FIVE
 
 K  I  N  D  R  E  D 
“Mom, can I go out with TJ?”
	“At this time of night?” Layla Lawden looked at her son.
	Liam, cat green eyed and dusky skinned, stood solemnly waiting on her word, though he wasn’t surprised when she said no.
	“And don’t even think about asking your father,” she continued. “But, what you can do is stop running through your uncle’s house.”
	“Hey!” Todd said, as Liam nearly bumped into him, running into the kitchen.
	“Sorry, Uncle Todd,” Liam straightened up and walked past the tall, grey haired man.
	“He’s full of nothing but energy,” Todd commented, coming into the living room.
	“Will wants to have another one, and I’m still recovering from our nine year old. Who would have ever thought I’d say that.”
	“Who would have ever thought that Fenn would be off visiting his twenty year old son?”
	There was a knock on the door, suddenly, but, as Fenn so often said, it was merely symbolic. The door opened and red hair disheveled, long nose quivering, Bennett Anderson entered the house with his brother, Matthew, and his cousin, Riley Lawden.
	“What’s going on?” Layla directed this more to her nephew.
	Before the caramel skinned boy could answer, Bennett said, “Todd, do you know where your daughter is?”
	“What the—?” 
	“Maia just up and disappeared,” Riley said.
	“She disa—“ Layla began and Todd concluded, weak voiced, “disappeared?”
	“Actually, they got in a fight and then she walked away,” Matthew said, levelly. 
	Bennett looked at his brother fiercely but Matthew, who was dark haired and pale, cool tempered like Elias, was unaffected.
	“You should call Fenn,” he told Todd.
	Todd nodded at the sixteen year old and Layla handed him the phone.
	“What’s going on?” Liam came out into the kitchen
	Bennett opened his mouth, but Layla said, “Nothing’s going on.”
	“I need to call Tara first,” Todd decided.
	Solemnly, Matthew shook his head.
	“You should not call Tara.”
	Layla, thinking of Tara, and thinking of how she herself would react at hearing her child had gone missing, agreed.
	“Hello… Fenn… What? Huh. Yeah, put her on.”
	Todd cracked a smile.
	“She’s in Chicago!” Todd said. Then, “What are you doing in Chicago? You don’t just get up and leave town without telling your parents! If you were right here, I’d turn you over my knee, Lady, and thrash you—”
	“Well, she’s found,” Layla said, casually turning away from the rest of Todd’s diatribe while he took the phone into the kitchen.
	A few moments later he returned to the living room. Bennett’s brow was furrowed and his eyes beady. 
	“Did she have anything to say to me?” he demanded.
	Todd thunked him on the head not without affectionate.
	“No, Bennett Anderson-Stanley, she did not.”
	“Where is she?”
	“Staying with your brother and Dylan.”
	“I should go to her.”
	“You should not,” Todd said. “Son-in-law, you and Maia have some serious shit to work out.”
“Did you dig those up from under the sofa?”
	Elias was unpeeling caramels and popping them into his mouth.
	“Yes,” he replied, his mouth full of candy. “Yes, I did.”
	“Well, now it is his sofa,” Maia told Dylan with a shrug.
	“Yeah, but we just picked that thing off of campus after some other students left it. Good God, Eli!”
	“That is kind of nasty,” Maia commented. But Eli just held out his hand, and offered her a candy.
	“It’s wrapped,” he said, mouth still full.
	“I’ll pass.”
	Dylan got up and went across the room to light a candle in front of the altar and muttered, “You all are impossible.”
	“Is that your prayer for the night?” Maia said. 
	“No, that’s my declaration of faith.”
	“Why are you here?” Fenn said, bluntly. “What did Bennett do to you?”
	“He’s just driving me crazy.”
	“You all shouldn’t be living together.”
	“Firstly,” Maia said to Elias. “You and Dylan are living together, and living with Lance at that.”
	“We’re more mature,” Elias said, straight faced. Maia could smell the stick of Nag Champa Dylan had just lit.
	“You’re something,” Maia said. “But my second point is we are not living together. We just live together.”
	“Oh my God, repeat that to yourself,” Dylan said, returning to the couch to sit on the other side of Maia from Elias.
	“We have another roommate. We’re just roommates.”
	“I think Layla and Will pulled that about a decade ago,” Fenn said.
	“Actually, you and Todd pulled it thirty years ago,” Dylan said.
	“Well, now there you go,” Fenn said to his son.
	“Is everyone going to talk like I’m not here?” Maia looked at them.
	They began to laugh, but Elias was first to stop, saying, “Sorry, Sis. Why don’t you go on.”
	“I just need some space from him,” she said. “From his doing stupid shit and not thinking. From his temper.”
	“Well, there is that,” Elias agreed.
	“You’re the calm on. You’re the one who makes sense,” Maia said to Elias. “It’s like Ben just doesn’t think. And sometimes it’s beautiful. Like he gave away three hundred dollars to this charity. Only it was mostly my money, and then I had to ask Dad for the rent.”
	“I remember that,” Fenn noted.
	“And it’s boneheaded shit like that, that is driving me crazy.”
	The phone rang, and though Fenn got up Dylan said, “I got it, Dad.”
	A few minutes later, they heard Dylan cry: “Hey! What’s going on?”
	He sat down on the counter and began talking, laughing, smiling wide, whispering for about ten minutes.
	“Laurel,” Maia and Elias guessed.
	“Alright, girl!” Dylan laughed into the phone.
	It was endearing and odd to hear a somewhat butch, white boy with a military hair cut call anyone girl. It excited Elias a little bit.
	“May, it’s for you,” Dylan said, coming back into the living room.
	“All of that talk, and it was for me?” Maia muttered, taking the phone.
	“Laurel?”
	“I just heard that you left Bennett?”
	“Are you serious?” Maia said. “Is my business all over the world?”
	“No, just all over Rossford.”
	“Where are you?”
	“With Moshe. In New York. But Riley called me and told me, so now I’m calling you. What the nut, cuz?”
	“I need space from his dumb ass,” was all Maia said.
	Laurel thought about this, and then said, “Well, yeah. There’s a point to that.”	
	“Hold on, there’s a call trying to get through.”
	“Alright.”
	Maia switched over and said, “Hello?”
	“Oh, my God, Maia, what happened?”
	“Meredith?”
	“Who else?”
	“This is ridiculous. Meredith, I’m fine. Meredith, I would love to talk to you accept Laurel’s on the other line.”
	“Well, if you ever need to talk…”
	“I will remember that. In fact, I will call you when I’m off the phone with Laurel.”
	“Alright, Sweetie. Love you. Bubbye.”
	“Alright. That was Meredith.”
	“How did she know?” Laurel said.
	“It’s about five hundred possible ways she knows. Anyway, I’m fine, and don’t have much to say. Except I promised Meredith a call back, and right now all I want to do is go to sleep.”
	“Alright,” Laurel said. “Well, I’m getting off the phone. Haven’t really seen Moshe all day. I’ll be back in a few days. Love you.”
	“I love you too. Get the hell of the phone.”
	Maia hung up, but just then the phone rang again.
	“Oh, my God,” Fenn muttered, exasperated.
	“Hello,” Maia said, picking the phone up. Then, “Layla!”
	“Yes,” Layla said.
	“You’re the one hundredth person to call about Bennett, and I’m fine. We’re both fine.”
	“That’s good,” Layla said in a strange voice, “and of course you know I care about you and Bennett. But this is about Dylan.”
	“I’ll get him—”
	“No,” Layla said, soberly. “Could you get Fenn?”
	Maia felt suddenly serious.
	“Yeah,” she said in a low voice.
	“Fenn, it’s Layla. Come to the phone.”
“Do you have any facial expression?” Layla whispered to her uncle, over the phone.
	“I’m sure I do.”
	“Whatever it is, hold it,” she said. “And then listen.”
	Fenn realized he was frozen in a grin, and then said, “Alright.”
	“I just got a call from Meredith’s stepson.”
	“Uh huh. Meg Callan’s son.”
	“Right. He tells me Eileen Wehlan is in a hospital in South Bend. She’s dying, Fenn.”
	Fenn said nothing, and Layla said, “Your expression? Right now? How is it?”
	“The same,” Fenn said through a grin. 
	“Will you tell Dylan?”
	Fenn lifted a finger because Dylan was signaling him. He said, “I’m taking this outside.”
	In the hall that smelled of cooking and carpet and, in some way he couldn’t explain, Chicago, Fenn continued as he went down the steps.
	“He doesn’t love her. Or if he does the love is covered in hate from the time she left. He certainly doesn’t know her.”
	“I know. But doesn’t he need to know? And how would he feel if he wasn’t told?”
	“Especially with so much of his blood family in the city.”
	“Right,” Layla said.
	“Well… And you want me to tell him?”
	“Ned does.”
	“I think that’s a mistake. I think Ed should tell him. Ed is his family.”
	“He’s actually a little afraid of Dylan.”
	Fenn sat down on the little stone bench in the courtyard of the apartment. A way off, he could hear the rattle of the El train. Students were walking down the street.
	“Fine,” said Fenn. “Fine. I’ll let him know. I’ll tell him now.”
	When he was off the phone with Layla, when he was feeling that it was already a very long night, Fenn made another call.
	“Hello,” Dylan said.
	“Come down here,” Fenn said.
	Above, the curtain opened and Dylan looked down. Fenn waved to him.
	“Um, alright,” his son said.
	A couple of minutes later, Dylan was there and Fenn touched the seat.
	“That was a call from Layla that came from your cousin Ed who called our house.”
	“Alright?” Dylan sat up, his senses tingling.
	“Your mother is dying, and she wants to see you,” Fenn told him.
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