'It takes one, to know one' is an innocuous phrase usually meant to call attention to the hypocrisy of the speaker’s words. Yet in Aedan and Laurence’s case it was all too true.
When first they had met, the Irishman had nothing but disdain for the light praetor, silently mocking Laurence for his ‘normal’ character.
Now, after a meltdown and a reconciliation, Aedan was forced to eat his words and accept that the American was far more than what the initial impression of the man had left on him. They were more similar than they had ever dared to believe, and instead of laughing, or being frightened by this thought, it lef