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
gay, he‘d get more pussy than—‖
Logan missed the rest of Tish‘s salty observation under the roar
of blood rushing past his ears. Involuntarily, his head snapped over in
Nick‘s direction, and he stared in consternation at the oblivious man.
What the fuck? He’s… that way? And letting everyone know—letting
these girls blab it all over creation? What the hell is wrong with him?
Called back to reality by Norah asking if she should be the one to
top off the car‘s oil, Logan wrenched his attention back to his students.
With monumental effort, he taught the rest of the class with a
reasonable show of composure.
Norah had volunteered to take the other women back to ACC,
leaving Logan and Nick alone to clean up. Logan barely heard Nick
talking about what they should do to get started on the car, as he was
wondering if he should broach the subject of Tish‘s bombshell. Finally,
as they were leaving, he cleared his throat and ventured, ―That girl,
Tish, she was saying….‖ The words died in his throat, so he cleared
Where the Allegheny Meets the Monongahela
49
them out and tried again. ―She said right out in the open that you‘re….‖
His eyes darted back and forth between the open door and Nick‘s face.
Nick‘s frown seemed to indicate he had an inkling of the subject
matter; his belligerent tone was confirmation. ―That I‘m what? Gay?
So?‖
Logan squinted at him and forced out, ―You should be more
careful ‘bout that.‖
―Careful?‖ A quick step by Nick bridged half the distance
between them. ―Are you
threatening
me?‖
―Threatening? No! Fuck, I‘m just saying…. A fella can get….
Some folks out there would hurt a guy bad. Even
just thinkin’
he was…
like you.‖ Logan closed his eyes briefly to find, burning there, an image
of a bloodied body lying on a floor very much like the one he stood on.
He hurriedly opened them, noting that Nick‘s frown was now more
puzzled than pissed. Needing to fill the yawning chasm he‘d cleaved
between the two of them, Logan added, ―It happened… a while back in
Elco.‖
Nick took a deep breath before saying, ―Yeah, it happens. But
Pittsburgh ain‘t Elco, and I can take care of myself. Been doing it a
long, long time.‖
Unconvinced but out of ammunition, Logan surrendered the
battle. ―Didn‘t mean no harm.‖
―Okay.‖ Nick‘s throat muscles moved, obviously swallowing
anything more on the matter. He hooked a thumb into his pocket,
asking, ―You still wanta help with the car?‖
―Sure. I ain‘t one to….‖ Logan lost that train of thought in a
memory before firmly stating, ―I don‘t care.‖
―Good. That‘s all we really want, you know.‖
Logan didn‘t know, but it seemed he was going to find out.
FRIDAY night, Logan parked in front of his landlady‘s house, dog-tired
and glad of it. He had pulled four hours of overtime at work, which he
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had spent moving all of the sapling trees from the nursery section to the
front of the garden center, where they would be displayed as clearance
merchandise for the next two weeks. From the passenger seat, he
grabbed the paper sack containing a small box of fried chicken and a
six-pack of beer—both obtained at the corner store—and slowly headed
for the steps leading down to his basement apartment. His plans for the
evening were: shower, dinner, TV, and not thinking at all about the
events of the previous night. Especially not anything related to Nick
Zales.
Logan‘s plan didn‘t even make it to the front door, since his path
was blocked by a tiny grey and navy figure perched on his top step. The
person closed a small leatherbound book and jumped up at his
approach, revealing to Logan that it was none other than Sister Ciera.
She was one of the Sisters of St. Francis Millvale, a convent with a
thriving prison ministry, who had offered her help while he was still
navigating the labyrinth of the legal system.
Despite her cheerful assistance, Logan had never really felt
comfortable around the woman, maybe because of her propensity for
rapid-fire speech colored with her slight Philippine accent, maybe
because she didn‘t dress like that flying nun or the ones in the movies,
or maybe because she didn‘t preach at him and talk about God all the
time. Not that he wanted that—not by a long shot—but it would have at
least fit his idea of what a nun should be. When she greeted him with
an exuberant shout while dusting off her ordinary cotton trousers, he
wondered if she fit a
nybody’s
idea of what a nun should be.
―Logan, I hope you don‘t mind me dropping in on you.‖ Without
waiting for a reply, she continued, ―You‘ve been on my mind so much
and you‘ve never called or checked in with me—you still have my
card, don‘t you?—so I thought I‘d check in with you.‖
―Umm, yeah, I still have that card somewhere….‖ Not sure that
was really true, Logan decided to change the subject by asking her in.
Ciera eagerly agreed, following him into the one-room apartment.
―I can see, and smell—smells good by the way—that you have your
dinner there, so I won‘t stay long at all. But tell me, how are you
making out? How is the counseling going?‖
Where the Allegheny Meets the Monongahela
51
Logan placed the paper bag on the kitchen counter before turning
and answering, ―Uh… it‘s goin‘… fine.‖ He wondered why she was
bothering him about this instead of just going directly to his counselor.
―Don‘t you see Dr. Gerard at that center sometimes?‖
―Of course, but I wanted to hear if it‘s working
for you
. Is it? I
hope so, I think the world of Trudy; she‘s a very compassionate woman
and not at all judgmental towards men in your situation.‖
If Logan were inclined to be completely honest, he would have
told Sr. Ciera that no, the counseling wasn‘t doing him a damn bit of
good, and that judgmental was exactly the word he would have used to
describe Trudy. But Logan was a ―better the devil you know‖ kind of
guy and shuddered to think what alternative to Dr. Gerard the active
little nun might propose. ―Like I said, it‘s goin‘ pretty good.‖ To throw
her off the trail, he added, ―I‘m even volunteering—teachin‘ car repair
to some of them… to some girls.‖
―Yes, Nick Zales told me.‖
Wiping a rivulet of unease from the back of his neck, Logan
asked, ―Told you what?‖
―Told me about the class. And how is that going? Do you like
volunteering? I understand Tish is one of your students. She‘s a
handful, isn‘t she? But no harm in her at all, really. I helped her get her
GED, and she was so proud and grateful, the way she hugged me. And
you have Norah, too. She‘s such a dear. Did you know….‖
Logan had learned soon after meeting Sister Ciera that if you
simply kept quiet, she would eventually answer most of her own
questions, so he just let her ramble on, supplying mainly nods and
agreeable-sounding grunts. She finally veered onto a topic that required
his actual participation. ―And how is your family? Are you seeing your
wife and daughters now?‖
―Seein‘ my daughters some, every other Saturday. But not my
wife. Not yet.‖
―Oh that‘s too bad.‖ She patted his arm in an unsuccessful gesture
of comfort. ―She‘ll come around. I‘m sure when she comes to consider
all of the hard work you‘re doing, she‘ll find the Lord‘s forgiveness in
her heart.‖ Logan didn‘t point out that he was hoping more for Linda
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Felicia Watson
forgetting than forgiving, but Ciera had moved on again anyway. ―But
it must be a comfort for you to see your little girls.‖
―Sure is, they‘re good girls—‖
―Oh,‖ Ciera interrupted, ―I just had a brilliant idea! We should
have your girls come along on this year‘s Kennywood trip.‖
Logan and Linda had talked just last year about taking the girls to
the huge amusement park not far from North Braddock, but of course,
like everything else since March, those plans had been put on hold.
―What trip is that?‖
―ACC sponsors a trip every summer for some of the children at
the center; Nick is actually the one who does all the planning, but I‘m
always one of the chaperones. I could—‖
―My girls ain‘t at that center,‖ Logan cut in tersely. ―They‘re
livin‘ with their mom.‖
―Yes, I know that, dear, but the trip would be open to any children
who‘ve been through… what your girls have. I can make the
arrangements with your wife, I‘m sure she‘ll be agreeable. All of the
kids always have such a good time.‖
As much to shut the woman up as for his daughters‘ sake, Logan
agreed to the suggestion and was relieved to see Ciera start to make her
way to the door. She shook his hand, promising once again to clear
things with Linda, and tripped gaily up the steps.
Logan figured he was home free until she turned around on the
third step. ―I hope you don‘t mind—I know you‘re not a religious man,
but I am praying for you, Logan. It can‘t hurt, right?‖
―Nope, can‘t hurt.‖ He squinted up into the glare of the sun
setting behind her. ―Can‘t see that it‘s helped much either.‖
―Oh, I‘m sure it has. In some way we can‘t even see yet. God‘s
mercy is often hard to recognize at first. Mysterious ways and all that.‖
And finally she was gone, leaving Logan to wonder about those
mysterious ways. He concluded that if God was trying to hide a recent
act of mercy, He was doing a bang-up job of it.
Where the Allegheny Meets the Monongahela
53
Chapter 5:
Half Reveal and Half Conceal
Words, like nature, half reveal and half conceal the soul within.
—Alfred, Lord Tennyson
THAT Sunday, Nick was feeling in desperate need of his planned
diversion. With Agnes having had two good days in a row, Nick felt
relatively secure in leaving her alone for a short while. He dashed over
to Adam‘s place, wondering if his assessment of his mom‘s condition
was more blind hope than reality. He shrugged that concern off,
figuring that if Agnes got worried or confused, she‘d just ring his cell
phone. Of all the things his mom habitually forgot, his number was
never one of them—a fact that was equal parts blessing and curse.
When forty-five minutes of energetic sex didn‘t entirely quiet his
restless mind, and with his cell phone resolutely silent, Nick gladly
accepted Adam‘s invitation to cap off their afternoon with a beer at
Sully‘s, Adam‘s favorite sports bar. An hour later, his gambit for
distraction proved worthless. Nick was staring into his beer mug, his
mind running over Norah‘s last session while the room around him
exploded with joy.
Adam punched him in the arm, exclaiming, ―Hey, what the fuck!
Wake up, dude. Doumit just hit a triple. The Pirates might actually win
a game, and you‘re missin‘ it!‖
Nick glanced up at the score flashing on the screen. ―Wow, when
did they grab the lead?‖
―Last inning, where the hell were you?‖
With a guilty shrug, Nick admitted, ―A million miles away.‖
―Why?‖ Adam settled back onto his barstool. ―Is it somethin‘
with your mom?‖
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Felicia Watson
―Not really. It‘s work.‖ He shifted to face Adam directly, saying,
―See, I‘m worried about how I‘m handling something with Norah.‖
―Your boss?‖ Adam asked distractedly, his attention back on the
TV where the Pirate hitter was striking out to end the inning. ―Fuck!
Sure could‘a used ‘nother insurance run—the Reds have the top of the
order coming up.‖ As the players trotted off the field, he refocused on
Nick. ―Sorry, you were sayin‘ somethin about your boss….‖
―No, you idiot,‖ Nick laughed fondly. ―
Trudy
is my boss. Norah
is a client of mine. The one I picked up—‖
Polishing his beer off with total unconcern, Adam wiped his
mouth on on the side of his hand before interrupting, ―Trudy, Norah….
Chick names all sound the same to me.‖ He signaled the bartender to
bring two more beers before saying, ―Come on, don‘t waste a great
afternoon worryin‘ ‘bout work. Lighten up. You just had a seriously
good fuck.‖ He paused to look in Nick‘s eyes as he murmured, ―It was
good, wasn‘t it?‖
―You know it, ‖ Nick confirmed.
―Of course,‖ Adam crowed. ―Though if you were still ‗itchy‘,‖ he
drawled, elbowing Nick slightly and nodding towards the very end of
the bar, ―I could recommend some time with that guy.‖
Nick studied the muscular black man Adam had discreetly