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The City of Rossford

Well, we know it continues because this is in the past and we saw Casey give in in the last chapter. I felt like I placed this scene awkwardly because it was easy forget all of this had already happened when Casey is writing the message that starts out, "I'm scared...."
 
CHAPTER SIX CONTINUED


DYLAN AND MAIA raced around the house trailing garland, and Adele was at the counter, her arms white with cookie dough while Jefferson Starship Thundered:

We're sailin' 'cross the river from Liverpool,
Heave away, Santy Anno.
Around Cap Horn to 'Frisco Bay,
'Way out in Californio.

So, heave her up and away we'll go.
Heave away, Santy Anno.
Heave her up and away we'll go.
'Way out in Californio.

At the kitchen table, Fenn was ashing a cigarette and telling Brendan, “I’ve been thinking.”
“About?”
“About the fact that we need to go grocery shopping tomorrow, firstly,” he said. “And then about my niece.”
“Layla?”
“Unless something else is going on I don’t know; Layla is the only person who fits that description.
“She’s sort of…. Well, she’s drifting. And then the marriage didn’t turn out… I better go talk to her.”
When Fenn crushed out his cigarette and got up to head out of the kitchen door, Brendan said, “I’m off all day tomorrow. We could go early. You always forget to get Doritos.”
“I don’t forget, Bren. But we can go early,” Fenn said as he came into the living room where Layla was.
“Layla, I’ve got an idea.”
“Yes?”
“You’re shit is falling apart,” her uncle said.
“Oh, no!” Layla got up. “No. Damnit, Fenn Houghton. You’re the last person I ever expected to get that speech from.”
“You’re not going to get a speech,” he said. “You’re going to get an idea. So, just hold on.”
“Alright. Fine.”
“Go to Valpo. Go there and get your Masters in something.”
“I don’t know what I would…”
“Anything you like. Don’t worry about paying and everything. Just go.”
“But…. You think I’m going to find my purpose. Or… stop drifting if I go there.”
“Layla, you don’t have a job or a home or anything. There is nothing wrong with drifting, but there is a way to drift in style and get a little bit of respect for yourself. Quit looking at horrible jobs. You’re going to graduate school. For you, I would say in English.”
“And if I don’t like it?”
“You quit. Don’t get ambitious, your grades aren’t all that. Just go where they take you. You don’t know what you want yet. That doesn’t make you different from other people. But you know all that about yourself, and that makes you very different. Graduate school is an excellent way to hide out from the world, and as the head of this family, I’m saying: make it happen.”
“So…. I guess that takes care of the job thing. Now I just need the house thing.”
“Layla Lawden,” Fenn told her. “I’m your godfather, your fairy godfather. You just do that one thing, and you leave the rest of this to me.”
Layla smiled. She took a breath and realized she hadn’t been breathing, not really, in weeks.
“I thought Kevin would change me. He would make me a wife and take away my troubles.”
“Yes, well…” Fenn shrugged. “Back to the drawing board.”
“Fenn?”
“Layla?”
“Can I ask you a question?”
“Yes. I guess.”
“There’s a rumor that… Well, I’m just gonna say it.”
She crossed her arms over her chest: “Did you gamble on my wedding falling apart?”
“Are you sleeping with Will Klasko?”
Layla looked at him.
He looked at her. They looked at each other.
“I should go check on the chicken in the oven,” Layla said.
“Yes,” Fenn told her.
“Um hum,” Layla said, and walked away.


They both sat crosslegged on Robin’s bed while the old Mariah Carey CD played. The stereo was old and Meredith said, “I remember when we were little and used to sing:
‘And then a hero comes a long….’ Come on,” Meredith said.
Robin smiled and added:
“With the strength to carry on
and you cast your fears aside
and you know you will survive!”

The two girls exploded, singing into their fist:

And you finally know the truth.
That a hero lies in you!

As Mariah erupted into the bridge, Meredith said, “It’s all you, girl,” to the CD player.
As Mariah Carey sang on the tinny CD player, Meredith noted: “Sometimes, and I hate to say it, but you need a little Mariah.”
“Amen to that,” Robin said with a grin. And then she said, “I’m tired.”
“I should go then,” Meredith said.
“I guess you should,” Robin said, reluctantly.
Meredith got up off the bed and began gathering her things.
“I’ll leave the CD with you,” Meredith told her. “And that lip gloss. It’s better on you anyway.”
“Oh, Meredith, you keep it!” Robin said.
“Are you afraid?” Meredith said, suddenly. “Of the trial?”
“I don’t even care about the trial,” Robin said with a heavy seriousness.
“Alright,” Meredith shifted her purse on her shoulder. She opened her arms for her friend.
Robin embraced her.
“I love you, Meredith. Good bye.”
Meredith laughed, kissed her on the cheek, and then walked out saying, “It’s no need to sound so final.”

“That’s never happened to me before,” Sheridan said, sitting on the edge of the bed.
“Sheridan,” Shelley Latham put a hand on his shoulder. “It happens to us all.”
He looked at her.
“I mean it happens to all guys. Especially under stress.”
“I’m seventeen. It’s not supposed to happen to me.”
“You are under a ton of stress. And your cell is vibrating.”
“Uh?” Sheridan turned around and saw the phone shaking.
“How does it do that?” he wondered aloud as he flipped it open.
“It’s Chay.”
“You better answer it then.”
Sheridan obeyed and said: “What’s up?”
“Hey. Can you give me a ride to Casey’s?”
“Had you ever thought,” Sheridan began, “that I have better things to do than drive you around?”
“Harsh,” Shelley murmured. She took the phone from Sheridan and said, “Hi, Chay. This is Shelley. Sheridan has nothing at all better to do than drive you around, which he’s going to do, because he’s a friend.”
She handed the phone back to him, whispering:
“Nothing was going to happen now, anyway. Not the way you are right now.”


“I’m sorry,” Chay said.
“You don’t have anything to be sorry about,” Sheridan’s voice was low and sullen.
Chay remained unconvinced. In the distance they heard the train wail, and then it let out a scream as the night deepened.
“Shit,” Sheridan said.
“I wonder how fast those things go,” Chay said.
“My dad said that they knocked a kid out of his Keds, that’s how fast they go.” Sheridan shrugged. “I guess that doesn’t mean anything.”
“Do they still make Keds?”
Sheridan started laughing and, encouraged by this, Chay laughed too.
“I wasn’t mad at you,” Sheridan said as they neared Casey’s house.
“I couldn’t get it up tonight,” he admitted.
“Oh.”
“I… that has never happened. I’ve been so fucked up since this thing happened to Robin. I haven’t been able to… to do anything.
“Well, here we are,” Sheridan said, looking at the large old white house with the lights on in the front.
“I’m gonna come in with you.”
Chay looked at him curiously, but all he said was, “Alright?”
They climbed out of the car and walked up the gravel to the house where Casey, in his glasses, was already opening the door of the screened in porch.
“It’s cold,” he said. “Hurry up.”
They got in the house, and after greeting Chay Casey said, “Sheridan, right?”
“Right,” Sheridan nodded. They were of a height.
“I wanted to talk to you,” Sheridan said.
“Chay, go put your things away,” Casey told him.
Chay looked between the two of them, and then obeyed.
“About?” Casey said.
“I know about you and him. He hasn’t told me, really. But I know. You’ve gotta be thirty.”
“Twenty-eight.”
“Well, he’s not even sixteen.”
“I know how old Chay is.”
“I know about you two,” Sheridan repeated.
“Whaddo you know, Sheridan?”
That was a good trick. It was harder to say than imply. Sheridan tried.
“I know you’re fucking him.”
Casey took a breath, but he didn’t seem to be very worried. He folded his arms over his chest, and that was when Sheridan realized that Casey was built. He had a body that sort of snuck up on you.
“Whaddo you want?” Casey guessed.
“I want you to hire me.”
Casey looked at him strangely, and then said, “Fine. Come by tomorrow. But… you have to go right now. Because despite what you think you know, this time belongs to Chay. Chay first and me second. Good night, Sheridan.”
Sheridan Klasko nodded, turned his back and left, hearing the door shut behind him. Why had he left knowing that his best friend was going to be having sex with a thirty year old pornographer? What was he?
He walked to the car. He should have threatened Casey with the police. Or with Noah. Or… something. He sat in the car before turning the key in the ignition. Coming down the long driveway, he stopped for the sudden whir of ambulance and fire truck, red and blue lights twinkling as they sped up the road. In the darkness again, coming out onto the state road, Sheridan knew that Casey had glamored him from day one, and he wanted to be in his world far more than he wished to destroy it.
 
You were right Sheridan has got even more interesting! I like that he is trying to look after Chay. He is a good friend. It sounds like what happened with Robin and the situation with Casey means he is probably getting into some trouble. I hope he comes out of it alright. Great writing and portion and I look forward to the next one!
 
Man, shit is getting to a difficult and crazy place for all of them. There's more to come tomorrow night, and more surprised. Thanks for reading and I'm glad you enjoyed.
 
CHAPTER SIX CONTINUED

Casey looked at him strangely, and then said, “Fine. Come by tomorrow. But… you have to go right now. Because despite what you think you know, this time belongs to Chay. Chay first and me second. Good night, Sheridan.”
Sheridan Klasko nodded, turned his back and left, hearing the door shut behind him. Why had he left knowing that his best friend was going to be having sex with a thirty year old pornographer? What was he?
He walked to the car. He should have threatened Casey with the police. Or with Noah. Or… something. He sat in the car before turning the key in the ignition. Coming down the long driveway, he stopped for the sudden whir of ambulance and fire truck, red and blue lights twinkling as they sped up the road. In the darkness again, coming out onto the state road, Sheridan knew that Casey had glamored him from day one, and he wanted to be in his world far more than he wished to destroy it.


Dena Affren gripped her stomach and got up.
“Put that damn cigarette out, Milo. You’re making me sick.”
“Since when?” Milo wondered, but he put it out as Dena went in the direction of the bathroom. She came back a moment later.
“I seriously thought I was going to throw up.”
“You’re as bad as Claire,” Mathan said.
Dena tilted her head.
“Maybe you’re both pregnant,” Meredith suggested from her seat on the edge of the sofa.
“You’re an evil bitch for wishing that on me,” Dena said. “I feel better now, anyway. I’m going to go make some popcorn.”
Meredith yawned. “None for me. I think its almost bedtime.”
The show was interrupted by a station banner reading: SPECIAL REPORT
“Oh, shit!” Dena put a hand on her hip.
Charlie Palmer materialized, and she said, “I’ve seen enough of him to last my whole life.”
“Good evening, Rossford,” Charlie said, soberly, “This just in…”

Face to face, Chay’s legs wrapped about Casey’s waist, they rose and fell together, bodies moist, Casey’s mouth was open, and so were his eyes as he held Chay’s face in his hands. They looked into each other, shaking and gasping before, with a gentle signal, Casey turned him around and pressed his stomach into Chay’s back. He pressed himself over and over against him, eyes closed, burying his face in Chay’s shoulder so that Chay could feel the stubble. He kissed him up and down, reaching under the boy to run his hands over Chay’s chest. Quickly Casey reached for the condom. Gently and with tenderness, he inserted his shiny finger, making Chay groan as Casey opened him. Casey’s hands lifted the boy by the hips and both of them gasped as, gently, he pushed his penis inside of him.


“Off of Old Hickory Road there was a train accident tonight. A freight train bound for Indianapolis was stopped in its tracks when it killed a young girl,” Andrew Palmer reported.
Meredith began to tremble, and she looked to Mathan while Andrew continued…

The bed creaked first a little, and then a lot, and then it groaned with the danger of breaking as Casey fucked him harder and harder. Chay reached his hand back to feel the solidness of Casey’s neck, the knot of his neckbone. He wanted to pull him deeper in while Casey kissed him over and over again, fucking him against the bed, sweat raining from him, Casey kept saying “I’m all for you, baby. I’m all for you. Everything…”

“What makes the accident that much more tragic is that by all reports the victim is one Robin Netteson, the same girl who only a few weeks ago was the center of media attention in the Rossford High School rape trial.”

They shook. He moved in him like a piston. He was one vibration as Chay’s body lifted and lifted up to heaven, the lights swirled, the bed shook, the world trembled and the lights went out. He shot out and out from himself, Casey’s hands were slick on his back, trying to hold him to earth as they both went into blackness.

Blackness and blackness, swirling in blackness, all the lights fainting as the couch, and the earth dropped from under Meredith Affren, and on the edge of everything she fell and fell, the scream of a train roaring in her ears.


DRIVING BACK INTO TOWN, everything was quiet in a hellish sort of way. By the time Sheridan got to his house he was glad to see the olive green siding and the screened in porch. He just wanted to go to bed.
He parked the car in the driveway and walked tiredly across the brown lawn, up the steps and into the house.
Mom and Dad were sitting on the sofa, and so were Layla and Will, and they were all looking at him.
“What?” he said.
Will just kept looking at him.
“What’s going on?” Sheridan became more irritable.
It was Layla who stood up. She came across the room, put her hands on his shoulders and looked at him tragically, like Layla never looked, and then she pulled him forward and held him.


At Saint Agatha’s Father Frank got up and, with the help of his great nephew, began turning the lights on, lighting candles and preparing for arrivals. As the lights of the old church came on, first over the altar, and then in the corners of the sanctuary, next all the way down the nave, Frank thought of saying something darkly sober about how good Robin Netteson was for the Catholic Church of late. But he left off. Unconsciously he was fingering the large beads of his rosary and in place of his own clever words he began to pray the Hail Mary.
Soon the bells were tolling from high above, and it was Sean who came running down the long aisle.
“It’s Dan Malloy on the phone. Over at Saint Barbara’s.”
“I know who Dan Malloy is,” Frank said and, making a small reverence at the altar, he turned, and holding the long brass lighter like a banner, went through the sacristy and back to the house.
“Yes, Daniel,” Frank said. “I know. I’ve opened the church. It’s a real mess is what it is.”
“Some days I want to give up the God business,” Dan said.
“Is that what they’re calling it these days in seminary?”
“I dunno. I haven’t been in seminary for twenty years.”
“I’m just waiting for folks to arrive,” Frank said. “Maybe if I left it open all the time, then I wouldn’t have to open it just tonight because it would make people different.”
“I don’t know what to say to them when they come,” Dan said. “What am I supposed to tell people?”
“The truth.”
“That I don’t know? That I don’t understand?”
“Yes.”
In the distance, Frank could hear Sean begin to play the organ. It wasn’t Catholic. It was from the Anglican requiem. I Know That My Redeemer Liveth. Frank resisted the urge to hum along and returned his attention to Dan Malloy.
“I don’t think uncertainty is what people want to hear,” Dan said
“I don’t think it’s your job to tell people what they want to hear,” Frank Slaughter differed. “As a priest of Christ, you are a witness to truth. Every Christian is. Forgive my preaching, I know you feel old and wise. But I’ve been a priest longer than you’ve been alive.”
“The truth will set you free,” Dan murmured.
“Yes. That’s right. It will. Jesus wasn’t bullshit when he said that. He was never bullshit.”
“But the truth is that I am confused and disheartened.”
“The Lord did not say happy truth will set you free, or what you wish was true will set you free, Daniel.”
Frank shook his head though, of course, Dan Malloy couldn’t see it.
“Truth is truth,” the old priest concluded.

When Bryant’s cell phone rang, Chad picked it up because it was on the table before him.
“Hello?”
“Where’s Bryant?”
“Nice to talk to you too, Sean.”
“Sorry. It’s nice to talk to you, Chad.”
“No, it isn’t.”
“Please don’t do that.”
“You’re the one who started it with what you said around the Christmas tree last week.”
Sean took a frustrated breath then said, “And what I said still stands. The only difference between you and me is I’m not harping on it. Now can I please talk to my big brother?”
Chad flipped the phone shut.
A second later it rang.
“Sorry,” Chad said. “I do that all the time.”
“You’re lying and that was petty, and—”
“Bryant!” Chad put the phone down and called his partner.
Bryant came into the living room from down the hall and Chad told him, “It’s Sean.”
“Oh,” Bryant leapt over the couch like someone fifteen years younger, all arms and legs, and Chad commented, “if you’re not going to keep your phone with you, what’s the point in having it?”
Deaf to it, or simply ignoring him, Bryant said, “What’s up? No, we’re listening to Christmas music and… what?” Bryant’s face changed. Chad wanted to grin for a moment. Bryant always looked like a boy, and he was so beautiful. That was the thing; he seemed to have only gotten better in the last decade.
He turned around and told Chad: “We gotta go to Saint Agatha’s.”
“What for?”
“You don’t have to. You have to teach in the morning.”
“No,” Chad got up, walking toward the closet for his coat.
“It’s horrible. One of the students at your school died. Maybe you know her?”
Sean’s conversation had made Chad irritable, and while Bryant handed him his coat and pulled out his own, Chad said, “Not if you don’t tell me.”
“Robin Netteson.”
“Bullshit,” Chad dismissed this. “Lightning can’t strike twice.”
“It can,” Bryant said, knowingly. “In nature and in life.”
Chad was incapable of tying his own scarf or buttoning his coat.
“And that,” Bryant told him, “is why we’re going to Saint A’s to be with our family.”


After that, phones began ringing all over town. It became important that everyone know where everyone else was. The only one unaccounted for was Chay, and Sheridan said to Will and Layla:
“If anyone asks where Chay is, he’s with me.”
Layla opened her mouth, but Will said, “Where is he?”
“He will be with me,” Sheridan said, heading out of the house.
“I think that’s the only answer we’re gon get,” Layla told Will.
“And…” Sheridan added. “When Meredith and Mathan get here, if they get here, tell them I’m going to be out a little while myself. Tell them me and Chay are out.”
“You want us to lie?” Will said.
“To the appropriate people,” Sheridan said. “Yes. Besides, it won’t be a total lie. I’m bringing Chay back.”
Before they could ask him any more questions, Sheridan went out the door.
His mother came back into the kitchen with a tray of tea.
“No one’s going to sleep tonight, are they?” Mrs. Klasko said.
“No, Ma,” said Will.
It was Layla who thought it made sense to tell Meredith and her cousin Mathan not to come, seeing as Sheridan and Chay weren’t there. But Dena told her that they were already on their way.
“Meredith is a real mess,” Dena said. “She fainted at the house. And she just spent the afternoon with Robin. She watched after that girl so carefully. I think she thought that the only way to make sure nothing ever happened to her again was to watch her at all times.
“And then this happens.”
When Meredith and Mathan arrived, the very tall boy led his girlfriend in carefully, and the blond girl sat down on the sofa beside Will, her eyes clearly some place else.
“It just seems impossible that so much tragedy could happen to one girl so quickly,” Will was saying, and, “How in the world did she not see the train? What was she doing at that time of night?”
“Of all the awful accidents,” Mrs. Klasko said.
Meredith looked up at them. She came to life enough to say: “You’re joking, right?”
They looked at her.
“Getting attacked by a group of boys she didn’t understand was an accident,” Meredith said.
“Walking to the train tracks when you knew the train was coming and getting run over?” Meredith shook her head. “She told me goodbye before we parted. Only I didn’t understand. She told me I love you and goodbye. This was no accident.”

When Sheridan arrived at the house he parked further away and then walked close to the porch before deciding against knocking, and simply seeing if he could get in.
It was open, and so he walked through the large old house, following the noises, heart palpitating to the feeling of being an intruder. It made sense. Nothing was right this night. Everything was wrong. He followed the sound and went down the side hall. Gold light came down the corridor and led to the bedroom.
He lay against the lentil, lightly. Not even believing he would be caught, entranced by what he was watching. Though he was larger, and though he was older, on the bed Casey was on his hands and knees, his head down, and little Chay, on his knees, his small buttocks flexing and unflexing, his hands planted on Casey’s perfect ass was fucking him. Sheridan felt his mouth dry. He was harder than he’d been in a long time. He watched and watched, his balls aching, his penis throbbing, and then he turned around, very slowly, while Casey gave a high, soft moan, and Sheridan left the house.
 
Poor Robin, this portion made me cry. I wish she had just talked to her friends or got help in some way. Such a waste. :( I think Sheridan is right about Casey manipulating Chay. That whole situation is very complicated and I am interested to see how it turns out. Great writing! I am going on a short holiday for the next few days so won't be able to check jub as often but ill try to get on occasionally. Hope you're having a good week!
 
I almost feel like I have to apologize for what happens to Robin. Robin is based on and the whole story is dedicated to a young college student around here whom this all actually happened to and who did take her own life. It was truly terrible and the only way I knew to deal with it was to put it at the center of this story and just walk her backwards to the moment of attack, so I knew from the start what would happen. I couldn't have done something like this to a character. In my mind she was already gone and I was looking back at how it happened. At this moment the situation with Chay and Casey is so muddy, and everyone is in the middle of so much grief, it's hard to really say who's right and who's wrong and what the intentions are. I hope you enjoy your vacation. If I was on vacation, I would check JUB that much either!
 
CHAPTER SIX CONTINUED

CHAD HAD BEEN SILENT the whole car ride, and now, as they parked across the street from Saint Agatha’s, its alcove lit golden in the late night, Bryant touched his wrist.
“I had her in my music class,” Chad said. “She was in choir last year.”
“It’s hard,” Bryant began, climbing out of the car and rounding it to open the door for Chad, who had gotten used to this over the years.
“A kid, so full of life. And then gone.”
A car came down Meridian, and when it had passed, they crossed.
“But she wasn’t full of life,” Chad said.
“I know you’re supposed to say that,” he continued as they crossed the street together, Chad looking both ways for vehicles that weren’t coming. “But she wasn’t lively. She wasn’t really pretty. She didn’t have a lot going for her. And then…. Everything happened to her.”
They could hear the organ music now, as they went up the old marble steps crusted in salt and rimed in old snow.
“It’s just not fair. And it’s Christmas next week.”
Passing through the vestibule, they entered the nave. Chad watched Bryant dip his fingers in holy water and cross himself, and then they traveled the long aisle until they found Uncle Frank sitting in the front pew, arms folded, one leg crossed over the other.
“Dan,” Bryant said in surprise to the priest beside his uncle.
“Your uncle was just putting things into perspective for me,” Dan Malloy said. The younger priest and the older priest were looking at the old lit altar, as if it were a movie screen.
“Whaddid he say?” Chad said.
“He said he didn’t know.”
Frank Slaughter shrugged elegantly to display this.
“Go up and visit Sean,” the old priest said. “Relieve him for awhile. You always have something nice to play.”
“An organist is a organist,” Chad said.
“Not so. And your repoitoire is better.”
“Sure,” Chad shrugged and jammed his hands in his pockets. “Maybe I’ll do some show tunes.”
“Something from Le Mis would be nice,” the old priest told the departing organist with not a hint that he was joking.
Up in the loft, Sean Babcock gave only a nod to recognize Chad and kept playing to the end. He thought of giving a long inappropriately triumphant finish to the hymn, but stopped. He had learned how not to act from a Trappist organist when he’d stayed in a monastery. He didn’t like the man and thought he was a prissy homosexual, the kind that never had sex and was filled with resentment over it.
“Well, when did you all come here?” Sean said, coming toward Chad.
“A few minutes ago,” Chad shrugged. “Bryant thought we should all support each other at a time like this.”
Sean snorted and Chad said, “What?”
“You know exactly what. It was in your tone. Support each other at a time like this…” he shook his head.
“It’s kind of funny,” Chad agreed. “To be in a church. Around this time. Makes you think about… God. I try to pay attention now whenever I play organ here or at Saint Barb’s.”
“You do?” Sean raised an eyebrow.
“You’re a Catholic. Your uncle’s a priest. I mean… you must believe a little bit.”
Sean shook his head.
“They could be talking about Zeus. This is a job.”
Sean looked at Chad, gauging the look on his face.
“So much disapproval.”
“No…” Chad checked himself, and saw that it wasn’t disapproval. Not exactly. “Just… Sometimes I think you’re so like Bryant. You look like him.”
“Do I feel like him?”
“Please stop,” Chad said. “But… you’re not him.”
“No,” Sean looked down at the nave of the church. “I’m not BJ. Did you think I was? Is that why you came to me?”
Chad didn’t answer.
“You used to love it.”
“That’s done now,” Chad said. He sat down at the organ shaking off one shoe and then using his toes to pull off the other. He began pushing the pedals with his socked feet.
He was humming to himself as he played.
As his fingers moved up and down, and his shoulders lifted and fell, suddenly he felt Sean’s mouth at his ear.
Chad tried to shake him like he would a mosquito, to concentrate on playing, but Sean’s hands fell over his hands, Sean’s arms over his and he whispered.
“You miss it.”
There was the familiar smell of Sean’s breath and the cologne that Bryant never wore, that was like cinnamon.
“You miss me against you. You miss me inside of you? Don’t you?”

SHELLEY LATHAM OPENED THE DOOR and was surprised to see Sheridan Klasko, red faced, and furious looking. Before she could say anything, he kissed her hard on the mouth, and then when she understood what was up, she closed the door behind her and they moved to the bed undressing.
His shirt still on, his underwear and pants around his knees, he began fucking her. She was just in her tee shirt and the nightlight was dimmed because she’d been getting ready to go to bed. Her thighs were tight around him and she bit her lip as he moved up and down, in and out of her. And then he moved up and up, his face getting redder, his eyes glinting with tears, and he was like fire, or like lightning. She kept catching her breath, her hand reached up like a claw as they jolted together, and there was a scream. She was surprised that it was her own. Only a second later, Sheridan moaned and wailed, shaking between her legs. It was over nearly as quick as it had begun.
They parted and Sheridan lay on his back beside her. Sweat stained his pits and soaked his tee shirt. He didn’t want to pull his pants up. Shelley, almost demure, pulled her long tee down.
Sheridan said, “Robin Netteson is dead.”


THE LIGHTS WERE ON in Fenn’s house, and upstairs he sat beside his son’s bed.
“You can’t hide what’s going on from me,” Dylan told him.
Fenn pushed the covers up around the boy’s neck.
“I wouldn’t try.”
“I think you would,” Dylan said, sagely. “If you could.”
Fenn looked down at him.
“Grown ups are always hiding things,” Dylan said.
“Well, I won’t hide anything from you. How is that?”
Fenn thought, ruefully, that it was a losing battle to keep anything from the boy anyway.
“You know what I think, Papa?”
“What, Little One?”
“I think everyone’s afraid. Grown ups are so afraid. That’s why they hide things. Just like kids.”
“That…” Fenn began. He climbed onto the bed beside Dylan.
“You know what, son?”
Dylan climbed out of the bed and mirrored Fenn, sitting Indian fashion, his chin in his fists.
“What, Father?”
“I think you’re absolutely right.”
“Except for you, Dad,” Dylan said. “You’re not afraid of anything.”
“Oh, son,” Fenn pulled Dylan’s head onto his knee and stroked the little boy’s hair.
“That is not true.”

Brendan was sitting in the kitchen draining a bowl of soup. Across from him were Julian and Claire who said, “Layla told me Sheridan came into the house strange and left stranger.”
“How are you, Kenny?” Julian said to the young man with the thick red hair.
“I think I need to go,” Kenny told them. “I think I just need to go to bed.”
Julian nodded.
“Here I come,” Brendan said, pushing his chair in and going to the sink to rinse out his bowl.
Kenny waited at the back door near the refrigerator.
“And here we go,” Brendan said, opening the door. It was cold outside, and he was only wearing jeans and a tee shirt. But they lived just downstairs, Claire remembered.
Julian looked from Kenny and Brendan to his wife.
“How do you feel?” he asked her, because she was patting her stomach.
“A little sick to tell you the truth. I think it’s time to get one of those little sticks you pee on.”
Julian resisted the urge to smile and said to Kenny. “We’ll be around to check on you.”
“Thanks,” Kenny McGrath said. “But not tonight. I’m just going to sleep tonight.”
When he and Brendan had left and barely made it around the back yard, Kenny turned around and kissed Brendan desperately, pushing his back into the wall. He hung against him that way for a while and, mouth open with concern, Brendan looked at him.
“I need you,” Kenny whispered, threading his fingers into Brendan’s hair. “I need you inside of me tonight.”
Brendan nodded, dumbly, and then his arms around Kenny’s waist, he led him around the house.
 
CHAPTER SIX CONTINUED


The next morning, Meredith Affren stopped when she heard her name called.
Looking through the crowded hall of Rossford High School for whoever was calling, she lurched a little, remembering that she wasn’t half as steady as she thought she was. She’d only slept for an hour, and when she got up, though Nell told her she should stay in bed, she had to go to school.
Coming down the hall, his blue eyes crack fiend wide was Kip Danley.
“Kip?”
“I didn’t expect to see you here today,” he said as a passerby jostled him.
“I couldn’t stay home.”
“It wasn’t an accident, was it?”
“I don’t know,” Meredith said. Then, “No. It wasn’t.”
The bell rang overhead, and Meredith said, “School bells are satanic. I can’t wait for college.”
“I killed her,” Kip said.
Meredith blinked.
“I killed her. Just like anything, I killed her.”
Meredith said nothing.
“I could have stopped it. I could have said something, shouted, hit someone a little harder. Run to get the police.”
“Yeah,” Meredith agreed. “You probably could have.”
“I… I didn’t do much at all. I could have done a little bit more.”
“You did what most people would do,” Meredith said, tiredly.
“People aren’t good. They aren’t heroes. They… do just… enough. And not even enough. If anyone else was in your place they would have done the same thing. Probably less. Robin… She said you were good. She remembered you as a good person.”
“But I’m not a good person.”
“No,” Meredith allowed. “Probably not. But… you’re not a killer, either.”
She didn’t say it in a consoling way. She just said it. She just shrugged when she said it.
“Meredith,” Kip said, as she headed toward class.
She turned around and looked at him.
“Yes?”
“Could I…? Would it be possible for us to talk sometime?”
Meredith sighed.
“I think…” Meredith held up a finger, “I think I need to get back to you on that one.”
Exhausted, she shook her head.
And then she left.


EARLY THE NEXT MORNING, Sheridan showed up at Casey’s house. Sheridan was unwashed, pale and tired and Casey, arms folded in the darkness of his west facing work room, said, “Let me tell him.”
“No!” Sheridan almost shouted. “No, I’ll tell him. She was our friend.”
“Alright,” Casey said in the tone of someone who really didn’t feel like fighting.
“Well, then at least I’ll be there when you tell him.”
Sheridan nodded. Sheridan realized that he didn’t really have much choice but to nod.
“We should tell him now. We should wake him up.”
Casey nodded, unfolded his hands and pushed himself up from the stool. Again Sheridan noted that Casey was only deceptively small. As he followed his new employer, he tried to get out of his head what he had seen last night. Chay and Casey fucking, what had filled him with lust and confusion and made him go for Shelley. But it was too late and his dick was already fully hard as Casey came into the room and shook Chay awake.
Sheridan sat down, closing his thighs over the stiffness of his penis and Chay said: Wha?” still half asleep, and then, looking at Sheridan, he frowned in confusion.
“Just get dressed,” Casey said. “Sheridan has something to tell you.”
Sheridan turned around, but no one left the room while Chay pulled on clothes, and then Sheridan said: “It’s about Robin?”
“Whaddo you mean?”
Chay’s tee shirt was half on, he was buttoning his jeans.
Sheridan opened his mouth. It had seemed like it would be so much easier to say it. But he couldn’t get the words out. It was as if someone had put a curse on him. He opened his mouth. Nothing came out. He opened his mouth again. It was as if someone had stuffed it with cotton. He looked to Casey, as if Casey were the source of the curse. Casey looked confused.
Then Chay looked at Casey too, and Casey told him: “Your friend… Robin. She died last night.”


The light that fell into their basement apartment was grey white, and when Brendan woke up the furnace was whirring and then it began to roar. He turned to his side and Kenny was still asleep, splayed more like someone who had been knocked out than someone who had fallen asleep. It disturbed Brendan, and he climbed out of the covers and tried to move the other naked young man to a better position.
As he did, Kenny lunged out a little, before waking, then shaking his head he moaned: “Bren?”
“It’s just me, Ken,” Brendan told him.
Kenny nodded.
They were quiet, and then Kenny said, “I need the bathroom.”
He was gone a while, and Brendan climbed out of bed, pulled on a pair of trunks and went into the kitchenette to turn on the coffee pot. He leaned against the counters, crossing his legs and folding his bare arms over his chest, looking at the pot in the darkness of the kitchenette, waiting for it to begin percolating. He had to get in the bathroom. He hoped Kenny wouldn’t take a long time. He hoped Kenny wasn’t doing anything that would make the bathroom unpleasant to follow him into.
The toilet flushed and Brendan made for it.
When he came out, whistling, his hands washed, Kenny was standing there, in tee shirts and sleep pants and he handed Brendan clothes as well. They got dressed and went into the kitchen. Kenny flipped on the light and put down a yogurt. Brendan took out cups and coffee creamer. Sugar.
They did everything in silence and Kenny flipped open the yogurt top. He stuck in his spoon.
They both sighed.
Brendan put a hand to his mouth and breathed.
“My breath.”
“Smells like coffee. Coffee covers everything.”
Kenny dug his spoon around a little and then sighed, shaking his head.
Brendan turned from the contemplation of his yogurt, to his boyfriend.
“I wanna die right now,” Kenny said.

Upstairs, in the living room, Todd explained: “Brendan was supposed to go to the store with Fenn, but he might not because Kenny’s torn up.”
“About?” Milo sat down on the old sofa.
“The girl who died. Didn’t your sister know her?”
“Robin? Yeah,” Dena said.
“She was Kenny’s cousin.”
“Shit,” Dena and Milo said together.
“He didn’t tell me that,” Milo said.
Dena looked at him.
“I’m his best friend, and he didn’t tell me that.”
“Maybe he and Bren wanna be alone,” Dena said.
“Fuck that,” Milo said, grabbing his coat. “You hang tight, Deen. I’ll be back.”
Dena watched her husband leave the house and Todd said, “What about you?”
“I didn’t know her,” Dena said. “And there’s nothing worse than someone who doesn’t really care pretending to.”
While Fenn chuckled in the corner, Todd raised an eyebrow at his niece.
“What?” she said. “And besides… I’m not going to say this around anyone but you all, but what was that homely girl doing hanging around in the parking lot with those boys? She should have fucking known better.”
Dena folded her arms over her chest, frowning in contemplation over the horror of the last few weeks.
“Oh, I almost forgot,” Dena said. She shook her head. “How could I forget? It’s the most wonderful news. But I better wait til Miles is back—”
The front door burst open, but it wasn’t Milo. It was an excited Claire Lawden and her husband.
Claire waved a stick around and shouted.
“Its blue! It’s true! I’m pregnant!”
As Fenn and Todd clapped their hands and approached her, Dena said, “You bitch!”
They all looked at her.
She stood there frowning, and then she stood there smiling.
“You stole my fucking thunder.”
Todd looked from his niece to Fenn’s and he said, slowly, “Both… of you?”
Claire and Dena looked at each other, mouths open.
Fenn took Dena’s hand and lead her across the living room, and then he took Claire’s hand. He stood between the two young women, and now he kissed them both on their foreheads, squeezing their hands, bringing them both into his light embrace.


MORE SATURDAY
 
Those were a great two parts. The loss of Robin has affected all the characters deeply. I hope the guys who raped her get what is coming to them. That is great about Dena and Claire both being pregnant! Excellent writing and I look forward to the next part!
 
END OF CHAPTER SIX

From the perch on her sofa, Radha Hatangady sat staring at the fat black Buddha on the stereo.
“This isn’t good,” she said.
Layla and Will sat across from them on the love seat and Mark in old corduroys, his hair uncut, said nothing. Aidan Michaelson had just returned from the kitchen with a Sprite.
“It’s not good for anyone,” Radha said. “I can’t believe that girl died like that.”
“I’ll light a candle for her spirit,” Aidan said.
Layla looked up at him and said, “Sprite? This early?”
Aidan wagged a finger, “That’s why we didn’t last, Lawden.”
“What will this do to the case?” Will said.
They all looked at him.
“Everyone was wondering the same thing,” he said, after a moment.
“He’s right,” Layla said.
Radha kept looking at the Buddha.
“Rads?” Mark said.
“Yes,” she said, not looking at Mark.
“I know what this has done to you. I know how you feel. And… I know how you feel about having Russell in the house with us.”
Radha said nothing.
“Radha, would you look at me.”
At last, she did.
“I know how all of this has made you feel. But the way it’s made me feel, the way all this… life being fragile makes me feel is...”
She looked at him, waiting for him to continue.
“Radha Hatangady. Will you marry me?”
There was a little gasp in the room, but Radha said, without change of expression.
“Yes, Mark. Of course I will.”
“Great!” Aidan clapped his hands together. “That’s great and fucking about time.”
Radha looked at Aidan, and gave a small smile before her expression changed.
“What?” Layla asked.
But Radha looked at her fiancé and said, “Mark? Where is Russell?”

As Russell Turner climbed the little hill he whistled.

Follow the drinkin gourd
Follow the drinkin gourd
For the old man is coming
To carry you to freedom
Follow the drinkin gourd!

He could hear the humming, he could hear the rushing. Last night when he’d heard about Robin on the news, the sound of the train outside went through him like lightning. It called to him. So now he climbed up. He stood there on the tracks. It was getting louder and louder, coming closer and closer with no way of stopping. The wind increased in his face as he heard it roaring, and he wished he’d tied his shoelaces to the rails, or could bind his whole body there, anything to keep him anchored.
He hummed a little as it roared.
It was coming.
It was coming.
It was filling his ears
Filling his vision, shaking his body.
In a strange way filling his mouth.
It was…

Light.
 
SEVEN



CHRISTMAS



MEREDITH CAME AS SOON as she got the phone call from Mrs. Netteson. She didn’t tell anyone about it. She just drove over. Dena had called earlier and said, I have excellent news!” Meredith thought it would be better to hear whatever the Nettesons were going to say and get that out of the way first. It couldn’t possibly be good.
As she drove through town she thought of Kip Danley. She wondered what she would have done in his place that night. But then, if she had been with Robin, nothing would have ever happened. She would have told Robin it was time to go and that they had no business with any of those strange boys. And in a dark parking lot at that.
“What was wrong with her?” Meredith finally let herself say. She hadn’t wanted to think it. She knew so many people had already. And it was dangerously close to saying: she asked for it.
“Why didn’t she have some sense? She should have known better.”
Meredith stopped talking. It was a relief now to just say it, to say it out loud and, what was more, to make sure no one ever heard her say it out loud. She was just so tired of denying her rage.

In the house, Mr. Netteson said, “Thank you for coming,” and Meredith nodded, not able to find anything sensible to say.
Mrs. Netteson made a gesture to her husband, which he nodded to, rose and said, “I’ll leave you ladies alone.”
“Thank you,” Meredith said at the same time Robin’s mother did, and both women looked at each other, Mrs. Netteson giving Meredith a small smile.
“You should read this,” Robin’s mother said.
She held a folded piece of paper in her hands, and she gave it over to Meredith.
“Open it,” Mrs. Netteson charged in a small voice.
Meredith didn’t really want to. The paper rustled as she opened it. Everything else in the house was so quiet.
Meredith read it once, very quickly. Then another time, this time slow and finally she placed it on her knee.
“I’m not afraid,” she quoted. “I’m just going to take a little ride. I’ve got to…”
Mrs. Netteson nodded.
“That’s what she said,” said Meredith. “I’m just going to take a little ride. So… she planned it.”
“Yes,” Mrs. Netteson said. It sounded better than saying: suicide.
They were both quiet.
The clock was ticking. The cat yawned with a little “yeow” and outside, on Veram Street, a car rumbled by.
“You knew it though,” Mrs. Netteson said. “Even without the note you knew.”
“I thought I knew,” Meredith agreed.
“So did I,” Eileen Netteson said.
Meredith knew the older woman had something to say. Finally she did.
“It’s just…” Eileen shook her head and took a deep breath. “I know this sounds terrible, but… maybe you know how I feel, Meredith. You’re a smart girl. I mean, you’re what they call an old soul.”
For some reason this made Meredith’s eyes sting. They were hot with tears. Her face ached with tears not falling while Mary Ann Netteson continued:
“She just… in the end didn’t have much choice over anything,” Robin’s mother reflected. “And… I just think that with everything… It sort of makes me feel good, you know, to know she at least chose that.”
 
A lot going on in these new portions. I feel so sorry for Eileen. All of the characters are going through it at the moment with what happened. I am glad Radha and Mark are getting married. Great writing as always and I look forward to the next portion!
 
Thank you for reading, and thank you for letting yourself be a little sad. Yes, we've reached a place of incredible sadness and everyone is shaken. Of course, the sadness isn't over yet, because, though Radha and Mark are getting married, they still don't know what's happened to Russell.
 
SEVEN

CHRISTMAS CONTINUED




THE HOUSE WAS STUNNED TO SILENCE. As they entered, Layla’s and Will’s fingers locked together. He looked at her and she was glad to have him. She wanted to say: “Don’t ever cut your hair.”
He opened his mouth to speak, and then shut it.
Out of the crowd, Radha approached them. She was more sober than they’d ever seen her, but black became her, and Layla thought how even in this, with the kohl rimming her large eyes, she was still alluring. Everyone else here was so lost and so plain.
“I feel like I shouldn’t even be here,” Layla confessed.
“I feel the same way,” Radha said, looking around. “And this is going to be my family.
Across the room, Aidan’s head was pressed to Mark’s, but the two men didn’t seem to be saying much to each other. Annelise Michaelson’s hair was tied up and she was with one of Mark’s cousins. When she saw Will and Layla, she lifted up a finger and crossed the room.
“Well, I guess it’s official?” she said, looking from Will in his rumpled jacket with his shoulder length hair then to Layla.
When neither of them said anything, Annelise said, “It’s the one good thing to come out of all this awful year.”
Now Chad North came into the room along with Bryant, who really didn’t seem to belong.
“I heard about something like this once,” Chad said. “In California. A rash. One kid got in front of a train, and then after him, or her, I don’t remember, it was about three others who did. All suicides in the same spot.”
Radha smiled grimly, patted her friend on the shoulder, and said, “You might not want to tell Mark that story. The last month, learning about Russell and that girl… And now both of them in the same twenty-four hours. The thing is we’ll never know what happened.”
“I think we do know what happened,” Will said.
“I think she means the details,” Annelise said to her ex boyfriend.
“I think I did too,” Will said. “But now…. I don’t need them. I don’t want them. Not really. I want something. But I don’t know what it is.”
Hoping to change the subject, Bryant said to Radha, “Is it true? What I heard about you and Mark?”
At this, Radha brightened and she said, “It is! Thank you Bryant.”
She hugged him quickly.
“You were two of my best students.”
“Mark was one of your best students?”
“Well,” Bryant confessed at the doubt in Radha’s voice, “he had a great personality.”
Claire came out of the bathroom, her hand on her stomach and Layla said, concerned:
“Is it usual to throw up all the time during pregnancy?”
“It’s usual for me,” Claire said. “I talked to Paul last night… I can’t wait to tell him. Didn’t even tell Kirk. He can’t keep a secret. At least not from Paul.”
“When did you find out?” Bryant asked.
“When Julian got tired of me throwing up all the time and bought a home pregnancy test about a week ago.” She turned to Layla.
“Feel like being a godmother?”
“This is the second time I’ve been threatened with that in a week,” Layla said.
“Dena…” Will reflected. “Knocked up.”
All of a sudden Chad spoke.
“Is it true? That they’re thinking about changing Wally Reed’s charges from rape to murder?”
“Thank you for making the conversation a lot less light,” Claire told her old friend, but Radha confessed: “I kind of hope so.”
“I know Meredith hopes its true,” Layla said. “Meredith Affren,” she said to clarify the matter.
“She doesn’t think it’ll happen though,” Layla continued. “And she told me she isn’t even entirely sure it should. But… I don’t know. I think we’re responsible for a lot more than we admit. Robin’s blood is on Wally’s hands. Maybe Russell’s too.”
She gave a bitter chuckle here and then said, shaking her head, “Life is such a bitch sometimes.”


O LORD OF LIGHT our only hope of glory
Your radiance shines on all who look to you
Come light the hearts of all in dark and shadow

O spring of Joy, rain down upon our spirits
Our thirsty hearts are yearning for your word
Come make us whole, be comfort to our hearts

For you, O Lord, my soul in stillness waits
Truly my hope is in you!

From the mirror on the organ, Chad North could see Keith McDonald light the last purple candle. Now the lights wavered, three purple, one bright pink, and Christmas was a few days off. He liked playing at Saint John Chrysostom. He needed to get away from Catholicism, although it always attracted him. This was the happy medium. He needed to get away from a place where he felt like he was pretending not to be gay and they were pretending not to notice. Then again, in some ways it was more comfortable to be at Saint Agatha’s or Saint Barbara’s, where his business was his business and anyone who knew anything about him, and anyone who mattered even a little bit knew he was Bryant’s lover than to be here where, if he talked about Bryant it was… a political statement. It was a thing that threatened the more conservative members and galvanized the so-called liberals.


For you, O Lord, my soul in stillness waits
Truly my hope is in you.

As Keith McDonald said: “In the name of the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit…”
Chad thought about what Sean had said, bitterly:
“They could be talking about Zeus!”
Here, they might as well be.
What did he believe? He loved music. He loved working around town playing organ. He loved liturgy. He loved playing for the Vespers and Morning Prayer services here. He liked that much better than Mass. But did he believe in anything, really? Chad didn’t ask himself questions, not really, and when he did they weren’t very demanding ones.
He began to play the Gloria. He knew it so well he could drift off into thought even while adding the occasional flourish.
He liked the grottos at the Catholic churches. He hadn’t grown up with that, little manmade caves filled with candles where a saint lived inside of a statue and you could sit in front of her or his presence and bare your sorrows. No matter what ideas people had about saints, the saints he had seen never judged. Nothing was ever too much for them. You could tell them anything and always their plaster fingers were open in love. They were open with a human love, and with God’s love. Their faces were so calm and solemn. Nothing shocked, no request was too much. He wished he believed in them. He wished he could get to that place. Bryant lived in that place. That’s why he loved him so much. He wished he could tell someone, anyone, about everything happening inside of him.

Chad sat back sighing while the congregation chanted the psalm. They didn’t use an organ today. They sang from one side of the church to the other, something he liked much better than Catholic Mass.




Rescue me from my enemies, O God;
Protect me from those who rise up against me.

Rescue me from evildoers
And save me from those who thirst for my blood

See how they lie in wait for my life
How the mighty gather together against me…

And as he sat, relaxing, his socked feet playing with each other, he remembered the other night, Sean’s body pressed behind him, Sean’s arms over his arms, his smell, the scrag of his unshaven cheek as he whispered, and suddenly Chad blinked, embarrassed because he had an erection in church while he was listening to people pray.

Glory be to the Father
And to the Son
And to the Holy Spirit
As it was in the beginning, is now
And ever shall be
World without end
Amen!

He was embarrassed and he was afraid, because he knew Sean still wanted him, and Chad wasn’t sure how much longer he would be able to stay away.


To Kirk Stanley, he just looked so damned good. It was like a scene in one of those romantic movies, and there was Paul with one bag over his shoulder and another two in his hands. Kirk was going to fetch those. He had on those gray slacks and that clean white shirt. His marmalde hair was freshly cut and his shades perched on his head. Those eyes that were flashing at him! And when Paul was coming to him, and he was coming to Paul, he anticipated his smell. That spicy sweet cologne from the blue bottle, and the deeper smell, the touch of sweat, the iron of his breath, the indescribable smell of freshly washed marmalade colored hair.
They kissed in the concourse and this was the first man who ever kissed him publicly. But this was O’Hare, in Chicago, where the concourses were larger than the streets of Rossford and women in saris, men in turbans and dishikis, brown, black, ivory people walked to and fro proclaiming every nation. Above them a flight for Tokyo was being called and Kirk took a bag and then clasping Paul’s hand, the two men walked together.
“How was New York?”
“It was good. What was more, it paid. And, let’s see… My character is now truly, and officially dead. But there’s this one part they want me to try out for, and would you mind that?”
“You know I wouldn’t.”
Paul gave him that great smile that spread across his face.
“That’s great,” he said. “Stop. I wanna kiss you again.”
Kirk let him. When they had first gotten together, Kirk was surprised by the fact that, no matter how out he said he was, he was a little unnerved about being kissed in public. Eight years into this and three children later, he didn’t care. Their love was their’s, and as if picking up on the string of his thought, now Paul said, “And by the way… Where are my kids?”
“With Fenn. He still remembers how I crashed the car when Elias and Bennett were fighting and he said, very convincingly by the way, that there was no way in hell I was going to drive from Rossford to Chicago with three toddlers.”
“Well…” Paul admitted, “he was probably right. And I’m definitely thankful. But I do want to see my babies.
“Oh, Claire told me about Robin? And about Radha’s brother-in-law. Her almost brother-in-law.”
“Yeah,” Kirk murmured. “That’s really shaken the whole town.”
At the sound of his voice, Paul said, as they neared the glass doors, “Did it shake you?”
“A little. Yes.
“But,” Kirk remembered, lightening, “Claire says she has something else to tell you.”
“Yes. And she said she wants to tell me in person.”
“She wouldn’t tell me either, so we’ve got to get home.”
Paul hooked an arm around him.
“Just in time for Christmas.”
 
Looks like it is going to be a sad Christmas for all concerned. It is nice though to see so many of the characters supporting each other. I hope Chad doesn't stray from Brian but I can see that it definitely might happen. Great writing and a great portion! I look forward to the next one soon.
 
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