume from the field.
“Nothing’s gonna happen,” Al said.
“Al.”
“Yes, I’ll call you if anything happens,” Al finally agreed. Theo huffed and let it drop for the night, but that didn’t extend to the next morning.
“Aw geez Al, you look terrible,” Theo said disapprovingly as soon as they’d gotten up. “Please, just consider staying home.”
“We already talked about this,” Al sighed, his voice weak after his morning coughing spell. On a good day this unwilling morning ritual lasted about ten minutes, but this morning it had been nearly half an hour of hacking and gagging. “Drop it, babe.”
Theo had pressed his lips together in disapproval but he knew there was no convincing Al at this point of stubbornness. He regretted not trying harder anyways though when he heard Al’s ringtone from the soccer field later that afternoon.
“Can somebody get that!” Theo shouted to the field, his hands occupied by showing the new goalie the stance he wanted to see. Someone pushed a freshman with red hair towards the sidelines to answer it for him. A minute later, the same kid came up to him with the phone in his hand and held it up to Theo.
“Someone named Al needs you,” he said timidly.
“Shit,” Theo swore. He told himself for the hundredth time that he was never listening to Al’s “fine” again…
“You look like hell,” Juliet said as Al slumped to their table at the fall club festival.
“No quips, please, I already got plenty from Theo,” Al groaned, taking a seat next to her. It was a chilly September afternoon and Juliet had manned their booth for Gay Straight Alliance this morning, while Al had the afternoon shift. Although it was still relatively warm in the Hudson Valley, random cold snaps would suddenly appear and they were always hard on Al’s lungs. Plus, he’d already managed to catch the beginning of the school year sniffles. He’d spent a lot of last night coughing and it had been even worse this morning, even though he was using his inhalers frequently.
Juliet was packing her things up to go but hesitated. “I have to go to class,” she said cautiously. “Are you sure you’re going to be okay here?” Al crossed his arms and stuck his tongue out instead of answering. Petulance was a healthy trait, right? Juliet rolled her eyes at his antics. “Fine, but close up the table early if you start feeling worse.”
“Okay, mom,” Al said.
Juliet shook her head. “You’re a piece of work,” she scowled. “Text me when you wrap up.”
“Sure thing, gorgeous,” Al replied. Juliet rolled her eyes again but it was all good natured. She hurried off to class, leaving Al to lean on the table with a sigh. It had been his idea to start a GSA at Isherwood University and Juliet was doing just as much as he was to garner interest. Al was an extrovert, but he was also tired all the time because of his cystic fibrosis. Therefore, he’d handled most of the talking and promotion but Juliet had been doing a lot of the leg work. She might be rough around the edges, but Al knew she wanted the club to succeed too. It was something missing that Al hoped would make a positive change on campus.
Al did his best to enthusiastically welcome the students who came by the table, but his voice was crackly and he kept turning away to cough which wasn’t a great advertising tactic. As the day stretched later, the temperature dropped. Al shivered and was practically counting down the minutes for when he could take everything down. He’d given up standing half an hour ago and was now staying seated in his cold metal chair. He was too tired to go out of his way to invite people over anymore, so questions had slowed. Al slouched and resisted the urge to put his head down on the table. If he could just close his eyes for a minute…
“Hi, I was wondering when you guys meet?”
Al found a young male standing in front of his table with warm olive skin and wavy dark hair. He seemed a little nervous, as were a lot of people inquiring about clubs today but especially one that was so potentially divisive. Al smiled his friendliest smile at the kid and asked, “Our first meeting is next Wednesday, are you interested?”
“I think so, yeah.”
“Great! I’m Al, what’s your name?”
“Elliot,” the kid said. “So do I write my info here?” He motioned towards the piece of paper Al had on the table requesting name and email.
“Yup,” Al said before turning his head away to cough roughly. He cleared his throat and added, “We’re a new club this year, so we’re just starting out, but we hope to do education, community outreach and awareness, some volunteering at the local LGBT kids club.” His throat tightened at the end and he coughed more, wincing as this round was harder to stop.
“Cool,” Elliot said, then tentatively, “Are you okay?”
“Fine,” Al croaked. He handed Elliot a copy of the flyer he’d made.
“Oh sweet, did you drawn this?” Elliot asked.
Al nodded. “I’m an illustration major,” he said. “Excuse me.” This time Al turned his whole body around to cough, doubling over in his chair and finding it difficult to catch his breath. Little black spots floated in his vision.
“You seem kind of not okay,” Elliot said worriedly.
“Sorry,” Al panted. “It’s not as bad as it sounds, I swear.” It sounded pretty bad though. Not wanting to make the look on this kid’s face even more concerned, he added, “I have a chronic lung condition.”
“Oh,” Elliot said. “I’m sorry.”
Al laughed, which turned into more coughing. “It’s fine, I was born with it,” he rasped. He always found it awkward when people told him they were sorry about something he’d never lived without. It sucked sometimes, but it was also just how life was.
“Yeah, I get that,” Elliot said. “Well, thanks for…” He trailed off as Al continued coughing and this time didn’t seem to be able to stop. Al tried to get himself together, but any cold always kicked his coughing into overdrive. “Do you want me to call someone, maybe?” Elliot asked as it continued. People from the booths next to Al’s were staring now.
“I’ve-“ Al tried to say he had it under control, but he couldn’t even get that out. He realized he probably did need some help before he actually landed in trouble, so pulled out his flip phone, hit speed dial 2 for Theo and set it on speaker phone. Then he pushed it towards Elliot, thinking that there was no way this kid was going to join the GSA after this show he was getting.
“This is Theo’s phone, Cliff speaking.”
Elliot blinked in confusion. He recognized that voice. “Cliff?” He asked in surprise.
“Uh, yeah, Theo asked me to answer since he’s got his hands full, can I take a message?”
Elliot shook his head in disbelief. What were the odds? “Cliff, it’s Elliot. I’m trying to get Theo, can you tell him Al needs him?”
There was a long pause before Elliot heard Cliff laugh. “Wow, that’s crazy. Yeah, I’ll tell him…” There was the sound of movement, and then Elliot could hear Cliff say from a distance, “Someone named Al needs you.”
“Shit,” Elliot heard what was presumably Theo say. “Al? Are you okay?”
Al looked up to say something but just kept coughing instead. He was fighting the urge to gag, because coughing in public was one thing but throwing up was worse. “I’m with him,” Elliot answered for him, “He’s coughing a lot and doesn’t seem to be able to catch his breath.”
“Who is this? Goddamn it, I told him to stay home today! Are you still at the club fair? Can you give him the phone?”
Elliot glanced at Al, who was still gasping but finally getting his breathing under control. Elliot offered the phone to Al who took it with a shaky, “Thanks. Theo don’t be mad-“
“Oh, I’m mad. You better get whoever you’re with to get you inside the student union before you choke to death, but I’ll be doing that myself once I’m there to pick you up!”
“Theo,” Al whined before breaking into another round of coughing.
“I’ll be there in fifteen minutes. Practice is over guys, sorry, I gotta split.”
Al hung up the phone looking chastised. “I’m so sorry,” he said to Elliot. He glanced around at his table, trying to figure out how the heck he was going to get all of the stuff on his table together. He opened the backpack he’d brought, but it was hard to pack up when he kept coughing every few seconds.
“I can put the stuff in there for you,” Elliot offered. “The Student Union’s literally right there, you get inside. Seriously, I’ll be right there.”
Al was thoroughly embarrassed by all of this, but he doubted accepting the offer would make Elliot respect him any less than he doubtlessly already had to by now. He nodded, whispered, “Thanks,” and grabbed his water bottle before heading towards the doors of the Student Union which was only a few yards away.
Al got into the entry way and onto a chair before he had to keep coughing, covering the best he could to avoid more eyes on him. His head was really starting to ache from the force of it and his chest burned with discomfort. The much warmer air inside the Student Union made a big difference though and Al was finally able to catch his breath for more than a few seconds. He had just managed to drink some water when Elliot appeared with his backpack. “Got everything,” he said when he saw Al.
“Thank you,” Al said, “And I’m really sorry about all of this. I swear I’m not usually like this, I’ve just got a cold and cold air doesn’t really agree with me as it is.” His voice was hoarse and apologetic.
“Don’t worry about it,” Elliot reassured him. He looked a little awkward, but surprisingly more fine than Al would have expected. Al was well bided in recognizing the ‘is this guy about to drop dead?’ stare, after all. “So your… friend’s gonna come get you?”
Al nodded. “Yeah, my boyfriend,” he said. “He’s totally pissed, he didn’t want me going out today in the first place.” He sighed, knowing he was going to get an earful at home. “So you knew the kid who answered the phone huh? That’s so weird.”
Elliot grinned, taking a seat next to Al. “Yeah, it’s definitely a weird coincidence!” He agreed. “I don’t know why your boyfriend and him are together though.”
“Theo’s captain of the intramural soccer team,” Al explained. “Sounds like your friend’s on the team.”
“Guess so,” Elliot said. “Oh yeah, I think he did say something about today being the first practice…”
Al winced, realizing he’d just dragged the team captain away from his first practice of the year. “You’re right. Ugh, I shouldn’t have called him,” he rubbed his face guiltily. “You don’t have to stay with me. He’ll be here soon.”
Elliot hesitated. “You sure? Coz I don’t mind staying.”
“That’s really nice of you, but yeah, I’m sure,” Al reassured him. “My boyfriend’ll definitely come to bite my head off if nothing else. I’ll see you on Wednesday? If I haven’t totally scared you off.”
Elliot grinned. “Nah, I’m good. I’ll see you then,” he agreed. Al couldn’t tell if he actually meant it, but one could hope.
“Thanks again,” Al said warmly. Elliot waved to him as he headed out of the Student Union. Al allowed him to let the coughs he’d been holding in escape and rested back on the chair tiredly. He couldn’t wait to lie down. Hopefully this would all feel a whole lot less embarrassing after some rest, assuming Theo ever let him forget it. Probably not though.