ROSSFORD WEEKEND PORTION ONE
PART
THREE
EXPLOSION
NINE
TRAIN RIDES
“Well, the whole thing excites me,” Caroline Houghton said.
“Layla’s poetry reading?”
“No,” Caroline said. “I mean yes. I mean, that’s not what I
was talking about. I was talking about you going out with
Alex.”
“Well, I’m not going out until I get back from this thing
with Layla,” Laurel said, straightening her top.
“But going out nonetheless. And not with that Jack
Warren.”
“You’re not bringing him up again?”
“I guess I was,” Caroline reflected. “But I guess I’ll stop.”
“Thank you, Mom.”
“You know,” Caroline followed her daughter out of the
bedroom, “that’s how I met your father. In a dream.”
Laurel turned around.
“Mom, that didn’t work out.”
“It worked out for a while. It worked out long enough for
you to come into the world.”
“I’m not even going to look for the flaw in that logic.”
Downstairs there was a knock at the door and Laurel said,
“That must be Layla.”
Laurel and her mother went downstairs together, and
Laurel opened the door for her aunt. Claire and Dena were
with her.
“I can’t believe I’m being snubbed by my own sister,” Layla
said.
“I’m not snubbing you,” Caroline told her. “I’m snubbing
WomanFest.”
“Is it really that bad?” Claire cringed.
“Well, it is called WomanFest.”
“How did you know about it?” Dena asked her.
“I did card readings there one year.”
Beyond that Caroline wouldn’t say.
“Do you have any prediction for how Layla’s going to do?”
Claire said.
“I don’t really need to predict. All I need to know is, it’s
WomanFest and please, if you ever want to be invited back,
learn how to wear a poker face.”
“That,” Laurel noted, reaching for her coat, “seems like the
beginning to a story I need to hear.”
“Later,” Caroline said. “I promise.”
They went down the long steps to Claire’s van below, and as
they were climbing into it, Laurel’s phone rang.
“Who is it?” Layla said.
Laurel checked it.
“It’s Dylan.”
“Give it here,” Layla said from the shotgun seat.
Laurel handed it to Layla as Claire began driving, and Layla
turned the phone off and then stuck it in her purse.
“Layla!”
“You,” her aunt told her, “are off duty today. It’s
WomanFest time!”
“Well, now I understand that you don’t like Ron,” Danasia told
Noah, “But you should have gone to him a long time ago.”
“It’s not that I don’t like Ron,” Noah said. “And he doesn’t
really like me either.”
“Well, now that is true,” Danasia reflected. “But what is
also true is that if you are looking for something less tame,
something where your past won’t matter, Ron is definitely the
man to go to.
“Or even Casey.”
“I’m not going to Casey.”
“See,” Danasia said, leaning across the table, “that’s your
problem. You want to be proud and respectable, and then do
all the things that proud, respectable people just can’t get away
with. You’ve got a past, and this very minute that past has a
hundred videos more shocking than you sitting on a
dildo and
riding a bicycle that would get you drummed out of this school
system.
“And that’s a shame, it really is, because Rossford City
Schools isn’t that great, and if they were more concerned with
what teachers were doing now than what they did ten years
ago, the schools would be better places.”
“That’s exactly what Chay said.”
“Well, he’s a wise boy.
“But my point is,” Danasia continued, “you’re being too
proud.
“I wouldn’t dare have you surrender your pride to Ron. I
know the two of you have had bad history, and I’ve told him
about that shit. I told him, Baby, Noah Riley was in my life
years before you, and you keep up this shit and he’ll be in it
years after you. No, don’t laugh. I’m dead serious. You and me,
for life.
“But I will go and see if he’s in touch with anything. You
need to go talk to Casey.”
Noah’s face went stony, and crossing his arms over his
chest, he sank a little into his chair.
“I know you have bad history, but you were friends once.”
“Bad history? He had sex with my son! He did it when
Chay was fifteen for Christ’s sake.”
“All the more reason he owes you,” Danasia said. “And you
can put it like that. And you better.”
Noah nodded.
“That teaching job was bullshit, anyway,” Danasia told him.
“I loved being a teacher, though.”
“You loved tutoring at home,” she corrected him. “And
there’s more than one way to teach.”
“Well, you know,” Noah told her. “Lately, I haven’t even
been concerned about looking for a job or anything. It’s other
stuff that’s been on my mind.”
“Other stuff? Not that shit about Chay and Sheridan?”
“Believe it or not, no.”
“Well, good,” Danasia decided. “It’s not good to always be
hung up on your children.”
“It’s more about Paul.”
“Is something wrong with him?”
“No, nothing’s wrong with him. That’s the problem. We
were watching that old video, the one the dean found. I said I
couldn’t watch it by myself, and we laughed at it a while, but
when it got to the sex part…”
“Did it make you hot?”
“It was us years ago. but… I mean, I know we don’t look
the same—”
“You look the same to me.”
“Well, that’s nice, but when I take off my shirt, I know I’m
not quite the same, and neither is Paul. But we watched the
whole thing and we were looking at each other, and then we
snapped out of it, and I said I had to go home.
“We’ve been friends for so long, but we used to do movies
together. I can still remember it. Pauley broke me in. I used to
get weak in the knees with that man. Doing stuff with him was
just so easy cause I just loved being with him. And then when
we left that, when we first came to Rossford, we were sleeping
together. We were lovers. I left and he found Kirk, and then
James came into my life. But me and Paul were something, and
I was feeling it again. And I’ve been feeling it.”
“Do you want to leave James for Paul?” Danasia said, only
half sarcastically.
“No,” Noah said after a while. “But I do want to sleep with
Paul, and that’s fucking me up real bad.”
“Okay, so we’ve been friends for a long time and I’m just
going to get this off of my chest.”
“All right,” Fenn said, sitting up on the couch.
“You remember this couch?” Paul said.
“Yes, it’s my couch, I’ve remembered it for twenty years,
but I bet that’s not what you wanted to talk about.”
“No,” Paul brushed that away. “I just mean the first time I
came here, when Todd brought me, you put me on this couch
and this is where I woke up talking to you. I met you on this
couch.”
“That is the most maudlin thing you’ve ever said.”
“Well, now I’m officially old enough to be maudlin,” Paul
said. “I’m the same age you were when we met.”
“Get out,” Fenn murmured.
“Yeah, I’m not a boy anymore.”
“Well,” Fenn told him, “Now that we’re both old, what
were you about to get off your chest.”
“I never said you were old—”
“That’s hardly the point,” Fenn shrugged. “So why don’t
you tell me the point.”
“I want to fuck Noah.”
If Fenn had a drink in his hand, he would have dropped it.
“We watched that video the dean found. It just brought
back feelings. He was so hot back then. So sweet. We used to
be lovers! I couldn’t stop thinking about how it was with him.
The whole time we just kept looking at each other and… you
know, in the past it could never have worked out for several
reasons.”
“I can think of several reasons why it wouldn’t work out
now.”
“Yeah, yeah,” Paul waved that away. “I’m not saying run
off and make a life with Noah. I’m just saying I really, really,
want to have sex with him. It’s all I’ve been thinking about.
We’ve been friends for so long, and you know we used to be
lovers.”
“You just said that.”
“In this house. In Dylan’s bedroom—”
“There’s more than enough sex that’s been going on in
Dylan’s bedroom.”
“Oh, yeah,” Paul said, sadly. “I’m glad he finally decided to
tell you about that.”
Paul instantly realized what he had said, but before he could
rephrase it, Fenn said:
“Whaddo you mean, finally?”
Paul looked frozen and stupid, and he was trying to figure
what tact to take before he came down on honesty.
“Well, when I found out, it was last year, so it must have
been going on for two years—” Fenn’s face betrayed nothing.
“I… I told him to be careful, but I thought that if you knew it
would kill you, Fenn…” Paul finished lamely.
Fenn said nothing.
After a space of silence, Fenn said, “He’s been having sex
with Lance Bishop for two years?”
Paul opened his mouth and closed it, but Fenn distinctly
saw the word, “Who?” on Paul’s mouth.
“It wasn’t Lance Bishop?” Fenn said standing up.
“I… don’t… think so.” Paul wished he’d never spoken.
“Well, then who? And how many?”
“I don’t know, Fenn. And I don’t know.”
“You knew that my only son was running around with half
the city, and you didn’t think you should tell me?”
“Tell you what?” Paul threw his hands up. “What were you
going to do but what you’re doing now?”
Fenn ignored Paul.
“I don’t know him,” he said. “I don’t know that boy at
all.”