“The lines are baby powder,” he continues. “It was Flynn’s latest test to see if I’d kick him out. His parents did a number on him. They must’ve blown their lid at the slightest inconvenience, and he couldn’t understand why I wasn’t the same. He kept pushing to see when I’d kick him out.”
 
 I pinch, staple, wither toward heartbreak.
 
 “It started with stupid things. He short-sheeted my bed. Poured pickle juice into the milk. Squeezed hair dye into my shampoo. I never told him, but I enjoyed it for the most part. He made it feel like I was back living with my brothers.”
 
 Pinch, staple, wither. “Back when you were playing sibling stabbing games?”
 
 He huffs a strained laugh. “No, the stabbing was far more recent.”
 
 “It sounds like Flynn could’ve given me some lessons on how to rile you.” I pull the trigger on the final staple, my fingertips lingering on his taut muscles for unnecessary seconds.
 
 “Not a lot riles me these days, Pyro.” He reaches under my chin and raises my face to his. “But rest assured you always will.”
 
 I stare into his sorrow, become consumed by it. “You seem okay to me.”
 
 “Look closer.”
 
 My pulse stutters.
 
 My cheeks flush.
 
 “You’d think losing Flynn, being punctured with a million fucking staples, and attempting to drown any ounce of emotion in liquor would’ve lessened your effect.” His voice brushes over me in tempting strokes. “But I’m still fucking hard.”
 
 I pull back, my gaze instinctively snapping to the massive bulge of his crotch.
 
 I suck in a breath and glance away as the flush takes over the rest of my body.
 
 “It’s sick, right?” he taunts.
 
 I nod. Because it is. It’s vile and shameless and so sickeningly problematic. But here I stand, guilty of the same lust.
 
 I clear my throat. “You need to dress your wounds.”
 
 “You can do it for me.”
 
 No, I can’t. I can’t touch him knowing we both crave the same thing.
 
 “Come on, Pyro. I like when you play nurse.”
 
 I glare at him. Glare so hard it hurts. It morphs. It transforms into a choking, needy ache in my throat.
 
 He grabs the sterile bandages and holds them out. “You can’t half finish the job.”
 
 I snatch the bandages and drop one back to the vanity before tearing open the other. “Too bad the cartel didn’t have the same code of conduct.”
 
 His lips kick in a half-smile. “Don’t pretend you wouldn’t mourn my loss.”
 
 “Are you sure about that?” I remove the plastic from the adhesive edges then clap the bandage over the entry wound harder than necessary.
 
 He jolts with a chuckle. “I like when you’re fired up.”
 
 I grab the second bandage. “Do you want to do this yourself?”
 
 “Not even a little bit.”
 
 “Then I suggest you start keeping your thoughts private.” I rip open the packet, prepare the bandage, then place it over the exit wound, gentler this time, not daring to give him more angst. “If you’re not going to see a doctor you should get a topical antibiotic to reduce the risk of infection.”
 
 “I’ll get right on it,” he drawls in a tone that implies he’ll do the exact opposite.