CHAPTER NINE
FOR THE LOVE OF SIMON

How can it still be so early, barely two when they are rolling over the cobble stone streeted hills that wind down to the house on Moore Street, driving slowly under the branches with their green, white and pink buds appearing, None of them has traveled too far in the last few years. Donovan has never traveled far at all, not farther than he needs to. At least Cade and Simon can say they weren’t born in Indiana. When Don met Cade he was working at the public school at the bottom of Moore Street by the river, and Don went home everyday by walked up the street the two blocks. He could just barely see the the school from the brick split level where he lived, which he said was as far as you needed to be from work. A block up from this began downtown, and quiet as that was, a beyond that was the gas station where a woman was shot, and across from it on the other side of Moore was the Taco Bell where the prostitute shot up heroin before dying in the bathroom.
But, back down to the safe version of Moore, by the river, closer to the school than where Don was living, and around the corner, up the hill, he and Simon now arrived at the house on Eastbrook, old and brick, cheap because it needed work and had come with a mouse problem.
When they came to the house on Eastbook and walked in the door, the five children who were in the living room immediately stopped what they were doing and made a circle around Donovoan.
“Mr.Shorter,” they all said in different little voices, though Marlayah’s voice always sounded accusatory and she said, “Mr. Shorter, where have you been?”
“I had to take a little bit of a vacation,” he said. “You know how you just have to get away sometimes.”
Marlayah, who was six, nodded her head and the beads in her braids jingled as she did.
“That’s what my mom says.”
“Mista Short,” Aceson, peanut headed, yellow, with a tiny face like an old man said, throwing his arms about his waist.
Donovan palmed the boy’s head and and he said, “Marlyllah, Ayla, Aceson, Fernando, Abigail, say hello to my friend, Mr. Barrow,”
“Hi, kids,” Simon said in that slightly loud nervous voice adults used for children.
“Do you know Mr Cade?” Marlayah asked, and Donovan said, “Actually, “Marlalyah, he knew Mr. Cade before I did.”
“Ayla, the smallest of them, slipped a book into Donovan’s hand and said, “Can you read us a story?”
“Have you been working on your reading?”
“Yes,” Ayla said, seriously. Her dark eyes were wide and reflective, her mouth in a precise mini frown.
“We’ve been being scollish, but I still like it when you read the stories.”
Marlayah slipped another hand into Donovan’s free one and declared, “Mr Shorter reads the best stories.”
As they pulled him in, Donovan said, “Help yourself to something to drink, Simon. I’m in their possession now.”
“Woah, woah!” Deanna called as they came in with Donovan and the other children stopped what they were doing and banded around him, leaping up to do something between a hug and a tackle. Donovan gave way and went on the floor in time to see Justin’s arms fling around his neck and Candac laugh as she grabbed his waist.
Cade was at a table with Joaquin, one of the few white kids in the set up, gluing together something and he shrugged and said to his partner, “As you can tell you were missed.. Hey, Simon.”
Donovan was on the floor in a loose mostly quiet circle of children questioning and being questioned by them, and Simon stepped around them, sitting down beside Cade.
“You all do this every day.”
“Ev-ry day. Well, Don does it everyday. I’ve been gone for a while. That’s why he needed some time of.”
As five or six of them shrieked at something Donovan said, and he put his finger to his lips, Simon shook his head.
“They take a lot of energy.”
“They do,” Cade said. There you go buddy. I’ll go hang this. You go play,” he told Joaquin.
“You’re looking really nice,” Cade said.
“So are you,” Simon told him.
“I’m just used to you being more formal,” Cade said.
“You know,” Simon gestured to himself. He was in jeans with a tee shirt hanging out of his pants, “Day off.”
“I forgot what you looked like casual.”
“A mess?”
“No,” Cade said. “Nice.”
It was strange. For four years they had been everything to each other, and now they wer nervous, almost like strangers. While they talked, Ayla began singing, “I’m scollish! I’m scollish. Look, I look so schollish!”
The little girl had made, as far as Simon could see, a pair of glasses out of black paper, and Donovan told her, “It’s not enough to look scollish. You have to be scollish.”
“I ate spinach so I’m going to be scollish!”
“I would be lying,” Simon said, ‘if I didn’t pretend to want to know what in the world they’re talking about.”
Deanna and Donovan were on the floor with the kids, cutting out more things from paper, and Cade whispered in a conspiritorial voice, “Once it was snack time and all we had was a bag of kale—”
“Gross.”
“Well, I suppose,” Cade allowed. ‘If you’re a child.”
“Or anyone else but you.” Simon interjected.
Cade made a face.
“Don gave them the last of my kale and told them it would make them Becketish. Cause Becketish people eat a lot of kale.”
“I did not know that.’
“Neither did I. Don’s full of fun facts. Anyway, Ayla started laughing, they all started laughing because they couldn’t understand the word Becketish. So the more Don repeated it, the more they thought he was saying Scollish, and then he decided that was great.”
“So scollish means Becketish.”
“No!” Cade said. “Don’t you see? It doesn’t mean anything! It means whatever it’s supposed to mean at any given time.”
“Shit!” Simon sat back and laughed.
“Am I schoolish, Mr shorter?” Damian asked, standing up.
“I’m Scollish,” Kingston, a little boy with a low ragged voice like a fifty year old gangster declared.
“I’m the most scollish scollish.”
“You’re allschollish,” Donavan insisted, and Kingston clapped his hands, happily.
“Don’s a fucking a genius,” Simon insisted.\
At that moment, Deanna crowned Marlayah with a pair of cow horns, and then next she slipped some on Fernanodo’s head.
“This is about to go to a funny place,” Don announced, standing up and dusting off his knees.
Simon screwed up his face and shrugged, looking at Cade.
“I dunno,” Cade said. “I just listen to Don.”
“Can I get some horns?” Aceson, the little boy with the face of a forty year old man asked.
“Sure you can, Ace,” Deanna said.
“This is the best day of my life!” she announced.
But soon Marlayah announced. “I got big horns!”
And Alya pointed to them and said, “Marlayah’s horny!”
“I’m real horny!” Marlayah agreed, smiling and clapping her hands.
Little Aceson jumped out into the middle of them, throwing his arms out like a star and cried, “I’m horny.”
“I’m horny too!” Kingston declared.
“Kingston,” Marylaah reproaced him, “you don’t even have horns. I’m hornier than you.”
“I’m hornier too.”
And then Fernando began to sing, “I’m horny! I’m horny!” and in a disorganized circle, the five and six year olds, somewhat falling on each other and then picking themselves up again, began to sing, “I’m horny! I’m horny! I’m horny!”
Simon’s face was red and Cade looked queasy while Deanna looked like she didn’t know what to do.
And then, calmly, so calmly he could almost not be hears, Donovan said, “Children?”
There were a few stray, “I’m hornies,” but now they were all looking up at him.
“The word is hornful. Because you are full of horns.”
“Ornvul?” Marlayah said.
“Orvil!” Ayla decided.
Don nodded, expressionless before saying, “Orvil.”
“I’m Orvil!” Ayla shouted, and then the children resumed their dancing, singing, “I’m Orvil1 I’m Orvil! I’m Orvil! I’m Orvil!”
Deanna gave a long sigh and Simon shook his head, murmuring, “Goddamn. He should work at City Hall.”
“Did they drive you too crazy?” Donovan asked Deanna after Justin’s mother had taken him home, and Justin ran back and hugged Deanna clumsily, and then, like a nut cracker, clenched his arms around Donvoan too.
“Oh no,” Deanna said. Then she said, “They can be… a bit much. Makes you think about having your own. Or rethink it.”
“Did you plan to be a mother?”
“I think it was at the back of my head. Now I don’t know.”
“Well, you know,” Don said, “you don’t have to have them twelve at a time.”
Deanna laughed and she thought, “I remembered Cade and Freddy as little, but I hadn’t actually had little children around me. You really have to give them you’re A Game.”
“The secret is you don’t,” Don said.
Deanna blinked at him.
“They’ll take your B game or even you C game. You just have to be there and sometimes they literally just want you to be there in the room. Hide the sharp objects, make sure they wash their hands when they come out of the bathroom. Things will be pretty good for the most part after that. Oh, and snacks. Make sure they have snacks.”
“They had Oreos today,” Deanna said. “Cade says once you gave them kale.”
“Ah… yes. Well, Cade needs to remember to do the shopping.”
“Have you thought about kids? The two of you? Your own?”
“I thought about it,” Donovan said. “They are work, I really know that now, and my heart gets light when its around four or five and I know they’re going back to their parents. The truth is, sometimes my hearts get a little less light when I know I’m going to have them all day. No, I don’t envy parents, I respect them, but I don’t think I want to be one.
“Are you going to stay with us for a while?”
“I’m going back to Ely tomorrow. To be with Mom and Dad. I was in Chicago, and I thought I needed to have that life up there, that I just couldn’t deal with coming back home. So I will go back home, and then I’ll go back to my apartment and remember that I have a family. I’m glad I came down or else I wouldn’t have had these kids and I wouldn’t have met you.”
“You’ll leave tomorrow evening?”
“Yeah.
“It’s not my business, but I’d prefer you stayed tomorrow evening, and then left the morning after. I don’t like the idea of you driving in the dark.”
“You’re kind,” Deanna said. And when Donovan protested, she said, “No, no, I’ve seen you with kids, so I know. I don’t mind driving in the dark. I love it, and I promise I’ll call or text to let you know I’m safe.”
“Don let me know he doesn’t much believe in politics,” Simon said, “Or in our mayor.”
“Well,” Cade shrugged and laughed. “You know don. You know Don very well.”
“All the time we were together,” Simon said, “you never said anything about my job, about politics, or whatever I did.”
“When we were together I never said anything about anything,” Cade told him.
“I always assumed you were smarter and better than me.”
“You did not.”
“I did. And I just always thought you were right.”
Simon nodded.
“And then,” Cade added, “you never asked my opinion. On anything.”
Simon still smiled, but he looked reflective.
“Well, that is right enough. I never did ask. I had a lot of ideas. A lot of bad ideas. And I’m sorry for that Cade.”
“Good thing about Don?” Cade said, “He doesn’t wait to be asked.”
Here Simon looked over at Don and Deanna and then Cade said, “What are you doing for dinner?”
“Dinner?”
“Yeah. Some people call it supper. It happens at night. Last meal of the day.”
“Ha. Yeah. I hadn’t planned anything really.”
“We hadn’t planned anything either,” Cade said. “Why don’t you eat with us, We’ll all plan something together. I don’t think it’ll involve actual cooking.”
“I like that,” Simon said. “I could go for some Thai or Italian or Indian.”
“I was thinking chicken or Pizza or Taco Bell, but sure.”
Simon shook his ead and chuckled.
“I’m pretentious.”
“You’re not pretentious. You just have a disposable income and good taste”
Cade thought about what he wanted to say next and then he did.
“Simon?”
“Yes?”
“I’m glad Don stayed with you last night.”
“Good.”
“Real glad. I think… We love each other, but we know love is big. It’s not like when you and I were togerher. We didn’t love each other enough, and so we were always looking for love somewhere else. But… I know you and Don love each other. It’s different from the way I love him. Or the way I love you. And… yet…”
Simon looked a little nervous now, wondering what Cade was getting at.
“Deanna is staying here tonight. I love her, but she’s back after two years and I don’t feel like explaining everything. But, if you wanted to eat with us tomorrow night too, that would be great.”
“Yes,” Simon said, still not entirely sure of Cade, surprised by the dark haired man with the fringe of dark beard all along his fine face. “I can come over after work.
“Great,” Cade said. “And after dinner, if you wanted, you could stay. Stay the night like you used to. With us. If you’d like. Don would like. I would like. Would you like?”
Cade was not looking at him. His brown eyes had darted to Simon, and now looked at the table, one of his long figners was tracing a circle on the table with its remnants of yellow and red construction paper. Simon’s heart beat a little faster than it had in a while. He felt himself going firm in his pants, his skin flushing with happiness.
“Yes,” he said, “I would like it very much.”
PS. THE NEW CHAPTER HEADING SHOULD HAVE ACTUALLY BEEN POSTED LAST NIGHT.... MORE TOMORROW