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The Hidden Lives of Virgins

Well, tonight's response will be long, and also leave you with a bit of a surprise. A period stretching fifty years, several people would have passed, and the thing about this part of the book, is almost everyone mentioned it accept Cedric, Ida and Ralph are all dead. It isn't wrong to be sad though. These people have all been dead since the beginning of the book, but we did not think of them, perhaps because of not taking the past seriously of the older characters. All of these people have lived in the memories of these older characters and now we are meeting them. Cedric of course, never knew Marie Madeleine or Anne's baby or cared much for his grandfather, but his life is circled in losses, as, I suppose, ours will be too. I had initially thought you should ask two questions, but it is the weekend, and I won't ask you to do that.

Now, last night I asked, but you didn't see, if you still had the Rossford family trees. I will not ask you to get them out, you could check on your own for your own pleasure of curiosity, but I posted them ahead of time buried with a few factoids. Evelyn references that Marie Madeleine had five sons, one which she had several children with. Another one of those sons is Remy, who is roughly the same age as Estelle. Remy's children are Percy and Lula duFresne, which you would remember as Lula Houghton after her marriage, the grandmother of Fenn and the great grandmother of Layla and Julian. Percy is the grandfather of Lee and the great grandfather of Mathan through his daughter, Darla Philips. Fenn briefly references this at the close of the last Rossford story and as to the note of stray witch craft in the family, Caroline and Laurel both possess a limited psychic ability as seen before.
 
BY THE TIME DOMINIC was fourteen many things had changed. Ida was already married, her last name was Lawry, and she hinted that she didn’t like her husband too much. The fifties had ended and the second Vatican Council was in full swing. Estelle locked herself in the house with her rosary and the only Mass she ever attended again was the one said for her funeral.
School changed. Names changed. There were no more Negroes, but whatever they were they were still Catholic and so now Dominic crossed the river into Indiana to attend St. Xavier High School.
This is how he remembered Ralph Hanley.
Ralph Hanley had no pretensions to the priesthood or even the smallest longing to attend school Mass. He was also the only other Black person in their whole year, and it was either his cousin or Uncle Jigelo who drove them to school, but they went together everyday.
Ralph had instantly liked Dominic, and it was he who reminded the other boy of their meeting years before. But Dominic felt dwarfed by Ralph. Ralph was taller, with a ready smile, good with the girls. He was quieter than Dominic around guys. Somewhere between Evelyn and his mother, Dominic had developed a foul mouth that proved beneficial in high school, but it was Ralph who had all the ladies.
In fact one experience that Dominic never forgot no matter what his name was, was learning that Ralph had already had sex. He talked about it without exaggerated stories, confidentially, without bragging about it. To a fourteen year old Dominic, this was a mindshaking revelation. It was on one hand a mortal sin, but on the other still an amazing thing. Ralph boned and boned frequently and made a comment that he wanted to bone Jigelo’s daughter, Dominic’s cousin Faustina.
Dominic realized that Ralph was asking permission.
Dominic did not really care. He didn’t like Faustina. She was yellow gone to waste, half white, half Polish no less, and named after some nun who had invented some sort of prayer that a bunch of white people got together and said in Our Lady of Jamnia.
But that was changing too. The bishop was strongly hinting, both the bishop in Fort Wayne and the one here in Ohio, that all the Black people crossing the river to attend Queen of Peace was not appreciated when they had their own Our Lady of Jamnia right here in the neighborhood. A nun actually stepped out of the convent and wrote a letter to both bishops, “Build us a church, and we’ll stay in Jamnia.”
Hard times, heady times. It was around this time that Dominic’s father died.
Cedric Senior was drunk, and he stumbled onto the train tracks near the factory where he worked, the very factory where Luke Madeary would one day live. The train made quick work of him. His insurance left Gladys twenty-five thousand dollars.
“Best thing he ever did,” Gladys murmured after she told her son. “I don’t mean die. I mean that he left us this money... However... if he hadn’t of died....”
The first thing Gladys did was “Move the hell out of this house. Mama, you’re getting on my goddamned nerves. I’m thirty-six years old, and I ain’t never had a place of my own.”
So she got her first apartment, and doing right by her son split the small fortune down the middle and stuck it in a trust fund for him.
And then one day, less than two months after his father’s death, Gladys said, “Goddamn, Cedric!”
At first Dominic didn’t realize she was talking to him.
“I’m pregnant again!” she said, patting her stomach, and shaking her head.
“I’ll be damned. Fucked from the grave!”
And that was how Louise had come.
It was as if Gladys needed a Cedric in her life, but could bear only one. Now that the first one was dead she began to slip up and call Dominic Cedric all the time, and finally Ralph said, “Well, who the hell are you? I’ll just call you Ced. Cedric’s easier than Dominic anyway. I wish I could get a new name.”

When Gladys was pregnant with Louise she swore, “This time I’m gon do it right.”
“You should,” Estelle told her daughter. “You’re on the wrong side of thirty-five.”
“And you’re on the wrong side of the grave with one foot in it, old woman. Best make sure I don’t get frisky and push the other foot in.”
Now that Gladys had to see her less, she was less kind when she did see Estelle who was approaching seventy in a steadily emptying house. Despite Glady’s outbursts, she was determined to make a right life for herself, her new daughter and for Cedric. Now that the bishop had actually humored Crawford Street and bewildered the Irish, Lebanese, and Polish population by putting in Our Lady of Jamnia’s first Black pastor, the people of Crawford Street no longer made the sojourn to Queen of Peace. This made things hitherto unthinkable, such as daily Mass, a staple. And Gladys came, rosary in hand, though she never did learn to say one. She brought Cedric and her daughter with her, and then Cedric was off to school.
Cedric’s cousin Michael was finally ordained, and Evelyn figured she’d better start going to church and quit acting like such a heathen. He managed to get stationed at Queen of Peace, and once they all went to see Michael DuFresne preach.
Cedric never did get to know his cousin well, but Ralph was entranced by him, and the two green eyed, sandy haired young men looked as if they might have been brothers. What Cedric noted was that as they progressed toward senior year, Ralph became less and less fun while Cedric, still going to daily Mass and maintaining his virginity, made sure to hit the gambling and drinking spots at least three times a week. He had learned to drink and smoke and tell dirty stories, and it made him quite happy. It still made Ralph happy, but Ralph didn’t talk about sex anymore, though Cedric was sure he still had it.
The school attached to Queen of Peace went up in flames in 1968, senior year. Cedric and Ralph heard about this while they were in trigonometry. Michael DuFresne had gone in to save a little girl. She escaped. He put her out of the window just before the section he was in collapsed in flames.
The funeral at Queen of Peace was closed casket. Evelyn sat in the front, magnificent in black. She was not between her children, who were also in the pew, but between Cedric and Ralph. As the organ was thundering the beginning of the requiem, an old woman, her face hidden by the thickness of her black veil, touched Evelyn on her arm.
Evelyn looked up, pushing away her own veil.
“I do not say...” said the woman, “that it’s ever a good day to die. Or that death can be good... But,” she smiled fiercely, “whether you take comfort in it or not... he had a glorious death! And there are not many of those.”

One day, over lunch, Cedric told Ralph, “I’m not going to college.”
“What?”
“Not right now. Don’t feel like it. I’m going to Louisiana with Flipsy and Jig. I’ve been in Catholic school for twelve years. Now I’m ready to shake what my daddy gave me. And he didn’t give me shit, but I’m still gone shake it.”
“Well, I’ve decided to go to Sainte Terre,” Ralph said stoutly.
Cedric snorted. “What the hell for? You can go to Georgetown. Or Xavier right here. For God’s sake you could go to Louisiana and shake your ass. The only thing you’ll shake up there is your hands trying to get warm.”
“I’m going to F.C. Been thinking about it.”
“Who’s he?”
“Not he. It’s a thing. It’s for...” Ralph sighed and said, “I’m going to be a priest.”
Much to his discredit, Cedric threw back his head and laughed in his friend’s face.
Ralph said, rather seriously, “Haven’t you ever wanted to give your life to God?”
“I’ll give my life to God in the French Quarter,” Cedric said.
So after senior year, they parted ways.

i i i

It had been a long time for Mick Rafferty, and the deed having been done, he saw no sense in regretting it. He had already had Ashley on the sofa. She admitted that this was why she had come. It wasn’t even really a seduction. She had said, “I’m almost eighteen.” Right now it was statutory rape. But only statutory, the same way fellatio was only oral sex. Basically, they were consenting adults.
Maybe Ashley saw how much he needed her too. Maybe if she had been dying from need of affection and the fear of loneliness, then she saw he had been too.
He spent the whole early morning fucking her in his bed. She spent that whole time raking her nails down his back. They made love and kissed and sucked each others bodies and then fell asleep in the pile of covers and each other’s arms until it was time to get ready for school.
“You shower first,” Mick told her, leaning up in bed and kissing her throat.
“I think you just want to sleep some more, Mr.- ” Ashley paused and then said, “That’s not going to work, anymore. Is it?”
He shook his head, smiling. “I don’t think so. But you go shower, and then I guess you should drive to school. I would drive you, but...”
“How would that look?” Ashley completed the thought. She climbed out of bed. Mick wanted to swat her luscious ass, but thought better of it. He lay on his back, smiling, pleased as anything. Hard as a teenage boy.
Observing the spackle pattern on the ceiling, he realized that this was just the sort of thing that George Stearne had warned him against.
The shower water cascaded down in a roar. Mick heard Ashley singing:

This is the noise that keeps me awake
My head explodes and my body aches!’

“HEY, FOSTER! HEY, FOSTER!” MACKENZIE closed his locker and turned to see Bob Gulo.
“Yes?” he said, looking a little put out.
“When’s the last time you sucked a big fat cock?”
Vaughan, at his locker, heard it, and was trying to shape an appropriate response while he heard Mackenzie say, “Two nights ago, you got a problem with it?”
When Vaughan turned to see his friend and Bob Gulo, Mackenzie was staring him down, and looking hard.
“If you’re good, maybe you’ll be next,” he said. “Were you trying to get on my list? Wanna see if I might come over and help you out too?”
“Hey, chill out, man. I was just fucking with you.”
‘The one thing you won’t be doing,” Mackenzie informed him, “is fucking with me.”
When Bob Gulo had left, Mackenzie looked at Vaughan, tired.
“Can I have your autograph?” his friend said. “You’re magnificent, you know that? You’re even starting to look like an Indian chief.”
“I learned it from you, Dad,” Mackenzie gave his friend a cheesy smile and then headed down the hall.
“Can I tell you something?” Vaughan said as they headed into the bathroom.
“Hum?”
“I always worried if you had it in you. To be hard.”
“I didn’t have it in me,” Mackenzie snorted. “Goddamn,” he said suddenly, and turned to his friend, “I am so tired.” He looked at himself in the bathroom mirror. “I don’t even look the same. I do look hard. I look mean.”
“You just look like someone who shouldn’t be crossed.”
Mackenzie put his books on the floor beside the sink and turned on the water. He began splashing his face, saying, “I didn’t have it in me. I don’t have it in me.” His voice was muffled by the water he was splashing. He shut it off, pulled his face up and began paper toweling himself. He blew out his cheeks and sighed.
“I hate high school. I’m starting to hate this town,” he said picking up his books. “I wish Ian was here right now. That sounds ungrateful, but I do. ”
“Ungrateful?”
“Yeah, I should just be happy you’re here,” he put his hand on his friend’s shoulder. “You don’t have to be here. You don’t have to go through this with me.”
“Don’t be nuts,” Vaughan told his friend. “Of course I have to be here with you. Where the hell else would I be?”
Mackenzie turned and looked at himself in the mirror.
“I’ve never really known what I look like. I’m really not bad looking. What if I dyed my hair black and started wearing a lot of old clothes?”
“Then everyone would think you were Tina’s twin and not Lindsay’s.”
“Lindsay’s a fucking bitch and I’m gonna jack the shit out of her one of these days.” Then Mackenzie grinned, “Listen to me, I’m starting to talk like you. And I don’t know who I look like,” he was still looking in the mirror. His image, the hooded blue eyes, the sharply drawn brows, the beginnings of bags, his fine boned nose, stared right back at him, challenging him. “I used to be younger looking. Now I look like one of those bitchy New York models. I bet they’re all gay. I bet they all grew up in Ohio.”

At lunch Mackenzie noticed that Tina had now even dyed the tips of her hair black.
“In mourning?” he said.
“I went to Grandma’s last night and completed the process,” Tina said. “It seemed somehow appropriate. So,” she looked at Ian and him, “how’s life in the war?”
“There’s a war?” Ian said.
“I could hear the gunshots from my bedroom,” Madeleine said, beside Luke. “You know your aunt called last night?”
“Huh?”
“To make sure you were alright and that your father didn’t try anything nutty.”
Ian only nodded and looked tired.
“Are you gonna get your car when you go back to Mom and Dad’s tonight?” Mackenzie said to Tina. Vaughan noticed that he hadn’t said, “home.”
“I’m not going. Plus, Ashley brought the car to school this morning.”
“I wonder where she really was,” Mackenzie said.
Tina did a saccharine impression of Aileen and said, “At Cassidy’s.”
“I wish I had a Cassidy,” Madeleine said.
Rod and Derrick Todd were walking out of the cafeteria together when they stopped at the table, Rod to kiss Madeleine and drop a hello by everyone else, Derrick to lean in toward Mackenzie.
“I heard Steve Gulo talking shit this morning. He said you wanted to suck his dick.”
“Really?” Mackenzie’s eyebrow went up.
“That,” Ian commented, “is a dangerous looking eyebrow.”
“I was just telling you to let you know that we all said it was bullshit,” Derrick said. “And Bone McArthur no less, and Dice- ”
“He’s my cousin.”
“That’s right- ” Derrick remembered. “Dice said they’d kick the crap out of him. Incidentally I said the same thing, and I can’t even fight.”
Mackenzie began to chuckle.
“Did you talk to him? Gulo?” Derrick asked. By now Rod was standing behind Derrick, listening too.
Mackenzie nodded.
It was Vaughan who re-ran the whole story, which Mackenzie had actually forgotten by now.
When Vaughan had finished, Derrick said, “Well, I just wanted you to know. We got your back.”
“My sister- ” Mackenzie began.
Derrick flipped a general bird in the direction of Lindsay’s usual seat, shrugged, and headed out of the cafeteria followed by Rod.

MORE TOMORROW
 
It was interesting to hear some more of Dominic and to get back to the present of this story. I am really starting to like Derrick. Great writing and I look forward to more tomorrow!
 
That afternoon Tina finally marched off the stage when practice was over and told George Stearne, “You’ve been acting very strange today, sir!”
“Ms. Foster, I don’t know what you mean,” Stearne said, picking up a sheaf of papers and stacking them.
Tina looked flustered and said, “I don’t know either, except... You’ve been... You’ve been real nice to me.”
The goateed man gave his usual mocking smile and said, “Ms. Foster, I pride myself on always being ‘real nice’ to you.”
Tina snorted.
The smile dropped and Stearne looked... sweet, the way he’d been looking all day.
“I was worried is all,” he said at last. “I know things aren’t my business, and I’ve been fighting with that. I’m usually pretty good at staying out of other people’s business, but this is a small school and a pretty small town and so...” he shrugged.
“How much do you know?” Tina said, at last. “About anything.”
“Well,” George frowned, trying to think. “Everyone knows that Mackenzie is gay. Except, I gather, your parents.”
“They found out last night.”
George said, “I had sort of heard that too.”
“From?”
“From the Gay and Lesbian Student Union, naturally. Remember, I run the drama club and the band.”
Tina laughed.
“Though the reputation isn’t deserved,” Stearne went on. “J.D. Amasson’s a walking tragedy, but he’s hardly cut out for theatre, and Jaime Tolliver can’t act to save his life. Great man, though.”
“Well, to fill you in,” Tina said. “Kenzie’s left home and so have I. I’m living with Luke- ”
“Luke Madeary?”
“Yes.”
“In the factory? Good God, Tina.”
“It’s that or my grandmother’s, and I don’t know if I can take my aunts and my cousin, so...”
“But what happened?”
“What happened is when my brother isn’t accepted, then I’m not going to be accepted.”
And Stearne couldn’t say anything against that. He just nodded.
“Well,” he said. “I just wanted to... If there’s anything I can do, let me know.”
“Thanks,” she said, and suddenly hugged him, and then hung back with a surprised look on her face.
“What’s all this?” Stearne smiled back at her.
“I just didn’t expect you to...” Tina looked for words, then chose to pick her book bag up and sling it over her shoulder.
“Have a heart?”
Tina cocked her head and, grinning, she lifted a finger to make a slight difference in the remark.
“To admit to having one,” she said, and then headed up the aisle and out of the auditorium.

The sky was getting dark as George Stearne came into the main lobby heading out into the emptying parking lot. Mick, in his blue sweat suit, whistle hanging from his neck was coming out of the gymnasium.
“You wanna grab a few beers, later?” Stearne said, feeling strangely jovial.
“Can’t,” Mick said. “I got a night.”
“Really?” Stearne’s eyes lit up, and he grinned. Then he said, “You got a woman!”
Mick began turning red, but otherwise, as they headed out of the school, coming down the vacant steps into the almost empty parking lot, his expression remained unchanged.
“Thank God,” Stearne said. “You’ve finally quit sniffing after jailbait- ”
“No one ever sniffed around.”
Stearne shrugged, “- and got a real woman. That’s great. That’s great.”
“So what’ve you got planned for tonight?” Mick asked his friend.
“Teacherly stuff. Going over homework, taking my dentures out, drinking chamomile tea. And you?”

“UH, OH GOD! FUCK ME! FUCK ME! FUCK MEEEE!” Ashley moaned as she buried her hands in his damp hair. His face hard, Mick slammed into her against the cheap desk he’d bought at the Salvation Army. He twisted in her and her hands caught his shoulders, pulled down his shirt, went down his back, frantically caressed his ass. He didn’t make any sound while she grunted. He took her off of the desk and put her under him on the small spot of rug on the floor. Then he picked up rhythm. She picked it up with him.
“Not yet!” he put a finger to her lip when he knew she was about to come. “Not yet!” He gasped. “Not... not... Now!” he shouted, strangled on it. They came together, rigid and trembling and then Mick Rafferty lay collapsed across Ashley.
“I want to go out some place,” Ashley said at last, licking her dry lips, caressing the wet small of Mick’s back. “I want to go out some place.”
“But not here in town,” Mick said, panting and rising up on his side.
“No,” Ashley agreed, her breasts still heaving, her ass rug burned. “Not in town.”

“WHAT?” Ian said that night over dinner.
“Only if you want to, and only if you think it’s best,” Cedric said.
“Don’t go tonight,” Mackenzie said, softly.
Ida was there and Rodder as well. Ida, who had experience in hiding lovers in odd circumstances said, “Well, you could always stay with me.”
“Thanks, Mrs. Lawry,” Ian began, and didn’t know how to press on. So Vaughan did.
“They’d rather stay with each other,” he said.
And Vaughan and Mackenzie looked grateful that someone had said it.
Ida nodded, and said, taking out a cigarette, “and I’ll bet the root of it is that you’d both rather stay with Vaughan?”
Vaughan looked a little surprised.
Mackenzie and Ian both looked at their friend and nodded solemnly.
“If that’s alright, I mean,” Mackenzie said. “I mean, Vaughan’s always been with us, and that may not always be the case but...”
Ida nodded.
“It’s a strange friendship,” Rod commented. “But it works.”

Ida waited until she’d reached Windham Street to make her phone call. She had nothing good to say to Kevin, so she hoped he wouldn’t pick up. The more she thought about it, she had very little that was good to say to Aileen either. But still, Aileen was her daughter.
“Hello,” Ryan’s voice said over the phone.
“Ryan, put your mama on the phone.”
“Is that you, Gran?”
“Sure is. How are things?”
“Not... the way they should be. Can I come over sometime?”
“You can come over anytime you want. You can come over tonight if you want. In fact, tell your mama to bring you over. I wanted to talk to Aileen anyway. Tell her to come right over. Right now.”

When Ryan was off the phone he went to the little desk where Aileen usually sat scribbling notes and paying bills. Her thick glasses were on, and her hair was tied up in a bun.
“What is it, honey?” she said offhandedly.
“It’s Gran. Take me over there.”
“Tomorrow honey, I’m busy.”
“Actually, Gran said she called to speak to you and she told you to come. She said right now, and then hung up.”
Aileen became very still, debating her mother’s summons. Ida Lawry never used them lightly, and so she knew she was in trouble.
“Shit,” Aileen said, and pushed her glasses up over her head.
“Get some pajamas, Ryan. And clothes for tomorrow and all that. I’ll be dressed in a few minutes.”

Kevin did not bother to complain. He had a feeling he knew what Ida was going to bring up. Aileen did as well. It took her five minutes to get to her mother’s house. She did not want to see her aunts, who were sitting in the living room, watching TV and smoking cigarettes.
Ida was in the kitchen finishing off a chicken Caesar salad with gusto when her daughter and grandson came in. She motioned for Ryan to come and kiss her, and when he did, she said, “Now, go upstairs. I want to talk to your mama.”
Ryan nodded and went upstairs, a little afraid for his mother. He knew the tone of that voice. He’d never imagined that his mama could be in trouble with her mama.
“So now that Ryan’s here, how many of your children are home tonight?”
“Mama, I don’t feel like this.” Aileen reached into her purse for her cigarettes. “I am just too tired.”
“How can you be too tired? You haven’t done a damned thing. Have you even seen Mackenzie?”
“Mama, that’s a lot! That’s a lot to drop on me in one night.”
“He didn’t drop it on you. Ross and Lindsay did.”
“Either way it’s a lot.”
“And me finding out that my only daughter is knocked up at fifteen—with twins—isn’t a lot? Housing the boy that got her pregnant and not knocking his head off isn’t a lot? Really, Aileen, you’d think you’d been a halfway model child. Mackenzie is a model child. He’s a damned good child. And you think you’re going through a lot!”
“Is that what you called me here for?”
“Yes.” Then she said, taking out her Newports, “No. No, Aileen. I called you over here to tell you to do right. Not just to Kenzie. But Tina too- ”
“That girl- ”
“-is a handful. So what? I heard what Kevin said. That man’s trying my patience more and more-”
“I could fuck up his Tarot!” Meghan shouted her offer from the living room.
Alice said in her mellow voice, “Meg, why don’t we mind our own business?”
“Thank you Ally,” Aileen hissed under her breath.
“You’re welcome,” said Alice.
“And Ashley,” Ida went on.
“What about her?” said Aileen.
“Exactly. What about her? All you know about her is she’s not at home. Come on, Aileen. Honey,” Ida shook her head and put down her cigarette. “I know what it’s like to marry young and try raising children. However it happened you’ve been doing it for eighteen years. It’s too late to quit now. Your kids need you.”
Aileen sat, looking bitter, her burning cigarette twirling around in her twisting fingers.
“Mama, I’m so tired.”
“I know, baby.”
“With the kids, with school and all. I don’t- I don’t know how to be here for Mackenzie or Tina. I can’t be here for myself. I don’t! I need help, Mama.”
“When did I ever say I wouldn’t help you?” Ida demanded. “Mary Aileen Lawry, look around you. This is your home. This is Jamnia, Ohio. Here is your family—nutty as it is. And your friends, like it or not. Just ask, baby. There’s all the help here that you need.”

“I better take you home,” Mick told Ashley as they were driving south down Willow Parkway.
“I want to go home with you.”
“And I want you to go home with me,” Mick said. “But you’ve got parents and one of them is my co-worker, so I’d better drop you off.”
For a moment, Ashley was desperately upset. She wanted to cry. This sort of despair shocked her. She felt like one of those dumb bitches in a Lifetime movie.
My life has become a Lifetime movie, Ashley reflected. It made her giggle a little.
“What?” Mick Rafferty said, offhandedly, turning his careful gaze from the road for only a second.
“You’re right,” she said, the laughter calling her back to her senses. “But you’d better drop me off on the corner of Logan and Michael. I don’t want anyone who might be up checking seeing it’s your car.”
Mick nodded.
He dropped her off on the corner, but said, “I’ll watch to make sure you get in your house safely.”
“Alright,” she said. It was so dark the moon was hidden behind clouds tonight. The March air through the open car window was a little cold. She leaned in to kiss Mick. He returned it. They went into the backseat of the car and made out like neither one of them had in high school. When it got to the sex part, Mick said, “We shouldn’t.”
Ashley asked, “Why not?”
And since Mick couldn’t come up with a good reason, he unbuckled his belt and began to work his trousers down while Ashley spread her legs for him.

“They’ll be back in a minute,” she told Vaughan. He was sitting up in bed, the moonlight shining off of the white gown of a woman who looked very much like Madeleine.
“I assumed,” Vaughan said. “I’m thinking of telling Kenzie that it’s silly for all three of us to sleep in here.”
“This bed can fit five, Vaughan Fitzgerald,” she laughed.
“But- ”
“You see things logically on your side. I gave up that kind of logic a long time ago. He loves you. They both do. You think they’re just playing, just trying to not make you feel like a third wheel?”
Vaughan didn’t answer.
“Vaughan William Alexander, answer me.”
“Well...” he said, at last. “Sometimes.”
“Well maybe it’s true... But only sometimes. They love you a lot. And you love them. This place is like a bank. Why do you think I keep coming back?”
“Cause you’re my mother.”
Marilyn laughed.
“Well lots of people have mamas and lots of them go in a lot worse ways that I did. I went linked to you. That was one reason you can come to me and I can come to you. But it’s mothers all over this town linked to their children, wishing they could hear them. But you hear me. You see things because you’re ready. When I said this room was like a bank I meant one that holds love. All this love flows in and out of it. The love collects interest and- ”
The door opened. Instinctively Vaughan went under the covers. The moon was hidden under a cloud. Just barely, Vaughan saw Marilyn.
“I gotta go, for now,” she told him.
Vaughan gave the smallest of nods to acknowledge her passing.
His heart was full of love. He felt a little like he might cry from the uprush. Ian and Mackenzie were closing the door and crossing the room in their bare feet. He wondered if this is what it felt like for them when they were together. That must have been why they’d left.
“Are you awake?” Ian hissed.
“Yes.”
“Sorry.”
“You didn’t wake me up.”
Mackenzie climbed back into bed and turned his back to Vaughan.
“It smells like roses in here,” Ian stage whispered.
“Marilyn was here,” Mackenzie said.
“What?” Ian waited for an explanation.
“I’ll explain it in the morning,” Vaughan said.

MORE TOMORROW NIGHT
 
Sorry for posting so late, it has been a busy weekend. I am glad Mackenzie has some supportive people around him even if his parents aren't so accepting. So Mick is still doing it with Ashley? This is only going to lead to trouble. Great writing and I look forward to more tomorrow!
 
Yes, Mick is having it off with Ashley and it probably won't lead anywhere good. Things are really coming to a series of explosions and they aren't over yet. Mackenzie's in his personal passion and crucifixion, and we;ll se where this will go.
 
Luke woke up in the middle of the night and realized that Coconut was not beside him. He crawled out of the makeshift bed and through the room he’d partitioned for himself, up the ramp a little further to the space he’d made for Tina. Funny how it had never seemed this cold here before. Not until this early spring.
He thought he heard Tina giggling in her sleep, and looked to see that Coconut was avidly licking her toes.
“Coconut, stop that!”
The dog looked up at him, offended.
“Just stop.”
The dog humphed, and padded back to its pallet. Luke looked around. There were lots of crates here, a little naked light bulb hanging from above, and plenty of space. He’d had years to make his space into a house, into a home. Tina had just come here last night.
Luke went to his room and pulled one of the blankets off of his bed.
Gently he spread it across Tina, and then looked down at her.
“Have a good one, Lucky Strike,” he murmured, and crossed the ramp that made the bridge over Michael Street. He looked out of one of the dirty old windows. Michael Street stretched below him in the night, the occasional street lights shining up. In the distance the small lights of what passed for downtown Jamnia twinkled from the darkness of the trees and houses.
“Good night, Jamnia,” he said.

i v
After Ida had sent her daughter away, she went upstairs, and for a long time lay with Ryan in her arms, letting the boy tell her everything. She’d treasured Mackenzie because he was the first grandson and Ryan because he was the last. Ross had always just been around. Even though Aileen had still been young when she’d had this last child, Ida was sure she’d never bear another one. Six was plenty. And then Ryan had special needs. So Ida treasured him. She held onto this moment of listening to all of his problems and telling him stories as long as she could because he was getting older. Next year he’d be in high school, too big to be babied.
She went downstairs once Ryan was asleep. Meghan and Alice had gone to their rooms. Ida sat alone in the kitchen. In the dark her eyes adjusted to the glass cabinets hanging all around, to the old linoleum, to the white refrigerator that replaced the harvest gold one, the pot of geraniums in the window over the sink that overlooked the side yard and saw into the O’Donnells. This place had been the house of Ida Lawry’s dreams, though the reality had turned out so differently. This had been the house and the life that had saved her from Broad Street.
Tomorrow morning, when she went to Mass, she would thank God the way she was thanking him now. Some people wanted to give love so they could pass on what they had received, but sometimes you wanted to give it so that you could pass on what you’d never had. It was a little like making a plant grow with no seed. A miracle. It was a miracle to love a daughter when she had experienced herself as unlovable. It was a miracle to love six grandchildren, though some more than the others- this couldn’t be denied- when there had been no grandmother, or none worth mentioning in Ida’s own picture.
Ida Lawry remembered a kitchen not unlike this one in 1959, on Broad Street, and being sixteen. She’d been in the bathtub when for no reason her mother had walked in with a knife and shouted, “You trifling BITCH!” and Ida had leapt out the tub wrapping herself in a housecoat, the whole time making a list of all the sins she might have committed and wondering how her mother had found out. By the time she’d been chased in five circles around the house and run all the way to 1133 Crawford Street, she couldn’t think of a one.
As a child, when Cedric had gone by the solemn name of Dominic, he had been a solemn child, and he had told her very seriously when she woke up on the sofa of the second story of the DuFresne house, that he was going to own a big white house on Michael Street. Whoever wanted to come would live in it, and whoever needed to hide out could hide out.
She just wanted somebody to love. Ida could not understand Gladys running off, and she told Evelyn that.
“I just want to love somebody. Not be loved. That’s nice too. I don’t want to suck love like a sponge, though,” Ida said. “I want to be love, like Jesus.”
“Well just always add ‘like Jesus’,” Evelyn said, “and you’ll never have to worry about giving it up to anybody.”
“I go to an all girl’s school anyway.”
“Yeah, but I seen them rough flat faced Irish boys, and them Polocks in your neighborhood, Ida. And they’d have you on your back and marching up the aisle, then sprinkling holy water on some baby’s head at Our Lady of J before you could get the first line of Ave Maria out of your mouth.”
Ida O’Muil laughed, but Evelyn said, “I’m serious. Rule for a good Catholic girl? Leave good Catholic boys alone. Shut your legs and say your rosary. That’s what I say.”
So she had taken Evelyn’s advice. Two years later she had gone up to college on the coast of Lake Erie where some wealthy cousins lived. She wanted to be educated. She wanted to be away from her mother and Broad Street, and she thought she wanted to be with her extended family. Mam had managed to shoot out another baby, this time by Colonel Foster, though no one would admit to it, and Meghan was turning six and turning into a royal pain in the ass. Privately Ida hoped that one day her younger sister would suffer a tragedy.
All Irish were not alike. Wealth did make a difference. All Catholics were not alike. She hated living up north in Rhodes. She felt like the bastard daughter of a loose washerwoman. She felt like everyone at Saint Clare’s college could smell the boiled cabbage in her clothes, see the worn holes in her socks. This was really the first time in her life that she’d felt less. That she thought that maybe all of her bluntness and her courage was just crudeness.
One day her cousin Laine had thrown back her head, laughed, and said, “Ida, we’ve come along way. We’ve got one of our own in the White House, and you look like you just came off the boat from the potato famine!”
So Ida had returned home, and gone to Belmont College. She should have stayed here anyway. She rented an apartment, and fell in love with her professor. Professor Lawry had returned the favor. He was cute to her, young for a professor, balding though, and bespectacled. A scrawny little man, but his education had turned her on. She laughed to think about that now. Sophomore year Professor Lawry had intimated that getting into her pants might be a good idea. Junior year he’d proposed marriage when the first proposal had failed. They married senior year, and he brought her to the beautiful house on Windham, where she decided to make all of her dreams come true.
But she’d have to make dreams first.
She did, however, write a long letter to her cousins up north to inform them that they were a pack of whores who couldn’t appreciate their past. That she was glad to smell like potatoes and cabbage, and planned on getting good and drunk to really live her stereotype up tonight. And then- because her husband was half Italian- he was going to live up his stereotype so that she wouldn’t be able to walk straight for weeks.
She wrote all this to her family up north, and then signed the letter:

Your’s,
Ida.

She sat in this very kitchen. It was an August day in 1964. Everything was yellow, the light, the scarf in her hair, her dress. She thought how immature it would be to mail that letter
And then she went right on ahead and did it.

Life went on more or less the same. Meghan was growing into something decent. She was smart mouthed and sassy, but she had to be, living with Mam. And even as a baby, Ally was strange. Meghan- whose father had probably been Lebanese- couldn’t resist hanging around Eleventh Street the way Ida had loved Crawford Street.
And things were changing so much! Even little Belmont had the nerve to stage a protest. Ida hoped the damned thing in Viet Nam would end soon. Otherwise things moved for the better. Her mother kept complaining about the new English Mass, but Ida was curious. Dick Lawry was Methodist, and except for baptizing her kids, Ida never thought of going back to a church where she couldn’t understand what was happening.
Mary Aileen Lawry was born in 1967 with naturally curly hair and a sweet face.
“She’ll be pretty this one,” Evelyn said. “You can hardly tell she’s Irish.”
Ida only raised her eyebrow at Evelyn.
She was called Aily. The Mary was never to be used except in the worst of occasions. She was, of course, baptized at Our Lady of Jamnia, like three generations of O’Muils and Brennans and Daleys before her.
One day Cedric had burst through her door with gifts and stories of Louisiana and Miami. He had dandled the baby on his knee and Ida, laughing said, “Now you can return the favor and babysit too. When and if you’re not in college.”
“I guess I’d better go,” he said, absently rocking Aileen.
“You should. I should have. That’s why I went. Me, a woman. You, Black. It’s empowering and everything. And it is. I don’t mean to mock it. But sometimes I want a little more.”
Cedric looked at his friend.
“I want to be in love.”
“But Dick- ”
“Ahhhh!” Ida threw back her head. “I think I’ve been asleep the whole time I’ve been with him. I wanted someone to love. He was in need of as much love as possible. We don’t fight. He doesn’t cheat on me. I don’t think. But there’s no love in this house. It’s a far cry from Broad Street, let me tell you. But there’s no love here.”
For three days Cedric stayed at the house—taking care of Aileen—before he went back to Gladys’s. For months Cedric lived with his mother and Louise. Then, one day, he said, “I gotta go.”
“Where now?”
“Ida, we’re just sitting around in stasis. Things have to change. I need to go get Ralph. I’m going up to Sainte Terre and find out what the hell’s happened to my friend!”

A week after Cedric had left, Ida had just finished breast feeding when Dick came into the living room.
“Yes,” she said to her husband.
“I feel,” he said. “That we should separate. That... I ought not be here.”
“Oh.”
“Do you mind? If I leave?”
“Would you like to divorce me?” Ida looked down at their baby, gurgling, and completely unaware of her parents’ exchange.
“I- ” Dick started. “I think I would. I think I have to.”
“Well,” said Ida, “if that’s what you have to do...”
“You don’t mind?”
Much to Ida’s surprise she said, “No, Richard. I really don’t.”

And that was that.


CONCLUSION OF CHAPTER SEVEN. TOMORROW NIGHT. COLOSSUS OF RHODES
 
That was an excellent conclusion to the chapter! I liked hearing more from Ida, she seems to have had an eventful life. Great writing and I look forward to getting back to Colossus Of Rhodes tomorrow!
 
Like so many Grandmas, Ida's life is full of interesting things.How fitting, that as she remembers sending a letter to her snooty richer cousins up in north, we shall be returning to them tomorrow, or at least their children, since Pierce O'Muil is, of course, Ida O'Muil's cousin, and his children, Jinny and Anne will be hanging around in Rhodes waiting for you.
 
C H A P T E R

E I G H T


v

FOR TWO NIGHTS AILEEN FOSTER remembered her whole life. She could never get up the nerve to do anything until her nerves hurt unless she got up and did something. Maybe this is why she’d never done anything.
“You have done things,” a voice in her head protested, and began to tick off the list of her accomplishments, the same list she always brought out when she was certain she’d never accomplished anything.
This time Aileen cut the list off. It just didn’t matter. It didn’t matter if she’d built the Eiffel Tower and the Great Wall of China. And she hadn’t. Now she had to act.
This was all she thought about all day. She thought about action while she cooked the little bit of breakfast for Ryan and Ross, Lindsay and Ash. Ashley was coming home late. She’d have to talk to her, too. Everything that Ida had said was sticking in Aileen’s head. What about Ashley? What did she do with her time?
Tina came and went as she pleased. It was almost as if she didn’t live here anymore. Aileen wondered if she would see her daughter anymore.
There are so many damned people in this house, Aileen thought, and not a one talks to the other.
She wanted to stand up and demand that everyone tell her something right now. She wanted to say, “You’re going to start telling me your business now.” Aileen remembered Winona, Kevin’s mother. How in her fifties she’d suddenly gotten assertive and demanded to know this and demanded to know that. Kevin was never able to stand up against his mother. In the end it had been Aileen who had taken her aside and said, “Listen old woman....”
So Aileen knew that once you forfeited the right to know, the right was gone. You couldn’t get it back. Once you stopped being dependable, you couldn’t demand that your children depend on you. She hated to admit it, but she knew she had stopped being dependable a long time ago.
Aileen was thinking about her family all day long. She was thinking about them as she drove out of Logan onto Michael, and then headed up through downtown to Windmill Cereals. She parked her car in the little parking lot. This building was old. It could not last much longer. Life would have to change for all of them. Very soon.
She thought of her children, flipping them over as she flipped boxes. Where had she failed? Didn’t all parents fail? No, Ida hadn’t. Ida had been a single parent, had to half raise two sisters and a nephew in the mix. She had managed not to fail. Who would judge her, Aileen wondered? God? No. It would be Mackenzie, Ryan, and Tina in the end.
She had failed her oldest, no doubt about it, and Aileen was sure she’d failed Tina by not being interesting enough. Martina had been born in the wrong body in the wrong place. Aileen could not see beyond the Midwest. She could hardly see past the Parkway, and everything Tina had done had been odd to her. She had never really encouraged it. They’d never seen eye to eye, and now Aileen realized that this was because she had always assumed that it was she who was right. What if she had not married Kevin? For a very long time she hadn’t been married to him. Ida had only been about the same age Aileen was right now when Tina and Ash were born. What if she’d given Tina to Ida? Ida knew her.
But then what about Ashley? It just wasn’t enough for Aileen to assume that Ashley was like her. She admitted she didn’t know Ashley, either. Ashley was afraid. Ashley was drifting. Ashley had what Ida liked to call- damn it, Mother- cheap beauty. Ashley was blond with blue eyes and breasts and that was all she had or all she thought she had. Aileen didn’t know what to do for her. She’d failed that child too.
Lindsay would be fine. Lindsay was what parents raised their children to be. She wasn’t stupid, but she wasn’t too smart. She wasn’t bad enough to be hated, but Aileen also realized that she wasn’t good enough to be liked. Or pretty enough to be envied or ugly enough to be mocked. She just was.
And the same could be said for Ross. What the hell was wrong with her and Kevin? Ryan was a good kid. Aileen had always thought he wouldn’t make it, but Roy had helped him make it. Roy loved him. But Aileen and Kevin had taken pride in raising three children who were good because they were normal. Ross’s and Lindsay’s virtue lay in the fact- yes, that they would never stick out, never overreach themselves, never cause trouble. They were normal. Actually, Ida had always said they were mediocre.
“They’re not, Mother.” At lunch, Aileen caught herself talking to the mother who wasn’t there.
Ida had said, “Normal, mediocre. It’s the same thing. It just depends on how much value you put on being normal.”
“Well you like Mackenzie.”
“He’s not normal.”
And Aileen remembered almost shouting, “Yes, he is!”
He was her most handsome son. He was the one everyone said was the perfect blend of Kevin and Aileen. He had his father’s piercing eyes and in Mackenzie the Foster nose had been toned down. It was hawk like, not hooked. The whole top of his face was like a hawk. His smile was fierce, he had the full lips of his Italian great-grandfather. He only got more handsome as the years went by. And he was kind and sweet and smart. He was a heartthrob. All the boys wanted to be his friend. Her pride was watching him come down the stairs unconscious of his measured walk, his good clothes, the dash of cologne he wore, his gradually broadening shoulders. Watching her son in church, how he never realized how the girls were looking at him, was her pride.
So how could anyone that extraordinary have been ordinary?
He wasn’t normal. He was unusual.
Mackenzie was queer.
And this was a difficulty. Aileen turned that over in her head again and again. She had to deal with the fact that this might mean that she had never known Mackenzie. Ida had known. Ida had known about Ian. None of this was news to her. For God’s sake, Cedric Fitzgerald and Father Hanley knew! Aileen had to deal with the fact that the remarkably good looking son that she took so much pride in for never noticing the ladies checking him out, had been spending the bulk of his time checking boys out, and would never look at a lady. She had to deal with the fact that that nice Ian Cane who came over all the time was her son’s boyfriend. Aileen spent a while playing around with that concept. Then she went the next step. This didn’t mean a friend who was a boy, like Vaughan. This meant that Mackenzie had kissed Ian. That Mackenzie and Ian did things together. This might even mean that Mackenzie wasn’t a virgin anymore. How does a boy lose his virginity to another boy? Is it even possible? Aileen didn’t know if what was hard to deal with was the idea of Mackenzie sleeping with a boy, or Mackenzie sleeping with anyone.
In the end she decided it was best not to think about some things.

After work, Aileen drove right over to the house on Michael Street. She hadn’t been through the iron gate, up the brick walk, up the wide stair onto the porch in a long time. She’d forgotten what a happy old house this was. She felt a little safer now, knowing Mackenzie was here. She knocked on the large door. Vaughan answered it, smiling.
“We’re all in the kitchen.”
Going down the hall he walked a little ahead of Aileen. She wondered why he wasn’t surprised and why he wasn’t wondering how Mackenzie would take all of this. And then she knew that Vaughan was really too much like his mother and father, and that he was surprised and probably was wondering what to say, but that his face would never betray this.
She looked around the kitchen. Luke and Tina were present, Mackenzie stopped talking. Ian looked startled too. The two other boys, Aileen did not know.
“Mom,” Mackenzie said. Tina’s eyes just narrowed. But she smiled a little, looking interested, as if she couldn’t wait to see what would happen.
“I- ” Aileen started. “I came to see you.” She included Tina. “The both of you.”
“I think you need to talk to Kenzie more,” Tina said.
Aileen looked at her daughter, and then said, “I think you might be right.”
She looked at her son.
Vaughan and Ian looked at Mackenzie, and he nodded.
“Well, you heard the lady,” said Vaughan. “Let’s get out. Amateur, Tolliver. This means you too. Shake a leg and we’ll reconvene in the BBC-arium in five minutes.”
They all picked up their things, and with a minimum of noise were gone. It was just Mackenzie and Aileen.
He sat at the large, round kitchen table. She put down her purse, and in her trench coat, hair still tied in a bun, sat down too.
Neither one of them spoke at first, so Aileen said, at last, “I came to bring you home.”
“I don’t know if that’s a good idea.”
“It’s your home.”
“Mom, it’s not my home if I can’t be me there,” Mackenzie said.
“Who says you can’t be you?”
“Can you accept me? Can you accept your gay son? Gay Mackenzie?”
“Is that what you’re calling yourself, now?” Aileen said.
“Mom, I am gay.”
Aileen put a hand up and said, “Yes. Yes, Mackenzie. I’m starting to realize that. But you’re also my son. And I would like you to come back to my house. Besides,” she added with a smile, “the other kids there are boring.”
Mackenzie raised his eyebrow and grinned.
“I’m sorry,” Aileen said, taking out her cigarettes. “But there’s just a time when you’ve got to face it. I’m sure it’s my fault, but they’re boring as all hell. Except for Ryan—and he just gets stranger and stranger because of what’s happened. Roy hasn’t been around in a few days.”
“He’s probably nervous about everything.”
“Well, I suppose,” Aileen took a drag off her cigarette. “But hell, Ryan needs him. And I need some sanity,” Aileen told her son.
“Can I bring Ian?”
“To live?” said Aileen.
“To eat with us. To be a guest. Like he was before?”
“Only it won’t be like it was before. Will it?” said Aileen.
“It will,” Mackenzie said. “Except no one really knew what it was before.”
Aileen sighed, her cigarette dropped ashes. Mackenzie pushed an ashtray across the table for her.
“Of course you can,” she said, wondering how she would negotiate this with Kevin.
“But Dad- ” Mackenzie started, obviously thinking about the same thing.
“I- ” Aileen put up a hand to silence her son, “will take care of your father. Now, the whole Ian thing... Is he at home? I heard- ”
“His dad hit him in the face. Hasn’t been around here, though. Ian doesn’t ever want to go back, and Cedric won’t make him.”
“No… Of course he won’t. Well, I have a few other errands. Give your mama a hug before I go.”
“Don’t forget Tina,” Mackenzie said, standing up and letting his mother wrap her arms about him. She smelled of cigarettes and Primo perfume from the counter of Osco’s drugstore. It had never smelled so good. Suddenly Mackenzie said, “I thought you wouldn’t come. I thought you didn’t care, maybe, and that- ”
Aileen took her son’s face gently.
“I will always care.”
And then she turned around and walked out of the kitchen.
 
I like the character of Aileen a lot! I am glad to read how she handled Mackenzie's sexuality. Hopefully the dinner with Ian goes well. Great writing and I look forward to more whenever it is posted.
 
Aileen stuck her head into the BBC-arium long enough to say:
“Tina, I want you at the dinner table two nights from now. Bring Luke with you. We’re having a get together.”
“Really?”
“Yes, I’m sorry, but your siblings are boring the hell out of me and so’s your dad. I need to be interested in my family again.”
“Maybe we should invite Aunt Meg and Aunt Ally over.”
“I said interested. Not horrified.”

The sky was rapidly darkening as Aileen made her way to the white house on Allen Street.
Race Cane answered the door and was shocked to see Aileen Foster standing there.
“Do you have a few minutes?”
Race realized that she had never gotten over feeling a little inferior to Aileen. Over the course of nearly twenty years there was a great deal that the two of them ought to have talked about. It could be any number of things, really. Yet until this very moment, Race did not believe she’d ever spoken to Aileen.
“Come in,” the other woman said.
Aileen looked around the house.
“It’s nice,” she said.
“Thank you,” Race said, sheepishly.
“Actually,” Aileen said. “I was looking to see if your son might pop out.”
“He’s with Kirk Berghen of all people.”
“My cousin?”
“He is, isn’t he?” Race said, tilting her head. “This is a small town.”
“Too small.”
“Come into the kitchen, Aileen, and have a seat.”
The blond woman followed Race who said, “Can I get you something to drink?”
“Just water if you have it. I’m parched, and I’m dealing with my family. Which is sort of why I’m here.”
Race stopped in the act of pulling out the ice tray.
“Race, I know you’re a good woman,” Aileen went on. “After all, you sent Kevin back to me... When he strayed. Despite everything. That’s either courage or just knowing how much he is to deal with.”
Race was just standing there with the tray.
“I never knew you knew about that,” Race said.
Aileen nodded.
“I wasn’t the most accommodating wife at the time,” she said. “Not that that excuses it. But it’s true. I was a shrew. And then, later, I couldn’t really afford to think about it. But the point is, I think you’re good, so I’m coming to you.”
Race nodded her head, and blindly plopped ice cubes into a tumbler while she let the water run.
“Of all the boys in the world for Ryan to really take a shine to it’s Roy,” Aileen said. “And he hasn’t been around the house in a while.”
“The whole... Ian business.”
“Ian being my son’s boyfriend?” Aileen said glibly.
This woman was definitely a surprise. Race nodded, and placed the glass in front of Aileen.
“Thank you,” Aileen said. “Well maybe Roy wouldn’t mind if Ryan came here? Unless you would.”
“No.”
Aileen nodded and said, “I’ll send him on over this weekend. They’ll both like it. I think.”
“Roy loves Ryan,” Race said simply. “He’s like....” Race let the phrase drop, “an older brother.”
“Um,” said Aileen. And then, “Speaking of older brothers, what about yours?”
“Sam?”
“Yes. The one who by all reports punched his boy in the face.”
Race said nothing. She just sat down exhausted across from the other woman.
“Will it ever be safe for Ian to go back home?” Aileen said.
“It’s safe now,” said Race.
Aileen reconsidered and said, “Will he ever be happy going back home?”
“God, Aileen,” Race replied honestly, “I don’t think anyone would be happy going back to Sam Cane!”

Lee Cane was miserable.
Her life came in three phases. There was work when she put home out of her mind. There was home when she sat by herself with no background music playing from Ian’s room or, for that matter, none of the presence of her son. People had presences. Even if they never left their rooms. Even if they never said a word to you. Even if his presence hadn’t necessarily been a happy one, Lee felt Ian’s absence keenly.
The house was not huge, but it seemed too large for just her, and it was just her a lot of the time. She found herself longing intensely for Sam to come home.
And then when he was finally here, this was the third phase where she wanted him to go to sleep and go to sleep soon. Stop talking, and especially stop ignoring the fact that his son had—two weeks hence—flown the coop, hopped out of the window.
It was just now that Lee was able to realize she did not really want Sam home tonight.
But Lee did want Ian.
She’d called Race that evening, and listened to everything about Aileen. What a woman this Aileen must have been! Why couldn’t she do that? Then she decided she could.
Lee decided to get her son.

When Ashley came into the house that night, Aileen was sitting at the kitchen, smoking, one leg crossed over the other.
“Do you think you’ll be free the night after tomorrow?” Aileen asked her daughter.
“Oh, I don’t know, Mama.”
“Well, I do,” Aileen said, continuing to smoke her cigarette, “and the answer is: you will be. I want you to bring over the boy you’re spending so much time with lately.”
Aileen might as well have shot ice water into her daughter’s spine. Ashley mastered herself and said:
“Such short notice- ”
“Tell him it’s for me,” Aileen said. She smiled brightly. “Tell him it’s time to meet the mama.”


The clouds boomed, and then it seemed as if they’d been poked with a giant needle and rain exploded against the window, falling heavy while the lightning flashed gently over the school in the distance.
“I always loved storms,” Ian murmured, reclining on his side in the bed Luke had slept in when he stayed at 1959 Michael. He watched the rain make patterns that ran down the large window creating shadows making patterns across Mackenzie’s face, and his arms, and his torso.
“All the little kids were so afraid of them, but I’d wanna run off and play in the rain. I think I thought that maybe a tornado would come, and then I’d get to go to Oz or something.”
Mackenzie chuckled to himself, and Ian threw an arm over him.
“What? Didn’t you think strange things as a kid?”
Negligently, Mackenzie kissed Ian’s hand, turning on his side he pulled the other young man’s arm around him.
“My grandma told me that Australia was at the bottom of the world,” Mackenzie said, “And I remember going with Vaughan to the lake so that we could hunt for kangaroos.”
“What?”
“I thought that the bottom of Lake Clare was the bottom of the world. It was so huge, you know, and I thought... ‘Sure, there could be a country under there.’ We’d go swimming and I’d go down in the water and open my eyes and look for koalas or something.”
Ian started to laugh so loud he had to turn on his back.
“Now, you’re mocking me.”
“No,” Ian’s laughter died down a little. “No, that’s actually sort of cute. It is cute. You’re cute. Everything about you is cute.”
Mackenzie turned around and lay over Ian. He kissed him on the mouth, and then looked down at him again.
Ian, half smiling, traced his cheek with his index finger.
“Everything,” he said. “Including, I think, your mother. But I’m still not sure if I’m ready for her whole dinner idea.”
“Ian,” Mackenzie chided. “Do you think she is?”

“Well, I could show up,” Mick Rafferty said from the shower the next afternoon. “Then what a party that would be!”
Ashley climbed out of bed and began brushing out her hair.
“I don’t think so, Mick. We still have my grandfather’s guns, and I’m pretty sure Dad knows how to use them.”
The shower went off. Mick came out a few minutes later, red and dripping, the towel about his waist.
“Do you think she knows? Suspects a little?”
“That I’m fucking my teacher? No. That I’m fucking Bone McArthur or something like that. That’s probably what she thinks.”
Mick began drying himself, his face and hair first, his hair sticking up in spikes.
“Did you sleep with Bone McArthur?”
Ashley, in the midst of pulling on her skirt, suddenly looked at Mick sharply.
“What?” he said.
“Do I ask you for a history of your sex life?”
“No.”
“Well, then,” Ashley finished dressing. “I’m off. I need to find a suitable boyfriend by tomorrow night.”


The girls were at their lockers, between classes.
“Hakim is back at it again,” Claudia was telling Madeleine and Tina. “He’s trying to get back into my panties, and I said, ‘Really, this mess is gon have to stop and- ’ ” Claudia stopped talking. They all turned to look at Ashley.
“Yes, Ash?” her sister said.
“I need you to do a huge favor for me, Tina.”
“Really?”
“You know tomorrow night? Mom’s whole dinner idea? She wants me to bring my boyfriend- ”
“Who’s probably forty-five years old- ”
“It’s hardly that bad. But she knows it’s someone, and she wants me to bring him around the house tomorrow, and I was wondering if you’d ask someone for me? Someone you have influence over.”
Tina raised an eyebrow.
“Derrick Todd.”
All three girls barked out a laugh, and Ashley said, “I’m serious!”
“Your mother will never believe you’re dating Derrick Todd,” Madeleine said.
“He’s the nicest guy in the school. He’s clean cut, and sweet, and- ”
“And this is why Aileen will never believe it,” Madeleine insisted.
“You can’t do that,” Claudia told Tina. “Lindsay would hate you if- ”
Tina put up a hand, and then she offered the other one to Ashley.
“Twin, just for the sheer pleasure of pissing Lindsay off, I’ll ask him.”
Ashley took her sister’s hand, “It’s always good to know we can hate Lindsay together.”
“Isn’t it, though?”

“You want me to what?” Derrick said, closing his locker.
“Just be her boyfriend for one night,” Tina told him.
“She chose me?”
“She thinks you’re nice,” Tina said. “And she thought that I would be the one who could talk you into it.”
Derrick cocked his head at her, and grinned.
“Which would mean at this very moment I’m manipulating you,” Tina went on. “Only there actually is something in it for me.”
“Tina, this would piss Lindsay off so much,” Derrick said, shutting his locker.
“That,” Tina told Derrick, “is exactly what’s in it for me.”

MORE TOMORROW
 
This dinner sounds like it is going to be quite the event! I look forward to reading about it! Great writing and I am excited to read more tomorrow!
 
This dinner is certainly going to be something, and what it is... well, I guess we'll see what it is tomorrow. It will definitely not be boring.
 
TONIGHT, GOOD NEWS, BAD NEWS, PARENTS, SURPRISES BY BOYFRIENDS, SURPRISES OF BOYFRIENDS A N D THE DINNER TO ALMOST LITERALLY END ALL DINNERS




When the boys came back to the house that afternoon, and entered the kitchen, Mrs. Cane hopped up from the table. Cedric looked utterly exhausted, and Vaughan sent a glance to his father the same time Ian looked at Lee Cane and said, “Mom.”
“Yes,” she said. “I came to bring you home.”
Ian stared at her blankly, and then she said, “Don’t you want to go home?”
“Not really,” he told her, sounding dull and stupid to himself. “I need to sit,” Ian said, and made his way to one of the chairs.
“It’s no sense being someplace that isn’t your home when we want you to come back,” Mrs. Cane told her son.
“You want me to come back now?”
“Yes. Don’t you want to? You can pack up now.”
“I need to think about it,” Ian said.
“What’s to think about?” Mrs. Cane sounded a little shrill. “You have a home. You have a mother, and a father. We love you. We want you to come home.”
“Mom, did Dad say he wanted me to come home?”
“He didn’t have to.”
“I think he does,” Ian differed.
“Of course he wants you back.”
“He didn’t like me when he thought I was straight. How’s he gonna take me being gay?”
“You are not gay!” Lee Cane told him.
Lazily, Ian jerked his thumb toward Mackenzie, who was standing behind him.
“Meet my boyfriend, Ma,” he said.
Lee stared at Mackenzie. He only offered a hand.
Lee Cane did not except it. She returned to Ian.
“Look. You’ll get over this. This is not you, and I don’t see why you’d define yourself like this- ”
“Because I’m in love with a boy- ”
“It’ll pass.”
“No, it won’t,” Ian said, standing up. Cedric was about to open his mouth when Ian said, “Mom, please go away.”
“Ian- ”
“Please. Just for now, awright?”
“But I want you to- ”
“And I want to think about it. You can’t just expect me to come running back right now. I mean, for God’s sake, it took you two weeks to even come over here.”
“But his mother- ”she pointed at Mackenzie.
“His name,” Ian said, wrapping an arm around Mackenzie’s waist, “is Mackenzie Allyn Foster. And his mother actually acknowledges that I have a name too. And his mother actually makes an effort at... something. Mom, please go now.”
“But Ian!” she snapped.
“Really, Mrs. Cane,” Cedric stood up now. “I’m going to have to ask you to get the hell out of my house.”
She looked around at them all, incredulous, and then Cedric walked toward the hallway, and motioned for her to follow him.
When he came back, alone, all three boys were a little bit shaken.
“I have to tell you,” Cedric said in his usual, deliberate voice, “she’s been here since two-thirty driving me about nuts. And it’s hard for me to be driven nuts. Really, Ian,” Cedric sat down and took out his cigarettes, “your mother is one tedious bitch.”
“Yes, sir,” Ian answered soberly, “I would have to agree.”

It happened twice in one day, and after play rehearsal it was just too much.
“Ms. Foster,” said Mr. Stearne, “do you know what you’ll be doing with yourself after graduation?”
“I can honestly say that I don’t,” Tina said. She’d had to lie to Mr. Rafferty today, talking about plans. She told all of this to George Stearne who grinned at her, and tugged his goatee. God help us, the little man was cute to her today.
“And then he told me- get a load of this,” Tina hefted her gym bag over her shoulder, “Maybe me and Ashley should look for colleges together. Maybe I should help her out a little more.”
George Stearne frowned, and said, “I think Ashley Foster’s gotten enough help as it is. Pardon me, Ms. Foster.”
“Why do you always call me Ms. Foster?” she asked suddenly.
“It keeps the lines of respect going. You know if you’re calling me Mr. Stearne, shouldn’t I have the respect to call you Ms. Foster?”
Tina thought about it a second, and said, “I never thought of it that way. I always thought you were just making fun of me.”
“Well, there’s probably a little bit of that too,” he smirked at her. “You really don’t have any plans for next year.”
“No, St- Mr. Stearne.”
“I just wanted to help.”
She looked at him again, strangely.
“You always seem to be surprised that I don’t have fangs.”
“Mr. Stearne, I am surprised. You’ve spent the last two years polishing them... You’ve got to know it’s all we talk about.”
The schoolteacher jammed his hands in his pockets and said, “Do the students really think of me that way?”
“Distant, but in a good way,” Tina supplied. “Sort of like Thomas Jefferson’s view of God.”
“Nice to know you stayed awake through American history. Have you been to your guidance councilor?”
“That woman doesn’t have time for me.”
George Stearne frowned a little, and then pursed his lips.
“I tell you what. Teachers find students who... have promise... every now and again. It doesn’t happen that often. Sometimes this is the most unrewarding job in the world. I’m just telling you now in case you ever plan to be a second generation teacher at this school.”
“No.”
George Stearne shrugged.
“But now and again,” he continued, “there are students you want to help because you know they’re going to go far. Madeleine- ”
“She’s even worse than me. She really doesn’t know where she’s going!”
Stearne smiled, mysteriously, and said, “all the same, I have it on good authority that she is being seen to... Expertly. I want to sort of see to you expertly. Steer you in the right direction.”
“Thanks, sir. I appreciate that,” Tina told him. “But it’s March. I mean, aren’t most schools no longer accepting applications?”
“Tina, Tina, Tina,” George Stearne placed a confidential arm around the girl, and surprised the hell out of her. “There are other things besides school after high school... And anyway... I’ve seen your grades. All those schools that just made their decisions... you wouldn’t have gotten into anyway.”

That evening, as Tina Foster was coming up the steps of 1959 Michael Street to the last of the daylight, she bumped into Rodder Gonzales.
“Mr. Gonzales,” she said, instantly realizing she’d been around Stearne too long.
“Hey, Tina!” he grinned brightly, which was a sign he was nervous, and clutched what he held to his chest a little tighter. “Madeleine’s not home,” he added.
“And yet you are?” she cocked her head. “What’s that you’ve got, Rodder?”
“Oh, nothing.”
The little woman swiftly grabbed the package from the tall young man’s hands.
“Tina!” Rodder protested.
“Ms. Madeleine Fitzgerald.... School of.... What the hell is this? Madeleine’s going to college?”
“She thinks—we think—” Suddenly Rodder became very stern and said, “Please return the package, Martina.”
She laughed in his face.
“I’m serious!”
“I know. What’s this all about?”
“She doesn’t know anything,” Rodder told her. “Please keep it that way. Me and Cedric are sort of enrolling her in school behind her back. And then if she gets in we’ll tell her. She can make her decision.... If she doesn’t she’ll never know. If she doesn’t want to go...” Rodder shrugged.
“Oh, my God!” Tina said. “Now I know what Stearne was talking about. I wish you were my boyfriend!” Tina said.
“Please don’t tell, Tina.”
“Oh, no! I’d never.” She leapt up and kissed him full on the lips. “You really are the sweetest thing in the world, Roderigo Luis Gonzales. No wonder she kept you!”

Mackenzie told them that Aileen said dinner would be at around seven.
“Well great,” Vaughan told him. “I hope you have a good time.”
“What?”
“I said I hope you have a good time.”
“You’re not coming?”
“Hell no. It’s not even about me. And I have my own shit to deal with. I’m staying the night at the monastery.”
“Oh,” Mackenzie said. “Well, if you change your mind.”
“I won’t. It’s a damn war zone over there. I’ve had enough of Logan Street for the time being.”

George Stearne called up Mick Rafferty, and said, “Before you tell me you’re not free, and all your time is taken up by this sexy young thing you’re with, I should probably get off the phone.”
“George, my boy,” Mick said cheerfully. “I am blessedly unoccupied this evening. My sexy young thing has plans tonight. So I’m perfectly free. Go to the Tsalagi?”
“Yeah,” said George. “I want to hear about this gal of yours.”
“You’re a voyeur, you just wanna get some, proxy.”
“Yeah, well...”
“As you once asked me: how long’s it been, George?”
“I’m getting off the phone now.” George Stearne said, “I’ll see you tonight, Mick.”

“But that’s great,” Madeleine said. “I wish I had someone helping me out with my future.”
Tina meditated only briefly on telling her about Rodder. Then she said, “Are you going out tonight?”
“Naw. You want me to help you battle the storm on Logan Street?”
Tina clasped her friend’s hand. “God, yes!”
“I’m there for you,” Madeleine told her. “Actually, I’d be there just to see the look on Lindsay’s face when Derrick Todd walks in.”
“I can’t wait to see the look on Mom’s face,” said Tina. “I mean, my God, does Ash think she’s a complete moron?”

“This or this?” Ian displayed an electric blue dress shirt, and a plain one.
Roy chose the electric blue.
“I thought it might look too fruity for the parents.”
“Ian, you’re going as Mackenzie’s boyfriend. It can’t get any more fruity than that, can it?”

Tina was smoking a great deal this evening, sitting at the table playing cool, but taking in everything. She lifted the next cigarette to her mouth the same time Aileen did, and realized that her mother, in a white, spring dress, smelling of perfume, was just as nervous as she. Luke wouldn’t be back from the gas station until around six. The more she thought about Stearne, and the more she thought about Luke, the more she wondered who was going to help him out.
Mackenzie looked a little haggard. No. He looked a little dangerous. Weren’t gay people supposed to be soft and sensitive? But Mackenzie was calling himself queer. There was no Ian as of yet. He was coming later with Roy. Ashley was sitting at the other side of the table from her and Madeleine. When there was a knock at the backdoor, Tina jumped, thinking it would be Derrick, but Ryan came in and said, “It’s Luke.”
“Tina’s got great news,” Madeleine said, as Luke sat down beside her. But Tina cleared her throat, and Madeleine looked at her strangely.
“What?” said Luke.
“Nothing,” said Tina. “Just not now. Later.”
Luke looked at Tina a little longer, and then said, taking out a cigarette. “Awright. Later, Ms. Foster.”
Things could not have gone better except that Mackenzie seemed to be getting nervous as he entered the dance of children setting down plates and filling glasses with ice, passing the salad bowl. Kevin Foster sat down in the midst of it all looking, to Madeleine, a little out of it. Unlike most boyfriends, Luke did not seem to feel a need to ingratiate himself to the distant Mr. Foster. But then Luke wasn’t exactly most boyfriends... or even a boyfriend... Was he? Madeleine seriously did not know about that.
“Is your man coming, Ashley?” Aileen asked with a smile.
“Yeah, Mom,” she said, wondering if he really would show.
“Because if he doesn’t,” Tina heard Aileen threaten as she went into the living room to bring out candlesticks, “you know you’ll be restricted to school and the house until I finally see him.”
Tina heard her sister give a strangled noise, and then Tina said, “Don’t worry. I see his car now.”
Mackenzie was fidgeting, and even though he knew it was only Derrick Todd at the door, he almost leapt up to get it.
But it was Tina who ushered Derrick in, and Ashley rose up from her chair, graciously, throwing her arms around him at the same time that Lindsay stood up, amazed. Ashley kissed him on the mouth and said, “Honey!”
“I hate you!” Lindsay shrieked as Tina and Madeleine began to laugh. Even Mackenzie had to laugh. Kevin Foster just looked perplexed.
Aileen put a hand over her face, and Tina couldn’t tell what her mother really wanted to do, but Aileen just said, “Now let’s calm down.”
Derrick just stood there as Ashley waxed on, “We couldn’t contain it anymore. I mean, we’ve been real quiet about it until now. Lindsay, I’m sorry- ”
Tina and Madeleine were laughing so hard Luke almost had to pick Tina up off of the floor, which would have been difficult, because he was in fits too.
Lindsay repeated, “I hate you.” She turned around and told her sisters and Madeleine, “I hate you all!” Then she stormed up the back stair.
This time when there was a knock at the door, Kevin got up to get it and then he came back and said, “School kids. Fundraiser. Let’s eat.”
Kevin said the grace. They were hungry. Mackenzie pecked at his food. When Roy showed up, Ryan told him how late he was and Roy said, “I’m sorry. Things got kind of crazy. I had to help Mom with some stuff at the restaurant, and before that I had to find Ian something to wear.”
“Where is he?” Mackenzie said.
“Beats me,” Roy shrugged, looking around the house as if Ian would suddenly pop up. “He left before me. He should have been here by now.”
“Well, maybe he stopped to pick up something,” Madeleine said. She was going to tease Mackenzie and say, “Pick up flowers”, but thought that at this table it might not be a good idea.
“No, he didn’t,” Tina said with certainty. And when she said it, Aileen put her glass down, realizing the same terrible thought that was coming to her was already in Tina’s head.
“Kevin?” Aileen said quietly.
“Um hum,” he kept eating. “Good corn.”
“Kevin?” At the strange change in her voice, everyone got quiet.
Kevin put down his corncob.
“Has Ian been here, already?” Aileen said.
Mackenzie turned toward his father for an answer. Kevin’s eyes began to space a little. But he didn’t answer.
“The fundraising kids?” Aileen said. When her husband still didn’t answer, Aileen said, “This is the time when you’d better answer me, Kevin Foster.”
“I couldn’t let him in.”
The whole kitchen was quiet. Aileen sat across from her husband, and waited for him to elaborate.
“I just looked at him, and I couldn’t let him. I just... I closed the door in his face,” Kevin said. “I could not have that in my house.”
Roy swallowed, and stood up.
“Roy, where are you going?” Kevin said.
Roy’s eyes, large and blue, filled up with tears that did not fall out. He looked, for once, like he wanted to kill someone. Tina could not decide if the transformation was wonderful or terrible.
“That,” he said, his voice thick, “is my family.”
He turned to leave. Ryan stood up.
“I’m sorry, Ryan. I gotta get my cousin.”
“Hold on,” Mackenzie said, standing up. He left the room for a minute, and came out with his bomber jacket as Roy was slipping his pea coat on. “Now let’s go. Tina, can I take your car?” He spoke right over his father’s head, trying not to let his voice tremble.
“No,” Tina said, rising. “Cause I’m driving.”
And then Luke and Madeleine got up with her and went to the kitchen door.
Ashley, Derrick, Ross, and Ryan were left between Aileen and Kevin.
Roy squatted down beside Ryan and said, “Don’t you try anything funny, alright? Just respect your dad.”
“Roy- ”
“Listen to me. Respect me, alright?”
Ryan looked at his friend, and murmured, “I want to- ”
“No,” Roy told him firmly.
When they had left, Ryan looked at Aileen and said, “May I be excused?”
Aileen, whose arms were folded across her chest and was staring down at her plate, nodded.
Ross, uncomfortable, followed Roy up the steps.
Derrick got up and said to Ashley, “Excuse me. But... those are my friends.” He nodded manfully at the Fosters, and left as well.
When it was just Ashley between her parents, Aileen said, “You might as well go too.”
“Yes, Mother.”
“And, Ashley?”
“Yes, Mother?”
“Don’t ever expect me to be so stupid as to believe that you and Derrick Todd would ever be a couple. But good points for pissing your sister off. Now take your food and go upstairs.”
“Yes, Ma’am.”
When it was just Aileen and Kevin, she finally looked up at her husband who was looking down at his plate.
“I want to thank you,” she told him. “For ruining everything.”
“Aily- ” he started.
She put a hand up, and stood up.
“You know what?” Aileen said, “They didn’t have a bad idea.”
She went out of the kitchen, and a few moments later Kevin Foster could hear his car leaving the driveway.

A LITTLE MORE TOMORROW
 
Wow that was an eventful dinner! Poor Ian! I hope this does not put him off being with Mackenzie! I had a feeling Ashley's boyfriend lie would not work. Great writing and I look forward to more tomorrow! It's Friday afternoon here so I will say have a great Friday and weekend!
 
Um, somehow I managed to delete my entire message. Anyway, its Friday morning here and almost time to do a few last things before wrapping the week up, so I will accept your happy Friday and wish you a happy weekend. Jamnia sure did have some events this week, and Kevin sure was a bit of a... well. I created him so maybe I shouldn't say too much about him. There are still surprises to be revealed and dramas waiting to happen, and some of them will happen tomorrow.
 
The first place they all went was the Fitzgerald house.
“Well then, where is he if he’s not here?” Mackenzie wondered. His grandmother, Cedric, and Ralph shook their heads.
“You think he went back home. His house?” Tina asked Roy.
“Not a chance,” Roy said.
“I can’t believe he’d do that.” Mackenzie just kept on repeating, “I don’t know that I believe in anything anymore.”
Apropos to nothing, Derrick Todd put his hand out, and introduced himself to Cedric.
“Weren’t you with Lindsay?” Ida said.
“At one time, Ma’am.”
“Now he’s with Ashley,” Tina stated.
Ida cocked a disbelieving eye at her granddaughter.
“Things didn’t work out with Lindsay, Ma’am,” said Derrick.
“Oh, you learned she was a bitch. Eh?”
“Uh,” Derrick started, trying to be politic. “Something like that.”
“You might want to try your house,” Cedric told Roy. “Wouldn’t that make sense?”
“Yeah,” Roy’s voice lightened with relief. “Thanks, sir.”
Cedric saluted the boy, then shrugged.

“That son of a bitch!” Race swore, blowing out cigarette smoke. “I’m getting the car keys. I’m going to kick his ass!”
“Mom, no! Not right now!” Roy said. “Please, sit!”
Race took in a deep breath. The ashes of her Winstons were falling on the carpet.
“Ian hasn’t been here?” Mackenzie said, hopefully.
Race knew the boy’s mother now. She knew what this boy meant to Ian, and what Ian meant to him. She had to love him.
“No, Mackenzie. I’m sorry.”
Mackenzie looked devastated.
“He’ll turn up, I’m sure. He’s probably just driving.”
“Can I stay here a while?” Mackenzie said. “In case he turns up?”
“Of course,” she said.
Then Tina said, “Can we all stay a while? If you don’t mind, ma’am?”
“I don’t mind,” Race said. “I don’t mind at all.”
Tonight Race looked at Tina and Mackenzie, and realized she’d have to start to think of the Fosters differently. They sat down on the couch with Roy between them, and Race looked at all three of them together, and didn’t know what to think.

SO THIS IS WHAT LOVE was, Vaughan learned. Some people would never learn. And this is what God was. It could not be taught at school or at a pulpit. It had to be experienced, and he was sure that it was only being experienced at a monastery by coincidence. It could happen anywhere. He sat in the casement of a window in a quiet room in an abbey outside-inside of Jamnia, looking across Lake Clare. And Lake Clare was like faith wasn’t it? He could not see it in the dark but he knew the Lake was there because he’d seen it before. In the distance were the lights of Jamnia.
How could anyone not believe in God? What was God? God was what was there. God was what was. God was all around. To believe in being, to be, was to be with God. So much that could not really be communicated. So much happiness at this moment.
There was a tap at the door, and Vaughan suddenly realized that the happiness was now over. He went to answer it, and Brother Paul stood there with Ian Cane.
“I figured he must need you really bad and all,” said Brother Paul.
Vaughan looked at Ian, and then nodded, and said, “Thanks.”
He closed the door, and stood waiting for Ian to speak.
Instead, the other boy did the most astounding of things and burst into tears. Vaughan put his arms around Ian, and Ian began to cry into his friend’s shirt. What in the hell could have possibly happened? Vaughan wanted to ask. But Ian continued sobbing louder and louder, catching his breath, and Vaughan knew that this was just not the time for questions.
Never mind, he would learn soon enough.

The phone rang in Vaughan’s room, and he told Ian, “Hold on.
“Who could this be?” he picked up the phone.
“Yeah, hello. Kenzie! Oh, God, Kenzie, slow down. Just stop. He’s right here!”
Vaughan put down the phone and said: “Do you think you could manage a phone call from your significant other?”
Ian swallowed and tried to smile as he reached for the phone.

It was late when the lights of Tina’s LTD lit up the driveway of the house on Windham Street. A few minutes later she came on in though the door that was never locked.
Tina found her mother and grandmother sitting around the table.
“Ian’s at the monastery with Vaughan,” Tina reported. “Kenzie’s going to join them.”
Aileen nodded.
“Mom, are you drunk?”
Aileen gave a little wave to acknowledge that she just might be, and Ida nodded emphatically.
“Oh, Mama, I’ve failed,” Aileen said.
“Whaddo you mean?” said Ida.
“I didn’t do anything tonight. I just sat there. I didn’t know what to do.”
“What could you have done?” Ida said. “You let your son be a man. You let love take its course.”
“I don’t understand this,” Aileen said. “I don’t get a thing that’s going on. I am screwing up in every which direction.”
“How can you understand people?” Ida said. “Or understand love? Look at me, Mary Aileen. Did you do your best?”
Tina watched her mother nod to her mother.
“Well, then. There’s nothing else to be done.”
All at once the three women took out their cigarettes, and lit up.
“If it makes you feel better, Mom,” Tina said, sitting down at the table. “I have a future. I don’t know where, but Mr. Stearne said he’s gonna help me out. And that a bright girl like me- he calls me bright- ”
“Of course. You are,” Ida said.
“You’re just lazy as hell... Scholastically,” Aileen added.
“And he’s... I’ve got an advocate now. It’s just... I wondered who would be Luke’s advocate?”
“Um?” said Aileen.
“Mama, he’s working hard at the first job anyone ever helped him get. Where’s he going to go, though. What’s he going to do? Who’s going to fight for him?”
“Why don’t you?” Ida said simply. “Maybe a woman’s not a woman until she has to learn to fight for someone. Until she learns she has been fought for.”
“What if she hasn’t been?” Tina said.
Ida told her granddaughter, “I wasn’t. So I made up for it by fighting a little harder for others. And what’s that to your story when you’ve got so many people on your side, Martina Foster?”
Tina nodded. She sighed and said, “Well then I’m on Luke’s side now. And I like that. I feel like I’m going to go places. And you know what, Ma? Mackenzie will, too. He’ll be fine. He’s stronger everyday.”
Aileen nodded. Then she said, “He’s my son. Of course he’s stronger everyday.”
Tina looked from her mother to her grandmother, and began to get the feeling that they were all a lot more alike than she’d ever thought.

On either side of Vaughan, Mackenzie and Ian were talking rapidly, and Mackenzie was going on about Roy, who stood at the edge of the bed.
“He was something else,” Mackenzie was telling Ian. “I’d never seen anyone like that. Except for Tina.”
“I wish I’d been there,” Ian said, blowing his nose.
“If you’d been there,” his cousin pointed out, “it wouldn’t have happened.”
“You all are really good friends, you know that?” Ian said.
None of them responded.
“No, I mean that,” Ian said.
“Oh, stop it, Ian,” Vaughan demanded.
“Let’s not lose this,” Ian commanded.
Vaughan muttered, “Alright Ian.”
“No, I’m serious,” Ian clasped Vaughan’s shoulder tightly, and with his other hand he caught his cousin’s hand, “You two didn’t have to be in all of this- ”
“Yes, we did,” Roy argued.
“No,” Ian said, quietly, looking up at his cousin. “You didn’t. But you are now, and I guess nothing’s gonna get easier. No matter how much we want it too. Right, Kenzie?”
Mackenzie, beside Vaughan, nodded.
“So, let’s stick together,” said Ian. “Like we are right now.”

vi

The next morning Ralph Hanley is up early. He showers, smokes, and drinks a cup of coffee before Mass. He does not make it to Cedric’s house though he sees both Cedric and Ida at Mass. Over thirty years ago, Cedric introduced the would-be priest to the one time baby-sitter. They got on as well as two friends of a friend could. Ralph did not expect to know her this many years later.
He checks on Father Brumbaugh again. Before Mass, Ralph went up to his room and tapped on the door a few times. Hearing no answer, he went in and found the old priest, hair disheveled, sitting on the edge of the bed looking as if he were—unsuccessfully—trying to recall something. Now, after Mass, he is still there.
“Father,” Ralph says. Outside the window of Father Brumbaugh’s bedroom the Number Seven rattles by.
“Come, let me help you,” Ralph hooks an arm around the old priest. He leads him out of the room and down the stairs. He wishes Cedric was here to help the old man with coffee or a bit of food.
Sometimes it’s this way.
The old priest has been sitting nearly catatonic in the rectory, being virtually spoon fed. Ralph knows that this will be the day that he must return Brumbaugh to Holy Spirit, and perhaps see about getting a new priest. Not that new priests are in vast supply.
He drives with the window wide open. This day yellow lilies like weeds are popping up in profusion on the side of the road, and the sky above is like a huge blue tent. The clouds are thick and white as if Michelangelo painted them there with dramatic flourish. Ralph cannot remember the sun being so bright or so close. Spring is here again. How many springs has he seen? This June it will be fifty-two.
Ralph turns toward the old priest, a collection of white wrinkles over blue veins. The old man’s mouth looks heavy, pulled down to his chest by gravity. His eyes are spaced out, looking at nothing. This may be his last spring. And does this even count as a last spring? If you are not present, is it present for you?

Julian and Ralph are talking in the common room. Julian is telling Ralph everything he knows about the kids.
“I’d like to see Vaughan before I leave,” Ralph says, taking out a cigarette, and stretching his legs.
Julian nods. “He came here for prayer and quiet, I think. But it doesn’t seem forthcoming.”
“Are they all here?” Ralph gestures with his cigarette. “Mackenzie and Ian?”
Again, Julian nods, “And this Ian’s little cousin too. It’s nice having boys in the place. They’re not vocations, but... Ick!” Suddenly Julian makes a face.
“What?”
“I’m tired of that word,” Julian says, then mimics, “Vocation. Vocation. Vocation. Discernment. Discernment. Discernment!” And laughs. “But yes,” Julian says, growing serious again. “It’s good you brought old Brumbaugh back here for his last days... And there’s no debating it, these are the last days. I’d love to send Paul to you.”
“But he’s not a priest.”
“True,” Julian admitted. “But it would be nice to see him in plain clothes, though. Almost as nice as it would be to remember what you look like in a habit.”
Ralph smirked at the other priest.

Vaughan finally got up from his knees, and bowed before the tabernacle, then headed past the grille into the pews of the chapel and said to the darkness: “How long have you been here?”
“How’d you see me?” Ralph laughed out of the dark.
“Aren’t we in a mess, now?” Vaughan said, not answering the question as he sat down beside Ralph.
“What all happened?”
Vaughan told him everything, uncensored, about last night.
“I got rid of them,” he said. “I told Ian and Kenzie to go walking by the Lake. Roy’s out amusing himself by himself. Which is something he’s good at. And I went here because I needed to be here. With God. Alone. And because I don’t think I’ll be able to be alone with God a lot for a while.”
“Um?” said Ralph.
“It’s alright,” said Vaughan. “There’s work to be done. I think God wants me to do it. Nothing big. Just to be there for people. Just to be there right now when they need me. Maybe someday I’ll put on a big black robe, and live in the woods like a hermit... Sing Latin all day.”
“I would not put it past you,” Ralph said.
“But not today,” said Vaughan.
“Fitzgeralds always come to the rescue,” Ralph said.
Now it was Vaughan’s turn to say, “Huh?”
“It used to be your father’s favorite phrase. Whenever he’d pop up and I would be in trouble. Or what he thought was trouble. He would say,” Ralph raised his finger, and shook it, “ ‘Fitzgeralds to the rescue.’ Which, at first, shocked me. Because for the first eighteen years I knew him, his last name was DuFresne.”
Ralph shrugged it off.

MORE ON THE OTHER SIDE OF FRIDAY
 
I am glad Ian has Mackenzie and Vaughan. They are all good friends to each other. I can't guess what will happen next but I am enjoying the ride! Great writing and I look forward to more soon!
 
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