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The Ends of Rossford

That was a great portion! I hope Moshe and Laurel can work things out. Everything is really coming together and I am enjoying the end of this story and the different time periods together in the same portions. Excellent writing and I look forward to more tomorrow!
 
Well, Laurel did have her talk with Moshe's mother, and I think they're on their way to working things out.
 
CONCLUSION OF THE DEMONS ARE DEMONS


Fenn Houghton was a water person in the wade-on-the-shore-of-Lake Michigan sense of being a water person. He was not a throw off your shirt and splash around like an otter water person—like Dan—and so he was glad for Dan when a family showed up on the second day. They were from the church Dan had grown up in, and when the children came out they swung on his arms and dunked him in water. They buried him up to his neck in the sand though it was damn near autumn. The mother sympathized with Fenn. They sat on the edge of the beach smoking cigarettes together.
“I remember you,” she said. “From years ago. When Danny was in college.”
“Yes, I came up here a few times.”
“Frankly,” she said, exhaling, “I wondered why you were friends with him. I have to tell you, Dan was always a nice boy. But he used to be uptight as fuck.”
Fenn let out a long laugh, and the woman said, “I’m glad you see what I mean. But look at him now! You’ve loosened him the hell up.”
The children had jumped on Dan with such ferocity, Fenn was afraid for him as he went plunging into the water and then came up, spluttering.
“I don’t like it when they say things about priests,” the woman said. “I grant you some of it—a lot of it—is true. And a few years ago I heard, though they covered it up, about these boys who had been messed over by a priest up here, and I wondered how that could happen, why a woman wouldn’t be careful with her kids hanging out with these men. I have a theory now.”
“Alright?” Fenn said, interested in learning.
She pointed a finger at Dan Malloy, as he came up out of the water, dripping, his dark, sandy hair plastered to his head.
“Dan was a very dull boy. Now he loves being a child. You need a man who can be a child. Maybe that’s what some priests are like. I don’t know. And of course you need a man who knows he’s a man. Now that’s the rare thing.”

When the family had left, Dan came into the cabin dripping and laughing.
“What if I hug you right now?”
“And soak me?”
Dan grinned and threw his hands on Fenn’s shoulders.
“You’re such a kid.”
Dan tilted his head and gave him a look.
“Not totally a kid.” His eyes went to the bed. “I like grown up things too.”
Fenn’s shoulders were very wet, and Dan stood there in his trunks, smelling like lake water, his semi wet hair sticking up.
“Daniel, what happens in the long run? I can’t see being your… mistress is a good word.”
“You’re not my mistress!” Dan backed away. He shook water out of his hair like a dog and it sprayed Fenn.
“But we are each others’ very private lives, and having us as an open life would end your vocation.”
Dan dropped his arms and began drying his hair with the red towel that hung on the bathroom door. He took off his trunks and dried his beautiful body, saying nothing for a moment, and then he wrapped the towel around his waist.
“Do you have any idea how much I love you?” Dan said.
“Yes, I do.”
“There are so many ways to serve God,” Dan insisted. “There are so many different ways to love people. What in the world makes you think that… if things came to it, that I couldn’t leave the Church for you?”
Then Dan came forward and said, “Do you want me to? Do you want me to leave right now? Leave? Would that prove it to you?”
“Oh, my God,” Fenn sat down on the bed, “It isn’t about proving something. It really isn’t.”
“Then what?”
“It is about… what is right. And what is possible. Daniel, I don’t need you to prove your love, and I don’t think you’re betraying me or betraying God or… anything. I think you should have it all, all the time.”
“You make me right,” Dan said, sitting down beside him. “I wasn’t right until I was with you. I didn’t love people until I was with you. I wasn’t a good priest. When I wake up next to you I’m right.”
“And I’m right too, but it can’t last.”
“I could leave.”
“We’ve been through that. Listen,” Fenn said. “I don’t care about the Church. But you? That’s another matter. If you stopped being a priest, at least now, you would no longer be yourself. You would become something else that you don’t love, that isn’t you. That isn’t happy. I know that so clearly there’s no doubt in my mind.”
Now Dan stood over him.
“Then you’re going to leave me?”
“I’ll never leave you,” Fenn said frankly. “I will stop sleeping with you, though.”
Fenn placed his a hand on Dan’s hip, right over where he had tied the towel and it rested there on the heat of his skin.
“Fine,” Dan said.
Dan turned his back to him like a child, and Fenn waited for him to speak.
“I came back here because I thought we’d be together,” Dan said. “I thought we’d be together all night.”
“Be together?”
“You know just what I mean,” Dan turned around.
“Did you plan to stop sleeping with me today? Right now?”
The towel was just hanging under Dan’s flat stomach, the dark hair of his groin rising from it. And Fenn would give him up. He would, he absolutely would. Soon enough. But what he said now was:
“No, Daniel. Not today. Not tomorrow.”
He stood up, and Dan’s hands went to Fenn’s shirt. He lifted it up, and then his hands went down into Fenn’s pants, and he kissed him.
Fenn said, as they went to the bed, “And not for a while.”

TOMORROW NIGHT WE BEGIN THE EPILOGUE OF THE ENDS OF ROSSFORD
 
That was a well done conclusion to this part of Dan and Fenn's story. I like these glimpses of them together and while I knew it was going to end eventually it was still nice to see. Great writing and I look forward to the epilogue tomorrow!
 
EPILOGUE
Dan Malloy leaned over Fenn and whispered his name.
“It’s time to get up,” he told him.
Fenn yawned and put his head in the pillow, but finally turned to look up at the man with the grey blue eyes and the grey golden hair.
“Aren’t you guys supposed to be off to meet Brendan or something?” Keith McDonald demanded, leaning against the door of the spare room.
“I need coffee,” Fenn said. “And cigarettes.”
“If you’d gotten up two hours ago,” Dan said on his way out, “we could be gone by now.
“Thackeray’s been up for hours.”
“I thought you might be dead, Dad,” Thackeray said as Fenn came out of his room.
“We need to make a run,” Dan said. “Go to the store for some things.”
“Can I go?” Thackeray asked Fenn.
“Of course you can. And don’t forget your scarf and gloves.”

While Fenn sat in what three months out of the year was the sun room, looking at the partially frozen lake that was about to freeze, Keith McDonald sat down beside him.
“Could I possibly get a cigarette?”
Fenn smiled at him.
“I had no idea!”
“Dan doesn’t either.” As he took Fenn’s lighter, Keith said, “He doesn’t need to know everything.”
Fenn exhaled a long blast of smoke and Keith said, “Was that Paul Anderson who called last night?”
“He was one of the calls,” said Fenn.
“He was never right with Dylan and Elias. He called to say he was sorry about that. Why he called last night I don’t know. Christmas?”
“Anyway, the last call was Todd. He always calls me before he goes to bed.”
“That’s nice,” Keith murmured. “Thirty years, huh?”
“Oh, God,” Fenn shook his head. “How amazing is that?”
The two of them sat quietly, looking at the lake, and then Dan came in, crying, “Keith!”
He quickly stubbed out the cigarette while Fenn raised his high in salute.
“Good God! And now you’re poisoning my husband as well!”
Dan put down the grocery bag and the skull cap on his head was hanging loose.
“Your head looks like a navy blue condom,” Fenn noted.
Dan frowned, shook his head and then said, “Are you ready? Thackeray’s in the car.”
“Bags are right there,” Fenn gestured to them.

They drive was long. The drive was sun and shadow sun, and tree limb, white snow, sharp blue sky, asphalt, poor brave cows out in fields. The drive was the peace of being with Dan at last. How long he had been away. Fenn would turn and look at him, and Dan, knowing he was being looked, at would smile.
The first year he’d left the priesthood he was glad to be gone. He had been so desperately lonely and the Church felt so dead, so on its way out as if two thousand years was all it could stand. For a very long time he didn’t set foot in one even though Keith said Mass every Sunday.
And then he’d begun to help out in the shelters around town and, at last, he had come to the small church in town. He understood then why he wasn’t going. If Dan went, if he saw his lover lift that wafer and that cup, he would realize it was the same Body and the same Blood he’d lifted in Catholic churches, and he needed to do this again. There had been the relatively brief work of becoming an Anglican priest. It was the psychology of switching churches that lasted far beyond the paperwork. For some time he didn’t know if he was Anglican or if he was Catholic.
“You are alive,” Fenn said. “And you are with God. And that’s all that matters.”
“There were times when I wondered if you were right to let me go,” Dan told him.
“Surely you don’t wonder now. I think Keith took care of that.”
“No. Keith is something different. I wanted to be with you. I loved being a priest and a Catholic priest, but I would have put it all away to be anything for you. A lot of men would have let me. When Keith came I was done with that. It was a whole different thing. We hadn’t just let each other go, you and me. We had become something entirely different.”
Dan shrugged, “So we weren’t the issue. Not then. No, I learned that you were right much earlier.
“When?”
“When I saw who was right for you. The same way that the Church and then Keith were right for me. It was Todd. I wasn’t jealous at all. I was glad. When Todd finally came, I understood.”


“I’M THINKING OF joining the army.”
“You telling or you asking?”
“I’m stating an option,” Todd said. “Feeling around to see how you feel?”
“What does it matter how I feel?”
“Why do you pretend it doesn’t?”
“If you go off to the Persian Gulf, or wherever they send you—And why, in God’s great ass would you want to go into the army?—then it’s really your business, not mine.”
“Firstly,” Todd said, folding his hands, “I want to go into the army to do something for my country. And secondly, I want to make a man out of myself.”
Fenn turned away from him and said, “I can’t even believe you said that shit. Not to me. Not with a straight face.”
“Can I come over tonight?”
Todd had learned to love. He had learned how important it was and that it could not wait. Bryant had taught him this.

“I go to horrid man after horrid man thinking that this dick’ll fuck me so hard it’ll get all the bad stuff out of me. Or get the part of me that liked the bad stuff out of me.”
“Fenn’s not that man.”
“What?”
“I’m just saying,” Bryant said, “I know how you feel about him. I don’t know if anyone else knows. But I see it. I think there are two sorts of guys you need. The love of your life, and the fix it guy, the one who sort of… preps you for the love of your life, or does what the love of your life can’t do.”
I want to offer it to you. I want to sleep with you, Todd. Alright?”
Todd caressed Bryant’s hand and then their hands folded firmly together, and Todd Meradan said:
“Alright.”

The bulk of his life Todd had simply not understood anything. The time with Bryant was like understanding for the very first time. Bryant taught him friendship and love. And it was a friendship. There was nothing else to call it. Bryant taught him how to be with someone who valued him. He could tell all of this to Fenn one day. Maybe. Not today. Today he spoke to the man he had left alone for a year, the man he was going to have.

“I’m coming over tonight,” Todd said. “I’ll be over at about eight. The guy from the army is coming around here this afternoon and we’re going to talk.”
“He just wants to get you killed.”
“I’m not going to be some grunt who just goes and gets shot. I’ve got a degree in journalism. They’ll have a good use for me.”
“I just don’t know why you don’t write for a newspaper.”
Todd said back, “You know what?”
“No. What?”
“I think you do. I think you know why I do everything, but you just string me along. You just make me work for the littlest thing.”
“Todd. I will be thirty-two. You might be twenty-three. Up until now I never made anyone work for anything, and look where it go me.”
“Yeah, with your own house that Tom made the down payment on, and the only theatre in town.”


END OF PART ONE, WE CONCLUDE TOMORROW !​
 
That was a great part one of the Epilogue. All this Dan, Keith, Todd, Bryant and Fenn stuff is very interesting as I am learning new things about their history. I look forward to the conclusion tomorrow and that was some excellent writing!
 
Hey friends, when you've completed this, you will have made it to the end of a seven book saga which spans, depending upon how you look at it, twenty or forty years. I am excited for us both. I wrote this story when I was often very lonely, in an often difficult period of my life and now you've shared my friends and become another and at this moment I am happy for us both. Thank you so much for reading. we are now, at last, at the conclusion:


When Todd arrived that night he didn’t tap on the door.
“You didn’t even knock.”
Todd pretended not to hear him as he crossed the room.
“What if I gave up on you?” Fenn said. “You’re taking a lot of chances. What if I said to hell with you and moved on?”
“What if you did?” said Todd
“What if—?”
“Fenn Houghton!”
Todd leaned down and put his mouth on Fenn’s. Fenn cupped Todd’s face in his hands and ran his hand over the thin black beard growing along Todd’s jaw line. They kissed awkwardly like that, catching each other’s waists. Fenn reached up to touch his hair, to hang from the warm pulsing of his neck.
“You’re not pulling back,” Todd said, in wonder. “You always pulled back.”
Fenn held Todd’s face in his hands.
They freed themselves just long enough to get to the sofa, and then continued again, for a long time, tired of all games, finding everything useless but this. A loud car came down Versailles playing mariachi music, and then there was silence.
They parted.
“Is there one reason we shouldn’t just do this shit? Is there one reason we shouldn’t just take this to the bedroom?”
“Or the floor?” Fenn mouthed on his neck.
Todd’s mouth parted and he whispered, “or the kitchen table.”
They nuzzled for a long time. Fenn reached for Todd’s face, and holding it in his hands, staring at the dark eyes ringed by their constant olive shadow, at the straight fall of his slightly hooked nose, at his full mouth, the little beard, the little soul patch under his mouth.
Fenn placed his mouth upon Todd’s, opened to the wetness. He pulled away, he stood up, for just a moment, his knee telling him he wasn’t twenty anymore. No, but he didn’t want to be twenty anymore.
He held out his hand.
Todd took it in his larger one. In the darkening house Fenn could just see the dusting of light black hairs on it, going up his arm.
They didn’t say anything. Fenn just led him upstairs. Head hanging in obedience, penis thick and rising with longing, Todd walked up after him, and followed.
They reclined on the bed, on the pillows, kissing and cradling each other.
“No one’s here.”
“No one’s here,” Todd said, hooking his hands into Fenn’s pants.
“No one’s here,” the word here was crushed by Todd’s mouth on Fenn’s.
They kissed for a long time. No one was going anywhere. Nothing was pressing. No one had better show up. The boy who had always been a fact, and a factor on the edge of his mind was a real thing, and a thing to be made love to, grown up now and free. And maybe he had grown up too.
He unbuckled his belt, and Todd held him. Todd shuffled off his trousers and lay on his side, letting Fenn pull down his dark blue briefs, letting his sex fall slowly out of them. While Fenn pulled underwear slowly down Todd’s thighs, Todd pulled off his work shirt, and pulled off his tee shirt, and lay naked. All of his long body, that olive color, the dusting of black hair deeper, thicker on his chest, toward his groin where his sex was dark as Fenn’s nearly, and he pulled at Fenn now, at his trousers, at his underwear, while Fenn’s hands kneaded him, stopped to kiss him on his hips, on his stomach, stopped to take his penis deep in his mouth, as far as possible. Todd, who had gotten to Fenn’s pants and underwear and now had his hands under his shirt, moaned to receive Fenn’s mouth. He clenched his teeth, hands opening and closing impotently, finally playing with his own nipples, rubbing his own chest and stomach, swearing before he sat up and, laying Fenn down, returned the favor.
That very first time it was early evening, gathering twilight, with not much certainty of what would come after, only what was right now. After they’d been steady at tasting each other’s bodies for the better part of an hour, Todd dipped his finger in the olive oil, slid it into Fenn and then, with deliberation, placed himself in Fenn, and began fucking him. He felt Fenn’s smaller, stronger hands on his waist, Fenn’s body under him.
Under him, eyes wide, Fenn pulled him deeper inside. He beheld Todd, neck arched, mouth parted, eyes wide and shining as they looked down on him with a demon light, and them back up to the ceiling. Todd stood on the edge of the bed, fucking him deeply, the long arm reaching down to stroke his cock with a gentleness countering the fierceness of his fucking until, with a startled shout, eyes shut, dry mouth open, hands clenched into fist, they came so hard both all but passed out.

The room went from twilight to darkness while they lay there and, at last, Todd rolled to his side.
“You alright?” he asked.
“Yes,” Fenn’s voice was very quiet, almost a ghost of a voice.
“You’re just so quiet,” Todd said.
“I just didn’t have anything to say,” Fenn told him. “And I am not in a hurry to speak, or move, or do anything,” Fenn continued. “Because…”
“Because I’m here now.”
Fenn nodded and smiling, he agreed: “You’re here.”



“YOU LOOK LIKE THE TWO Wisemen,”
Todd greeted Dan and Fenn as they entered the kitchen.
“Why not the Three?” Fenn asked. “Thackeray is with us.”
“I think it’s because we’re old,” Dan said with a crooked smile.”
“Dan, get yourself some punch,” Todd told him, squeezing his shoulder. He wrapped an arm around Fenn and told him, “We are equally grey and equally old now, Houghton.”
“Actually,” Fenn pointed out, “you are grayer than me.”
“You would hold onto that.”
“Of course I would,” Fenn squeezed Todd’s ass.
“He’s grown so big,” Dan marveled over Raphael, and Sheridan said, “Bren’s been waiting for you guys.”
“Me or Fenn?”
“Both.”
Dan looked toward Fenn, and Fenn, beside Todd shrugged.
“I’ll be back in a minute. Where’s Bren?”
“In the apartment.”
“I’m going to the restroom first,” Fenn said.
“You’re back!” Layla cried as her uncle entered the kitchen. She hugged him, but said, “If I know you, you’re on the way to the bathroom?”
“Exactly.”
“When you get out I have to show you something,” Laurel told him.
“Show me now,” Fenn said.
Smiling, Laurel held out her finger and Fenn murmured, “Goddamn, it’s the North Star.”
“I tried to tell her the size of the diamond wasn’t important,” Caroline said.
“But you didn’t believe it, did you?” Fenn asked his niece.
“No,” Caroline confessed. “I’m afraid I didn’t.”
“It’s going to be outdoors. Lane Brown’s doing it,” Laurel explained. “It will be Reform, so everyone will compromise and no one will be pleased!”

When Fenn came out of the bathroom he met Dan, and they left the house to go down to the apartment. The door was open and the place was, if not crowded, well occupied.
“Dad!” Dylan greeted him.
“You need to go over to the Andersons my oldest apple,” Fenn said, wrapping an arm around his son. “In fact, take Thackeray with you. In fact,” Fenn looked around the whole living room, seeing that Brendan was sitting pensive at his old writing desk—
“Take Lance and Elias too.”
“I don’t know if that’s a good idea,” Lance said.
“It is,” Fenn told him, someone shortly. “Now go.”
And so they did, and when Fenn had put them out of the house and Brendan had turned his chair around, looking a little weary, Fenn said, “So what is the problem, Mr. Miller?”
Brendan stretched out his limbs, yawning like a lion.
“I am so glad to see the both of you,” he said to Fenn and Dan. “I’m almost finished with the story.”
“I thought you were finished when I read it a month ago.”
“I was, but I was putting in some last bits and… now…”
Dan was reading the last paragraph, and he said, “From what I know of books, it seems like a good place to close.”
“But you haven’t actually read the book,” Fenn and Brendan said together, and then they looked at each other. There had always been something between them, Layla’s uncle and Layla’s oldest friend, Todd’s husband and the first boyfriend of Todd’s niece. This was the apartment Fenn had made for him, the first place he and Kenny had lived together. For that matter, the first place he’d made love to Sheridan. Fenn came to the screen and read it saying: “Oh, Bren, I have read the whole book. And I think you’re afraid to let it go.”
“It’s not missing anything?”
Fenn stood straighter. He took a deep breath and said, “Move over, and trust me in this, okay?”
“A’right?” Brendan raised an eyebrow, and scooted his seat over while Fenn bent down in front of the computer and said, “It’s only missing two words.”
And then Fenn Houghton hit the caps lock and smiling, swiftly he typed:

THE END
 
That was a fitting conclusion to this epic story! I know there will always be more stories but I will miss this one as I have enjoyed it immensely! I liked where everyone ended up and it seemed like a lot of storylines were tied together nicely. Great writing and I look forward to more of The Blue House and whatever else you post next.
 
I feel like I'm proud of us both. I love this story so much and I know I should have more to say, but.... I'll just repeat it. I love this story and I love everyone who finished it. We've been on such a journey. Thank you for being here.
 
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