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
the white skin before disappearing inside her jeans. ―Girlfriend—what
the hell?‖
―Yeah,‖ Cheryl whispered when she looked over her shoulder and
saw what they were all staring at. ―Roger did that. With a huntin‘
knife.‖
―Your husband?‖ Norah asked.
―Soon to be ex-husband—thank God.‖
Tish smoothed the shirt gently back down, saying, ―I can see why
you finally left that bastard.‖
―That ain‘t why I left him. That wasn‘t even the first time he went
after me with a knife.‖
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Norah closed her gaping mouth enough to ask, ―Then what finally
did it?‖
―It was my little girl. Amber.‖
Joining the conversation at last, Logan growled, ―He went after
your little girl?‖
―No, it wasn‘t that,‖ Cheryl said, her voice growing stronger. ―It
was…. See, I never wanted her to end up like me. I stayed with him all
those years ‘cause it was what my mom did. I saw my dad knockin‘ her
around, and I guess I grew up thinkin‘… thinkin‘ that‘s just the way it
is. She even told me it was ‗my duty‘ to stay with him, even though it
kept gettin‘ worse. Every time Roger beat me up, I tried to make it
seem like no big deal to the kids—so they wouldn‘t get upset, you
know? Then last time—‖ Cheryl choked back tears, and Logan had a
second to notice a grim-faced Nick had appeared in the shop and was
silently listening.
Cheryl recovered and went on. ―Then last time… I got home from
the hospital, and Roger Jr. was lookin‘ at all them stitches, and Amber
piped up like it was nothin‘, ‗Oh mommy got another boo-boo.‘ And I
knew… I knew she was gonna end up just like me, thinkin‘ a man had
the right to beat her and cut her and—‖ Another shaky sob echoed
around the garage before Cheryl finished, ―So I had to show her it
wasn‘t so. I had to get out so she would know….‖ By now, copious
tears were running down her cheeks as she finished, ―…so she would
know it ain‘t right and she shouldn‘t let it happen to her.‖
Logan watched Nick as he moved to Cheryl‘s side and put an arm
around her shoulder. She turned her face into his polo shirt, crying,
―I‘m sorry. I knew this would happen. I shouldn‘t‘ve started, but I
couldn‘t help—‖
―It‘s okay. You have every right to tell your story. We aren‘t
bothered. It‘s all right,‖ Nick soothed. Tish and Norah chimed in,
immediately agreeing that they were glad Cheryl had finally told about
her past, too.
Logan was off to the side, mute with horror and frozen with
confusion, needing to offer some gesture of comfort but sure it would
be unwelcome.
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After a few seconds, Nick escorted Cheryl outside to get some
fresh air and regain her composure. Logan cleared his throat and said,
―We better get this finished up if you‘re planning on gettin‘ home
tonight.‖ He then ably helped a subdued Tish and Norah finish the oil
change on the Cavalier.
Tish, though, could not be silent for long; as Logan did the final
check of the engine, she said to Norah, ―I never thought about that, you
know? I hope to hell my boys don‘t think they can go beatin‘ on their
woman some day. And my baby girl—damn, I‘m glad she won‘t
remember any of that shit.‖ Norah had no reply, but still Tish went on,
―And what about what Cheryl‘s mom told her, that it was her duty to
stay with that son of a bitch? How fucked up is
that
?‖
The hood of the car clunked down, and the shop was eerily silent
for a second until Logan dropped three words into the hush. ―Plenty
fucked up.‖ He didn‘t care that the question hadn‘t been directed at
him, and he refused to flinch from their evident surprise.
THERE wasn‘t much conversation beyond basic greetings when Nick
and Logan met up on Sunday morning for their second go at the car.
Nick didn‘t find it odd that Logan was quiet, and his own mind was
wholly occupied by the daunting task of removing the engine from the
Thunderbird. The two men worked together efficiently, the only words
spoken directly related to the task at hand. By eleven a.m. they had the
engine bolted to the engine stand and were ready to begin the tedious
process of disassembly.
Nick wiped the sweat off the back of his neck and looked at
Logan. ―Now what?‖
―We gotta remove the parts in groups, clean ‘em in groups, and
label ‘em in groups.‖
―Makes sense; where do ya wanna get started?‖
―The intake manifold. Then we‘ll work our way down to the short
block. Then we get at the valve covers, rocker arms, pivots, push
rods—‖
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Felicia Watson
―Okay, I get it, I get it,‖ Nick interrupted, afraid that Logan was
winding up to name every damn part left in the engine.
Twenty minutes later, Nick was humming happily to himself,
intent on the intricate disassembly work, when Logan cleared his throat
loudly. Nick now recognized this as the signal that the other man had
something of import to say, so he looked over and quirked an eyebrow
in a silent signal of attention.
It didn‘t take long for Logan to ask, ―How‘s Cheryl doin‘?‖
―Good. She‘s doing good.‖ Nick shifted slightly on the concrete
floor before explaining, ―That was a pretty positive sign that she told
you guys all about her situation. A lot of abuse victims have this
misplaced sense of shame, and it‘s good to see her getting over that.
Even though it was probably hard to hear….‖
―Sure as fuck was,‖ Logan grunted. ―That boy of hers—Roger Jr.,
she called him?‖
―Yeah?‖
―Is he a little redhead? Was on that Kennywood trip with us?‖
―That‘s him.‖
Logan removed his baseball cap and ran a hand through his
sweaty blond hair; he tossed the cap onto the workbench as he
continued, ―Boy seemed like a real handful.‖
―He sure is.‖ Nick stopped to label the head bolts he had just
cleaned before adding, ―But in a way that‘s a good thing too.‖
―Don‘t see how.‖ Logan hunched over the engine, his face a study
of intense concentration while he removed the water pump. After a few
minutes of work, he had it free and managed to complete his thought.
―Seems like Cheryl has ‘nough trouble on her hands.‖ He pointed at a
tool set near Nick‘s foot, saying, ―Hand me that puller, would ya?‖
Nick exchanged the requested item for the water pump as he
explained, ―Yeah, but ever since they left Wheeling, little Roger‘s had
a lot of anger festering. It‘s better that it‘s comin‘ out, even if it‘s
makin‘ things worse right now.‖ Nick watched Logan gingerly tugging
at the harmonic balancer and elaborated to the back of his head, ―I‘m
Where the Allegheny Meets the Monongahela
77
doing some work with him, but… I don‘t know. I‘m not really an
expert on juvenile counseling.‖
Without looking up, Logan replied, ―Looked like you were plenty
good with them kids at Kennywood.‖
―It looked that way ‘cause most of those kids are so damn grateful
for a little male attention that doesn‘t come with fear attached that
anyone….‖ Nick shrugged, then, realizing that the gesture was lost on
Logan‘s back, added, ―Well, any guy who cared to could do the same.‖
Having successfully removed the balancer, Logan straightened up
and eyed Nick. By the way he was chewing at his lip, Nick sensed
something was coming, and a second later it did. ―Them boys… like
Jesse and the rest?‖
―Yeah?‖
―Do they know that you‘re… um… gay?‖
―Never thought about it,‖ Nick replied. ―Probably. Most
everybody at ACC knows, I guess. I don‘t hide it, but I don‘t make an
issue of it either.‖ After taking a deep breath, Nick added, ―Why do
you
?‖
Resentment and alarm fell like a curtain over Logan‘s face. ―Why
do I
what
?‖
―Why do you make such a big deal out of it? That friend of yours
or whoever it was that got beat up…. Is that it? Or is it that you‘re
worried—‖
Logan snarled ―I ain‘t worried!‖ as he set the balancer down on
the workbench with a resounding thump and picked up a wrench.
―You sure you aren‘t afraid that maybe I‘m attracted to you,
Logan?‖ When the other man immediately turned back to the engine
and savagely attacked the mounting plate, Nick knew he‘d struck a
chord. ―So what if I am? Does it creep you out
that bad
? I don‘t leer at
you, and I‘m sure as hell not gonna make a pass at you. I never hit on
straight guys, so you can just
fucking
relax
, okay?‖
Hands still in the engine, Logan twisted around to glare at Nick.
―I ain‘t worried about none of that shit, so can we just stop talking
about it?‖
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Felicia Watson
―Sure.‖ Nick went to work cleaning the water pump but couldn‘t
resist mumbling, ―You‘re the one who brought it up.‖
Thirty minutes of working in strained silence in the sweltering
garage brought both men to at least enough feigned camaraderie to
peaceably work together at removing the oil pan and the timing chain
set. When Nick nimbly detached the pan, Logan actually grunted in
approval. ―You‘re pretty good at that for….‖
Nick waited, but when Logan didn‘t complete the thought, he
suggested, ―For a gay guy?‖
―That ain‘t what I was gonna say.‖ Logan laid the timing chain on
a drop cloth before adding irritably, ―I was gonna say for a guy who
doesn‘t do a lot of this kinda stuff.‖
Not believing him for one second but reluctant to renew the
hostilities, Nick retorted, ―I do plenty of work on my Jeep.‖
His only answer was Logan pointing at the motor and saying,
―We gotta turn it over now so we can number-stamp the connectin‘
rods.‖
―Turn the whole engine over?‖
―Yeah, of course. How else‘re we gonna get at the rest?‖
―Shit, I‘m already sweatin‘ like a pig,‖ Nick complained as he
pulled his stained, damp T-shirt over his head and wiped his torso with
it.
His own un-tucked, faded workshirt drenched with sweat, Logan
snapped, ―What the fuck do you think you‘re doing?‖
―I‘m hot and I‘m takin‘ my shirt off.‖ Nick parked his hands at
his hips as he challenged, ―Got a goddamned problem with that?‖
Logan looked down at the rag he was using to wipe his hands,
growling, ―You can‘t work like that. It ain‘t safe.‖
Defiantly, Nick threw his shirt on the workbench while asserting,
―I‘ll decide what‘s safe for me, okay?‖
Nick watched Logan fling the grease rag to the ground as he
yelled, in ascending syllables, ―I‘m the mechanic here, and I said it
ain‘t safe!‖
Where the Allegheny Meets the Monongahela
79
―Don‘t pull that paternalistic crap on me—‖
―Paternalistic?‖ Logan pivoted one step towards him, snarling,
―You fucking shrinks with your fancy ten-dollar words. Why can‘t you
stop talkin‘ bullshit and do something useful instead? You guys
wouldn‘t know a real job if it bit you in the ass!‖
―Is that right? Well for your information, I worked at Weirton
Steel as a screenman in the cinderin‘ plant every summer I was in
college.‖ He advanced on Logan, who refused to yield an inch; Nick‘s
voice grew louder and harder as he continued, ―And in case your
three
months in the mill
wasn‘t enough to let you know, that‘s one dirty,
back-breaking job. So you can shove that holier-than-thou shit right up
your ass.‖
Logan‘s breath was now coming in harsh pants, and his hands
were balled into solid fists. He gritted out, ―If you know what‘s good
for you, you‘ll get the fuck away from me. Right. Now.‖
Rebellion boiling in his veins, Nick yelled, ―Or what? You gonna
hit me? That‘s your answer to everything, ain‘t it?‖ He pointed a finger
in Logan‘s face, asking, ―What‘re you so fucking angry about, huh?
Why‘re you such a timebom—‖ Nick‘s question was cut off when
Logan grabbed him by the shoulders and backed him into the T-bird‘s
frame; Nick‘s entire body stiffened, preparing a defense against the
inevitable punch.
The blow came in a different form when Logan grabbed his face
and fused their lips together in a blistering kiss. Fueled by lust,
adrenaline, and relief, Nick‘s body slammed his conscious mind into
idle and took control. He grabbed Logan by the lapels and pushed back,
ramming their tangled bodies into the wall while shoving his tongue
into Logan‘s molten mouth.
The two men‘s sweaty, grease-stained bodies clung together as