CHAPTER
TWO
ON CHRISTMAS NIGHT CONTINUED
“BITCH, YOU’LL DO WHAT I tell you!”
He moved toward Naomi with the baseball bat. Noah jumped in front of her. Butch knocked him to the ground. Noah scrambled up, but the bat came in his direction and Noah dodged it, lifting his hand, the top of the wood slamming his fingertips.
“Get off her!”
And Naomi screamed out his name.
From the corner of his eye, as Noah rose up, he saw the door open. But he turned around heading for Butch again, and then Butch came at him and Noah hoped he could catch the bat and not be hit in the groin, but just then Butch went down.
Noah turned around.
In his jeans and tee shirt, James stood there with the crowbar.
“Apparently I didn’t come back a minute too late,” he said, sighing. He tried to smile.
“You miss me?”
“James, shut up,” Noah said, standing up to hug him.
Naomi was crying on the floor and James said, “Mrs. Riley, you have to stop that.”
“James, help me get Butch the fuck out of here.”
Huffing and puffing they dragged Butch’s fat, smelly body out of the house, James harnessing him under the arms. Once he started to wake up, James casually hit him over the head one more time.
“Whaddo we do with him?”
“Put him in the car,” said James. “Drive the car far away. You get in mine all right. Follow us.”
Noah did not ask where this plan was going. He just nodded.
They went east down Route 13, literally nothing but the occasional stoplight and intersecting road, farm fields pale yellow because it was autumn. James stopped at the side of the road and drove into a ditch. Noah parked behind him.
James came out of the car with the keys and said, “Let’s go. I had to keep hitting him upside the head. If he’s not totally retarded when he comes to, he’ll feel like he is. Take these keys, Noah?”
“How’s he gonna get back?” Noah said, as he moved over and James took the driver’s seat.
James started up the car.
“Why the fuck do you care?”
*******
That night they sat with the car parked in a field outside of town. The moon rose up high and large, and Noah said, “If Butch comes back he’ll make straight for Naomi.”
“Maybe Naomi’ll get some sense and call the police. I don’t think anything ever happened to her that just had to.”
“I don’t know,” Noah said. “But I gotta get the hell out of here. I mean, as soon as I turn eighteen.”
“You can go to my school,” said James.
Noah shook his head.
“That’s not for me. I’m just going to go to California.”
“That is the stupidest plan I’ve ever heard.”
“James!”
“Well,” James shrugged. “Do whatever, Noah. But just get the hell out of here.”
They sat quiet like that for a while. James’ hand was casually placed on Noah’s thigh and just then Noah gave into his wonder. He placed James’ hand between his legs.
“I’m sorry,” he said as his hand rested lightly on James’ after his friend started in surprise.
“It’s just… my whole life people have been touching me there when I didn’t want to be touched. And I just wanted to know how it would feel to be touched in a good way. When I wanted it. It feels good, James. Please don’t stop. I’m not ready for you to.
“You don’t… have to do anything. You don’t have to make me come or anything like that. Just… I just need to feel you touching me right there. All right.”
James placed his head on Noah’s shoulder and nodded, and under the moon, Noah opened his legs and let down his pants and closed his eyes, feeling for the first time loved by another man.
Brendan Miller jiggled the key into the door slowly and, closing the door quietly, he locked it, untied his dripping shoes, left them on the mat, and then tiptoed through the black stone foyer beside the large, low living room. He was on his way up the stairs when he heard a voice drawl:
“Well, well, well.”
Carol sat on the couch in her white housecoat, looking pleased and sipping a cup of coffee. How could he have not smelled the coffee, he wondered?
“Little brother was up late last night,” she commented.
“And you’re up early.”
Carol shrugged. “It’s Christmas.”
Then she said, “Wanna talk?”
“I guess,” Brendan said. Then, “Yes. But I want to go upstairs and take all this stuff off.”
Upstairs Brendan threw his clothes in a pile and changed into his pajamas. He yawned. Part of him wanted to go to sleep. In a few hours it would be sunrise. The other part of him was almost happy about the interrogation Carol was sure to give him.
When he came back down she was not on the couch, but in the kitchen and she had poured coffee for him into a white a mug.
“Were you with Kenny?”
“You know I was.”
“Um.”
“Um what?” Brendan said, reaching for the powdered creamer.
“Nothing. Just… Ho Ho Ho.”
“You’re a horrible person.”
“And you’re wrong as hell if you’re going to use powdered creamer. Use this.” Carol handed him the hazelnut liquid. “It’s the holidays.”
“Maybe you should get your own love life,” Brendan said. “And then you won’t have to be so concerned with mine.”
“You could have something there,” his sister said as they crossed the foyer and settled back down on the couch in the wide living room.
“Or maybe I just need to get laid,” she said. “I miss getting laid. The boyfriend was sort of incidental.”
“You don’t mean that.”
“If you don’t think I mean it, then you don’t know me, Bren. God, men are so… They really are a mess.”
“I know I’m a mess.”
“No,” Carol put her hand on his knee. “I mean, yes. I mean I suppose you are your own type of mess, but not like some of the messes I’ve dealt with. I think if I could go into a dark room, have some stranger come and give me a good shagging and then leave, I would be completely happy.”
“Then you’ll like the
Dildo I bought you for Christmas.”
“I bet that’s what you didn’t buy me,” Carol said. “But I think I could appreciate something like that.”
“Well,” Brendan shrugged, “That’s what birthdays are for.”
When Fenn Houghton woke up, he could hear Christmas music and pots and pans dinging downstairs. He knew the house was more or less full. This morning was bright and sunlight was struggling through the thick curtains.
He was on his stomach, face buried in pillows. Todd must have been downstairs. At least, he wasn’t here. Fenn turned over slowly. His throat was dry and his mouth was gummy. Sipping from the glass of water he kept by the bed and downing two Aleves he acknowledged how youth had flown by, quick and full of its own pains. Now middle age approached and there wasn’t a morning he didn’t pop pills. Time to be reflexive about this. If he had the same longevity as everyone else in his family, or most people in the world these days, the bulk of his life would come after thirty-five. He wasn’t at the end of anything, no, he thought, drifting back into sleep. He was at the beginning of at least fifty more years of infirmity.
“Are you going to get up or what?” Todd demanded.
Fenn turned over, shielding his face while Todd put a cup of coffee down beside him.
“Do you remember that time,” Fenn said, “before we were married, when you had your place and I had mine and I slept as long as I wanted to, and you never came into my room and told me to get up? Let’s pretend we’re back there again.”
“It’s eleven o’ clock,” Todd said, dragging Fenn out of bed and pulling him into pajama pants, as he raised his arms up to put on his tee shirt.
“It’s Christmas, goddammnit. It’s eleven on Christmas day which translates to wake up sleepy head.”
Todd dragged him out the bedroom and Fenn said, “I despise you sometimes, Meradan.”
“Yeah, I love you too, baby,” said Todd.
Downstairs his mother was stirring the sweet potatoes, and his grandmother was finishing off the macaroni while Adele put the finishing touches on turkey.
“It’s about time,” his mother said.
Adele added: “We could hear you calling hogs for the last hour.”
Fenn looked at all of them and said, “From hogs to heifers.”
Lula cackled, but his mother wagged a finger and said, “Now, see here.”
“Here you go.” Lee, holding Dylan, slipped Fenn a glass of something.
“Damn!” Fenn swore. “It’s more nog than egg in here.” He went from the cup of coffee in one hand to the egg nog in the other, and then said, “I need a cigarette. Danny, could you get my cigarettes? Where’s Tom?”
“Tom’s playing organ for the Christmas morning Mass,” Lee said, handing the baby to Todd whose fingers were aching for him.
“Oh?”
“Yeah,” said Lee. “Brian drove back home early this morning to be with his family.”
“Here you go,” Danasia handed Fenn his cigarettes and he said, “Thank you, baby,” as he lit one.
“Noah, Naomi and James are still at the apartment,” Danasia continued. “And Milo and Dena will be here later with Nell after they’ve had dinner at the Affrens.”
Fenn frowned and looked around the kitchen, “Where’s my niece?”
“She’s with Will,” Adele said, moving to the potato salad to chop onions.
“She said she had some sort of surprise for me.”
“That’s never good,” Fenn said, and putting his cigarette down, he reached for the baby.
“You know?” Fenn continued, “I never thought Brian would go back to Pennsylvania for Christmas. I sort of thought we were his family.”
Adele barked out a laugh.
“What?”
Adele pushed her hair back, and lifting the large casserole dish full of macaroni, said, “How could someone who slept with your man and broke up your house be family?”
And just then Layla opened the door and entered with her surprise.
The macaroni just missed crashing and Adele vacantly placed it in the stove and shut the door, staring murderously at her daughter.
Lee said, “Goddamn.”
Lula said, “Goddamn.”
Beside Layla Lawden stood Vanessa Lawden, Julian’s mother, Hoot’s mistress.
Layla said, “I brought your sister.”
“How could she…? How could…?” Adele choked on her words as she walked back and forth in the little study Todd used as his office. “That little… That treacherous heifer. I should… I will,” Adele crushed her fist into her palm.
“Adele,” Simon began. He had arrived approximately five minutes after Vanessa Lawden, and four minutes after Adele, in a rage, had locked herself in Todd’s study.
“That… bitch!”
“Vanessa? Or Layla?”
“Hell,” Adele exploded. “Both of them.”
The door opened and Adele made to fly for it with her fist, but it was just her brother.
“Is everything kosher in here?”
“Fuck no—” Adele began.
“Nothing,” Simon said calmly, “is kosher in here. Not yet.”
“Well, you have to come out sooner or later,” Fenn said. “Because I’m having a hell of a time being the happy host with the sister we never knew.”
“Who is a treacherous slut!”
“Who is Julian’s mother,” Fenn reminded her.
Adele stared wildly at her brother.
“Layla had a point.”
“Layla had no right!” Her mother fired back. “When we get home I’m gonna light a fire in that little girl’s ass.”
“Layla is seventeen, almost eighteen, and I doubt she’d let you do that,” Fenn said.
After a moment, he added, “In fact, I doubt that I would let you do it.”
When Adele’s eyes lit up, Fenn gave her a look that said her anger was irrelevant, and continued:
“When you get home, all you can do is be pissed off with her, and what’s the point in that?”
“Look,” his sister said, “I’m not you. I… you just forgive Tom, invite Brian into your house. Make him family and shit. I am not you.”
“No, you’re not,” Fenn agreed. “You haven’t even forgiven them for something they did to me ten years ago, almost.”
“That’s right. That’s who I am,” Adele said. “And… Hoot and that woman made a fool out of me for twenty years.”
“And,” Fenn added, “the wound is still fresh.”
For some reason, Adele hadn’t expected Fenn to understand. She was subdued. She nodded.
“I know,” he said. “If… If I had to accept Tom into my house, or Brian… A month after what had happened, I know I couldn’t do it. And I’m sorry you have to. It’s only been sixth or seven months. But… you do have to, Dell. We both do. She’s here.”
Fenn kissed her on the cheek. “I’ll see you out here in a couple of minutes.”
And then left the room.
Hands folded across her chest, Adele said, “Fenn has spoken.”
“Is what your little brother says always law?” Simon asked, amused.
Adele said, “Well, you know him… Yes, it is.”
Simon nodded and touched Adele on the elbow.
“Listen. You and me… We’re going to go out there, and you’re going to be civil and decent not for her sake, but because it’s who you are. That’s the woman I know, and you’re not going to let this…. You’re not going to let her get the better of you. You’re not going to sink to her place. And,” Simon said, touching her under the chin and grinning down at her, “I’m going to be with you the entire time.”
Adele nodded giving an almost smile, and then, taking his hand, she headed out of the room with her man.