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
demanded, ―Why bother with him?‖
―It‘s what I do. I minister to everyone because if God doesn‘t give
up on people—and He doesn‘t—then I have no right to do that either.‖
―Are you trying to tell me he‘s changed?‖
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―Not that I can see. He‘s still very much a violent, angry, bitter
man.‖
―Of course,‖ Nick sneered. ―So why the hell are you telling him
anything about me?‖
―Because he likes it, even if he won‘t admit it. Because it helps
me reach that core of humanity that‘s there, even in him.‖
―I don‘t believe that.‖
―Which part, that he likes to hear about you or that there‘s
humanity in him?‖
―Neither.‖
―If you‘re so sure, then there‘s no harm in seeing for yourself. Is
there?‖
―No harm… but no point.‖
Ciera looked at him shrewdly and said, ―I guess the only point
would be if you wanted to see what he has to say to you after all these
years. But since you don‘t….‖ She shrugged and finished her drink.
―Are you almost done? I have to be getting back to the convent. I hope
you‘re not planning on driving home tonight.‖
Though he was suspicious of the abrupt change of subject, Nick
said, ―Nah. I‘m staying at The Sunshine Motel on Seneca.‖ However,
she didn‘t raise the subject of his father again, and he walked Ciera to
her car in silence. This time they parted with a handshake.
After picking up some takeout on his way to the motel, Nick let
himself into the small room and gratefully flopped on the bed. He
rested for a few minutes, running the events of the night over in his
head. Finally, his growling stomach demanded attention, so he got up
and changed into a sweatshirt and jeans before tearing into his food. All
the while he ate, Nick stared at his cell phone lying abandoned on the
dresser. He was imbued with an overwhelming desire to call Logan, or
even Trudy, but finally decided against it.
In the end, the number he dialed was to his mother‘s room in the
nursing home. His five-minute chat with her was as frustrating as ever,
with Agnes fading in and out of coherence. After complaining that the
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nurses were trying to get her to eat ―six or seven meals a day,‖ she was
lucid enough to ask, ―When‘re you comin‘ to see me again? ―
―I‘ll be there tomorrow.‖
―Okay, good night, son.‖
―Wait a minute, Mom. There‘s two things I wanna tell you.‖
―What?‖
―The first thing is, I‘m sorry.‖
―It‘s all right, I can wait ‘til tomorrow for your visit.‖ Without
further ado, Agnes hung up her phone.
Nick stared at the dead phone in his hand for a moment before
shaking his head and saying, ―The second is that I forgive you.‖
He started getting ready for bed, ruminating on the conversation
with his mom. In the end he decided that it had been fine. After all, that
last sentiment hadn‘t really been intended for her benefit.
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Chapter 17:
Another Heart
The person who tries to live completely alone will not succeed as a
human being; the heart withers if it does not answer another heart.
—Pearl S. Buck
SUNDAY evening, Nick pulled into the driveway of his house feeling
both physically and emotionally drained. When he‘d arrived in
Pittsburgh five hours earlier, he‘d headed straight to the nursing home
to see his mom. After his epiphany of forgiveness—for both of them—
he had expected the visit to be… different. He wasn‘t exactly sure in
what way he‘d expected it to be different, or significant, but it didn‘t
really matter since it had pretty much been the same as all his other
visits to the nursing home. He, ever the dutiful son, had helped feed his
mom lunch and watched some old movies with her, all the while
initiating several fruitless conversations with Agnes, who seemed frail,
confused, and withdrawn.
Having failed to find the comfort he was looking for in a visit
with his mom, Nick rested his head against the steering wheel as a
wave of overwhelming isolation swamped him. His mind immediately
turned toward Logan, the one man who‘d managed to completely and
thoroughly breach the lonely shell Nick had spent years erecting around
himself. Yet as much as he yearned for Logan, he recognized that there
was now a distance in their relationship, a distance Nick had put there
when he‘d conflated Logan with Norah‘s murderer and his own father.
Part of Nick wanted to wipe that moment away, to loudly protest
to his own conscience that he‘d been upset when he‘d made that
connection, had been merely lashing out in pain, and that no such
doubts existed. But he couldn‘t. For too long he‘d lied to himself,
swept all uncertainties under the rug, and now there was a price to be
paid for that longstanding denial. If he and Logan were to last—and
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Nick could admit that he wanted that more than anything—then they
had to face those questions together.
Even as he started to face up to that harsh reality, silently Nick
protested,
Does it have to be tonight?
He felt chilled, heart and soul,
and he ached for the warmth of Logan‘s presence. Having at last
decided on a course of action, Nick snatched his overnight bag off the
passenger seat and hurried to the house. By the time he reached the
entrance, he already had his cell phone out and paused only to flip the
hall light switch on before punching in Logan‘s number.
Logan answered after two rings, but rather than the ―hello‖ Nick
expected, he got, ―I know I said we‘d be there by now, but we ran into
some traffic, Linda.‖
―Uh, what?‖
―Nick?‖
―Yeah, it‘s me.‖
―Aww, shit. Sorry. I thought it was—girls, would ya pipe down?
I‘m on the phone here.‖
Logan‘s daughters could be heard offering not-very-contrite
apologies in the background. Since he had no desire for an audience,
Nick said, ―I guess I caught you at a bad time. Give me a call when you
can talk.‖
―Sure thing. Won‘t be that long.‖
Nick stuck his phone back in his shirt pocket, relieved to have
made even minimal contact with Logan, and philosophically decided to
take the opportunity to unpack and do some laundry. After he started
the first load, he headed upstairs to the kitchen and made a sandwich
out of salami that smelled like it was still okay to eat. He started
reflecting disconsolately on the empty week that stretched ahead of him
when he was blindsided by a sudden thought.
Shit! I quit my job. I
don’t have another week off, I have… forever off. What the fuck was I
thinking?
After Nick was done smacking himself, both metaphorically and
literally, he made a vow to call Trudy first thing in the morning and see
if he could retract that impetuous resignation. Fortunately, the ring of
his cell phone stopped him from dwelling any longer on his possible
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state of unemployment. A glance at the screen confirmed that it was
indeed Logan returning his call. ―Hey, Logan.‖
―Hey, Nick. Sorry ‘bout that earlier. I didn‘t bother lookin‘ at my
phone ‘cause I was on the road. Just assumed it was Linda callin‘ again
‘bout us getting back from Elco so late.‖
―Is that where you went this weekend?‖
―Yeah. How was your—how‘d you make out at Norah‘s funeral?‖
How the hell could Nick sum up the mixed bag of emotions he‘d
experienced over the past forty-eight hours? ―It was okay. Hard, for
real. Seeing her in the coffin and meeting her family sure tore me up,
but I‘m glad I went.‖
―I still don‘t think you should‘ve gone alone.‖
―I wasn‘t alone. Ciera was there.‖
The silence on the other end spoke of Logan‘s surprise, but after a
few seconds he breathed, ―Oh. That‘s good. I guess?‖
Not bothering to hide the wonder in his own voice, Nick
answered, ―Yeah, it was.‖
Another awkward pause ensued, and Logan offered, ―If you was
with Sister Ciera, then I suppose ya had ‘nough talkin‘ this weekend.‖
The halfhearted attempt at humor fell flat, but Nick heard the
question behind it—
Are you ready to talk to me?—
so he answered it.
―Not to the right person.‖ The only answer was a sharp intake of breath
from Logan, so he persevered. ―I know how early you have to get up
for work, but do you think you could come over, or I could come to
your place if you just give me direc—‖
―I‘ll be there in half an hour.‖
―Great.‖
To distract himself from his almost painful eagerness for Logan‘s
arrival, Nick busied himself with more laundry and other chores. He
was in the basement hanging up some damp shirts when he was startled
by the blast of a horn from outside. Nick ignored it at first, thinking it
was for a neighbor, but when the sound repeated, he jogged up the steps
and peered out the front room window.
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In the dim glow from a streetlight, Nick could make out the
Thunderbird—as he‘d never seen it before. Every other thought flew
out of his head. He banged out the front door and ran up to his now
shiny red car. He and Logan stood across from each other, separated by
the car, twin grins of pride and satisfaction illuminating their faces.
Nick was nearly speechless. He ran a reverent hand across the hood,
saying, ―I can‘t…. I can hardly believe it‘s the same car.‖
Logan stared down at the gleaming sports car, nodding in
apparent agreement, but then squinted up at him. ―It ain‘t, thanks to
us.‖
―Damn skippy,‖ Nick answered with a smile. And suddenly he
was moving towards Logan, who was already on a collision course
with him. In seconds, he was hugging the solid warmth of that man to
him with a fierce, desperate need. Nick buried his face in Logan‘s neck,
knowing that their problems loomed as large as ever but also knowing
that this feeling, this solace, this rightness was worth fighting for. With
one arm slung over Logan‘s shoulders, he said, ―Come on. Let‘s go
inside.‖
THE greeting was everything Logan could have wished for, especially
when Nick kicked the front door shut behind them and immediately
pushed him up against the wall, diving for his mouth. All Logan could
do was sag back against the ancient wallpaper and go with the flow. He
groaned into the kiss as Nick‘s tongue demanded entrance and greedily
plundered his mouth before moving to plant a series of sucking kisses
along Logan‘s stubbled jaw.
Abruptly, Nick pulled back and trained on him a laser-intense
flash of eyes gone black with intensity. ―You know we gotta talk later,
right?‖
Logan emerged from his daze of lust just long enough to answer,
―Yeah, I know.‖ But he didn‘t let go of Nick‘s arms. In fact, he held on
tighter. There was no way he was letting go, not when he finally had
this man right where he needed him after being too long apart.
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Nick leaned back into the embrace, rumbling in his ear, ―The
operative word being ‗later‘. Now is for—‖
―Fucking,‖ Logan growled back.
―And there was a time I thought you weren‘t so eloquent.‖
Logan barely noticed the joke, since the jester was dragging him
up the stairs as he said it. Soon they reached the bedroom, and Nick
immediately tore his oxford off and started to work on Logan‘s snap
front shirt. Logan let him have his way, since his own hands were busy
yanking Nick‘s jeans open. With singleminded intent, they managed
clumsily, haltingly, with frantic kisses drawing the process out, to get
rid of all bothersome clothing. When he pushed Nick‘s naked body
down on the bed and climbed on top, Logan felt like he‘d found the
oasis in his own personal hell of a desert.
Nick was groaning, ―Need you bad, babe. I gotta—‖
Logan cut him off with a kiss before whispering in his ear, ―Me,
too. Gotta have you inside me, all I been thinking about.‖ Recognizing
Nick‘s intent to move, he pushed him back with a none-too-gentle
shove, mumbling, ―There‘s somethin‘ I been wantin‘…. I wanta try….‖
Never articulate to begin with, Logan found it almost impossible to
spell out his plans for their coupling.
A wanton grin slid across Nick‘s face as he murmured, ―Okay,
we‘ll do it your way.‖ He leaned up and kissed Logan before saying
with a sexy smirk, ―Whatever that is.‖
Logan answered by using his body to pin Nick flat against the