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The Skin of Things: A Sort of Love Story

Well, I'll tell you one place its going: it's going toward honesty. And I'm going toward my bed because its past two in the morning. I feel like I should say something profound, because this story means so much to me, but I don't have any profundity, just red eyes. Be on the lookout for a surprise. Or two.
 
THE CONCLUSION OF CHAPTER SIX



When Donovan asked if he had to wear a tie, Adrienne Shorter said, “Of course not,” at the same time his stepfather, Evan said, “Yes.” And then the two of them both said: “Leave it to your discretion.”
“Personally,” his stepbrother Tyler, who had shown up an hour ago, said, “I think going tie less with one button open is the sporty choice.”
Donovan shrugged, and put the tie down on the table. There was a knock at the door just then, and Adrienne said, “I guess that’s him.”
“Or Melanie,” Evan said.
“If it was Melanie there would be no knocking. Donovan, get the door.”
Donovan sighed, looked down at himself wondering if he looked like a complete dork, and then went to open the door.
When Donovan opened the door, he stood there stupid, and finally he heard Adrienne shout from the kitchen, “Donovan let him in already.”
And then his mother came out of the kitchen, followed by Tyler, through the dining room, into the little foyer and said, “I’m Adrienne Shorter, pleased to meet you.”
The blond young man looked at Tyler, then he looked at Donovan, then Adrienne, and then Adrienne looked at him, and then looked at the shocked look on Donovan’s face, and then she looked to Ezekiel again, placid.
And then the young man, looking from Adrienne to Donovan, said, “I’m Ezekiel Anders.”


“Evan says you’re a really great aid. Where were you an undergrad?”
“At Mercy. It’s not a big college.”
“And that was...” Adrienne shrugged, “a short time ago? I mean, for me it was a few years between being an undergrad and going to graduate school.”
“Yes,” Ezekiel said. “It was a few years for me, I suppose—”
“How old are you?” Tyler cut in pleasantly. “I think Mom wants to know how old you are?”
Adrienne looked at Tyler, who shrugged and then turned his full, slightly predatory gaze on Ezekiel.
“I’m twenty-eight,” Ezekiel said, turning to Adrienne.

For Donovan Shorter the entire night was pens and needles awful. There was no chance to speak to Ezekiel. There was no reason that anyone else knew that he should speak to him, and since Evan had introduced him, Ezekiel had spoken in strained tones. Could it be that Ezekiel was no more strained than Donovan? That, in fact, he wasn’t angry? No, without even looking at him, Donovan knew this wasn’t a possibility. In this room, in this house at this party he felt like a stupid teenager who had done a very dumb thing, and Ezekiel was, indisputably, a grown man. How could he have thought that this wouldn’t matter?
When Ezekiel announced that it was time for him to leave, but could he please use the restroom, Donovan saw his chance. He waited a few moments; he did not see Adrienne’s eyes or Tyler’s eyes following him. He stood up and went upstairs and waited for the toilet to flush, the bathroom door to open. Ezekiel, in his blazer and fawn colored jacket opened the door, staring at him in something like fear and horror.
“What are you doing here?”
Donovan opened his mouth. It was dry. He was trying to force some words out of there.
They were not coming.
“Why are you here? What are you trying to do to me?”
“I...” Donovan stumbled. “I didn’t know...”
“You didn’t know who your parents were?” His voice came out strained. “You didn’t know I worked for you stepfather? You didn’t know you were a kid?”
“I didn’t know you worked for Dad,” Donovan’s voice was a frantic hiss.
“You’re in high school?”
“Yes.”
“Is there any possibility you’re eighteen?”
Anything’s possible! he thought of saying, but this was not the time to make a joke. Donovan simply said, “I just turned seventeen.”
“Just turned....” Ezekiel put a hand to his head. He looked like he was going to be sick. He put his hands out in front of him, and pushed Donovan away. He was going to the stairwell.
“Ezekiel.”
Ezekiel turned around, his voice thick.
“You stupid kid. You stupid, stupid kid. Do you have any idea...? Any...?” He was at a loss for words.
And then Donovan said, coming near him, whispering fiercely, “We can work something out. We can—”
Ezekiel pushed him away, his face screwed up in rage, or in sickness.
“Stay away from me,” he said simply. “There is no…. us. There’s nothing. I don’t know you. Stay away.”
And then he straightened his jacket and caught his breath, as if he was pulling himself back together into something new, into a nearly thirty year old man who had not been having sex with an adolescent high school student.



When Ezekiel answered the door and saw Donovan, he slammed it immediately. It was reflex, almost. Donovan reminded him of how narrowly he’d avoided doing something wrong. No, he had done something wrong. He’d done something illegal. What would have happened to him if Dr. Barclay or his wife knew, if knowledge of this affair had fallen into the wrong hands?
Donovan was not going anywhere. Ezekiel was sure of that. He waited only a second before going to answer the door again. Of course he was seventeen, how could he have not been seventeen? Was it just his wish to make Donovan something older that had blinded him?
“Can I please come in?”
“No!” That was too much.
“Well, then can you please come out?”
Ezekiel hit upon the compromise of nearly closing the door, keeping it cracked while Donovan stood on the other side of it.
“I IM-ed you, but you didn’t return the message. You’re never on. Did you do that invisible thing? The one where you always appear like you’re offline to someone?
“Ezekiel, open the door.”
Ezekiel opened the door.
“Go away, Donovan,” he said.
“But don’t you get it—?”
“Now you want to come back here so we can—” angrily, he remembered what had happened before. Ezekiel leaned down and hissed, “fuck—like we did before.”
“No!” Donovan cried, though the moment he’d said it, was the moment he thought how that was just what his body wanted. It flooded all through him.
“I want to make things right.”
“Well, you can’t, Donovan. You can’t make things right. Not after…” Donovan saw in Ezekiel’s face what he had done. He’d seen it before, but now he really saw it.
“You can’t make that right. You really, really lied to me. And you endangered me. And I don’t want to see you. Not ever again.”
Donovan bit his bottom lip and said, “Well, then… will you please, please, just IM me? We can just talk online. That’s not seeing. That’s just you hearing me, all right?”
Ezekiel’s face was stony. Ezekiel’s face was hurt. It hurt Donovan to look at him. He said, “We used to be friends—”
“No, we weren’t, Donovan.”
Donovan looked at him.
“Listen, I don’t expect you to know what it’s like to be almost thirty.”
“You’re not—”
“I am. I’m twenty-eight, and I’ve worked hard to… get an adult life for myself. To not care if I never found someone who loved me, if I didn’t connect to anyone. Or anything. And I was falling in love with you. I was in love with you, Donovan. I was carried away in this thing we had. But to you… it was just you getting over on some dumb ole man. It was some kid’s trick.” Ezekiel’s voice began to rise. “And it was dangerous to me. And I could have gone to jail.”
“Ezekiel.”
“Donovan,” Ezekiel said, after taking a breath, “As you can tell, I’m sort of doing everything I can to not lose my temper. I’m trying not to fly off the handle. So, please… leave. Okay? Please?”
Donovan nodded on the little stairwell to the apartment.
“All right, Ezekiel,” he said. “I’m sorry, Ezekiel.”


“The world is a beautiful place.”
It had taken Donovan a while to realize the sound he heard was the water lapping against the sand. He took off his shoes and walked over wet packed earth, carrying his sandals. This time he followed Cade to the concrete barrier slabs along the shore, and when they reached them, he held out his hand for the guitar. Cade, in shorts and sandals, climbed up the grey concrete slabs and then reached for the guitar, and Donovan was about to to say, “Why did you bring that damn thing?”
Overhead, in the darkness, geese honked, and Don climbed up, and then walked across a lip of semi uneven broken slabs, surprised by how his eyes adjusted to the light. He turned around, and behind them were the rows of painted houses and hotels guarding the marina. Right ouf of view there was a little path that led out into the water and Donovan said:
“Lacina?”
“What’s that?” Cade looked up from the rolling paper he was licking.
“It’s not a marina, it’s a lacina. Marina is the Latin word for sea.”
Cademon Richards finished rolling the joint, and handed it and a lighter to Donovan while he said, “And the Latin word for lake?”
“Lacus.”
“Oh… well… Takus this jointus and lightus it.”
While Don did, Cade began to play on the guitar.
Donovan took a very long, very deep draw, and held the smoke in his lungs. He was about to pass it, but realized Cade was playing. As he exhaled he said,
“I won’t smoke it all.”
“Smoke it all,” Cade. “There’s more. I got it from Andrew.”
“Very gracious.”
Suddenly Cade sang:

“We all ought to love each other.
We all ought to love each other
We should all love each other
All the time!”

His voice was strong, almost a surprise to Donovan, even though he’d heard him sing several times, and now he said, “Give me a hit off that.”
Donovan did, and a moment later, Cade passed it back, saying, “I gotta fuck around with it a bit, tone it down for the kids.”
Now, past two in the morning, Cade sat up straighter, and his voice became thinner and higher, the gentle voice for his old work, for picking up kids and leading them to snack time and for walking them to the restroom.

“Love each other.
Love each other
The world’ll be better
If we love each other all the time!”

Cade added,

“La la la la la la,
la la la la la
a few well placed la’s
and we’ll add some words here
I’ve smoked too much weed,
For my voice to hit the
octave it needs

Love each other!
All the time!

If you loved me Don
And you were the friend I like to
count on
You would pass that joint
Cause I think I’m coming down
to my point

We should love each other all
time time!”


Cade finished on a riff, and Don passed the rest of the joint, saying, “I’ve had enough. I feel a little fucked up, and I hope you go back to daycares and sing the song to the kids just the way you sang it to me.”
“I just needed to get the tune. And the refrain. The rest’ll come easy, but not tonight. Now take another puff, you son of a bitch.”

MORE TOMORROW
 
I didn't know about the age gap between Donovan and Ezekiel. No wonder Ezekiel doesn't want to see Donovan at all. This story is still surprising me. Great writing and I look forward to more tomorrow!
 
Yes, it does appear that Cade wasn't the only up to crazy business in his younger days. Of course, being in the present we know it didn't work out, we just don't know how. More to follow.
 
TONIGHT CADE GETS A LITTLE MORE HONEST AND WE LEARN MORE ABOUT DON AND EZEKIEL



S E V E N



“Come home.”


- Donovan Shorter



Donovan Shorter was in bed going through the Encyclopedia Britannica online, looking up the boundaries of Prussia for a history paper, when he found an offline message in his IM inbox.


Donovan,

I shouldn’t do this, but you’ve got a hold over me and I couldn’t let things end the way they did today. I don’t even know what we are or where we’re supposed to stand. Are you the grown-up, and I the kid? Is even writing you wrong? All I know is you were my friend, and I did love you and no matter what the truth is now I think you loved me too. I won’t feel right until we talk again. So, please do write me back.
Yours,
Ezekiel


Donovan typed into the inbox.

I got it, and I want to talk to you too.

And instantly the IM lit up and there appeared

SIMONIZE: Donovan?

Donovan: Ezekiel? Yeah. It’s me. How are you?

All right, I guess, Donovan.

You said you wanted to talk to me. I want to talk to you.

Well, what’s there to say, Donovan? Really? We probably shouldn’t be talking. If it was anyone else but you…

I miss you, Ezekiel.

There was silence for a while, and then Ezekiel came back online.

I miss you too, Donovan. Donovan, why did you do what you did?

I saw your picture and I liked you. And then I started to talk to you and I really liked you, and then, when we brought up sex, I thought…

You thought what?

I don’t know, I just felt something. I really wanted to be with you.

You knew how old I was.

I thought that if it just happened once it wouldn’t matter. If we just met up once then who would care how old I was? Or how old you were?

But it wasn’t just once, Donovan.

Yeah, I know that. I thought that sooner or later it would work itself out. I’ll be eighteen at the end of the year.

It’s February, and you’re not eighteen. You’re seventeen.

Well, what’s that matter?

It’s the law.

The Law? Is the law the only thing that makes it matter?

What makes it matter is I’m a grown man and you’re still a child, Donovan.

No, that’s not true. Not really. You’re not talking to me like a child. We’re talking like equals.

Well, only a child would have done something this irresponsible.

Donovan didn’t respond right away, but when he did, what he wrote was:

Children do not fall in love with and sleep with men, and men don’t return the favor unless they’re child molesters. Are you a child molester?

Ezekiel signed off and Donovan swore.

He wrote in the offline messages:

Ezekiel, I didn’t mean to say it like that! What I meant was I’m really not a child. There’s nothing wrong with what happened between us.

Donovan sat in front of his computer screen for a long time, and then he got up, tapping his foot. Finally the light flashed back on and there was Ezekiel.

Donovan, what do you want from me?

Donovan wrote back, quickly:

I want you. Like I had you.

I can’t be your boyfriend.

Yes, you can. That’s what I want.

I can’t process this right now, Don.

What do you want? You haven’t told me what you want.

Don, what I want, right now is to go to bed. And get some work done. I need to think. I need to get offline right now.

Donovan nodded, though no one was there to see him. Ezekiel had signed off. In the offline message, Donovan typed:

If you want me just let me know. You have me.

-Donovan




Donovan,
PLEASE MEET me for lunch at Lulu’s on Saturday, if you have the time.
Yours,
Ezekiel


Ezekiel, I just got this message, if you get my message, please write me back,

Donovan


He had thought of writing Love, Donovan. But that was pushing it. He left that message in the morning and went to school, hoping there would be something for him when he got back, thinking, even of going over to Citeaux, or going to Ezekiel’s apartment and seeing if he was there. But he knew that would be too much.
School bored him. School went on all around his head. He only half showed up for it. If Ezekiel had seen him here, impersonating a teenager, he would have understood that Donovan was not too young. He had friends, or at least he had people he liked and who liked him, who talked to him, that he knew nothing about really. And they didn’t know him. He wished that one day one of them would come up to him and see through him, or see him at all and say, “Donovan Shorter, what are you all about?” But no one did. Or maybe he could have said that to someone else, except he didn’t know how not to make that seem strange and corny in the real world. In his mind being friendly and outgoing worked so well.
His English teacher, Mrs. McNair, a woman whose eyes bulged from behind her glasses, and whose temples were shot with veins when she recited poetry in class, her hands, clawlike, gesticulating liked to murmur—no matter what the month—“April is the cruelest month.”
Well, surely the cruelest month was February. This February in this dreadful year more than any other. It snowed and snowed without relief. Five inches followed by a foot, horrible stuff to take a moped through. And then it rained for a day, enough to melt the shit. And then it was back again. Evan seemed impervious to horrible weather, but Adrienne was markedly depressed, and the depression was shared by Donovan. He reflected that for the last two days, not even webporn could turn him on. But then, Ezekiel had something to do with all of that as well.
Traveling home from school, Donovan took it slow coming to the house on Colby. What if Ezekiel hadn’t written back? It would be too much to get on his computer, turn on his IM and find nothing. So he dillydallied. He even let himself fantasize, one more time, about showing up at Ezekiel’s apartment.


He went upstairs and turned on his laptop. There, to his breath exhaling relief, was a little message. How could such a little thing make him feel so good?

I’m online right now. Write me if you want to. We can talk before we talk at lunch on Saturday.

Ezekiel?

Donovan, how are you?

(He didn’t seem angry. That was a good sign.)

Good, how are you? I was hoping I’d hear from you.

(Donovan took a chance and wrote:)

I missed you.


(a moment later Ezekiel’s typing came)

I’ve missed you too.

So, what time on Saturday?

I was thinking one o’ clock. I know it’ll be a bit crowded, though. Is that okay with you?

Yeah. It’s fine. Anything’s fine.

(Donovan added)

What do you want to talk about?

(After a pause)

US.






“This is what I call a very cool place,”
“Isn’t it?” Donovan said.
“Why didn’t we come here before?”
“It’s all the way in the city. We were just meeting to… fool around,” he told Simon. “But this is the real deal. The Coffee House.”
“I can get you coffee with some cream and sugar or coffee with some cream and sugar,” Donovan had said, stepping in, “Or you can just take it black. Or a variation of what I said.”
“So, you’re serious,” Simon said, at once going quiet as he entered the place. “This is like a no frills coffee shop.”
“It’s just real debate and real artists and musicians. Small enough for intimacy. Large enough so everyone doesn’t trip over everyone else.
In the corner Simon heard two dark skinned women arguing;
“Yes, I perfectly agree with Hirsi Ali when she says that there is something fundamentally wrong with Islam itself. That the religion really needs to change. But there is a bitterness in her, I think—”
“Well, you would be bitter too if you’d been excised as a little girl, your clit scooped out of you, and then forced into marriage twice.”
“I’m not saying she doesn’t have a right to bitterness, I’m just acknowledging that the bitterness is there and, what’s more, that it affects her work negatively.”
“I think it gives it fuel.”
“I don’t. I don’t think that anger necessarily does that much, especially if you’re not aware of it. And from the ending of the book, and from her attitude in some of her interviews, I would say she isn’t. In fact, I would go so far as to say she is as fundamentalist an atheist as she was a fundamentalist Muslim.”
“Well, but that’s what bothers you. That she’s an atheist.”
“Of course that bothers me. That’s how fundamentalists are. They grow up in one religion that is overly simple and claims to be true. This is true. It has all the answers and they terrify you. Then, one day, you put it away, only you’ve been taught to think that way your whole ife. So instead of just not knowing what’s true, or being open to wonder you say: ‘That’s it. There’s no God’. There’s not anything. And she says that, and that’s just as stupid as her old position. And this is where I lose respect for her.”
“You’ve actually lost respect for her?”
“Yes!”
Donovan arrived from behind the counter where he had made the coffees, and startled Simon out of his enjoyment of the conversation.
“This is a wonderful place!” he said.
“I think so. It’s nice to just come here and listen sometimes. People are always saying something interesting. Or singing it.”
“I wish we could join their discussion,” Simon said. “I think they’d let us in. But I don’t really know anything about Ayaan Hirsi Ali.”
“The woman who wrote Infidel? Used to be in the Dutch Parliament?”
Simon looked at Donovan, and then said, “I forget you come from an overly literate household.”
“You forgot I wasn’t some dumb kid,” Donovan affected to feel hurt by this.
“Actually, yes,” Simon said, seriously. “Yes, I did, Donovan. And I’ve got to remember to stop making that mistake about you.”
“I’m just glad we’re here,” Donovan said. “Together and past… What I did.”
“I’m glad too. But the truth is I’m glad you did what you did,” Simon said. “I think I had to look inside of myself and realize how I really felt.”

“Well, I think you do have to learn non-violence,” one of the girls at the next table was saying. “I mean, I thought I was a nonviolent person because I look like one on the outside. But then I realized that when you work for justice, when you want justice you’re so angry. So here I was, pissed off on the inside… I wasn’t non-violent at all. It’s really got to be something you work at from the center…”

“I want to know them,” Simon said.
“We could introduce ourselves.”
“No!”
Donovan got up and went to their table.
“Excuse me, my name’s Donovan and this is my friend Simon, and we’ve been listening to you all. I mean, we can’t promise we have anything intelligent to say, and we might be drags on your conversation, but we just wanted to know if we could sit with you anyway?”
One of the girls, who had black rimmed spectacles and a knit cap cracked a smile and smacked a chair. “Com’on over. Usually most guys are afraid of a girl if she’s got half a brain.”
The red headed girl beside her waved Simon over.
“You’re cute,” she said.
“Thanks,” he smiled nervously.
“I’m not hitting on you,” she said. “We’re lesbians.”
“Oh,” Simon let out a relieved laugh. “We are too!”
At the look on their faces, Simon said, “I mean… what I mean…”
But the girls just laughed, and the first one said, “I’m Saffron. This is Kelly. Sit on down. Let’s be lesbians together.”


@@@@@@@@@@@@


CADE


I am lying. I suppose I lie everyday. Many of us do. But right now I am conscious of really and truly and frequently not telling the truth. If you think about it, lying is like editing. Everything that happens is everything that happens, but to make it into a story, to make it into the proper story, one must edit. One has to leave out. To protect people you love you had better leave out. I’m going to say something else that’s going to sound crazy. To let people see the you that you truly are, you had better leave out.
My very first real true I’m-in-love-with-you-boyfriend used to tell me shit that would break my heart. He would watch my face change, and then he would say, “I’m being honest. Don’t you want us to be honest? Would you rather I lie to you? “
I’m old enough to see he didn’t really love anyone, but I do, and so I lie. When Donovan asks me what it’s like living with Simon after we’ve broken up, I say it’s the same except for no drugs and no sex. He never asked, but to not say it would have been to leave the question hanging in the air. I think. The truth is after I came back to the apartment, after my summer trip. After Don and I decided starting over as friends and rebuilding our relationship was what mattered, I went back home. It was my apartment. I did pay rent on it, and I moved my stuff into the spare room. Me and Simon fought, but not about what you think. He said I should keep our old room, I said no. At last he said, “Well, at least take the bed.” So we put the bed in my room, and that was that.
We lived awkwardly for a week or so. Courteous separate lives. Friday night he came home depressed, but with cocaine and we spent the night drinking and snorting. When I went to bed, Simon came with me. It all happened about once a week. I never talked about it with anyone else, certainly not with Don. Every time me and Simon had sex I knew I didn’t love him. I knew I wanted to be touched. I knew I wanted someone who was safe and I knew I wanted that for him, that I cared about him, but it wasn’t the same as being in love.
So I know things have to change. I edit the truth again when I get back to the hotel.

In the official version of the story, Andrew and I have civilized coffee.

“I have a friend waiting for me.”
“A he friend or a she friend.”
“A he friend.”
“Like a boyfriend?” Andrew raised his eyebrow.
“A friend who is very important to me.”
“Well,” Andrew said. “Yeah. So… No crazy sex parties.”
“I’m afraid not.”
Andrew lifted his coffee and took another sip.
“We’re going to keep being friends, right? Talking?”
“Yeah!” Cade said. “Definitely.”
“I gotta ask you this. I will regret not asking.”
“Okay.”
“I get you don’t want a sex party and all that. But…. What about something else?”
I’m wearing thin jersey shorts with no underwear, and if I get up the whole world will see I have a tremendous boner. I touch Andrew’s foot with my toe, then open my legs and Andrew scoots his chair back to look under the table.
I take off my ball cap and put it over my lap, walking along the little outdoor café, back into the combination of lights and darkness that is this street with its shops at night The air smells like the lake and like seaweed, and the moist heat is coming back up. Only a moment later, Andrew is there. He turns his ball cap backward and gets down on his knees, and in the alley, he pulls down my shorts and starts sucking me off. I haven’t been with Simon in over a week, and Simon doesn’t go down on me often. It isn’t long before I come in Andrew’s mouth, and he gags a little bit then spits my nut out in the alley.
“Thanks,” Andrew says.
“Thank you.” I reply.
We hug awkwardly in the alley and I say, “Have a good time tonight.”
I’m still hard. I wish I was going to the sex party, but am afraid, and I wish I had fucked Andrew, but I am weirded out by the fact that I just let him blow me in the alley. I don’t know how I feel about myself or anything. This is why I strip when I get to the water. Why I just want to get back to Donovan and the hotel room. I never feel confused when I’m with him.
I say, “Don, I hooked up with that guy.”
He looks at me, and I say, “I need you to tell me if you care or if you don’t care, because here’s the thing. I do care. See, this summer I was silly. I should have stayed, but I left and I did things. Hooked up with guys, and I’ve been being this way for a long time.”
Donovan looked away. He was talking to the sand, not looking at me when he said, “Why are you telling me this?”
“Cause you’re telling me about this great guy, this guy you’re kind of sad about and I’m telling you, if you want to you should strike shit up with him again. Cause he does sound great and I sound… really fucked up. I’m fucked up Don. I am fucked up and I’ve been fucked up by other people, and I’ve… paid that forward. I am a screwed up man, Donovan Shorter, but, I am a man who loves you.”
Don looked up a him.
“No one’s going to love you more,” I told him. “I love you.”
We are still looking out on the water and Donovan says, “What in the…?”
He stops. He is pointing to something past the pier, and my eyes follow his.
Neither one of us says anything as it comes up from the water, first like a woman who has dived in later at night, except for, no one saw her go in.. And then, where legs should be… there are none. We look. I don’t dare describe. We cannot take our eyes away.
Donovan looks away first.
“I feel like it’s bad luck to look on too long.”
I nod my head. After all the little lies I’ve told here is this amazing truth than no one would believe.
“I always thought I would be afraid if I saw something like that,” Donovan said, “Feel stranger. Like in the movies.”
I can’t even speak.
“What a long tail,” Donovan says. “And who would have thought it would be brown? Like a trout? Who would have thought?”

MORE WEDNESDAY
 
Wow a lot more honesty as expected from your comment. Donovan's past is interesting. Cade's part of the story was good to read too. I don't know where this is going to end up but I look forward to reading more of it! Great writing and I look forward to more in a few days!
 
I was going to ask which character you prefer, Donovan or Cade, but I'l leave that to you. I really like looking at Don'ts passionate past that happened years before Cade.
 
I didnt even know you wrote until I checked this morning. Like any good writer, I will keep silence on how I feel at this moment, except to say Donovan is more of an alter ego.
 
SINCE ITS BEEN A FEW DAYS I'M INCLUDING A BIT FROM THE LAST SECTION....


CADE


I am lying. I suppose I lie everyday. Many of us do. But right now I am conscious of really and truly and frequently not telling the truth. If you think about it, lying is like editing. Everything that happens is everything that happens, but to make it into a story, to make it into the proper story, one must edit. One has to leave out. To protect people you love you had better leave out. I’m going to say something else that’s going to sound crazy. To let people see the you that you truly are, you had better leave out.
My very first real true I’m-in-love-with-you-boyfriend used to tell me shit that would break my heart. He would watch my face change, and then he would say, “I’m being honest. Don’t you want us to be honest? Would you rather I lie to you? “
I’m old enough to see he didn’t really love anyone, but I do, and so I lie. When Donovan asks me what it’s like living with Simon after we’ve broken up, I say it’s the same except for no drugs and no sex. He never asked, but to not say it would have been to leave the question hanging in the air. I think. The truth is after I came back to the apartment, after my summer trip. After Don and I decided starting over as friends and rebuilding our relationship was what mattered, I went back home. It was my apartment. I did pay rent on it, and I moved my stuff into the spare room. Me and Simon fought, but not about what you think. He said I should keep our old room, I said no. At last he said, “Well, at least take the bed.” So we put the bed in my room, and that was that.
We lived awkwardly for a week or so. Courteous separate lives. Friday night he came home depressed, but with cocaine and we spent the night drinking and snorting. When I went to bed, Simon came with me. It all happened about once a week. I never talked about it with anyone else, certainly not with Don. Every time me and Simon had sex I knew I didn’t love him. I knew I wanted to be touched. I knew I wanted someone who was safe and I knew I wanted that for him, that I cared about him, but it wasn’t the same as being in love.
So I know things have to change. I edit the truth again when I get back to the hotel.

In the official version of the story, Andrew and I have civilized coffee.

“I have a friend waiting for me.”
“A he friend or a she friend.”
“A he friend.”
“Like a boyfriend?” Andrew raised his eyebrow.
“A friend who is very important to me.”
“Well,” Andrew said. “Yeah. So… No crazy sex parties.”
“I’m afraid not.”
Andrew lifted his coffee and took another sip.
“We’re going to keep being friends, right? Talking?”
“Yeah!” Cade said. “Definitely.”
“I gotta ask you this. I will regret not asking.”
“Okay.”
“I get you don’t want a sex party and all that. But…. What about something else?”
I’m wearing thin jersey shorts with no underwear, and if I get up the whole world will see I have a tremendous boner. I touch Andrew’s foot with my toe, then open my legs and Andrew scoots his chair back to look under the table.
I take off my ball cap and put it over my lap, walking along the little outdoor café, back into the combination of lights and darkness that is this street with its shops at night The air smells like the lake and like seaweed, and the moist heat is coming back up. Only a moment later, Andrew is there. He turns his ball cap backward and gets down on his knees, and in the alley, he pulls down my shorts and starts sucking me off. I haven’t been with Simon in over a week, and Simon doesn’t go down on me often. It isn’t long before I come in Andrew’s mouth, and he gags a little bit then spits my nut out in the alley.
“Thanks,” Andrew says.
“Thank you.” I reply.
We hug awkwardly in the alley and I say, “Have a good time tonight.”
I’m still hard. I wish I was going to the sex party, but am afraid, and I wish I had fucked Andrew, but I am weirded out by the fact that I just let him blow me in the alley. I don’t know how I feel about myself or anything. This is why I strip when I get to the water. Why I just want to get back to Donovan and the hotel room. I never feel confused when I’m with him.
I say, “Don, I hooked up with that guy.”
He looks at me, and I say, “I need you to tell me if you care or if you don’t care, because here’s the thing. I do care. See, this summer I was silly. I should have stayed, but I left and I did things. Hooked up with guys, and I’ve been being this way for a long time.”
Donovan looked away. He was talking to the sand, not looking at me when he said, “Why are you telling me this?”
“Cause you’re telling me about this great guy, this guy you’re kind of sad about and I’m telling you, if you want to you should strike shit up with him again. Cause he does sound great and I sound… really fucked up. I’m fucked up Don. I am fucked up and I’ve been fucked up by other people, and I’ve… paid that forward. I am a screwed up man, Donovan Shorter, but, I am a man who loves you.”
Don looked up a him.
“No one’s going to love you more,” I told him. “I love you.”
We are still looking out on the water and Donovan says, “What in the…?”
He stops. He is pointing to something past the pier, and my eyes follow his.
Neither one of us says anything as it comes up from the water, first like a woman who has dived in later at night, except for, no one saw her go in.. And then, where legs should be… there are none. We look. I don’t dare describe. We cannot take our eyes away.
Donovan looks away first.
“I feel like it’s bad luck to look on too long.”
I nod my head. After all the little lies I’ve told here is this amazing truth than no one would believe.
“I always thought I would be afraid if I saw something like that,” Donovan said, “Feel stranger. Like in the movies.”
I can’t even speak.
“What a long tail,” Donovan says. “And who would have thought it would be brown? Like a trout? Who would have thought?”


DONOVAN


That night when Cade came home at the end of summer, of course I had no idea he was coming. He was gone, and I didn’t even get his letters until a little bit later. I knew when he returned I would love him, though what that love would look like I couldn’t say. And I knew I was a little angry. When he came, I didn’t know if it was love or anger… no… petulance, that would win.
That was the night when Calypso came over. I never learned his real name. Does it matter? What’s in a name. We talked and talked about art and finally, in those moments before I knew he was about to talk about being tired and go to sleep, I put my hand on his corduroyed thigh, and then raised my hand up it, unzipped his pants and went on my knees for him.
And I admit it wasn’t for him. He was there, and I wanted sex. I always feel like there is no point in coming out and telling the world how gay you are if you are not actually having sex with men. I feel like it’s harder and harder to fuck, not because I’m older or uglier, but because people are afraid. For one brief shining moment people have the courage to fuck, but men want to be men, and society wants to be society. We are afraid of orgasms. I won’t let Calypso be. I feel like in one half hour of conversation I’ve gleened a great deal about him and will be fine with never seeing him again, but the feel of this soft skin, the muscle under rounded ass, smooth back, the play of blue tattoo over white skin, the peppermint taste of his mouth, the soft hair of his pubis, the firm globe of balls, the fullness of cock, I will not be okay with not experiencing. The mutual giving of ourselves; if that doesn’t happen, I will not be alright.
I am still in the afterglow of the sex we had, lying on the couch naked. They say that once you’ve had sex you’re sated, but I don’t know who they is. Sometimes they are right. There is some sex that is almost ruinous, that leaves you not sure you want to be with anyone else again, or leaves you determined to go out and find a new experience. And there is some sex that is only like a primer, which immediately makes you ready.
I am just dressing again, flimsy tee shirt, old shorts, when Cade comes in with the key I gave him. The living room still smells of the cigarette I just finished. He is so tall. He is right there, and there is something in his face, almost as if both of us are not sure if we want each other, if we are happy with each other. I put my hands to his bearded cheeks and kiss him, and we hold each other. We don’t speak. We undress quickly and silently. That night, on that sofa, in the living room, never having reached the bed, knowing that the words of I’m sorry, where have you been, what did you do, who were you with, are too much, we give ourselves to each other. That’s too poetic a term for fucking, but it’s the truth because the real fucking is giving everything, giving everything including dignity. It’s laying face down while he holds you down and pushes his face into your back growling “I love you. I love you. I love you so much.” It’s being bent over the sofa or bending him over and thrusting while weeping, gathering as much of your lover’s body as you can, and the declarations of love turning into swears and curses and staggering groans. It’s the orgasm that is almost like weeping, that is a surrender that is a defeat and a victory because the great victory is to be loved and to be accepted in all of your weakness, and lying in each others arms, wet and weakened and strengthening each other, crumpled and wet like old paper towels, but, like old paper towels, used up, as was your purpose.
“I stood at the top of a mountain,” kiss, “and I saw a sunset but my heart hurt because I could only think of you.”
“I was walking down the street, looking at the full moon, and wanted to turn to you, but you weren’t there. I pretended you were and murmured a little conversation, so the other crazy people on the street stayed away.”
“Your ear is like a little wet shell.”
“Your breath is like milk.”
“I… missed you so much. You… are my best friend.”
“Stop talking,” hand to face, “Look at me and just let me look at you.”

Donovan asks himself if he believes Cade has been sleeping alone all this summer. He doesn’t know, and he doesn’t ask. Those first few weeks, when he was in love with Cade, his love for this man ruined his chances of getting laid anywhere else. And then there came the time when he and Cade were having furious sex, and after Cade left to find himself, Don decided he was too old to be a pining virgin. Things happened. That was the best way to put it. But when Brian came, that old love that was such a good love, he was primed. The truth was, far from good sex sating you, it only made you want more.
“Right now,” Cade stated, “I want us to sort of just rediscover what it was to be friends. See if we can live that way.”
Part of Donovan wondered if Cade could smell the sex in this house, knew he’d been naked with Calypso an hour ago.
What Donovan said was, “That’s a good idea.”


*************


When Cade woke up the sun was in his eyes, but there was a key jiggling in the door, and he wondered if that had brought him back to consciousness as well. He’d slept in his shorts and tee shirt on the surface of the bed, and now Donovan, in very old khakis and a rumpled dress shirt walked in, closed the door, and then pulled the blinds, saying, “Fuck all this. I’m going back to bed.”
“Where’ve you been?” Cade said.
“Watching the sunrise.”
“What time is it?”
“Six? Seven? Something like that.”
“Shit we just went to sleep like four hours ago.”
“But I wanted to see what sunrise looked like,” Donovan yawned long, and when he was almost finished, yawned again. “And it was beautiful.”
“I thought you were opposed to getting up early unless you had to,” Cade turned over, folding himself into a ball, and pulled the comforter around him.
“Well, I had to. And as soon as I pre make this coffee, I’m going back to bed.”
“When do you wanna head back?” Cade called into the kitchenette while Donovan took out the coffee pot.
“Uh…. Some time after we wake up, I guess. Whenever that happens. Do you have anything to do?”
“Not really. Say, won’t you be glad when the school year is over?”
“Good God, it’s hardly begun.”

Even though Cade woke before Don, it wasn’t until his friend woke up in the other twin bed and headed to the bathroom that Cade got out off his to turn on the coffee pot..
“I wish there was an alarm on it,” he remarked. “Next coffee pot will have an alarm.”
They were more or less alike in waking habits. Half passed out in their beds, with a cups off coffee on the night table between them, emerging to sip until Cade got up in a bit of a rush, locked himself in the bathroom and then, twenty minutes later said, “Don’t go in there for a while.”
But Donovan was sitting on the balcony overlooking Union Street on the way to the beach. He was drinking coffee and smoking a cigarette, thinking of what a beautiful world it was. Not even that the day was beautiful, though it was, the sky like blue glass, the white thin clouds, the sun shining on the rails of the tracks that passed before the row of townhouses and hotels they were in. There was something wholly beautiful in the world, like the beauty of an old friend even in his most worn out and unkempt condition.
“You wanna look around town?” Cade asked as he came out onto the balcony, “or do you wanna head home?”
When Cade said this, the blue sky was already becoming less blue, and the sun starting to hide behind clouds.
“I like the drive better than just hanging around here,” Don said, “and it’s kind of sad on Sunday with everybody leaving.”
Cade nodded.
“I would like,” Donovan said, “just once to take the train. See what it’s like. Not that clunky old South Shore, but the Amtrak into Chicago. Imagine what it would be like to be so rich you could spend your weekend Amtraking—is that a word?—to New Union to spend the weekend at your beach condo?”
The way he said it, though, Cade thought, did not make it sound good or bad. It was simply as if Donovan was saying, “Imagine.”

Cade’s phone made a ping and he stopped to return a message before driving on, as he looked back, briefly at the station.
“You know, we should stop at some weird places,” Cade said, his car rolling over the tracks. “Bump around in Saint Joe’s. Not make a hurry of it.”
“Yes,” Donovan agreed. “A hurry is greatly overrated. Look. There comes the Amtrak. And all the little people getting on it, on their way back, just sitting on the benches waiting.”
But by the time the word waiting was out of his mouth, they were past the station and onto Benning Street.

WE'LL RETURN TO OUR FRIENDS ON THE OTHER SIDE OF THE WEEKEND. TOMORROW NIGHT, WATCH FOR THE CONCLUSION OF THE FAMILIES IN ROSSFORD!
 
I don't know what is going to happen with Cade and Donovan but I am finding the journey interesting! I am still sad that The Families In Rossford is ending but am glad you are still going to post this story and other stuff.
 
Well, you know, all good things should know when to end, or at least when to pause for a time. I'm touched that you aren't tired of Rossford. That means so much to me.
 
TONIGHT A FINAL RESOLUTION IS MADE AND A NEW LIFE BEGINS


When Cade woke up the sun was in his eyes, but there was a key jiggling in the door, and he wondered if that had brought him back to consciousness as well. He’d slept in his shorts and tee shirt on the surface of the bed, and now Donovan, in very old khakis and a rumpled dress shirt walked in, closed the door, and then pulled the blinds, saying, “Fuck all this. I’m going back to bed.”
“Where’ve you been?” Cade said.
“Watching the sunrise.”
“What time is it?”
“Six? Seven? Something like that.”
“Shit we just went to sleep like four hours ago.”
“But I wanted to see what sunrise looked like,” Donovan yawned long, and when he was almost finished, yawned again. “And it was beautiful.”
“I thought you were opposed to getting up early unless you had to,” Cade turned over, folding himself into a ball, and pulled the comforter around him.
“Well, I had to. And as soon as I pre make this coffee, I’m going back to bed.”
“When do you wanna head back?” Cade called into the kitchenette while Donovan took out the coffee pot.
“Uh…. Some time after we wake up, I guess. Whenever that happens. Do you have anything to do?”
“Not really. Say, won’t you be glad when the school year is over?”
“Good God, it’s hardly begun.”

Even though Cade woke before Don, it wasn’t until his friend woke up in the other twin bed and headed to the bathroom that Cade got out off his to turn on the coffee pot..
“I wish there was an alarm on it,” he remarked. “Next coffee pot will have an alarm.”
They were more or less alike in waking habits. Half passed out in their beds, with a cups off coffee on the night table between them, emerging to sip until Cade got up in a bit of a rush, locked himself in the bathroom and then, twenty minutes later said, “Don’t go in there for a while.”
But Donovan was sitting on the balcony overlooking Union Street on the way to the beach. He was drinking coffee and smoking a cigarette, thinking of what a beautiful world it was. Not even that the day was beautiful, though it was, the sky like blue glass, the white thin clouds, the sun shining on the rails of the tracks that passed before the row of townhouses and hotels they were in. There was something wholly beautiful in the world, like the beauty of an old friend even in his most worn out and unkempt condition.
“You wanna look around town?” Cade asked as he came out onto the balcony, “or do you wanna head home?”
When Cade said this, the blue sky was already becoming less blue, and the sun starting to hide behind clouds.
“I like the drive better than just hanging around here,” Don said, “and it’s kind of sad on Sunday with everybody leaving.”
Cade nodded.
“I would like,” Donovan said, “just once to take the train. See what it’s like. Not that clunky old South Shore, but the Amtrak into Chicago. Imagine what it would be like to be so rich you could spend your weekend Amtraking—is that a word?—to New Union to spend the weekend at your beach condo?”
The way he said it, though, Cade thought, did not make it sound good or bad. It was simply as if Donovan was saying, “Imagine.”

Cade’s phone made a ping and he stopped to return a message before driving on, as he looked back, briefly at the station.
“You know, we should stop at some weird places,” Cade said, his car rolling over the tracks. “Bump around in Saint Joe’s. Not make a hurry of it.”
“Yes,” Donovan agreed. “A hurry is greatly overrated. Look. There comes the Amtrak. And all the little people getting on it, on their way back, just sitting on the benches waiting.”
But by the time the word waiting was out of his mouth, they were past the station and onto Benning Street.



On the platform Andrew sat beside Cory.
“I hope this train comes before the rain. Not that it matters. I guess we’re under a shelter.”
When Andrew said nothing, Cory shook his arm playfully.
“You alright, Baby?”
“What?” Andrew blinked at him. “Yeah.”
“You’ve been weird this morning. Something wrong?”
“Nothing’s wrong,” Andrew shrugged. “I’m just ready to go home and sleep in my own bed.”
“Yeah,” Cory said, looking at him askance as the train approached.
Andrew had seen the message from Cade when he woke up this morning:

-Good night.

Andrew typed:

-Sorry for being out of line. I hoped you had fun anyway.

He was surprised when an answer came back right away.

-What are you talking about? I don’t regret anything. You alright?

-I’m fine. But the train is coming in right now, so I have to sign out. I just wanted to say sorry for being nuts.

He put the phone back in his pocket, aware Cory was looking at him with concern. As they stood up and picked up their bags, Andrew didn’t look back. It was nice just to know, for the moment, that Cory was actually seeing him.


On their way back into town, Donovan said, “That’s a funny looking little Methodist church.”
“How can you tell?”
“Because I can see it, and it’s funny looking.”
“I meant how can you tell what kind of church?”
“The cross with the flame around it, or the flag that’s a flame, or whatever it is.”
“My grandma was a Methodist,” Cade said. “I tried to be a Quaker for a year.”
“Really?” Then, “No, I can see that. What was it like?”
“I felt like I’d changed. I had to be quiet a lot, and I had to watch the news. I watched all these documentaries and got really involved with being this different type of person. I stopped drinking real milk and started drinking almond milk.”
“Why?”
“I saw a documentary about the way they treat cows, and how the utters get chafed and bleed, and so there’s cow blood in the milk.”
“But then you would have had to stop eating meat too.”
“Yeah, I was getting thinner and thinner and so… I’m not a Quaker anymore.”
“That is…. There’s a book in there.”
Cade grinned over at Donovan. “There’s no book in there.”
Then he said, “What did you ever do? That was odd?”
“I tried to be a Jew for a year and a half.”
“What happened?”
“They… uh… always remarked about how interesting it was to have a Black Jew, or assumed I was a convert or talked about…. Well, they never stopped talking about me being Black, and when I grew up Catholic they never brought it up. That shit got old. Also….Jews clean all the time. And I wasn’t really up on Jesus, but I got tired of being down on Jesus. It’s like every week I kept hearing about how they didn’t believe in Jesus and now… I’m kind of done with churches. And you know, it’s all a church. Even a synagogue is a church. It’s all the same bullshit.”
“We should have our own church.”
“That is exactly the opposite of what the fuck I just said.”
“No, but our church would be cool.”
“That’s exactly what Martin Luther and Uldrych Zwingli said.”
“Firstly, I don’t know who Ulrich or whatever his name Zwingli is, and secondly, I’m sure Martin Luther never said that.”
“You know what we should be?” Donovan said.
“Huh?”
“Exactly what we are right now.”




The sky that was fitfully sunny becomes darker the further they move from the beach. Don can’t help thinking how good it would be to still be there, to see the storm return over the waters. Ahead of them, though, the sky is blacker still, and now rain is pouring in sheets, and hail pelts the sides of the car.
“You need to stop driving,” he tells Cade. “I’ll look out for a place we can stop.”
Despite the windshield wipers, the view is like melting paints, and the grey of the road wavers with the dark greens of the fields. At last they find a lot they can turn off into and park the car under the shelter of a tree. The sky is darker than Don has ever seen it, and Cade says, “I hope this isn’t a tornado or anything.”
“We could turn the radio on,” says Don, and Cade nods and does so.
As they sit in the shaking car, Cade went from station to station, but the Rolling Stones don’t care about the storm, and no one on the eighties station does either. At last, a serious and professional voice announces that there is a storm warning for the following counties…
“But not a tornado,” Don says.
“You brought this on,” says Cade.
“I’m waiting for your rationale.”
“All that witchcraft in the hotel yesterday. The incense, the burning candles. That’s why the mermaid came.”
“You’re blaming me?”
“I don’t know if blame is the right word,” Cade says, “but you brought it.”
“I can accept that.”
We sit in the car, not really listening to the radio as it fizzes in and out. We both need to know that the world exists, safely, outside of this storm and this car.
“What else should we do?” Cade says.
“Whaddo you mean?”
“Burn candles, light incense. See a mermaid. Though that’s not really doing something. That’s like having something happen to you. Read Tarot cards, I guess.”
“I have been dispelling an egregore.”
“What?”
“An egregore, a group spirit. You know, when you go to a fucked up place and everyone is fucked up, and the whole spirit of that place is fucked up, and nothing turns out right? That’s the egregore. It’s like a group mind. It’s like the spirit of the group.”
“So like… what group in specific? What egregore are you getting rid of?”
“I was starting small, with the school, cause it’s really fucked up. Those kids. And then maybe the school board, the city. Maybe the country. I think the president is an egregore. People keep wondering how we got him, but I think we got him because he’s what we are.”
“Do you think a life has a spirit?” Cade asks.
“Huh?”
“Our lives. Like, can your life just be fucked up because you’re feeding fucked up stuff into it?”
“Well, yeah,” says Donovan. “Of course. But that’s different. You’re in charge of that. Just change the way you live.”
As hail filters through tree branches, pummeling the car, and the sky goes black, the radio sings:

Just walk away Renee
You won't see me follow you back home
The empty sidewalks on my block are not the same
You're not to blame.

Cade, unstraps himself from his seatbelt, and Don, realizing he still has his on, does the same.
“Kiss me, Don.” Cade says, even though it is he who is leaning in, kissing him.
They move together, kissing, until finally Don says, “This is inconvenient,” and together they move to the backseat, pushing it down into the trunk to make one long bed, lying side by side, arms around each other, kissing, running hands through hair, over head, with silent agreement, lifting tee shirt and shirt and kissing, and at last, under the blackness and under the rain, laying together naked, linking thighs and arms, running hands over each other. The radio comes in clear enough for a moment.


You're gonna fly away,
glad your goin' my way
I love it when we're cruising together
The music is played for love,
Cruising is made for love
I love it when we're cruising together



DONOVAN


We cannot decide what is more important, to kiss, to touch, to kiss the totality of each other’s bodies, to place heads between legs and pleasure each other, to pleasure each other together, to delve tongues into secret places. We go back and forth, hoping the rain never ends. At last, with an almost relief, Cade lies down on his stomach and allowed me in him. I am so stiff, so hard, and pushing my dick inside of him I almost cried. We both moaned together. and I was gentle, but only for a little bit, unable to stop myself. After all the foreplay, the actual fucking did not take very long. Exploding inside of Cade was like a fire bursting, or something else breaking I couldn’t name, and in the aftermath of the orgasm, I lay shaken, on top of him, his warm back under my cheek, strands of his damp hair in my mouth. I felt as if something had been taken from me, and he moaned a little. We lay like that. A moment later we lay face to face, and suddenly Cade was laughing.
“What?” I said to him.
“I don’t know.”
The rain stopped for a bit, but then continued. We kissed, and curled together, smoked cigarettes, drank the last of the rum. Massaged each other.

We lay together again, touching fingers, making itsy bitsy spider.

Up and down the waterspout
Down came the rain and washed
the spider out.

Thunder explodes above the trees.
The rain begins again, it’s steady drumbeats hitting the roof of the SUV, Cade fucks me rough against the backseat and his hands spasming as the roughly grasp my shoulders, he shouts as he comes, flooding me.




As the rain falls so heavily from a black sky that only a witch could see them, naked they come, the tall white figure, the shorter dark one, hand in hand over the mud, down, down into the hollow of the trees and into the reservoir made by the stream, dipping into that water, under the warm summer rain, the second baptism, washing off sweat and come, washing off mistakes and dullness and other lovers, dunking each other, scooping up water to wash each other, getting on knees to suck each other, Cade’s head arching back in surprised pleasure, Don’s mouth full of the surprised exclamation of expanding cock, holding, hugging, laughing, kissing, fucking, exhausted and sore, returning to the car to sleep till the rain lets up.
“Can I come home?” Cade asks.
Blinking, Don looks up at him for clarification.
“My home is with you,” Cade says.
Don says, “Come home.”

TOMORROW NIGHT, WE RETURN TO GESHICHTE FALLS AND CHECK IN ON CHAYNE, RUSSELL, THOM AND PATTI
 
That was a great portion! I am glad Donovan and Cade are getting closer and more honest with each other. I especially like when Cade said "My home is with you". Excellent writing and I look forward to the return of Geshichte Falls tomorrow! I hope you are having a good weekend!
 
I am having a good weekend, though I feel like early sleep might be happening. I love that part too, and am glad you're enjoying Cade and Donovan's stumble into love. We'll get back to them Monday night. I hope you're having a good weekend as well. Even though it's pretty much Sunday afternoon where you are.
 


E I G H T




“It does good. It lights the way back home.”



They came into town arguing over what exit to take, and as they drove past a line of stores and factories on the industrial corridor, Cade said, “I’m not sure what part of Wallington we’re in, but we are in Wallington.”
After a few minutes, Donovan said, “I think that’s Wal Mart, and if it’s Wal Mart then we’re on Portage.”
It was Wal Mart and Cade said, “What direction?”
“Left.. Unless you want to go back to Michigan?”
“I do, actually. I want to live on a beach.”
They headed down Portage, across the overpass, through the cemetery and the lovely old houses, and then the less lovely houses and, at last, turning into the old historic district around the school, they rumbled over the old fashioned brick lanes.
“Fuck bricks!” they declared, turning onto asphalt again, and Cade parked across the street from the old brick townhouse turned apartment.
When Don was reaching for his bag, Cade leaned ahead of him and said, “I got it.”
Following Don across the street, Cade sang:

“Sing oak and ash and thorn, my love
All on a midsummer's morn!
Surely we sing of no little thing
With oak and ash and thorn!

Donovan joined him:

Of all the trees that are in the wood
Old England to adorn
Greater are none beneath the sun
Than oak and ash and thorn

Sing oak and ash and thorn, my love
All on a midsummer's morn!
Surely we sing of no little thing
With oak and ash and thorn!


Don went into the kitchen to make coffee and then he and Cade sat on the enclosed porch, watching the taillights of cars rolling up the street as the night darkened and smoking cigarettes. Cade strummed his guitar lightly and while Don blinked, falling into what he called, nap time sleep, he heard Cade say: “I need to be around kids. Kids make shit make sense.”
“Sometimes,” Don agreed, grudgingly.
“I have to get out of that place,” Cade said.
At first Donovan thought he meant school, and then he said, “You’re finally going to be the one to move?”
“Out of that place and to your true home.”
“I,” Cade began, “I feel home here, and I know we’re together. But it’s your home, and… I thought you’d like your space.”
“Then this is the part where I say you aren’t doing that at all, and you think you are, and we go back and forth and that just really takes up a of time, so why don’t you just say okay?”
“Well, when you put it that way... Look at me.”
“Huh?” Don said, who had been paying more attention to his cigarette than Cade.
He looked at him.
“I really appreciate you.”
“Well, shit, Cademon. I appreciate you too.”
Don didn’t feel like going back into the apartment. The egg shaped chair was comfortable, the night fair, and Cade was right here. He fell asleep to Cade’s trilling guitar and the occasional car passing. But when he woke up and things were much quieter, it took him a while to realize Cade was weeping into his hands. Don felt embarrassed, ashamed of himself for witnessing it. He knew if it had been one of his girlfriends, he would have gone right to her, but he felt like Cade needed to be left to his own sorrow, and so, as much as he wanted to go to him, he pretended to sleep and tried to think about tomorrow.



Cade and Simon lived in an old house on Roosevelt, and it seemed bigger and emptier, somehow musty, when Don came there that afternoon. It turned out Cade didn’t own that much, and it only took two trips to load everything into his SUV. Wordlessly, Simon helped them and now and again the two exes worked pulling boxes or folding a fu ton, and Don tried not to look at them, as if he were interrupting something indecent. He felt like he knew too much about them, and Simon, whom he had first met so confident, looked embarrassed when he opened the door. Did Simon know that Don knew about the weekends he planned where he and Cade would meet strange couples and have group sex? Did Don know that it was Simon who had told Cade it was over? And Don said nothing. He never did. He always thought silence was best.
“Simon,” Cade said.
“Yeah.”
“I need you to not to say anything to Don.”
“About?”
Then Simon said, “I know you love Don. I mean, it’s so apparent.”
“Yeah,” Cade said, still taping a box shut, “That’s why I need you to not talk about… anything.”
“If by anything you mean the fact that we were sleeping together until about a week ago, then sure.”
“Thanks.”
“I’m not a complete asshole, you know, Cade?”
“I never said you were,” Cade said.

As they were getting in the truck, Cade murmured, “Oh, shit.”
“What?”
“The keys,” Cade held them up, looking at them.
“You might need them. You might have to go back.”
“I will never go back,” Cade said.
“Give them to me,” Don held out his hand.
When Cade didn’t hand them over, Don took them from his fingers, climbed out of the SUV, and went to the door. Simon must have seen him because he opened it and Don said, “These are for the house.”
He put them in Simon’s hand and then turned to leave.
“Don,” Simon called.
Donovan turned around.
“I’m not a bad person.”
What a strange thing to say.
Donovan looked at Simon. He’d always been attractive. He was more conservative looking than Don thought appropriate, the same height but thinner than Don, blond, ivory complexioned, a look of assurance that people might call arrogance now gone from his young face, and he was young. Donovan, having said he was forty, never asked for Cade’s age or Simon’s. It was a while before he knew Simon was twenty-six and worked for the city.
“I’m not a bad person.”
No, it wasn’t a strange thing to think. Anyone would think it. It was a strange thing to say out loud, a sort of plea.
“No one said you were, Simon,” Donovan said.
And then he said, “Sometimes things just don’t work out.”
“I told him he could stay and I would leave. That we would work out something.”
“I told him to come with me,” Donovan said. “It hurt too much for him to stay.”
“Well,” Simon said, “that makes you a good friend. Maybe,” and then whatever Simon was going to say, Don saw him switch tracks and he said, “I don’t think I’ll stay here much longer, either. Take care of him, okay?”
Donovan nodded.
“I will.”



Days later they are walking up Moore Street, right near the hospital, past the empty lot they always pass on the corner across the street from the Masonic temple. Simon came over two days after Cade moved, and has often camped out on the enclosed porch, or in the little office before the apartment proper.
“I need to stop paying rent on our old place,” he tells Cade. “I don’t even want to be there anymore.”
Cade always liked the lot beside the house that is approached by a small flight of steps leading to a long gone house and a driveway leading to nothing.
But now Donovan points past the lot and says, “That house.”
“The ugly one.”
Beside the house that is no more is the mint green house, and Donovan says, “I never really thought about it. It’s so strange looking. For one, its very long. I can’t get the make of it. But I’m a little obsessed with it.”
Cade says nothing, but he thumbs the inside of Donovan’s hand.
Then he says, “Let’s go see the front of it.”
They walk along the front where there is a law office in what seems like an enclosed added on three season room. There are two doors on the side, and what seemed like a garage is not a garage anymore.
“Should we walk along the alley and see if it makes more sense?” Cade offers.
They do, and Cade says, “Well, those windows would seem to be like… the living room. But then…. The next set of windows could be the living room too. But there was that whole set and that could be like the living room too. I mean, there are like three possible living rooms, one must be the dining room, one would have to stretch across the whole house. The kitchen would be here, and then here… that’s a breezeway leading to… a garage that isn’t a garage. And then there’s just a whole set of gables and… architecturally this place is a mess.”
Don declared, “I am in love with it.”
Then Cade said, “You know Andrew?”
“Your friend…” Don added in the interest of truth, “who you had the threeway with?”
“Yes,” Cade said, precisely, “Well, Andrew’s been talking about how lonely he feels and I was thinking about—”
“You should invite him up for the weekend,” Don said. “This weekend. We seem to have an apartment full of lonely people.”
“Are you sure?” Cade said.
“Yes.” Don said, “We just have to remember not to sleep with him.”

MORE TOMORROW NIGHT
 
I am glad Donovan and Cade are moving forward with their life together. I am also glad Simon isn't a dick and is respecting Cade's wishes. Great writing and I look forward to more tomorrow! I hope you are having a nice night!
 
I'm having a peaceful night after some hiccups during the day. No, Simon isn't a dick. He and Cade were caught up in something that made them bad for each other and Simon bad for himself, and I didn't want him to seem like a villain. He's got some stuff going on his life too. More tomorrow night! Have you been well?
 
Yeah I am doing well, back at work and loving it which is good. I am still careful when I am out of the house but it is nice to not be as isolated anymore.
 
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