“He doesn’t want to talk.”
“You’ve tried? He said that?”
“He ignored my text.”
“Uh-huh,” Mom said flatly, clearly not convinced. “When did you send it?”
Shane’s cheeks heated. “Like, twenty minutes ago.”
“Good grief, Shane. He could be in the shower. Or on a treadmill. Or asleep. Or charging his phone. Relax!”
Shane huffed a laugh. “You sound like Ilya.”
“Because we’re very much aligned in our views when it comes to you.”
“You both think I’m an uptight wet blanket.”
“We both love you to death, and want you to be happy. And we both know you can be your own worst enemy.”
“Well. I had another enemy, but then I fell in love with him.”
Mom laughed. “Talk to him. Give him time to respond, and if he doesn’t, then try again. And for god’s sake listen to him.”
“I will. And if he won’t talk to me, I’ll...drive to Ottawa and stand outside his door until—”
“Or you could just be cool for once in your life.”
Shane’s mouth dropped open. “Oh my god. Ilya is such a bad influence on you!”
“He’ll call. I promise. Be patient.”
“Okay.”
“I love you.”
“I love you too.”
“And Ilya loves you.”
Shane nodded, hoping those words were still true. “Thanks. Bye.”
He stared at his phone for several minutes after the call ended, trying to will Ilya to text him back. When no messages came, Shane opened Instagram and scrolled through Ilya’s posts. He never paid much attention to them, especially since Ilya mostly posted photos of random things he saw, and rarely posted selfies.
The most recent post was from yesterday—Christmas—and it was of the foosball table Shane had given him. No caption. He scrolled and found a photo of the exercise ball Shane had been balancing on in Ilya’s gym. One of the latest puzzle Ilya had completed with Shane’s dad. One of Ilya’s loon tattoo.
One of the two plastic heart rings, together on Shane’s dresser.
Shane realized that most of Ilya’s posts were, in weird cryptic ways, about Shane. His entire account was like a secret diary of their relationship, full of inside jokes and little references that only Shane would understand.
And Shane hadn’t even bothered to look at it before. Not really.
He looked now. He scrolled until his eyes were so blurry he had to give up and sob into his hands instead. How could Shane have doubted for a second how fiercely Ilya loved him?
* * *
“This isn’t working,” Ilya said as soon as Galina closed her office door behind him.
“Our sessions, you mean?”
“Yes. I feel worse than ever. Everything is fucked.” He knew he wasn’t being cool, but it had been a rough twenty-four hours and he was barely holding himself together. He’d turned his phone off yesterday as soon as Shane had left his house. He’d spent a couple of hours lying on his bed, staring at the ceiling and trying to nap. Then he’d gone to the gym in his basement and rode his exercise bike hard. After that he’d punished his heavy bag for a while.
He hadn’t seen Shane’s text until this morning, and he hadn’t replied yet. He didn’t know what to say. He’d already had his appointment with Galina booked for today, so he’d decided to talk to her before reaching out to Shane. He wasn’t above wanting someone to tell him what to do because he was fucking lost.
“Why don’t you sit down?” Galina said calmly.
“No,” Ilya snapped. He pointed an accusing finger at her. “You said I would feel better. You’re supposed to fix me.”
Galina didn’t react to the anger in his voice, or the absurd finger-pointing. She only looked at him with quiet interest, and maybe a hint of amusement. “You’ve been coming to see me for less than two months. I’m good, but I’m not that good.”
Ilya put his finger away, but despite feeling foolish, he needed her to understand how urgent the situation was. “I can’t do this if I am going to feel worse. I have to focus on hockey, and I have to be a good boyfriend, and I can’t do either of those things if I’m this fucking sad.”
“Ilya,” she said firmly. “Sit.”
Ilya sat, sighing heavily as he did so. “What’s wrong with me?”
Galina sat in her own chair and crossed her legs. “You are a human being with a lot of responsibilities and pressure. You play a physically taxing, dangerous sport for a living. You are hiding a very big secret while also living your life in a spotlight. You are in love with a man you aren’t allowed to be in love with. You are carrying trauma from your childhood that you’ve never allowed yourself to process properly. And also you feel things very deeply. Deeper than maybe anyone realizes.”
Ilya blinked. He hadn’t actually been expecting an answer. Especially not one that was so...thorough.
“Is that all?” he said dryly.
“I think you are depressed.”
Ilya hugged his own chest protectively. “Like my mother.”
“Not necessarily. Depression is complicated and manifests in many different ways. And there are many ways to treat it.”
“Drugs.” Ilya didn’t want drugs. Other than painkillers that were absolutely necessary, he avoided pills. Pills could be a weapon.
“Again, not necessarily. Antidepressants can be very helpful for some people, but they aren’t the only thing that helps.” She waved a hand in the air, indicating her office. “This helps. Being here. Talking. Some people respond well to things like exercise.”
Ilya snorted. “I can’t exercise more than I already do.”
“No,” she agreed, “but you can do physical activity that is purely for you. Not for hockey. A hike, or a long bike ride. Tennis with a friend. That sort of thing.”
“In Ottawa? In the winter?”
She smiled. “It doesn’t have to be exercise. We haven’t known each other for very long, but I think you need to do more things that are just for you in general. Your priorities seem to be divided between hockey and your boyfriend.”
“I like those things,” Ilya argued.
“Last time we met I suggested you talk to Shane about the things you’ve given up for him. Did you do that?”