Read Where the Allegheny Meets the Monongahela Online
Authors: Felicia Watson
Tags: #m/m romance, #Novel, #Paperback, #Contemporary, #gay, #glbt, #romance, #dreamspinner press, #felicia watson
indicated, asking, ―One of your many conquests?‖
With a saucy wink, Adam answered, ―Oh, yeah. Guy can suck
like a Hoover in heat.‖
Trying not to seem ungrateful for the suggestion, Nick laughed
slightly and said, ―No, I‘m good. Or… we were.‖
―Okay, then. So your itch is fully scratched, and now our
perpetually awful baseball team is about to beat the Reds. What more
could you ask for?‖
Expelling a sigh, Nick answered, ―Confirmation that I‘m getting
through to Norah?‖
Adam pointed to Nick‘s beer, saying, ―How ‘bout confirming that
you‘ll have that finished before that next one gets here?‖ Nick gave his
head a bemused shake but did drain his mug while Adam continued,
Where the Allegheny Meets the Monongahela
55
―I‘m sure you‘re doin‘ the right thing—whatever it is. And even if it
ain‘t, geez, you give
enough
to that place. Don‘t be worryin‘ about it on
your day off. I see guys at the gym yakkin‘ on their cells to work while
they‘re tryin‘ to do the Stairmaster or somethin‘, and it ain‘t healthy.
Ya know?‖
―Yeah, I see what you‘re sayin‘, but I‘m not tryin‘ to close a
merger or make a million dollars; I‘m dealin‘ with a person. I know
Trudy says I‘m coddling Norah, but I can‘t help but think—‖
―Whatever it is, it can wait ‘til tomorrow.‖ Adam accepted their
beers from the bartender, adroitly flipping him a twenty and saying,
―Keep ‘em coming.‖ Then he pointed at the TV, saying to Nick, ―Do
yourself a favor. Worry about Dickerson coming up with one on and no
outs and forget about ACC for one fucking afternoon. Deal?‖
Knowing it was useless to argue with Adam in this instance, Nick
nodded and resolutely fastened his attention back onto the game.
Besides, whatever the impulse of the moment, he had never intended to
pour out his doubts and misgivings about Norah to his friend. After all,
it wasn‘t Adam‘s job to be that kind of sounding board.
AT CLASS that Thursday, Nick began to think Trudy and Adam were
right. Norah seemed, if anything, cheerful to the point of effervescence.
She even volunteered to drive Tish and Cheryl back to ACC again.
Nick tried to hide his eagerness as he asked, ―You sure?‖
Norah shrugged. ―Yeah, why not? It‘s a lot closer to my place
than yours, right?‖
―Thanks.‖ Nick wasn‘t sorry to forgo the drive that tacked forty
minutes onto the end of a long day.
Tish jumped into the front seat, saying, ―I‘m gonna be getting my
own car soon‘s I get that job at The Carlton. Then I won‘t need the
‗Nick and Norah‘ taxi service.‖
―Hey,‖ Cheryl interjected as she took her place in the back, ―
Nick
and Norah
—just like in them old-time movies.‖
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Felicia Watson
A grinning Norah slid into the driver‘s seat. ―Except she wasn‘t
blonde,‖ she said while fluffing her hair in a pose of mock glamour.
―And he sure wasn‘t gay,‖ countered Nick, thumping the car‘s
roof in a farewell gesture. When he swung back to the shop‘s entrance,
intending to firm up plans for working on the car that Sunday, he saw
Logan already standing there, still holding a ratchet wrench, with a
guarded frown marring his handsome face.
Oh, not this shit again.
He was mentally preparing a tirade about
Logan getting over himself about ―the gay thing‖ when their eyes met
and Nick was stopped dead—again—by the blue-fire ache he found
there. ―Somethin‘ wrong?‖ When the only answer was Logan‘s sudden
interest in the wrench he was toying with, Nick grimly offered, ―If you
can‘t make it on Sunday—‖
Logan looked up sharply. ―No, I‘ll be here.‖ He reseated his
baseball cap more firmly before adding, ―Anyways, I was thinkin‘
‘bout this Kennywood trip of yours—‖
―How did you know about that?‖
―That Sister Ciera—she told me. She arranged for my girls to go
on it.‖
―Oh.‖ Until that moment, Nick hadn‘t realized that the last-
minute additions belonged to Logan. ―I didn‘t know…. I guess I forgot
you even had kids.‖
―Yep—Krista and Meghan.‖
As he scratched at his stubbled chin in puzzlement, Nick said,
―Ciera left me a note, said the kids were twelve and ten.‖
―Uh huh, that‘s right.‖
Nick tried to remember a birth date from the quick look he‘d had
at Logan‘s file
Could’a swore we were born the same year.
―Aren‘t you
kinda young to have kids that old?‖
Logan tucked the wrench into his back pocket while saying, ―Me
and Linda was both twenty when our first was born.‖
―Huh, that‘s the same age I finally picked a major,‖ Nick
muttered while his thoughts flew to his cousins in Kittanning and
Freeport, most of whom had also married soon after high school. For
Where the Allegheny Meets the Monongahela
57
the first time ever, he wondered whether—gay or not—only his escape
to a college in Pittsburgh had ―protected‖ him from a similar fate.
Figuring the time wasn‘t opportune for that kind of introspection, Nick
decided to bring the original subject back around. ―You were saying,
about the Kennywood trip?‖
―Yeah, so I was thinking,‖ Logan said while pulling a ten-dollar
bill out of his pocket. He kept his eyes on the money as he extended it
towards Nick, continuing, ―You could get ‘em an ice cream cone or
somethin‘.‖ He finally looked up from under his lashes, finishing, ―Tell
‘em it‘s from their dad.‖
At that moment, Nick felt a chunk of the ice wall he‘d doggedly
erected against this man melt away—and no stern self-reminders had
the power to halt the thaw. He reluctantly waved the money off, saying,
―They won‘t need it. We give all the kids food vouchers,‖ adding with
a laugh, ―Plenty enough to make sure one or two of ‘em throws up on
the way home.‖
Clearly crestfallen, Logan tucked the money away, mumbling,
―Uh. Okay.‖
Pressed by a sudden need to offer consolation, Nick blurted,
―Why don‘t you come with us? Tracy, one of the other chaperones,
dropped out yesterday, and twenty kids‘s a lot for me an‘ Ciera to
handle alone.‖
―I don‘t think I could….‖ Logan‘s gaze was fixed on a spot over
Nick‘s shoulder.
The man‘s obvious discomfort jogged Nick‘s memory as to his
situation; he immediately surmised that Logan was restricted to
supervised visitation. ―It‘s not like you‘d be alone with ‘em. I mean, I
could clear it with Trudy, see what she says.‖
The faintest smile lifted the corner of Logan‘s mouth. ―Ya think?‖
―Sure.‖ Nick‘s own smile turned mischievous. ―But you an‘
Ciera‘re getting stuck with the ‗Kiddieland crowd‘.‖
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TRUDY not only approved of the idea, she steamrolled over any
objections of the visitation mediator. So it was that on Saturday
morning, Logan found himself nervously studying the gaudy carousel
horse perched in the middle of a fountain at Kennywood‘s entrance.
Nick had told him that the group would be taking one of the city buses
to the park; Logan had driven there and wasn‘t sure where the bus
shelter was, but he figured he‘d spot them easily from his current
vantage point.
However, when the group finally arrived, it was his younger
daughter who spotted
him
. She started shrieking ―Daddy!‖ from fifty
feet away and was dragging Sister Ciera, who was only slightly taller
than Meghan, by the hand towards him, with Krista close behind.
Logan reveled in his daughters‘ hugs and smiles and drew solace from
their company that had previously been dimmed by Marie‘s frowning
presence.
Logan looked up from Meghan to find another smiling face
directed his way—Nick Zales‘s. He tried to ignore the surge of blood in
his veins by gruffly introducing him to the girls. ―Hey, girls, this is Mr.
Zales.‖ He put one hand on each girl‘s shoulder as he continued, ―Nick,
these are my daughters, Krista and Meghan.‖
After exchanging a quiet hello with the girls, Nick turned to
Logan. ―Good to see you here. I‘m glad it all worked out for you.‖
―Yeah, me too.‖ Only after Nick was pulled away by two other
ebullient kids did Logan think that he should have thanked the man for
championing his participation in the outing. For a second, Logan felt a
flush of shame at his apparent show of ingratitude but shrugged it off,
figuring he‘d catch up with Nick sometime during the day.
Twenty minutes later, the group was inside the park, with Ciera
herding the younger children and Nick efficiently barking orders at the
older crew. The plan was for Nick to take all the teenagers on the roller
coasters and other teeth-jarring attractions while Logan and Sister Ciera
did the tamer rides with the younger crowd. At two p.m. the whole
group would meet for a late lunch at the Parkside Café before splitting
off again.
Logan wondered how Nick was going to handle nine rowdy
teenagers but fast observed that they took his directions seriously; even
Where the Allegheny Meets the Monongahela
59
the boys quieted down to a low rumble while Nick laid out the day‘s
plans. Logan noticed Krista looking wistfully at the older group that
was milling around at Nick‘s right. He leaned over, saying, ―If you
wanta go with them, it‘s all right by me.‖
Krista shook her head decisively, saying, ―No, I‘ll help you and
Sister Ciera with the little kids.‖ Logan was glad that he‘d have both
his daughters with him for the morning but was equally glad her sister
hadn‘t heard that label. Especially since one of the older boys, Jesse,
was teasing
his
younger sister, Darcy, about going on ―the baby rides.‖
The little firebrand stuck her tongue out at her sibling, defiantly
saying, ―We‘re goin‘ on the
Phantom’s Revenge
, too!‖
―Yeah, the sucky one,‖ Jesse taunted back.
Suddenly Nick appeared at Jesse‘s side, slinging a friendly arm
around his shoulder. ―Sounds like you don‘t wanta go see the Pirates
with me next month, after all.‖
Sheepishly, Jesse asked, ―Is your friend gettin‘ us those great
seats again?‖
Another boy piped up, ―Hey Nick, I‘ll take his ticket!‖
Nick threw a glance over his shoulder, saying, ―I already said you
could come, Ben.‖
―Yeah, but I could scalp his ticket.‖
Shaking his head with evident amusement, Nick retorted, ―It‘s the
Pirates
, I don‘t think you‘re gonna make much money.‖ He turned
back to Jesse, saying, ―But I‘m sure we could find
someone
who wants
Jesse‘s ticket. Maybe Darcy….‖
Jesse gave the matter exactly three seconds of thought before
turning to his sister and mumbling an apology of doubtful sincerity. But
it satisfied Darcy, and the two groups parted peaceably.
Two hours later, Logan and Sister Ciera were lounging on a
bench while their charges stood in line at the famous Potato Patch,
waiting for a serving of the legendary fries. Logan looked at the
vouchers all the kids were clutching and wondered how the center
could afford to splurge like this. ―All of this must cost a lotta money,
huh?‖
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Felicia Watson
―Oh, yes, but so worth it. Nick raises money for months—
organizing a car wash and dozens of raffles. Plus he always gets the
park to donate most of the admission fee.‖ A smile lit her dark eyes and
olive-skinned face as she commented, ―All in all, Nick is a
commendable young man.‖
Pondering the qualifier, Logan cleared his throat and murmured,
―Ya mean even though… even with him bein‘… gay?‖
It took Ciera a second to parse the last word, as low as it had been
uttered, but finally comprehension dawned, and she trilled, ―Oh, there
is that,
too
.‖ Rolling her eyes slightly, she said, ―No, I was thinking
more…. Well, let‘s just say Nick and I don‘t always see eye-to-eye on
matters of rehabilitation.‖
That word currently had only unhappy associations for Logan, so
he was glad when Ciera veered into tales of trips from years past and
talked nonstop as the kids wended their way up to the French fry
counter.
There was no opportunity for Logan to speak to Nick at lunch,
since his daughters insisted their dad sit with them and a couple of their
new friends. Nick seemed fully occupied with monitoring the kids
anyway, stepping in to prevent what seemed to be an impending food
fight between Jesse and one of the older boys.
At the end of the day, Logan walked his daughters to the bus stop