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The Prayers in Rossford

I am glad Noah and James are sticking together. It was also good to read Chad and Brian making plans for their future together. Naomi is starting to grow on me so I am glad she is staying in Rossford. Great writing and I look forward to more!
 
My favorite part was Naomi, because she does begin to grow on one. I honestly didn't like her and am not quite sure how I got her to this point, but then that's the same way I feel about Noah. He's grown a lot too, or maybe we just know him better.
 
CHAPTER FOUR CONTINUED

Dan did not look up immediately. He did not stop praying when the weight of someone else settled on the kneeler before the Virgin’s grotto, with her hands spread out over the few flickering candles.
“Fenn,” he said, at last.
“What are you doing here, in prayer and fasting on the day before Lent?” said Fenn. “You should be eating those jelly doughnuts with the funny name.”
“Pazckis.”
“As I recall, the spelling looks nothing like the pronunciation.”
“Well, it is a Polish thing,” Dan said. He pronounced the word: “Punch-kee.”
They were both quiet for a long while, and then Dan said, “There was a time when every candle at this Grotto, and the one to Saint Barbara on the other side of the church was lit.”
Dan looked over the metal poor box for the penny candles—which were now dollar candles, and over the five or six ones burning. He played with a small brochure. A handsome young man with wavy brown hair who, Dan reflected comically, was probably gay, inquired: “Have you considered the priesthood?”
“Do you think people believe less?”
“In God?” Fenn said. “No. In the Church? Probably.”
Dan said, “Then what do we do it for?”
“Hum?”
He shook his head.
“Do you believe in the Devil, Fenn?”
Fenn considered this.
“I always thought too many Christians talked about believing in the Devil. I mean, I thought the point was to believe in Jesus.”
“Yes,” Dan agreed. “I thought the same thing. And I thought how there was enough bad in the world and in me, that we didn’t have to blame the Devil. But now I sense something. It’s not me. It’s my enemy, and it whispers to me all sorts of horrible things. And to me that’s the Devil.”
Fenn waited patiently, for Dan to finish his thought.
“Some people,” Dan said, “they think the Devil is…. In Hollywood making bad movies, or making good little people think about sex or… rock music, or the church they don’t like. Those are people who their whole religion is a string of superstitions, thou shalt nots and ‘preacher said last Sundays’.
“But to me the Devil is that voice you can’t hear right away, that sounds like common sense, but that always keeps you in fear. Only most people are in fear, so you don’t know it. He keeps you… common. Not trying your best, not really alive. And that voice keeps saying that there’s no point. Or that things will turn out wrong.”
“Are you hearing that voice?” Fenn said, placing a hand on Dan’s shoulder. “Hearing it now?”
“I think I’ve heard it all my life. I think we all have, but I’m not willing to bow to it any longer. We’re… Things here are in real trouble. Keith’s in real trouble. Sometimes I feel like this church and… this whole world is in real trouble. And it’s all too much and now I need to believe. I need to not hear the devil saying it is no use. I need to believe. I need to believe quickly.”


“Do you think that your brother had a point?”
“Um?”
“I think he had a point,” Noah said, in the dark.
“Noah,” James turned on his side, “if you don’t tell me what the hell you’re talking about… At least tell me a little bit, I can’t be part of this conversation.
Noah straightened himself out on his back and he said, “Your brother. I heard everything he said. He said I had given myself to everyone but you. He said I was supposed to love you but I’d been with everyone but you.”
“Noah, I…”
“But that was why. You know? I wasn’t sure. I mean, he was right. I think that’s why nothing’s happened between us. I didn’t want to make what we had… common. Like everything else. And I thought you didn’t either.”
“Yes,” James aid. “But... How long can you go on like this? You used to tell me it was a need for you. When you would go off and do that, make the movies.”
“Make the pornos.”
“Yes,” James said. “And… I’ve seen them.”
“What?”
“Some of them. I was curious. I had a hard time. I was afraid to. But I did, finally. The look on your face, the look on a lot of their faces. It looked like a need. It looked like you had to be there.”
“Sometimes I did. There was this one boy—since we’re talking about this now—his name was Ari. And he was really innocent looking. In one of the videos he tells Guy that he hasn’t had sex since the last time he shot one of those movies. And he’s really, really shy. I’ve met him off set. But in the movies, on set, he’s different. Those movies are a release for a lot of people. They were a release for me too. Whole months, a very long time, would go between one and the other and I don’t really have a lot of experiences with men outside of films.”
Noah added, “But you already knew that.”
“Yeah.”
“But, I was thinking,” Noah said, “I mean, it’s not a need like that, a need to make a movie. It’s a need for a lot of things. And the movies met that need. But, if that’s what you’re afraid of… You don’t have to be. I mean, I can stop making the movies. I haven’t done one since…”
“Christmas Eve. When I came.”
“I didn’t even do that one. I directed it. I haven’t been in one in a long time. And… I don’t really feel the need to be in another one. I feel a need…”
“To be with me?”
“Yes. If you feel the same way. I…”
Tentatively, he touched James’ chest.
“One thing Ron said was you had always loved me. Is that really, really true?”
“Yes it’s really true.”
“Then fuck Ron and all of those folks. All of the movies. I… I’m totally clean if that’s what you’re worried about.”
“Of course I’m not.”
“I… hate that you saw those movies. I wish you hadn’t. If you can’t get them out of your mind, if you can’t… forgive that I’ve been with lots of people, guys, then—”
James put a hand over Noah’s mouth.
Slowly Noah removed his hand and said, “Then there’s nothing to stop us. Stop me from giving myself to you. Like I want to. Like I’ve always wanted to.”
Under the covers, Noah took James’ hand and put it on the band of his briefs.
“I’m already hard for you, James.” His breath was trembling.
James’ body was closer to his.
“Noah?”
“Hum?”
“Don’t promise me anything. If you want to go and make movies after this, go and do that.”
“I told you I don’t want to.”
“I’ll never hold you to anything. I don’t know what it’s like to be you, all right? And I can’t be angry if you need to do what you need to do.”
“I don’t,” Noah pulled away, “need to do it. I don’t need to do anything but what we’re doing right now.”
“Calm down.”
“I’m trying to give myself to you, James, and you’re telling me you don’t care if I run around and fuck other people.”
“Of course I care,” James said, sitting up. “But you’ll never have to hide anything from me, or be someone you can’t be. Or who you’re not ready to be.”
They were both kneeling on the bed, looking at each other.
“Look, James, I’m through with all that. I just want to be with you, all right?”
And James didn’t protest anymore, because he knew Noah couldn’t handle that.
Noah pushed himself forward and kissed James. James was surprised how good it felt, how natural. Noah guided his hands back to his briefs and helped James tug them off, helped him pull off his shirt. He wanted to be naked for James. He wanted to be held and hold James. He guided James’s hands to his hips, helped them run up and down his body for the first time. Noah smiled and gasped at James’touch. He wanted to kiss all of him. He pushed James gently to his back, and pulled down his shorts while the other man moaned.
“No one else but us,” Noah’s voice was quiet.
“That’s why Naomi left,” James tried to say, but found his voice floating away, and Noah held his wrists down. He knew what he was doing. He went down on him for the first time, for the longest time, forever, and it was like one of those dirty movies or those sex books James had watched, and then Noah came up panting and said, “I want to fuck you now. I mean, I want to ride you. I call it fucking… I…”
James was shocked. He made a brief noise as Noah stroked him and he felt his penis guided into warm cleft of Noah’s ass. So frim, so soft, sweet as Noah looking down on him. With expertise, Noah sat down on him and took him in, and the two of them began, holding hands, Noah’s face to the ceiling, his hands running up and down James’ chest, taking him in, his mouth, breaking into a smile, their voices, soft and then loud as they moaned with the satisfaction of entry.
 
An interesting conversation between Dan and Fenn. I look forward to seeing what happens next with Fenn and if Dan and Keith stay on as priests. Also a great scene between Noah and James and very hot at the end! Great writing and I look forward to more soon!
 
It sure was good to see Noah and James reach that moment, and I was also glad over the return of Fenn. He's been off doing other things, like raising a baby, I guess. I still feel the same way Dan does about the Devil.
 
CHAPTER
FIVE

RULES OF LOVE CONTINUED


In the end they turned over, and Noah knew this was what he had always wanted. Anything else had been half of this, of being alone, in the dark, in this huge, empty apartment, by themselves, not talking or chatting or consoling, but in this deep, deep, absolute fucking. Face in the bed sheets, mouth biting the pillow, bent over, taking him in, the two of them groaning and swearing until the moment passed over both of them in shock, like a fucking airplane overhead, and they were left trembling and shaken and wet, both on their backs, half off the bed, dicks stiff, semen slick, gasping.
They lay like that for a long time, and then James began laughing, and Noah began laughing, and then they were chuckling together, pushing themselves together, kissing and hugging, hungry for each other. They were chuckling and tasting each other, and when they stopped James said, “Now you can show me.”
“Show you?” Noah placed his hands on his own damp curls and looked at James.
“You can do to me what I did to you.”
“You sure? You’re kind of a newbie.”
“I am a newbie.”
“You get an A for a newbie. A Plus. You want me to fuck you?”
James was quiet for a moment.
“Well, when you put it that way, Noah… Yes. I suppose so. You have a problem with it?”
His hand went right over Noah’s still firm penis that began rising again.
“No,” Noah pulled himself up and kissed James, hard, “I don’t have a problem with it at all.”


“You are a very happy,” Paul noted after a grunt as they lifted part of the papier-mâché wall for Macbeth. Noah smiled brightly, shut his lips and said, “Yes. Yes I am.”
“Well,” —they went to the pipes for the border— “are you going to tell me why?”
“As you know,” Noah said. “Or maybe you don’t, me and Jamey had the apartment to ourselves.”
“Oh,” Paul said brightly.
“Oh, indeed.” They began lifting up the wall.
“We fucked. It was excellent!”
“You…” Paul screwed up his face and leaned against the wall to straighten it. “That’s so crude. What about… made love?”
“No, we totally fucked. We fucked all fucking night.”
Paul looked disapproving and said, “I don’t get you.”
“I do,” Fenn said, coming up behind them with a flower vase. “Goes in the center.”
Paul looked at him.
“The vase goes to the center,” Fenn repeated. “And I get it.”
“Well, as someone who, frankly, has spent a long time, as you will, fucking people, when I met Kirk I was glad to be with someone I could make love to.”
“How high and holy we’ve become,” Fenn said with a grin while Noah snorted.
“What’s that supposed to mean?”
“It means a year ago you were indiscriminately screwing any ass that showed itself and now you’re all…” Noah said, “I’d rather make love.
“Well, I’ve been in love with James since I was sixteen, and I’ve been screwing since I was eighteen and I was scared that if me and Jimmy got together, then it would be all this making love and I’d be, you know, wanting to fuck. I thought me and James were good at everything, but maybe not this. Maybe I’d still want to make dirty movies and hook up with people. But it turns out we’re good in bed too. There’s nothing we can’t do.”
“That,” Fenn said, thumping Paul on the head, “was what I meant.”
“You and Kirk don’t… go at it?” Noah said.
Paul went red. “Me and Kirk don’t talk about it like that. It’s… different.”
“Leave Paul alone,” Fenn said. “He’s not you.”
Paul looked at Fenn. “Is that an insult or a compliment?”
“It’s what it is.”
“What about you and Todd? Do you make love or…”
“Fuck,” Noah finished.
Fenn touched his lip, smiled and said, “You’d have to ask Todd. I have to go to church for some ritual.”
“Ash Wednesday.”
“Ash Wednesday is not some ritual,” Fenn said. “It’s a… Keith McDonald being released from his vows, temporarily. It’s right before the Ash Wednesday Mass. So he can be free to… find out who he is… or something like that.”
“So he can be free to,” Noah said in Paul’s ear, “Fuck!”
Paul raised an eyebrow at him, and Noah, simply grinned.

When Fenn Houghton arrived, Barb Affren, Bill and Nell were at the front of the church with Keith McDonald.
“We’re going to miss him,” Barbara was saying.
“I wish I’d gotten to know you better,” Bill said. “But you did a lot for my mother that I couldn’t. I’ll always be grateful for that.”
Fenn looked from Nell to Bill and stroked his chin.
“Oh, what!” Nell said.
“Nothing,” Fenn said in a low voice, and looking at her again, walked across the church toward the sanctuary.
“Bishop Lord!”
“Fenn Houghton!”
“I wondered if you had forgotten,” Fenn said.
“How could I forget the thirteen year old boy who, at his confirmation said—and I quote, Daniel—’Slap me and I’ll slap you back.’”
“Fenn!”
“I heard that they slapped you,” Fenn shrugged.
“And then he followed it up by adopting the confirmation name Crysoganus Climaticus.”
“I’m glad you could be here,” Keith said. “And what’s a better time than today? He clapped Fenn on the back which, usually, Fenn hated.
When Keith had headed to the sacristy, Fenn murmured: “Bishop?”
“Yes, Fenn?”
“This rite, the temporary release from vows?”
“Yes?”
Fenn said, baldly, “Is it for real?”
“Oh, Fenn,” the bishop said, grinning into his stole, “It is today.”
 
Noah and Jess are cute! I hope nothing comes between them. So Keith isn't going to be a priest for a while? I hope he finds what he wants to do with his life. Great section and I look forward to more!
 
CHAPTER
FIVE

RULES OF LOVE CONTINUED


Dan crossed the sanctuary in purple robes, holding the brass dish filled with the remaining hosts as the last of the congregation went back to their pews. Above, Mark Turner was singing. He was a good kid. Keith hoped he never had trouble like this, never had a life like his. He hoped no one ever had darkness like he had been through. But it was going to go away now. It was almost gone. He felt lighter already.

Before we gain the grace that comes through loss,
Before we live by more than bread and breath,
Before we lift in joy an empty cross,
We face with Christ the seeds renewing death.

“Kill me, oh God. End this me. I am ready to lose this,” Keith prayed as he sorted out the brass dishes on the tray with its white cloth, and traced a cross over them. As Donald Nickerson and Rose Jackson brought him the white veil, and they followed him to the tabernacle, he put away the Eucharist, and closed the little doors. The church was quiet now, after the organ, with everyone kneeling, everyone waiting. Keith crossed himself, and then he breathed. He went back to his chair beside Dan, and Dan looked at him briefly, before straightening his purple stole and rising.

Brian Babcock came down the steps from the choir loft followed by Mark, and at the church doors stood a pretty Indian girl and a young man: Brian’s Chad. Brian waved to Keith, who was turning down the lights, and Keith came down the arcade, past Saint Barbara’s grotto, to the front of the church.
“I want you guys to meet Father Keith.”
“Really, you can just call me, Keith.” He shook both of their hands.
“This is Chad,” Brian said, proudly, touching Chad’s shoulder.
“It’s nice to meet you,” Chad shook his hand. “I’m not really religious, but I hear you’re a really good priest.”
“Chad’s more spiritual than religious,” Brian said, but Chad said, “Actually I’m not spiritual or religious. I’m just Chad.”
“This is—” Mark began.
“I’m Radha,” the girl said, needing no introduction. “This town is too small. I’ve heard a lot about you already, Father.”
Her look was so merry, and so conspiratorial, that Keith looked alarmed and then Radha said, “No. I mean good things. All of it good.” And Keith took a breath and forced out a laugh.
“Have any of you seen Noah Riley?” Keith asked.
“Noah,” Radha said. “He was here?”
“I saw him here,” Keith said.
“I did too,” Brian confirmed. “And I was surprised, but he’s gone now.”
“Oh, Well,” Keith said with a frown, “I was hoping to talk to him before I left.”
“You’re going away?” Mark said.
“Yes.”
“But you’re coming back?” : This from Brian.
Keith thought of saying, “I hope so”, or “God willing.” Both statements were honest, but somehow not truthful, too melodramatic. So he said, “Of course.”

When they were gone, Keith went back to the altar. He turned out all of the lights till only the votives were burning. These black pants and tie and white collar held him in, made him a priest. He felt like a priest, not like the person he couldn’t control. Maybe if he always wore them… But he couldn’t sleep in them. Or jog. Or live. Best to live without them for a while and see what happened.
There was a section between the tabernacle and the wall of the sacristy where he could kneel and pray. God was there. He placed his hands against the brass of the tabernacle worked with sheaves of wheat and clutches of grapes.

“Lord, I’m going to leave you for a time. I’m going to sin. I’m going to let myself sin and sin until it’s all out of me. I’m going to make a wreck of myself. I can’t keep promising to be someone it’s killing me to be. So, I’m just going to be the me I am and trust you will forgive me. Turn your head. How many times have you not turned your head and seen me do things that shame you, that shame me? Turn your head this time and forget about me. The way I forget about you. These feelings come up in me and make it easy to push you away. So just push me away until I’m finished with them, until they’ve played out. I’m not like Saint Augustine. I’m not saying, Lord make me holy but not right now. I asked and I asked for you to make me holy and to do it right away so that I wouldn’t slip. But I keep slipping. I can’t stop this need. This… need. So, I’m going to give into it and give into it until I work through it. Like a flu. Or like a cold. I don’t know what else to do. And I’m afraid. I’m afraid to leave you. I’m afraid to lose myself. But I’m glad too. Because I need to be free. My body needs it. I need it. Forgive me, God.
Amen.


“Noah,” Paul said when they were in the vestibule of Saint Barbara’s.
“Um hum.”
“About today. You know, at the theatre.”
Noah looked at Paul closely.
“I mean what I said. I… I don’t mean to sound judgmental. I don’t mean to sound… prickish.”
“Oh,” Noah waved it off. “I wasn’t really thinking about it anymore. I know. You’re just… you.”
“Look, you’re the only one who knows. I mean, the only one I can talk to who knows what it was like, what we did. Everyone is going to be like, oh no. that’s terrible. Or ooh, I bet that was really cool. But you know, and so… I need you to know how I feel now. I guess.”
“Paul, I know how you feel,” Noah said. “All right? Just… you’ve really changed. You’ve changed more than me. But you were always better than me.”
“No, you know that’s not it,” Paul said. “It’s just I had this dream. I mean, I have this dream of a life way different from what I had. Where I have the good boyfriend and maybe even the kids. And I’m respectable. To respectable people. And I don’t ever want to think about any of the stuff before or—God forbid—the ways I survived before I made movies.”
“But didn’t you do it because it turned you on?” Noah said. “At least a little?”
“Yes,” Paul said. “Or it turned me on to turn into someone else. I don’t know. That doesn’t turn me on anymore. I can’t go back to—I don’t want anything like that. Ever.”
“Well, I do.”
“I know. You’re an excitement addict. You need to keep it wild and crazy. That’s what I like about you, Noah.”
“And I was afraid that there was no way I could find someone who would love me if I stayed wild and crazy. Or that I could love in a wild and crazy way. That’s what it’s like for poor old Keith I bet. Wants to be this good priest, but there’s that other part of him that can’t cool it. Can’t be tame. So he’s torn up. I can’t be tame. And I can’t be torn up over James. I can’t be wanting to go to all of these places he can’t come. That would just kill us. I was afraid James would need me to be what… you need to be. Settled down and making love. He doesn’t. He wants me wild. And I love that.”

***


The sky was purple grey, and the snow dim when Fenn came back from Saint Barbara’s with Paul, Kirk and Noah. Behind Todd’s Land Rover another car was parked and Paul frowned, and said, “I guess I’ll just park the Jeep on the street.”
“So we can climb over that hump of snow? Fuck that. We’ll go in the driveway right behind whoever the hell this is.”
Climbing out of the Jeep, Fenn muttered, “Damn, Todd, you could have done this driveway a little better.”
Melanie, Tara and Todd were sitting around the kitchen table with:
“Chuck!”
A thin, light skinned man got up from one of the kitchen chairs. Todd said, “So you’re back, Babe.”
“That driveway—”
“Looks as good as I care to clean it, and if you want it cleaner you better do it yourself. Say hi to Chuck.”
Paul encountered the thinnest Black man he’d ever seen in his life and Chuck said, gesturing to Fenn: “Did you ever see him on stage?”
“I work with him,” Paul said.
“He’s at the Theatre,” Fenn said. “He’s one of the best actors at the theatre. And this is Kirk. His significant other. And this is Noah.”
“I perform in other places,” he jested, shoving his hands in his pockets.
Chuck nodded, but did not seem to be paying attention, and said, “I got something for you—”
“He wants you to do a movie,” Melanie spat out.
Chuck turned around and looked at her.
“Well,” Melanie shrugged. “See,” she said to Fenn, “we were talking, me and Chuck, and he was doing a new film. You know, one of those Indie things. And I said, well Fenn is unexposed and he’s pretty free right now.”
“And I could have you out of my hair for a while,” Todd put his hands on Fenn’s shoulder and half leap frogged him.
“Do we have fish or chicken tonight?”
“Chicken,” Fenn leaned back and thunked Todd on the top of his head, “Are you for real, Chuck? Where are we supposed to be shooting this?”
“Chicago,” Chuck said. “And some small towns.”
“Like East Carmel,” Noah chuckled.
“Where’s East Carmel?”
Paul said, “Exactly.”
“So, you’re a real actor?” he said to Paul.
“Uh… I’d like to think so.”
“You have a great look,” he said, touching Paul’s cheek. “You have a beautiful hometown look.”
Kirk looked askance at Chuck, but Noah grinned and said, “You look like a pretty hillbilly. Paul.”
“Well, essentially that’s what I am.”
“Let me look this script over,” Fenn said.
“And you too,” Chuck said to Paul. “The part of Neil is great for you.”
Todd said, “Look it over. And then do it.”
“You eager to get rid of me?”
“I’m eager for more people to know how great you are. You’ve been behind the scenes working at the playhouse so long,” Todd said. “People forget your acting.”
Kirk tugged Paul on his shirt sleeve and said, “This is exactly what you always wanted to do."
 
Great section! It sounds like Keith is not going to loose his mind which is good. Hopefully he can make amends with Noah. This Chuck seems like an interesting character. I hope we see more of him. Great writing and I look forward to more!
 
Chuck may prove to be very interesting. Keith's journey could be very interesting, but I don't think it will be a quick or easy one.
 
CONCLUSION

“It’s what we both could use,” Kirk said, later that night. “I mean, I’ve talked about getting away, and you don’t want to go back to California. Well, Chicago isn’t California, and it’s hardly the end of the earth.”
Paul was actually surprised that Kirk wanted to go, but knew better than to say this. Instead he said, “We could settle there. If you wanted. There’s plenty of work for an actor.”
Paul, in fact, did not know if this was true or not, but supposed that if he could work in Rossford, then he would definitely be able to find work in Chicago.
“And maybe… even though you didn’t like school,” Kirk said. “I would like it.”
“You’ve been to school, though,” Paul pointed out.
“Not graduate school. Maybe I could try it. I’ve thought of it. We could have a new life there.”
“I hear it’s more expensive to live in Chicago,” Paul cautioned.
“Possibly.” Mark shrugged. He had no way of knowing. “I bet it would have been just as expensive in California. Moreso. And I was gung ho on going off there.”
“A movie,” Paul said wistfully, coming to sit down on the edge of the bed. “I’m going to do a real movie. All the way back then, the first time I came to Guy I thought, I’ll make real movies. And I even convinced myself that I had made some real movies. But this…” Paul shook his head.
“I like it when you do that,” Kirk said.
“Hum?”
“That smile. That brilliant, wide smile.”
Paul reclined on the bed. He and Kirk lay side by side for a long while.
“I was just thinking,” Paul began.
“Hum?”
He sighed.
“We’re only one Asian kid away from our dream,” said Paul.

“Have you ever seen any of his films?”
“No,” Fenn said.
“I was just wondering if they were better than mine,” Todd said. They were sitting on the low, battered sofa in the living room.
“You do documentaries and he does features. You can’t compare them.”
“I was thinking I’d like to do a feature.”
“Really?”
Todd nodded. “I mean, I got all the talent, right? Great actors. You, Mel, Paul is phenomenal. I knew that about him way back when. Even in a porno he sold that shit.”
“I hope it doesn’t come back to haunt him.”
“It’s haunting him now, Fenn. The only way it won’t is if he lives out his dream. And if I know Paul, he’ll only roll with the punches.”
Fenn nodded. That was true enough.
“After I do this for Chuck,” Fenn said. “You wanna try and make a film? You know a movie, with plots and shit.”
Todd raised his eyebrow. “You serious?”
“Of course. We’re partners, right? It’s the most sterile term in the world, but sometimes it fits. We’re in this shit together. Your dream is my dream.”
“And I have dreams for you that you probably forgot to have for yourself,” Todd said. “Which is why I want you to do Chuck’s movie. And then, yeah, we can make something. You and me. And everyone else. But principally you and me.”
Todd was quiet awhile. He frowned and sitting up straighter he said, “Was Chuck flirting with Paul? In front of Kirk?”
“A little,” Fenn said. “He’s like that. Kind of.”
“You know if he tries that with you I’m going to knock him to tomorrow, right?”
“Yes, and that’s what I like about you.”


It took three years for Fenn to like Chuck Standard. Freshmen year no one really did. He was always calling attention to himself, making fun of everyone. Making fun of Fenn. The fourteen year old Fenn Houghton had a sense that there was a game everyone was playing. He didn’t know how to play it, and didn’t care to learn.
Chuck never left him alone. Now he can’t remember how they went from annoyed and annoyance to friends. But by junior year this is what they were. By junior year Fenn had found some sort of place and was thinking about going out for a play at Loretto. Adele was there at the time and had told him about it. Saint Barbara’s usually did musicals, and Fenn didn’t have much interest in those. Chuck had gone on and on about the Wiz, which he was in that year, and Fenn was going to have to go and see it.
Chuck, who was called Chuckie, sometimes, had turned himself into Chuck E. This was how he introduced himself, and for some reason people outside of Saint Barbara’s, especially white girls over at Saint Margaret’s went wild over him when he did.
Fenn was fair to Chuck. He, frankly, did not understand what was so gorgeous about him. It must have been his personality. Chuck was very narrow, his face was almost sunken. He violated dress code with large belts, pants too low, V necked red rayon shirts from his parents’ closet. He was the opposite of Fenn, who was—at the time—conservative.
Chuck was reputedly a child model. Freshmen year he rode down the banister from the second to the first floor singing:

I’m so pretty,
I’m so pretty
Chuck is pretty
Suck my titty!

Also, Chuck had a tendency to moon people. He had a tendency to moon Fenn. Again, the fifteen year old Fenn was not the nearly forty year old one. He was devoutly Catholic and deeply sensitive. He turned his head every time Chuck did something like that. In the locker rooms, when there was a swim class, he tried to ignore those stripping and concealed himself as best he could.
At Saint Barbara’s first computer lab, on computers that bore no relation to anything in existence today, but had been state of the art twenty years ago, more than twenty years ago, while Fenn was trying to type without looking at the keyboard, he heard Chuck saying, “Get Fenn.”
Ben, Chuck’s cousin, said, “Fenn. Fenn. Look.”
“Look at—”
Fenn turned around.
Once again, there was Chuck’s ass hanging out of the seat, and he was chuckling and flashing his ass in the middle of class. And then, just before the carcinogenic Father Cliff came by, Chuck pulled his pants back up again.
For the first time Fenn was keenly aware of missing the sight of that ass. He began to wonder if there was another way he might see it again. He realized, to his embarrassment, that he was stiff between his legs.

And that was when Fenn Houghton began to wake up.

“I don’t think I should go to Hollywood after all,” Chuck said their senior year.
They had been study partners a year by now. In all other subjects, through all other years, Fenn had excelled. Fenn was smart, though what Fenn would do with that smartness, no one knew. But it was junior year, when Fenn had to deal with chemistry and geometry that he and Chuck became study partners. For a year now, they had been struggling through math and science, Chuck coming over to the old house Lula lived in now, where Fenn had his room at the top floor, under the attic space that was still Adele’s.
“I can’t count on Hollywood.”
“I never did,” said Fenn.
“I saw you in that play at Loretto. You could do some Hollywood.”
Fenn just looked at him.
“I think I would rather do Loretto.”
“You want to stay in town for school?”
“I don’t know,” Fenn shrugged. “It’s good enough for Adele, I guess it could be good enough for me.”
“Father Ron says we need to start thinking about that now.”
“Father Ron is a man who’s spent his whole life wearing one outfit and living off the Church.”
Suddenly Chuck began singing, “I’m so pretty…”
“Don’t start that again.”
“I’m so pretty—”
“Are you pretty as a covalent bond? Define a covalent bond.”
“I don’t know what the hell that is,” Chuck said.
“I’m so pretty,” Chuck stood up.

I’m so pretty
I’m so pretty
I am pretty and witty
I’ve got titties
Look at my boodie!”

“Good God,” Fenn said, feigning offence. And then he was aware that he was only feigning it. That Chuck had done it again for the first time in over a year. So much of Chuck was angles and bones, but this right here was soft and dusky, the color of deep caramel, and Fenn wondered what it would be like to touch it. What Chuck, who was dancing around singing, would do if he touched it. So just before he could pull up his pants, Fenn did. He did at the same time he felt he was stiff in his pants, and Chuck shuddered and stopped dancing.
In the room they stood like that. Chuck with his pants down in front of Fenn leaning over the bed, stroking him tenderly. And then Fenn caught Chuck’s slim hips, and pulled him to the bed. Suddenly they began kissing, Chuck’s long hands reaching to hold his scalp, Fenn’s hands pulling up his shirt, wanting to see him naked, amazed at the length of Chuck’s naked body, the brown and tan and gold of it, the bareness and the narrowness of it, the length of the penis in the spring of dark brown hair, how it rose up. Chuck’s hands were on him now, helping him undress, though he had been ashamed of his body before. He wasn’t thin and narrow. He wasn’t sexy. No one wanted him.
And then Chuck was on him. Chuck’s mouth was sucking him, and then they were kissing again and for instruction, the whispered desires in Fenn’s flesh guided him, all that afternoon they guided each other while the chemistry books lay open and abandoned and as the sun set and the bed creaked, their bodies spasms, and they groaned with orgasm.


“This is nuts.”
“I thought that every girl in the world liked to take moonlit walks on the beach.”
“Firstly,” Nell said, shoving her hands into her coat, “I haven’t been a girl in a long time. And second, most girls don’t think about walks on the beach in February.”
“Well, I could always take you back,” Bill said.
“No,” Nell pulled him by his mittened hand. “No.”
“I used to come to the beach all the time in winter,” Bill said. “When I lived here. I still do back home. But the Atlantic has this way of not freezing. Here… You see some of the waves just sort of freeze in the middle of breaking over the water. The forms are amazing. And… walking on a frozen beach. That’s something.”
Nell shoved her hands, and therefore one of Bill’s, deeper into her pockets and shivered, not with cold, but with the pleasure of the grey white sky, and ice grey water and the chunks of white ice.
“It is. It’s a whole other world. Thank you, Bill. Thank you for showing me this other world.”
“I wish I could show you everything. I wish we could show each other everything,” Bill said. “You deserve it.”
And then, they were looking at each other.
“What are you laughing for?”
Bill, chuckling, looked away and said, “I don’t know.”
His face was red, and Nell didn’t think it was the cold. She turned his face toward her, and then, just like that, they were kissing. Bill’s mouth felt so good on hers. She opened her mouth to his tongue, the first tongue in a thousand years, giving into the pressure of his mouth and his hands on her face, giving into Bill, into what she had wanted since that first day. Giving in.
And then, just like that, they pulled from each other in fear.
“I’m so sorry!”
Nell didn’t know if she had said it, or if it had been Bill.
“I’m so…”
Bill turned around and looked at the water. When he turned around, a change had come over him. He looked… less soft.
“Bill…” Nell began.
“Com’on, Nell,” he said briskly. “I’ll take you home.”

There was a rapid banging on the front door, and Dena got up from the beanbag in the library, shouting: “I got it, Mom!”
But when Dena reached the front door, Nell was already coming down the stairs.
“Deen,” Milo said, walking in as his girlfriend opened the door.
“What’s up?” she looked at her boyfriend.
“Grandma sent me here.”
“Barb? What for?”
“For—” Then Milo stopped, and looked up at Nell.
“For you, Mrs. Reardon.”
“Huh?” Nell said, coming down to them. “Whaddo you mean, Milo?”
“Grandma loves you,” Milo said. “Both of you, really. And she’s sure that Bill does too.”
“Well, Bill’s married,” Nell said, surprised by her own sharpness. She put a hand to her mouth, but Milo didn’t notice.
“It’s not just that,” Milo said. “He left a note. That’s all he left.”
Nell looked at Milo strangely.
“What are you saying, Miles?” Dena said.
“He packed up,” Milo told them. “Uncle Bill’s gone.”

END OF PART ONE OF THE PRAYERS IN ROSSFORD
 
A great end to part one of this story! It was good to hear more about Chuck's past. I did not realise him and Fenn had a history. I hope Kirk and Paul like Chicago. So Bill is gone? Thats sad. I hope he comes back. Excellent writing and I look forward to the next part whenever it comes out! :)
 
You don't have to wait too long. I'll put it out Monday or maybe even late tomorrow, but I want to do another short story. Are there any characters from the short stories you miss?
 
You don't have to wait too long. I'll put it out Monday or maybe even late tomorrow, but I want to do another short story. Are there any characters from the short stories you miss?

Probably Jay and Michael or Russell and Gilead but I like all your short stories so whatever you decide to post next I will gladly read.
 
Thanks, a lot. I really do love Jay and Michael too! Maybe one day they'll have a whole book. I'm also fond of Gilead and Russell, and the new story will have a few familiar characters making appearances.
 
PART TWO



CHAPTER
SIX

DANCING


When Mark dropped the saltshaker for the third time at the Value Burger on the Strip, Radha said, “Is there something wrong?”
“Uh, I… Uh….”
“Usually,” Radha told him, “you’re cute this way. In fact, I think it’s the reason we’re together. But right now you’re probably a danger to yourself. Especially if your drive back in the same condition you drove me here.”
“I’m fine!” Mark said, and then put a hand over his mouth. “What I mean to say is… I’m fine.”
“Okay,” Radha sat back. “You may have meant to say you were fine, but what you are, in fact, is a mess.”
Mark, rocking back and forth, a little bit like someone with serious issues, considered this and then said, raising a finger. “Well… there is something.”
“Yes?” Radha said, slowly.
“WILLYOUGOTOTHEPROMWITHME????”
“What?”
“You mean no?”
“I mean, I don’t know what you just said.”
“I…. My senior prom is coming up. And….”
“Oh—” Radha interrupted him. “Oh, prom.”
“I know you probably wouldn’t want to go. It’s just a bunch of kids and… I understand if you didn’t want to go to your own. But it is my prom and—”
“So,” Radha put a hand over Mark’s, “what you want to know… and I’ll say it slowly because apparently you cannot, is if I—being your girlfriend—would go to the prom with you?”
“Yes!” Mark breathed out.
“Well, yeah,” Radha said, blinking. “I need to find something to wear. Me and Claire were at the mall the other day and I saw all of these prom dresses at JC Penney. They had to be prom dresses. They were too ugly to be anything else. How come prom dresses and bride’s maid dresses are so ugly you can’t take them anywhere else? No,” Radha shook her head. “I’ve got to find something hot. Something to make your friends jealous.”
“Then…” Mark still appeared to be confused on this point. “We’re going?”
“That’s what I just said.”
Radha leaned forward and punched him in the shoulder.
“Silly.”

“This is so ugly,” Dena declared, standing in the mirror.
“It’s not,” her mother said. “It’s traditional. It’s blush.”
“It looks like a bottle of Pepto Bismol threw up on me.”
“Which is ironic,” Milo noted, “considering that Pepto Bismol is supposed to cure an upset stomach.”
They were in her mother’s large bedroom in the front of the house, and Dena looked back at Milo and frowned.
He shrugged.
“And with your hair up,” Nell came forward, pushing her daughter’s chocolate colored hair up a little, “Imagine—”
“I imagine,” Dena said, shaking her hair free, “that I’ll look like Betsy Meiers or Jill Mizen.”
“What’s wrong with that?” Nell said at the same time Milo said, “Who are they?”
“Some bitches I went to K-8 with,” Dena said.
“Dena,” her mother chided.
“When it came time for high school they did what half of Saint Barbara’s does and went somewhere else. I think that snotty girls’ school up in Densher.”
“Saint Ursula?” Milo suggested.
“That’s the one,” Dena said. “Look, Ma, I gotta get out of this, right now.”
“It will look nice, Dena,” Nell said.
Dena nodded, not wishing to be meaner than she already was, and went out of the room.
Milo stood up, said, “Scuse me Mrs. Reardon,” then followed Dena out.

In her room, door open, Dena struggled out of the dress in full sight of her boyfriend and breathed, “This dress is not who I want to be.”
“It’s just a dress.”
Furious, in bra and panties, Dena pulled on jeans and a sweatshirt she realized was Brendan’s.
“No,” she said.
Then she said, “You know what? Before Bill left, Mom wasn’t like this. I mean she was like this before him.”
Milo frowned.
“Dull, boring,” Dena said, going to close the door. “A woman who would keep her husband’s last name fifteen years after he cheated on her with her brother, who wouldn’t have a man or a date for over a decade and who would buy this—” Dena stabbed her finger toward the offending garment, “UGLY dress! This drab thing with ruffles all over the tits! She was turning exciting. And now….”
“I’m sorry about that,” Milo said, apologetically.
“It’s not your fault,” Dena said. “It’s not. It’s really not.”
“I guess they really were getting close. If Bill was so afraid he ran away.”
“Yeah…” Dena said, shaking her head. “And I guess we should have known she had no business getting that close. I mean… But she was so… happy.”
“She’s happy now.”
“She’s boring now,” Dena said. “And… if I wear that boring old dress, I feel like I’ll be my boring old mother, who I love. But who is….” Dena sighed and shook her head, then said, “Shit.”
She threw her arms around Milo’s strong neck, and began rubbing her hands back and forth along his shoulders.
“Milo,” she said. “Milo.” She crooned, She hung from his neck, and then pressed her face into his chest.
“Milo,” she said again.
He kissed her on the top of his head.
“You know what?” Dena spoke, conversationally to Milo’s chest.
“Hum?”
“I think it’s time we had sex.”
 
I wasn't expecting a new section today but I am glad you posted! Interesting to see some of the characters getting ready for prom. I am glad Radha said yes to Mark. Hopefully Dena and her mother can sort out their issues. Great writing and I look forward to the next section!
 
It looks like Nell and Dena might have to sort their personal issues out before they can make things better with each other. Poor Nell.
 
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