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Warm Dark Stone

It was nice to get back to Cade and Donovan. Hopefully Cade can make it up to Donovan so he doesn't feel so neglected anymore. Cade had a good reason to leave but I can see Donovan's point of view too. Great writing and I look forward to more tomorrow!
 
TONIGHT, DONOVAN AND CADE HAVE A LITTLE TALK ABOUT LIFE AND MAYBE LEARN TO LAUGH AGAIN.

Donovan Shorter woke up refreshed for the first time in a while. It seems all of his days in the past few weeks were full of irritation and backache, but now he was in a bed that seemed bigger, not smaller when Cade shared it with him, and he could hear Cade, on his guitar singing in the living room.

“A North Country maid up to London has strayed
Although with her nature it did not agree
And she's wept and she's sighed
And she's wrung her hands and cried
Oh I wish once again in the North I could be!

Where the oak and the ash
And the bonny ivy tree
All flourish and bloom
In my North Country!”

Without yawning, Donovan set to laying out the toys and the education pieces, with looking for the little breakfasts, the milks and the juices. When he was in the middle of this, Cade came stopped playing and called out, “What you doing, babe?”
“I’m getting everything ready for the kids.”
“The kids aren’t coming this morning. Just the afternoon ones. And setting up for the day was supposed to be my job. Remember?”
“I was tired yesterday,” Donovan shrugged. “Today I’m not.”
“You needed a night’s sleep.”
“I needed you to come home. Keep singing.”
In the living room Cade stretched out again, He was in the old brown codoroys that fit his thighs, and the old grey sweater. His thick curly hair hung in his face while he played on the guitar, his red lips moving as he sang. He had only made it a line when Donovan joined in.

“How sadly I roam and lament my dear home
Where lads and lasses are making the hay
Where the bells they do ring
And the little birds they sing
And the maidens and meadows are pleasant and gay.”

As Cade put his guitar down, Donovan suddenly kissed him. Cade pulled him forward and they made a comic stumble, before Cade cried, “My guitar!”and lifted it over his head, placing it gingerly on the table, and then he pulled Donovan onto the couch and they were a tumble of legs and arms and laughs and the need to kiss and touch.
“Are you sure?” Donovan parted from him, “No kids?”
“We need some time,” Cade said, “Just you and me. I am sure there are no kids.”
Cade smiled up at Don, and Donovan bent and kissed him.
“Your teeth are very white.”
“You notice the strangest things,” Cade said. Then, “I had them cleaned.”
He pulled Donovan down and kissed him. Again, they rolled back and forth on the sofa like two boys who had just discovered each other and then, when Donovan pulled up Cade’s sweater, Cade said, “I’m ninety percent sure no kids are coming. Why don’t we pull the curtain over the front door in case they see something they’re not quite ready for.”
Donovan grinned, and as his brown eyed boy leapt up, tee shirt tails hanging out and hair tousled, Don said, “Of course, whatever they saw could be an education and lead them to a whole new way of life.”
Cade laughed, pulling the shades.
“That’ll be for the older kids.”

When Cade’s phone rang again they were still laughing and a few minutes ago Donovna had pointed out that they could have gotten up a long time ago and moved to the bed or any place else but the sofa.
“We could,” Cade had agreed, but they hadn’t moved or dressed and continued laughing and holding each other, taking up a cigarette to smoke or a sip of coffee to drink.
But when the phone rang, Cade said, “Yes, that’s right. No one for the morning. We ran into some family trouble. Are you bringing Tayshawn this afternoon? No? Well, okay. We’ll see you in the morning, Ranita.”
“Tayshawn’s not coming, and that just means Derk and Justin in the afternoon which sounds like two too many. We should see if we can call their parents up in time or drop them off with Suzie.”
“Or have Suzie be here, and then we can do something?”
“Whaddo you want to do?” Cade settled into Donovan’s arms.
“I don’t know That’s too much to think of right now.”
“We should call up and say we’re having the house emergency cleaned because of the virus scare and we’ll be open the day after tomorrow.”
‘”That’s losing two days of business.”
“When did you ever care about money?”
“It’s not the money if I’m honest. It’s the being trustworthy and leaving folks in the lurch so quickly.”
“Remember when the schools shut down in March last year because of plague?” Cade said, standing up and stretching as he went to the kitchen with their coffee cups.
“That was leaving folks in a lurch quickly. We have our own emergency. We have to get our lvies back.”
While Cade poured coffee in the kitchen, Donovan sat on the sofa drawing his knees ot his chest.
“If we ever got in the money we could run the daycare some place that isn’t this house, then we wouldn’t have to get rid of the kids to have a day to ourselves.”
“That’s one if too many about things we can’t change,” Donovan said. “Let’s think about the things we can.”
“You’re so fucking practical,” Cade returned.
Before Donovan could retort, Cade added from the kitchen.
“Thanks for that.”
“Is the Lake played out?” Donovan asked.
“Huh?”
“Is the Lake played out? Would you want to go. Cold as it is. Frey called me and said he and DJ just went to Chicago.”
“We could go to Chi.”
“Fuck Chi. I just want to look at some water.”
Cade returned with their coffees and set Donovan’s in front of his, reaching for a cigarette.
“The Lake’s kind of our place,” Cade said.
“Our place is the entirety of Lake Michigan?”
“Our place is the entire fucking world, babe,” Cade murmured, his lips clutching the cigarette as Don lit it, “long as you say so.”
Cade lit Don’s cigarette of his own and then exhaled.
“I told you my mom goes to this secret church run by two gay ex Catholic priests. Or, they’re not ex priest, they’re just ex Catholic, only they say they don’t feel ex.”
“You told me a little. I feel like I wasn’t paying attention the way I was supposed to be doing.”
“You were distracted.
“And Dad thinks an alien comes to visit him every night with a message from God.”
“Did I tell you that Rob—“
“I love Rob.”
“Me too,” but Donovan would not be stopped.
“But did I tell you Rob used to be in love with this guy named Pat who had sex with him once, and then began sleeping with his brother only his brother was pretending to hate him—”
“Hate Rob?”
“No. Hate Pat.”
“He was pretending to hate the guy he was really boning?”
“Yes.”
“Wow.”
Then Cade said, “But you know I’ve pretended to hate some of the people I slept with.”
“Yes, and some you probably actually did hate, but never mind. Josh was pretending because he didn’t want Rob to know because Pat had wronged Rob a long time ago. Got it.”
“Got it.”
“Good.”
“Now go on.”
Donovan said, “Meanwhile, Frey’s nephew was, and still is, having sex with his adopted son—”
“DJ?”
“Right.”
“I remember.”
“Stop interrupting.”
“I’ve stopped.”
“And something happned and Pat started having sex with Frey’s nephew and his son.”
Donovan stopped.
“What?”
“I was waiting for you to say something.”
“You told me to stop interrupting.”
“But you were going to say something.”
“I was going to say,” Cade said, “or clarify: Pat, who used to sleep with Rob and then Josh, ended up having sex with DJ and Javon.”
“Absolutely, and then when Frey finally got with Rob and they moved in together, Rob went back and fucked Pat, but Frey caught them in bed together.”
“Woah,” Cade almost choked on his smoke.
“I feel like you’re laughing.”
“I feel like I don’t feel so bad about some of the things we’ve done. Or I’ve done.”
“Oh, yeah, we’re small time. And then there’s more.”
“More?”
“When Frey found them, he just took off his lcothes and climbed in bed with them, but apparently it’s over now, like that’s how it ended. I admire that… freedom.”
“I…” Cade thought about that, frowning, “don’t really have a lot of room to speak, but…”
“We’re small time. Our shit is small time.”
“Even with the—”
“Oh, yes,” Donovan said with certainty, “we’re definitely small time.”

MORE TOMORROW
 
Wow lots of revelations of who was/is sleeping with who. It seems like after Donovan got a good nights sleep things are better between him and Cade. Great writing and I look forward to more tomorrow! I hope you are having a nice weekend!
 
Well, a good night's sleep makes everything better. That and your boyfriend getting his shit together. Revelations for Cade, yes, but of course not revelations for you since you've read it all already.
 
They were not California people. They were not Southern people. They were people in the land where you had to catch the sunshine and the heat when it was there. You had to detect what there was of it and grab onto it, to be more than contented with it, to rejoice in the warmth and heat you got.
Before eleven thirty, they were in faded baggy jeans and cable knit sweaters, windbreakers and knit caps with thermoses of coffee and cigarettes, driving down Dorr Road and the Eastern road, not traveling to New Union, but to the empty beaches between New Union and Ely where the sand dunes rose up behind them with their grassy hills, stretching long and high to the north and to the south, and the beach turned into fingers of slab and rocks, wildness populated by only a few hearty souls. A woman in a white coat walked her dog. A young man in shorts, a sweatshirt and a knit cap was jogging. They clambered over rocks to where a rock finger stretched out like a pier and the grey blue water turned under them, washing up against the rocks in the seaweed scented wind of late March. They sat down, opening their thermoses, drinking their coffee, lighting cigarettes with great difficultie, shielding fragile flames and finally inhaling, watching the gulls cry for the joy of life above them, and stretch their white wings, turning in circles with each other. Heavy grey clouds had given way to fat white ones and now even the fat white ones thinned.
“What do you think they are doing today?” Donovan said.
Cade looked down at the swirling water and said, “Dancing probably. Wouldn’t you dance if you were a person who lived in the sea?”
“I wonder if Lovecraft creatures live in that sea. Or the lake, which is our sea.”
“Deep ones.”
“Krakens.”
“Makes going to the beach an adventure.”
“There are times when I cannot separate the strange and beautiful thigns of my imagination from …” and then Donovan said, “the other strange and beautiful things of my imagination.”
“Do you think there’s no diference?” Cade asked him. “Between what you imagine and what is?”
He took a long drag on his cigarette and then cartwheeled it into the swirling lake below.
“Everything is imagined,” Donovan said. “The bigness of your vision is what matters. It is not the difference between a mermaid and a postman, but between the person who sees the mermaid and the person who can’t believe in more than the postman.”
Cade had taken out a joint, which he thought was perfect for this, and he lit it from Don’s cigarette to save the irritation of using his lighter in the wind. Slowly its smell rose, and Cade began smoking, knowing Don would take it if he wanted.
“Then everything is real,” Cade said.
“Everything is real. What is given to us, and what we do with it. The visions we see and the visions we make. They’re as real as we are.”
Donovan continued to slowly smoke his cigarette and appreciate the smell of Cade’s joint. Watching him suck on it reminded Don of this morning, when he had gotten on his knees and taken down Cades old worn trousers and taken all of him in his mouth while Cade had trembled and moaned, He had cried out and this was love for him, this indulgence, this tenderness, and this was tenderness, the two of them on this rock talking about all things.
“I have visions sometimes,” Donovan said, “That right here, in our Midwest right here, is also the Enchanted Kingdom. That just as there are the thigns under the sea and the things in our dreams, there are other worlds. Sometimes as we drive and the sun sets you see the silos, the grain elevators in the distance, and they must be castles. You see an epic thing done in a drug store, an epic woman in a cigarette shop and think, here is a great and classic poem, a princess wrapped in cellophane.
“I bought the new journal, last time we went to the Wal Mart, I thought, let me check for journals and there was one, seafoam green like the mermaids, and on it was a copper key. I’d never seen something so simple and so beautiful and I knew I had to have it and something would come from it, some vision.”
“The things you scribble down all the time in it,” Cade said, smoke leaving his nostrils.
Don, who had finished the cigarette, took the marijuana from him and pulled on it, held the smoke in his lungs.
“Many pictures,” Donovan said, exhaling, “and I keep seeing a lady, a maiden, with a key about her neck, and she comes out of the water.”
“Will you write about her? Will she be a story?”
Cade knew that people came to Don out of the water or out of trees the way songs came to him from the air or behind his head.
:”I don’t have the story for her yet. She is a princess maybe. Or a sorceress, a great woman with an ancient family. She is descended from the women of the sea. Long ago those ladies loved fisherman and …..”
“They produced a race of fisher kings.”
“Yes.”
“And great sailers,” Cade said. “Mariners.”
“Yes.”
“And she came from one of these lines.”
“Yes, the most ancient noble line.”
“Did she wear seaform green?”
“Yes she did.”
“What was her name?”
“Her name is Manderly.
“Manderly, the Lady of the Copper Key.” Cade said.
“Yes.”
Donovan handed him the joint and Cade took two long hard puffs, holding the smoke in while Donovan poured more coffee for the both of them.
Squatting on his hams, Cade gave the rest of the joint to Don while he released smoke from his nose.
“Manderly,” he said.
“Yes,” Don said, though he could barely be heard over the waves. “Manderly.
“Well, you know what that means?”
“Hum.”
Now that we’ve spoke her name, the two of us, had a conversation about her, named her. She’d been brought into the world. She’s real.”


They walked the beach, and as they strode across the hard wet backed sand, and occasionally cold water touched the sides of their boots, suddenly, Cade lifted his voice and sang:


“Just give me your hand and we will wend our way
Give me a dream I can dream and then take away
Who wants it all a bed of Roses anyway?”

And then, taking up a slim twisted driftwood stick, he began to hum and sing, words and half words, Something was in him now. A song was building itself, or maybe several.

Cade and Donovan went for pizza and sat in the restaurant eating, before they decided to save the rest of it for dinner and heading back to walk the wooded path that wound up the highest dune and looked over the water. Now and again Cade would stop and start a hummung, and then suddenly he sang:

“I saw a girl and fair was she
I saw a girl and fair was she
I saw a girl,black hair and curls
And she was walking by the sea

And she was walking by the sea
And she did wear a brazen key
I asked her who she be
She smiled a witch smile, said Manderly!”

Donovan sat down on a rock to listen, and Cade continued.


“Before she spake I knew twas she
Before she spake I knew twas she’
Before she spake I knew twas she
How did you know, thus ask’ed she
how did you know asked Manderly

For I have journeyed five days hence
For I have journeyed five days hence
To know the maid with the copper key
Half elf, all lovely, thou Manderly
About her neck it did swing free!”

“My mothers’s mothers’ in the past,
long years before you’d even guess,
Raised up their heads from the deep sea,
and set their eyes on fishermen,
From those old unions, then came me,
but I am free, said Manderly
I am free, no man need I,
I hold onto the copper key
And so I watched a pined in grief,
all for the black haired Manderly!”

“Did she take him?” Don asked. “What did she decide?”
“He heard of her, but he did not understand her,” Cade said. “He wanted her, but did not know her. If anything comes of it, he must go back, understand how high above him she is. Be worthy. Such is the stuff of any love worth having.”
“True and poetic,” Don said.
“True and true,” Cade said. “It is, after all, how I got you.”


“Well, this one says we need the special flaky thin bread,” Linda said, as she sat beside Donovan scrolling through the recipe.
“And this says we have to have to have… do we have that brand of thyme?” “Oh this is bullshit,” Donovan says to Linda Richards, and Cade sniggers as his mother laughs.
“Really it is.”
He looks back to the shrimp in the bowl.
“The very nature of the term po boys implies that this should be easy to make and the ingredients should be on hand. Anyone telling you anything else is full of shit.
“Have you peeled the shrimp?” he looked up at Cade.
“Almost, Almost. Calm down. This takes a long time.”
“Well, you’re the one that wanted shrimp that had to be deveined and cleaned and… it’s really overrated, isn’t it?’
“Yeah it is.”
“I don’t think I’ve ever had a po boy,” Freddy said. He was coming in from the living room where Mr. Richards was sitting by the window looking out at the front yard. “It sounds like it should be exotic.”
“It shouldn’t be exoftic at all,” Donovan differed. “What it should be is easy. That’s the whole reason I decided to do it.”
“I don’t think I’ve ever seen you fry shrimp,” Cade said.
“I have when you weren’t here. It’s all pretty simple. The deep fryer tells you when its done.”
They had come to Ely on Friday night, and arrived at Cade’s mother’s house late.
Cade had never introduced her to a boyfriend and certainly never to Donovan, and he was more nervous than he thought, but the thing about Donovan being forty was that, even though he wasn’t as old as his mother, he was old enough to deal with her face to face, and they laughed together that evening, Donovan not ingratiating, but brusque and then, when it was about eleven he stood up stretched and said, “I’m sleepy. We need to get to the hotel.”
“Oh the hotel, you should have stayed here,” Linda said.
“The same way that good fences make good neighbors, visiting family staying at hotels makes happy families.”
When he was younger he wouldn’t have believed that, and Cade hadn’t totally believed it either. But when they drove to the simple motel six down the road and were in their own room, Cade stretched out on the bed while Don luxuriated in the shower.
“We’ll stay with your mom tomorrow,” Don decided. “That could be fun. If you want. It’s your decision, really. I had thought about it, but—”
“No,” Cade said. “That’s a great idea.”
“Spend the day with your family. Spend the afternoon with them. Have dinner. How’s that sound?”
“We could go to a decent restaurant.”
“Or cook. We could always cook.”
And so they were here, right now, in the kitchen of Cade’s father’s house, and Linda Richards was mixing mustard and pepper in mayonnaise and making a sauce while Donovan was taking out the flour and adding spices to it.
“This reminds me,” Linda said, “of when you all were kids. When things were so different. When this house was full.and we were very different.”
‘I don’t know if we were really different.”
“You were a child,” Linda said. “That’s pretty different. And Deanna was here.”
“True.”
“It was before anything was broken,” Linda said. “Before all the wounds.”
Donovan said nothing, did not think it was his place.
Cade said, “Wounds happen. People and things get broken.”
“True,” his mother said this time. “But you have to know how to put them back together. And I never did.”

MORE TOMORROW
 
Sorry I am replying late, its a holiday here so I was out with family. That was a great portion! I am enjoying more of Cade and Donovan again. I am glad they are comfortable around their families together. Excellent writing and I look forward to more tomorrow!
 
I actually hadn't thought to be upset for you not responding. It's Labour Day, right? Well, anyway, thanks for reading and commenting. I have had a doozy of a last few days and may PM about it. Yes, Cade and Donovan are pretty comfortable in thier families. Cade might have worried, but Donovan is sort of the head of his, and Frey is his cousin, so its a little different.Anyway, more tomorrow.
 
CONCLUSION OF CHAPTER EIGHT

Later that night, Donovan was watching TV in Linda’s living room, and Cade made a note of it.
“Sometimes it’s good to do.”
“I didn’t know this show was still on.”
“It is. I forgot there was such a thing as TV you didn’t have to subcribe to.”
“They call it prestige TV now.”
“So many new words.” Donovan said. “So many new words for things, and then new words over the new things. And the way you’re supposed to learn to say them in an urbane way so that it sounds like you always knew them.”
“Prestige television.”
“Intersectoinality.”
“White privilege.”
“Toxic masculinity.”
“But what happens,” Don said, “when the words are so funny, and the way we change them has become so ridiculous, that it glosses over the fact that words point to something real and serious, and then we stop taking seriously what matters, because the naming was not taking seriously, and so we cannot take seriously the people who say the new phrases for the old problems.”
“That’s a heavy conversation for a sitcom.”
“It’s better conversation that the sitcom,” Don said, turning away from it. “It’s not quite as good as I remember it. I don’t know that it’s made for me.”
“It’s not really cold outside. I’ll write you a song and that really will be made for you.”
“And then I have to make something for you.”
“No, you just get to keep talking, and I can keep listening, and that is making… happiness for me.”
“Is Linda coming?”
“Do you want her to?”
“It’s her house, and we’re here to vsit her, so how strange if she doesn’t come. And she likes me which makes me like her.”
Don was by now in a reflective mood, and a chatty one, and the two did not always come together. He said, as they built the fire, “You know, I finally watched that documentary about that writer, you know, I finished her book a few weeks ago.”
“The one with the red cat on the cover?”
“Yes,” Don said. “I always loved reading her. Thought of her as this leftist who awakened me to a lot of things. And as I watched the documentary, I thought, what an interesting life, but not a life that could have ever been mine, not really even speaking to people who could have been people like me. She’d gone off to Princeton, and then she’d won this huge national award and been sought after as a writer, and she was still in school then, and I didn’t envy her, but I thought, well how different her life is from mine. From ours, I guess.
“And then at one point in the documentary she says something about the danger of the right and the left, how the place you must go to is in the middle, and when she says this I realize that, after everything, the truth is I’m an anarchist. My thoughts are so varied and so conflicting. I’m so far to the left that the only thing I value is people who are far out wherever, and the middle she was talking about was where all the good hearted Unitarians and Episcopalians who believed in Whole Foods and gay marriage but not gay sex lived. I thought I was a liberal, but it turns out I am a leftist. I have a mad desire to burn everything down. It’s always with me.
“And then I thought about her, and all the good liberals I had admired, and the politics I used to admire, and I thought, what if she, this author, was chosen? What if in some way she was chosen to be the limit? These Democrats, these old school was that can’t win an election and think people are so rational, who think there’s a right and a middle and a left and who are afraid of anything more left than a bit of the middle, what if they set her up as the mark of good taste for tastelful vaguely left people? What if she and all of those others who they put on NPR and the literary shows are not liberals and leftists, but the limit, the signpost for how far you can go, and its all of us poor anarchistic fools who are sitting in the dark waiting for the world to burn?”
“I am not a big thinker,” Linda said.
Cade, used to Don, had said nothing.
“You may be a bigger thinker than you think,” Don said.
“I think most people are, and most people are left out, and the old world of that famous writer and those old politics is fine with it.”
“But what about the stuff you do?” Linda said. “All your stories that Cade has told me about?”
“Cade has told you…” Donovan looked up at Cade. He said, “I’m afraid they’re in the same place as me. Outside of the the New Jerusalem, along with the magician and thieves and the sodomites.”
They didn’t talk for a long time after that, and they let the fire do its work. Across town, Freddy was asleep at the old house, but in time they heard the turn of an engine, a car driving up and Freddy arriving.
“I knew there’d be a fire up,” he said. “I just knew it.”
“He brought beer, and his mother crowed and said, “You really did know,” and they sat around the fire drinking beer and smoking cigarettes, though Cade did not take out weed in front of his mother and, in fact, they didn’t talk about anything, because what was the need? And then Linda yawned, but said she wasn’t really sleepy.
“I could eat,” she said.
And when she said it, Freddy said, “I could too.”
“Crispy bacon. And some eggs. Good scrambled eggs and flaky biscuits.”
“Like form McDonalds,” Cade said. “I loved their biscuits.”
“Ugh, no. Real biscuits.” She slapped his hand.
“No, not really biscuits,” she changed her mind. “Croissants.”
“Yes,” Donovan agreed in a low satisfited voice as if he’d already eaten them.
“That actually sounds great,” Cade decided.
“With just a little heat on them,” Linda continued, “Warm, tender, stretchable and split and buttered, one side with jam and the other side with honey.”
“We don’t have to sit around being hungry,” Freddy said. “Amberson’s opens in a little bit.”
“It’s too early for breakfast,surely,” Linda said.
“It’s too late for dinner.”
“Is it past midnight.”
“It’s past three,” Donovan said.
“What? No?”
“Let’s get crossants and whatever,” Freddy said. “Amberson’s opens at four.”
Donovan was sure of two things: that he did not know Freddy like he should, and that Cade and his mother did not talk like they should.
“I’ll go with you,” he said.
“The two of you stay,” he said to Cade and Linda.
Cade looked after him a bit as he disappeared and then sat back down, poking the fire and adding more brushwood.
“I think,” his mother said, rubbing her blue jeaned thighs, “I’m going to be a naughty and have another beer.”
“I think I’ll have one with you.”
They drank and Cade wondered if he’d finish the whole thing, then supposed it didn’t matter. Most of his drinking was done at parties and in front of people he’d had to impress, but now he was at home in his mother’s backyard. He asked her:
“How is church? Father Dan and all of them?”
“Oh… lovely,” she said. “It’s a lovely Lent, and almost Easter.”
“I was sure you would take me again.”
“You didn’t ask.”
“I know,” Cade said. “I didn’t know I had to.”
“I didn’t ask in the past,” Linda said. “I was always dragging you to things. Always putting God in your face.”
She was quiet, and the quiet that had been around them all night seemed different now, louder. Cade was waiting on her to continue.
“If I hadn’t have taken you to Cornerstone, then that man never would have done what he did to you.”
Cade felt cold all over and strangely ashamed, and his mother looked small and in the cold. Neither one of them spoke and then, at last, Linda did.
“When that man got arrested and taken to jail, I began to think about Nash. But I wasn’t ready to think about you. I was talking to Freddy, and he told me. I should have said something to you, but you’re so proud, and maybe I was so embarrassed. I’m sorry. I just didn’t know how to… do anything. I felt like it was too late. I’d missed it all. I’m so…”
Linda shook her head over and over again, her face tight.
“How could I have led you to him? How could I ever make up for it?”
Cade didn’t go over and hug her. He felt like she wasn’t asking for it, and it wasn’t hers to be comforted, not by him. He didn’t want to be held either. He wanted both of them to sit in the semi cold light of morning and feel the mutual weight of this.
“I didn’t get it as bad as Nash,” Cade said, at last. “I couldn’t save him. I loved him, and I couldn’t save him. And then… when I heard about the kid who had exposed him I thought, I just stood by and didn’t do anything. All the kids that things happened to because I never said anything. I just moved on.”
“Parce Domine,” Linda said.
Cade didn’t ask what she meant, or what it meant. It sounded Latin and churchy and if he’d stayed in church logner, he might have understood it.
:”Mercy,” Linda whispered, shivering and getting up to move next to her son. “Mercy,” she whispered to the fire, sitting down beside him again.
“It’s not like a memory,” Cade said. “It’s in a different part of your brain. Sometimes it was like I was right there again. It’s a feeling that comes over you, like a shadow. Like a heaviness. It’s hard to describe. It took a long time for me to be able to live with it.”
Linda nodded over and over again and Cade said, “And when I think about how I let that happened to other kids—”
“No,” Linda put her hand over his sharply.
“I could have done something.”
“No.”
“I should have. I got so selfish. I got so cold I couldn’t help anyone but myself.”
They were like this, huddled by the fire, wet eyed, when Donovan and Freddy returned.
“We could eat later,” Freddy suggested timidly.
“No,” Cade said, his voice a little rough, and he took the back of his hand over his face.
“No. fuck that. We’re eating now. I’m done with being too sad to be happy.”
He stood up, lending an arm to his mother to help her rise.
“Come on gang.”


“Whoa, ah, mercy mercy me
Oh things ain't what they used to be, no no
Where did all the blue skies go?
Poison is the wind that blows from the north
and south and east
Whoa mercy, mercy me,
Oh things ain't what they used to be, no no
Oil wasted on the oceans and upon our seas,
fish full of mercury.”

Cade’s phone was ringing over Marvin Gaye playing low from the speaker hooked into Don’s phone, and Cade half blinked and felt around them. He had fallen asleep, not in his old bedroom, but in the living room with some sun coming through thick curtains on the old nineteen seventies furniture with an orange and white afghan over them, and awaken with Don’s arm hooked around his waist.
“Hello?” Cade croaked.
“Cade! Cade! Are you awake?”
He was now.
Freddy had gone home early that morning, and if he was this alarmed, something must have happened.
“How is Dad?”
“Dad’s fine,” Freddy was saying as Donovan was sitting up on one elbow and scooching up to listen.
“Then what?”
“Tell mom. Come over as soon as you can,” Freddy continued.
Before Cade could be irritated with his brother, Freddy said, “She’s back. Deanna’s home.”

TOMORROW: SOMETHING DIFFERENT
 
That was a great conclusion to the chapter. Maybe this is a silly question but I forget, who is Deanna again? I am assuming a sister but I could be wrong.
 
Deanna is Cade's sister. She has been missing from this entire story, and I have spaced out the telling of the story over a long time, so there is no reason you would really remember her existence. Deanna was also the person Cade traveled with in the first book when he left Don to go find himself after he had broken up with Simon. She was with him when he hooked up with the desk manager at the hotel. But most of her action has happened.... of camera.
 

E I G H T

POST
PRODIGAL





“Maybe you need to learn resurrection.”

- Donovan Shorter



Robert Dwyer was glad his partner in life and the keeper of his home, Isaiah Frey, believed whole heartedly in the principal of If it ain’t, broke don’t fix it. He was the sort of man who felt that if you had something ocne a week or once a month, there was no point in variety because that in itself was variety. Every Friday night there was a roast on the table when he finally came home, but in Lent there was always some type of fish dish. Frey never set foot in a church, and on the Saturday evening mass before Palm Sunday snuck into the vestibule of a nearby church to get palm branches and on Ash Wednesday and for seven Fridays after, made a feast of fish.
So on Sundays, When Rob was coming home he anticipated the chicken. A half hour out of town he thought of how the skin gold and crispy but a little sticky with the butter and the salt and paprika and the garlic would melt on his tongue, and how the bird, brined all night, exploded with the suculence of sage on his tongue. When he was in Mass on Sunday morning with his father and very often with his brother Josh, he imagined coming home in the early evening and being alone with Frey, being served by this man whom he was glad to serve, and being treated like a king by someone he fully thought of as his king. The rice, and the broccoli right after, the beer for him and the wine for Frey, and afterward tea for Frey, a cup off coffee for him, cigarettes, perhaps sitting on the back porch if it was a little warmer, looking at the sunset and hearing Frey slightly snore.
Frey might have his nephew or his son over, and they might be chuckling and laughing, and on their way to leave and live their lives. Or Frey might have his sister Sharon or his best friend Melanie. There were some occasions when Frey was not there strictly to seve, when he was in the living room with Melanie and Shannon and the troupe of his writer tfriends and he stood up to kiss Rob and tell him how glad he was that he was home, ask him about church and make him his plate, and then go back to what he was doing.. He never put a plate in the microwave. That seemed unloving He always prepared it in front of Rob, and talked to him a bit, and then told Rob he was welcome to sit in the iving room with everyone else knowing Rob never would.
There the occasional awkward Sunday return home. Once was when Jason was staying, Rob had come into the house only to be embraced by Jason first. The large and truthfully very handsome man had sat across from Rob trying to learn more about him and asking all about his interests, and Rob hadn’t known what to say to the man who had been Frey’s principal love and the father of his child, and hwo was, on top of everything, an actual and not an attempting artist.
The other awkward time had been when Rob had spent the morning at church with his brother, his father, Pat Thomas and Pat’s father, and then he’d gotten a phone call from Frey that said, “Pat’s coming to stay with the boys. You’d better bring him with you.”
This was after the day he and Frey had both been with Pat, in that bed in the house, and the strangeness of driving with his old friend and one time lover to his chief friend and constant lover had been so awkward, that while he drove and Pat fucked around with the radio stations he wondered, what is it that holds Pat Thomas to me? Even… why was it that me and Pat Thomas ever had sex? Recently? Why did I keep coming back to see him, be with him?
Pat grinned at something on the radio, and then laughed outloud, flashing his beautiful teeth and nudging Rob in the arm.
Pat was in his life for the very reason that Frey had never tried to push Pat out of it.
“It’s because he’s my only friend,”

This is why everything that had happened had happened. The intensity of their childhood friendship, the strange night when Pat’s mother and sister had died, and they had sat on the couch before, without words, Pat undressed him and had him and Rob had said nothing. He had not said stop, He had not said yes. He had simply let Pat have him on that sofa, and then he had let Pat walk off and go to bed. Neither one of them had spoken. So there was something fucked up about Pat, Rob understood that. He wasn’t an entirely right person.
But then again, neither was Rob. What kind of person would just let sex happen, would just lay there for that? He was as messed up a creature as Pat Thomas. He had to review their whole relationship. He had to review why he had been sure that Pat had so many other friends. But Pat hadn’t had friends. He was popular and very good looking, but he didn’t have friends. And Rob had to review why he thought he was friendless. Well now, when he thought of it, he was friendless, but that was not the same thing as being hated. He always went off on his own, and going off on his own hadn’t produced anything. Isaiah Frey was a solitary man, but he went off and came back with poetry and photography and a group of creators surrounding him. He went off on his own and came back with a boyfriend he couldn’t shake for twenty years and son. Rob had gone off on his own and come back with nothing.
He always watched Frey sitting at his desk, writing. In that, Frey and his cousin Donvoan were almost indistinguishable. Even, Rob reflected, to their preference for white boys, though he wasn’t much like Cade. But… Cade was a little like Jason. Never mind that.
One afternoon while Frey was scribbling he didn’t look up, but he said, “Your’e doing that thing.”
“What thing?”
“The thing where you watch me.”
“Because I was wondering,” Rob said, “How you do what you do?”
“Write?”
“Well, yes, but what I really meant is, you seem to be able to get to the truth. I mean, your truth. If I ask you a thing, about your life, about why whatever is happening is happening ,you can tell me. You know. But I look back on my life and it’s a blank. I can’t tell my story. I spent such a long time not thinking, that if I try to go back and figure out things now, figure why I did whatever I did, I can’t.”
“It’s never easy,” Frey said, looking up from his writing and closing the journal. “Not really.”
Rob thinks about what he almost let himself think when he saw Frey scribbling. Frey was scribbling painfully almost, not smoothly, but like someone writing with a razor, scratching into skin.
“It takes a long time to get to honesty.”

Where he got to with Pat was honesty. It was a reset button. A reset button is not forgiveness because it is not understanding. It might be resolution or it might be weariness, but it is not understanding. The reset button had begun the day Pat had come to the monastery with Josh and with DJ and Javon. Rob asked no questions, though he had several suspicions, all coolly confirmed or at least corroborated by Frey when he came back to bed.
“But it was good to talk to Pat,” Rob said, “and I want to live my life in a different way.’ “
“Not mad? Not mad at him?”
“I don’t know if I was mad with him.But I was weird with him.”
“Weird is almost worse than mad,” Frey said. “Yes, you do what you have to do.”
And Rob had done what he needed to, or ast least what he thought he had to, because Frey was easy. Almost after the monastery, they had packed up the few things in the little hosue, the few things Rob had, and come to live in Frey’s house, and those days were a delight, a delight because even though he had said he wanted to be with Frey and be his man, and even though he was sure he was and that they were together, Frey was not exactly a husband, and Rob was not exactly a spouse. He felt secure with Frey, but he didn’t feel quite married to Frey, and Frey did not seem like he needed them to be. On all the dating apps, men just wrote the same thing on their profiles. There was always someone writing NSA, no strings attached. It seemed a little vulgar to Rob, to want whatever you wanted, but at no cost. But at this moment with Frey he felt like their really were no string or like Frey wanted nothing more than his love and companionship. He didn’t want the fullness of a relationship that was barely a bud, and in those days Rob was always going between Frey’s house and his father’s, and Frey was always hustling teaching assignments at the community college and dealing with Javon and DJ and checking on his small royalties while making sure Jason sent child support. He was juggling with Jason. Jason was staying over. He was, once or twice, sleeping with Jason, Rob was sure. And in those first days, when Rob thought about the police academy and thought being state police made perfect sense for someone traveling between Ashby and Becket, Indiana, Pat had come home from medical school, and after church on Sunday, they had begun to meet.
It had been Josh who told him about Pat being home, and they had all gone to church together that Sunday. Josh and Rob and his father, and Pat and his father, and Rob wasn’t sure if he believed, and he didn’t think Josh really believed, but sitting in Saint Augustine’s brought some kind of peace to life. It made things make sense. Rob vaguely remembered he’d once thought of being a priest, and he wondered where the thought had gone. Had it gone when he found out he wanted to have sex one day, or was it finding out he wanted to have sex with men that had killed his taste for the Church? He couldn’t be sure. Every time he tried to ask those deep questions, he was never really sure of their answers. The past didn’t behave itself. Stories didn’t stay in one place. The befores became afters and you just had to return to this moment.
Rob and Josh and Pat were all talking at lunch after Mass, and Josh said he was going to get up and do some work. He was on his way back to college in a few days and Pat said, “You wanna hang out by the lake?” and Rob said he did.
They went by the lake, but not to the lake. They were in Voleman Park and over the hills, on the other side of it was the water, but they never got to look at the water, and somehow this felt like his whole relation to Pat. They sat on a bench and Pat said, “I dropped out of medical school.”
“What the? Why?”
“I don’t know,” Pat said, shrugging. “I wasn’t… feeling it sounds like the wrong word. Sounds irresponsible.”
Pat thought on it and then said, “I wasn’t ready for it. I don’t have the energy I need for it. I need to stop. I’m broken a little. I’ve been patching myself up, but I’m not right. And I don’t know how to get right.”
Rob said, to be kind or maybe to be funny, “I don’t know if I was ever right.”
“You’re the rightest person I know,” Pat Thomas said. “Only you didn’t know it. You could never see it.”
He said, “If you can’t see it, I guess it doesn’t matter then.”
“I’m joining the police academy,” Rob said.
“Good. You should. That’s a real thing, and you’d be good at it. Helping people.”
Rob nodded and Pat said, “Why’d you do it?”
“Police academy?”
“Yeah..”
“I think the reason you said. Seemed like I could help folks. I saw a lot of bad cops on TV and thought I could be a good one. I wanted to do something good. Is that why you went to med school?”
“No,” Pat shook his head, looking blank and a little drunk.
“I wanted to make money.”
With a touch of discovery, but not the slightest hint of irony, Pat said, “It turns out, it takes al little more than wanting to make money to be a good doctor.”
“You could be a lawyer?” Rob suggested with a grin.
“Yes,” Pat said. “I had thought of that.”
Now, somewhere two year later, when he understands everything a little bit better Rob sees that Pat who just turns around and chuckles now, is a very different person than him, always was, was the kind of person who eventually understood a joke and laughed at it, not the kind of person who made one. Looking back, Rob realizes Pat Thomas didn’t know who he was, and Rob didn’t think of himself as anyone at all, and that was a problem, because, if he wans’t anybody, then who the hell was Isaiah in love with, and if he didn’t think he was anything, really, then what was coming home to Isaiah? He had met Isiah in the dark, a blank profile on an app, a set of lusts and needs, a body that had met his, and they had traveld from that into this, but what was he really? Just breath. And Pat didn’t seem to be anything either. That was why he said, “Do you remember that house? The little one where me and Frey stayed?”
Pat, his arms folded over his chest, nodded.
“Yeah.” he said.
“Do you wanna go back there for a bir?”
“Yeah,” Pat said.
It wasn’t jealousy over Jason, or lovelessness, or anything like that, but the overwhelming feeling next to Pat that neither one of them was quite real, and that bodies were real and feelings were real and need was real. That was the reason they went back to that little house and had sex, and when it was done Rob did feel real, and the closer he drove back to Ashby and Frey, the more real he felt, and the less real anything with Pat was.
It never would have ended unless Frey had come that day. This was increasingly the way his life moved. When he came back to Becket it was less and less real. It was the life he’d had that he had to keep coming to. His brother, who was back at college, in the land of the living was not in town most of the time , and it saved the questions about what Josh’s relationship was to Pat. And when he was in Becket he wasn’t real, and Pat had ceased to be real. Or maybe it was better to say, being ghosts, they had ceased to be present. This was the place to catch up with all that was lost. The passivity of his past life was made up for here, on weekend in the house with Pat, in looking boldly at him in church. That one spoiled night long ago when Pat had touched him and he had lain down, and he had been as lifeless and lacking in willn as a doll while Pat shuttled up and down on top of him was made up for by his pushing Pat against the wall, thrusting hands into his jeans, yanking them down, unpeeling his underwear, and taking Pat in his mouth. The past was amended by the two of them, so long distant, squeezing their bodies together so tight there was no space, while they both breathed and moaned and pulled together in that bed. The past was resolved to Rob by his hardness, his thickness, as he pushed up Pat’s legs and entered him ,and trapped by Pat’s hot tightness, could not stop entering, could not stop thrusting,. Then came the mutual gasping and crying out, taking Pat’s head and fucking his mouth while he yanked his hair and Pat begged for it.
In all that time, they never talked about life, not really, But there was no life, only that house and what happened in it, and what happened in it was the past. No, over and over again Rob thought, it wasn’t sex, it was the past, the fucked up refucked, the unresolved, slowly reassembled.


MORE TOMORROW
 

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That was an interesting portion! I feel sorry for Pat, he seems to be going through a tough time. I am glad no one is getting too jealous because of his actions. Great writing and I look forward to more tomorrow!
 
TONIGHT FREY AND ROB DEAL WITH PART WHILE DONOVAN AND CADE HEAD BACK HOME


That last time, when Pat was on his way to see DJ and Javon, and Rob had put out of his head that Pat was going to be having sex with one or both of them, he had stayed at Frey’s house for dinner and Rob had wondered about his lover, “How can he be so gracious? How can he be so in charge? Here was this guy he had known had been having sex with him, whom he had come to, climbed into bed with and taken possession of himself, and this guy had apparently been with DJ and Javon, everyone at the table save Sharon and Melanie, and here was Frey, expansively pouring wine and sharing out mashed potatoes.. Here was Pat, beginning to forget his fears and reservations and laugh.
Rob had expected that as the night went on, the boys would all go off to their place, and maybe the women disperse, but they did not, and at one point Pat excused himself and when he was gone for a while, though no one seemed ot note it but Rob, Frey got up. It was Isaiah’s absesne Rob Dwyer noticed, and now he wondered what was taking so long. Was Frey perhaps, in bed with Pat? It was strange enough to be true. Had they gone off to start an affair, a tit for tat? At last, Rob could not simply sit and wait. He got up, casually, and moved around guests to go to the back of the house. He heard what was the sounds of sex, the intake and outtake of breath, sharp heaves, and he wasn;t sure how he felt. No, no. He was at least partially aroused, and in partial arousal pushed open the door but was instantly surprised and set wrong by the sight of Pat, in the spare room, weeping in Frey’s arms while Frey held him and stroked his head like a child. Pat’s shoulders heaved and he couldn’t stop crying, and Rob came slowly into the room and sat in the chair across from them.
“I don’t know,” Pat wept. “I just don’t know what to do.”

A year ago, Donovan would have waited for Cade to summon him, and two years ago he would have beaten around the bush before asking if he should come. Now he knows better. In ths world where they sleep bodies link so they wake up and have to separate, their skin sealed by perspiration in the night, and his nostrils are full of Cade’s breath while their arms are tangled together, and he begins the most mundane sentence and Cade finishes it, he knows that when Cades gets up to get dressed and go across town to meet his sister, his place is with Cade.
“I thought the sky was brighter,” Cade notes. It is heavy and grey as a wet blanket, and even though they are in a Land Rover and not walking or riding bikes, Donovan desires to get to the house before the downpour starts. Truthfully, even though none of these homes is his and he is living in Cade’s past life, he things of Linda’s home as home, and wants to go back there, have the last of the croissants, do eggs for them, have a cup of coffee.
When Cade gets to the porch the door opens, and behind his sister, his father is saying ,”You won’t believe who came to visit,” and there is no irony because he has no irony anymore. Deanna is standing there, very pretty, Donovan thinks, not tall but not short, well formed with ash blond hair he hadn’t imagined for Cade’s sister, and wide grey blue eyes.
“What are you just staring at me for?” she demands and steps forward and throws her arms around him, pulling him down.
Above them there is the rumble of thunder. Freddy has come to the door and given a shy wave to Don. Mr Richards says, “We should go inside. It’s about to rain.”

They talk about how clean the house is and how things have changed, how Deanna did not think it was possible for Cade to get taller but it seems he and Freddy did. How good Dad is looking, how good it is that Mom was over last night. They talk about how good it is that winter is finally ending and you can see buds on the trees. Deanna tells Donovan little stories about Cade, how as a baby he used to eat the heads off of matches. How you could never shut him up, and once in the grocery sotre when their grandmother passed gas, he said, “Oh Grandma, you strnky.”
When she said, “That’s not nice. I don’t know what you’re talking about,” he said, “Grandma yes you do. You pooted.”
“Poor Grandma was so mortified,” Deanna said.
“Dad,” Deanna turned to him, “Do you remember when we went ot Chicago, and Cade pointed at this guy—huge guy—with an earring and said, “Why’s he got an earring—”
A light was in Stan Richard’s eyes.
“He was huge and I kept trying to shut you up,” he told Cade.
“And Cade is just like, ‘Earrings are for ladies. He’s too big to be a lady.’ And we just try to get off that bus as soon as we can.”
“I don’t remember any of this,” Freddy said.
Cade crossed his arms over his chest and tried to look superior. “I don’t remember it either.”
“Well, you were young and stupid, and Freddy was just a baby.”
“And remember when Deanna had the Barbie Dreamhouse?”
“I loved that thing it was so cool,” Freddy said. “Didn’t it have running water in it?”
“The shower had water in it. You could press it and make the shower work,” Deanna said. “The only thing I didn’t like about it was it was pink, the whole house.
“And Don,” Cade said, “Deanna used to swap the heads of Ken and Barbie and then she would tell us all that—”
“She had made bisexuals!” Teddy finished.
They were laughing, even Mr. Richards, but Don thought it was more because his children were here and they were laughing than because of any great joke.
They talked about everything, grinning, sometimes bursting out into huge guffaws. They talked about everything except where Deanna had been and why she had been away for so long. This is the grace of the prodigal son, or daughter. This is the grace of family. Family is here to love, not to interrogate.

At a certain point, Don looked directly at Cade and Cade raised an eyebrow, and then Don continued looking and finally Cade cleared his throat and Don turned away.
“We should probably call Mom,” he said, and looked back to Donovan who nodded. Why use words when a look would do?
There might have been an argument from Deanna at another time, but in the midst of her family and Donovan, Freddy simply got up, called and started with, “You won’t believe this….” Then, a moment later, “I’ll come and get you.”
Freddy didn’t trust his mother to drive safely hearing this news, and Don thought he might have been right. While he prepared to go and get Linda, the conversation drifted from that to the past, to Grandmother, not the one who had passed gas, but the one they called Jida, and Deanna, rapturous, demanded, “Remember the fatteh, and laksma,”
“Oh and what was that cake she used to make?”
“Nyjella,” Cade said.
“And the baba ganouj and the chicken—“
“ They all said, “Gej”
“And how was it?” Deanna wondered, “that even her coffee tasted different?”
“Sweeter?” Cade said.
“Yes. And strong.”
“When you were with her,” Cade said softly, “you knew you were loved and no one could love you like her.”
Donovan had not known that sort of grandmother. One had died young and the one who had lived was not worth mentioning. Cade looked at him ,and he looked mystified, but when Cade said, “What?” Don said, “All the food she made…” his voice trailed off, and then he said, “It sounds wonderful. “
“It was. Are you alright?”
“I’m fine, I just feel like I don’t know that much about you.”
Freddy was headed for the door.
“That’s crazy. Of course you know about me, you know all the words coming out of my mouth before I say them.”
Donovan was strangely perturbed, and didn’t know how to say what he wanted to say without sounding tacky in front of other people, so he settled on, “Where was she from?”
“Syria,” Mr. Richards said.
“That’s a deeply interesting fact that Cade never once told me.”
“Sure I did.”
“Sure you didn’t. It’s the neatest thing you’ve never said.”
Cade shrugged, “I probably thought I did. It’s not a big deal.”
“For me to live with you for two years and not know your ethnicity or anything about your family is kind of a big deal,” Don said, throwing calm to the wind.
He wasn’t sure who he was mad at, himself for not asking, or Cade not telling. He looked at Cade’s deep dark eyes, his thick curly hair, the skin more olive than white. He’d always thought, Italian somewhere, possibly Jewish. But he never asked. Why hadn’t he asked?
“I want to know everything and I don’t know anything. I’m Black and you have this whole immigrant very non white past that you just… forgot?”
“Yeah,” Cade said, sheepishly. “Kind of.”
“If it makes you feel better,” Deanna said to Don, “I think part of it is we just felt like next to other people who…. Look more ethnic… we were faking it to try to jump on the I’m a minority train, so we just didn’t.”
Mr. Richards hadn’t said anything, but Cade said. “Our great grandparents left Syria a long time ago, and our grandfather married an American woman. A white woman, and took her name because…. Things were different. So my dad was raised Richards, even though technically his name—”
“Our name,” Deanna corrected.
“Meghadam,” Cade said.
He shook his head.
“It’s my fault. I spent such a long time putting the bad parts of my past away I put the good parts away too, And you never asked cause you knew there were things I wasn’t ready to look at.”
Donovan nodded.
“But I am ready to look at everything now,” Cade said. “So things are going to change a bit in our lives.”


Donovan dreamed that he was walking by the river with the dogs, though he couldn’t remember having little dogs. And they were off the leash and as they walked along the river in the early spring where the strip of park land was black with just the beginning touches of green, and where the trees were just coming into bud. One of the dog walked, deliberately, into one of the giant mole holes or groudhog dens.
“Come out,” he called, “Come out of there.”
But the dog would not, and the dog crawled deeper and deeper, and the then Donovan heard the growl from the ground hog’s den and couldn’t be sure if the dog was being eaten or the groundhog.
He woke up to talking in the living room, and heard himself snore and Deanna laugh.
“You need to go home,” she told Cade.
“What?” Cade smiled over at Don.
“Oh my gosh, you look so tired. We do have a drive and we have to be up for those kids.”
Those kids,” Don said. And then he said, shaking his head. “We could use a break. We need to do something. I don’t now if I want to see kids every morning, and tonight all I want is sleep.”
“I could come with you,” Deanna volunteered.
When they looked at her she said, “seriously. I mean, if you would have me. I could come. How many kids you got coming?”
“Twelve or thirteen,” Cade answered while Don was still blinking and not entirely sure what to say.
“And sometimes Suzie comes to help,” Donovan said, at last. “I mean, she’s supposed to be there all the time but.”
“What you need,” Deanna said, “is someone else there. At least sometime. I’m coming along.’
“Did she just invite herself?” Freddy wondered.
“She’s always been that way,” Cade pointed out.
“I’m not refusing her,” Donovan said.

MORE TOMORROW AFTERNOON
 
I am liking where this story is going. Deanna is an interesting character and I hope there is much more of her. Great writing and I look forward to more tomorrow! I hope you have a wonderful Friday and weekend!
 
note 1: which applies to everything, but it was too late to edit my post, there will be no posting of anything tomorrow. Posting will resume on Saturday night. 2. I am glad you like Deanna. Now here is my question, not.... which is your favorite, but who is the character who has surprised you most in this story?
 
That's good to hear. It was a long time before I got back to them, because I didn't just want them to have the same story a second time around. There's been a lot going on here, and a lot of it is going to show up on these pages very soon.
 
RETURNING TO WALLINGTON, CADE REKINDLES HIS RELATIONSHIP WITH HIS SISTER WHILE DON REKINDLES HIS WITH SIMON

“The last time we were together was when we were making that trip all around the country,” Cade was saying.
After Deanna had volunteered or commandeered herself to return with them and help with the daycare, Don had decided he would sleep in the back of the Land Rover and the two of them would sit up front.
“Yeah,” Deanna said, “You were finding out who you were, after Simon and everything. As I recall, I was finding out who I was too.”
. “Were we happy?”
“I feel like we were, but it’s hard to recall, We had money enough to be unhappy and figure things out.”
Her voice was higher, “He was always thinking of you, Don,” she said. “He brought you up a lot, but even when he didn’t, he was thinking of you.
“You know what I think,” her voice was ordinary now, “I think you had never really loved anyone until Don, and you wanted to be sure it was true. I think so many things happened back here in Ely and later on, and that whole trip was to decide something.”
“I think,” Cade said as they drove in the dark and the dashboard gave a comforting green and red light, “that what I was doing was avoiding life and avoiding making decisions or coming home.”
Don wondered, half asleep, was I his home? Is that what he was saying? He had said as much in a lovely letter Don had received while he was still sleeping with Brian Vaughn.
Brian, he needed to call him, Ezekiel too. Don might have put old lovers out of his bed, but he did not put faithful friends out of his life.
“I think you can do both,” Deanna said. “Try to find out who you are, and try to keep the present at bay, running around doing everything besides coming home.”
Cade didn’t respond to that, so Deanna continued, “It’s what I’ve been doing.”
“And now that you’re home,” Cade said, “What have you learned? What are you going to do?”
“I dunno,” Deanna said. “I guess take care of some kids.”


They reached home around midnight, and when they were getting there, Cade said, “Are you sure?” And Donovan said, “yes, I’m absolutely sure.”
They drove near their neighborhood but went up a few blocks to houses hidden behind trees, and at one of them Cade knocked on the door and Simon answered.
“Hey…?” Simon looked confused, “Guys?”
“This is my sister Deanna, and she’s staying with us,” Cade said.
“I think we met before,” Deanna said, politically, even though she had hated him and thought the wheat haired boy was bad for her brother.
“And Donovan said we should sit up and talk all night, and he should stay with you. So…” Cade said, kissing Donovan on the cheek, “There you go.”
As Cade and Deanna got back into the Land Rover, and Donovan came into the house with his bag, Simon said, “You all are so… strange.”
But they weren’t so strange that Simon was totally surprised, and they weren’t so strange that Simon spurned them. Donovan had never stayed here before, in the old bungalow with the molded doorway and lentil that led from living froom to dining room, and the long hallway departing to three rooms, but Simon had stayed at Don and Cade’s a great deal, and stayed with Don during the time when Cade was taking care of his father, so it it only made sense that, at last, Don should come to stay with him.
“I’ll show you around,” Simon offered, and Dnovan said, “I think I only need to know where the bedroom is.”
Simon ignored this and showed him the main bathroom and the little half bath and the soaps and the towels, and Don said, “This place is so well kept. It’s like a little hotel.”
“It’s easy to keep things nice when you live alone.”
“Donovan shook his head, “No, it isn’t. You forget, most of my life I’ve lived alone.”
He yawned.
“I think I would love abath, but really I think right now I want to go to sleep.”
“You’re going to wake me up in the middle of the night, and then turn around and go to sleep?”
Donovan shook his head.
“No, I don’t believe I woke you up. And I don’t believe I’ll be asleep very long. If we’re both up in an hour, let’s find each other.”


Simon’s living room was hung with rich dark curtains and bookshelves filled with good books Donovan knew he had never read. As they sat beside each other, Simon leaned over and poured Don a Scotch, and then offered him a hand rolled cigarette. This was not an affectation. Simon would be the first person to tell you he’d never read these books. Simon loved single malt Scotch. He also loved marijuana and cocaine, and he had recently come off the latter when he’d nearly lost his job Maybe to people he did not know this was not public business, but Don knew because he told Don. The oak coffee table, the large fireplace with the fire burning in it, the oriental carpet, Don appreciated because he knew what they had cost Simon. Simon had worked to get the finer things in life, because he had been born far from them. Donovna could live without niceties or even without money because, though he had never been rich, niceties and money had always been around.
“How’s the business of work?” Donovan asked him.
“We went to the Near Northwest where eco houses are being built,” Simon began, “and me and Kareemah went to tour the schools with the mayor, see about the computer program, and he’s still thinking about making a presidential bid.”
“Presidential? He’s the mayor of a tiny town in Indiana. Wouldn’t it make more sense to run for governor or senator?”
Simon shrugged. “He’s young. I believe in him. There are young voters out there, and it’s a new day, and,” Simon put down his Scotch. “When have you ever asked about my job?”
“Of course I care about your job.”
“But you’ve never asked about it.”
“I thought I should,” Donovan shrugged. “It seemed appropriate. The truth is I don’t really care about jobs.”
“You used to always talk about school.”
“But that wasn’t talking about the job. The very definition of being a school sub was the work was so immediate and day to day there was no job, no politicking, no believing in anything, no party line. Just milk and cookies and hugs and tying shoes and being constantly ill from constantly ill children.”
Simon shrugged.
“And I am just the opposite.”
“There isn’t a lot of work place gossip you ever talk about.”
Simon shrugged.
“I suppose not. We’re not really work place gossip people. We’re…”
“Liberals. With a purpose,” Donovan said. “And the mayor is your purpose.”
“How do you feel about him?”
“It’s strange,” Donovan said. “I don’t believe he can be a president, and I don’t think he has much of a vision, truthfully. I think you all are well of, all of you in the mayor’s office, so you don’t see the cracks in the city, and in the last few months I’ve spent a long time not paying attention to those cracks too. I’ve been caught up in the daycare and Cade and Cade’s father.”
“I haven’t helped you at all, either. I haven’t done anything about that.”
“It’s not for you to do anything about it. It’s not your responsibility.”
“I suppose, but…”
“We can only do what we can do, and it seems what we do is never enough. I won’t say much more because then I sound like a pessimist, and I’m not a pessimist, merely astounded and surprised by all the work there is to do, and how it seems like ti will never be done.”
“It was a strange thing,” Simon said, smiling through his glasses and the white msoke of his cigarette passing his lenses. “Seeing Deanna. She never liked me.”
“Are you sure of that?’
“Yes,” Simon said. “some people make too much of themselves. Talk about who hates them and who doesn’t, but I know she didn’t think much of me. I doubt she hated me. I think she got the measure of me.”
“That’s not fair.”
“It is. I wasn’t much good, Don. I’m thirty two now. I’ve looked on what I was. Insecure and afraid and ambitious, and that’s all true, but the way I dealt with it, the way I built up the little I have, this cute middle class life I love, I admit it, the going to city council meetings, the having nice dinners at nice restauranta, the residual income—it’s good to have money—the way I got to it is pricey. And when you think that it didn’t make me rich, just comfortably middle class, well then…” Simon shook his head.
“I’m glad I put away a lot of who I was. That Simon wasn’t a good guy. He wasn’t evil. You know evil isn’t the opposite of good. He was weak and stupid and selfish and… not good.”
Donovan knew enough. He’d been with Cade for two years, and he was intimate friends with Simon. He knew that when Simon was with Cade he’d wanted threesomes, and orgies, had filmed their sexual encounters with together and with others, had spent a lot of time getting drunk, snorting cocaine and occasionally doing hard drugs. But ti was the life he and Cade had together, and he didn’t blame or despise Cade for it, so it was hard to blame Simon. Cade explained thar relationship as, “We were both sick and broken together. And we looked good being sick and broken, so we stayed together.”
Four years, Donovan thought, two years longer than Cade had been with him.
Simon yawned and Donovan said, “Do you want to go to bed?”
“No,” Simon said, “This is my day off. I mean, tomorrow is. And it’s great you came over tonight. I’ve never had my friend in my house.”
“It’s a very nice house too, not like the old beige townhouse off the river. That was nice too. But this is … grown up.”
Simon chuckled.
“Your house is a different kind of grown up.”
“Is it?”
“It’s a homey house. It feels like a home. I can’t stop making mine feel like a museum.”
“Well, the childrens’ toys that your bare feet crunch on, and the piled up dust help to make it homey, I suppose,” Don said.
“You joke,” Simon said, “But they do. And your books and your sculptures, that you always mean to put in more order, but that always end up in in random gatherings.”
“The mound of blankets on the living room floor?”
“That too.”
“You make it sound so charming.”
“It is charming. And it never looks terrible,” Simon said. “It just looks happy. It always did.”
“Well,” Donovan only spread his hands and gave a small bow, reaching for another cigarette.
“You always liked me,” Simon said. “Right?”
“Huh?”
“Well, I was just thinking, the same way Deanna didn’t care for me, you always liked me. Even… a long time later Cade told me how you didn’t know he was was with me. How I was a surprise to you that first time but, we got on. I remember when we finally broke up and I tried to look for… blame in your eyes. And it wasn’t there.”
“You’re a hard person to dislike,” Donovan said.
“When I put on my charm I’m a hard person to dislike,” Simon said. “For certain people. But I never had charm with with you. You just accepted me.”
“Well, yes, you funny blond man. I like you. I could definitely say I love you. You don’t really understand how I am glad you’re in our lives.”
To Donovan, Simon was, no matter what, innocent and full of light, blond and white and soft, his blue eyes peering out of brass rimmed spectacles, something right and calm about him. Even now he realized how litte he knew about him. And he said it.
“I don’t ask enough questions. I think I was just trying to be accepting, so I don’t always ask questions. But just now I’m learning about Cade after two years.”
“If it makes you feel better,” Simon said, “the things you learned in two years I probably never leaend in four.”
“But I never asked you anything about you. I never did.”
“We’re not all great stories worth delving into.”
“No, probably not. But I think you are.”
It was easy to love Simon. That first time he’d stayed with them, the morning he’d come in and climbed into bed with them, it was easy for the lovemaking of two people to turn into the lovemaking of three. And there had been those times when the relationship between he and Cade was like wet cement, not entirely finished, and it was as easy to sleep with Simon, when the tenderness with him was a different side of the tenderness and the openness with Cade. Every lover wasn’t kind or open or gentle, every man’s body didn’t feel like home. Every lovemaking couldn’t be so free of judgment. When with Simon, the two of them felt free to do everything with each other.
The room was filled with a joy like Christmas, or like the tingle of the Scotch in Donovan’s mouth. Simon turned to him. His hands were long and smooth, the nails white and trimmed, his face soft, tender and loving.
“Donovan,” he said, precisely, and softly.
“Yes.”
“Don’t take this the wrong way, but are we going to go to bed together tonight?”
Their minds were in the same place. Perhaps Donovan knew what would happen the moment he decided to stay with Simon. Maybe, even Cade knew it too. His body knew it, for gentle as a rose he had blossomed and become firm, and his penis throbbed with its own heartbeat.
Donovan said, “Yes."

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