Monthly Archives:

November 2012

Brotherly Bonding in Boston

This weekend my brother is joining me for some time in Boston – starting with a bit of holiday shopping at the outlets, and then some quieter time just taking in the sights and sounds of Boston as it gears up for the season. It comes just in the nick of time – I’ve got to get out of dodge before my holiday card officially hits the internet… tomorrow at midnight. Yes, you must stay tuned for that… it is not to be missed.

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The Wedding Coat ~ The Holiday Card 2010

Being that Andy and I were married in 2010, the only suitable photo card for that year was my first-ever joint picture. It depicts us in our wedding finery (the coat was what I wore for our reception/celebration, while Andy’s outfit is what he wore for the ceremony.) Taken by the pool on one of those glorious summer nights, it was proof that I didn’t mind sharing the billing, and a nifty commemoration of that special year.

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A Rose for Christmas

This beautiful white blossom is from the plant commonly known as the Lenten Rose – but it is also called a Christmas Rose in some parts – which for this season, and for this particular flower – is more apt. I saw this on my last trip to Boston, and swore I heard it crying out on a November night, hanging on to the last bit of warmth from the sidewalk, shrinking into its Brownstone-backed corner, and valiantly putting on its last show in the spotlight of a street lamp. I’m not sure it will still be there when I return to Boston this weekend, but I’ll keep an eye out.

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My Big Fur Muff (Unseen), With Wings ~ The Holiday Card 2009

At this point in the parade of holiday photo cards, I can admit that I was getting a little lazy, and in 2009 I could barely muster the effort to come up with anything other than a sneak peek at an upcoming project. This one was all about the wings, no more and no less. And the mop of hair, which I don’t usually keep that long. Ho-ho-hum.

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Topped by a Top Hat

Though I’ll be in Boston this weekend, there are two very important Victorian Holiday Celebrations going on that you should definitely attend if you’re in the upstate NY area. The first is the Sharon Springs Victorian Holiday Celebration started by those industrious Beekman Boys two years ago, taking place on Saturday, December 1, 2012. This looks like it will be a grand event, from the costumes to the food to the Bloody Mary cocktails and several live performances. There is even a special Beekman 1802 Cancellation Stamp being offered at the post office for those who want their Holiday Cards to have a little extra pizzazz (I didn’t dare think to subject the postal workers to my cards – not sure how accustomed they would be to blood on the envelopes…)

The second event is the Troy Victorian Stroll, which marks its 30th anniversary this year. Set to take place on Sunday, December 2, from 11 AM to 5 PM, it will feature musicians, magicians, dancers, refreshments, rides and crafts. This is always a great day judging by the photos of past strolls, and Troy has the historic buildings and architecture to make it even more authentic. Next year I am determined to make it to one of these, as the opportunities to take out my gray top hat seem to be getting fewer and further between. (The folks at Price Chopper will just never get used to it.)

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At My Most Unobtrusive ~ The Holiday Card 2008

For 2008’s holiday photo card, it was a softer year, and when I saw this shot that Andy had taken of me on our Fall trip to Ogunquit, I knew that was it. Originally, I was going to be even less of a presence in the photo, but this one was unobtrusive enough. It’s not only my outfit and placement that is subtle and subdued, but also the coloring. Shot along the Marginal Way, it is probably one of my most peaceful cards. Some years you need a little peace.

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My Christmas Wish List 2012

This year I’ve been a little lax in coming up with a Christmas Wish List, mostly because what was once important to me changed a bit over the summer, and I’m still in the processing mode. In the past I hated asking for practical things – it seemed like such a waste of a gift. Who wants a new set of tires or a working sink when you can get a frivolous fascinator or full-length opera cape? That said, practicality has its merits, and in these penny-pinching times it makes more sense to invest in something we can put to use instead of a clothing conversation piece that is so impressive you can only wear it once. To that end, I’m asking for two things that are the most boring and mundane objects in the world, but ones that, if employed and chosen properly, can be the starting point of elegance and beauty: a bed and a television. Both would be for the Boston condo bedroom – a Queen bed to make the trips with Andy more comfortable, and a flat screen television so we can finally get rid of the mid 90’s eyesore that takes up a good third of the room (and to please both Andy and my father when they deign to visit).

It turns out I still have an affinity for pretty bags and lovely scents, so I’m putting up a pair of items that would bring me some joy and happiness, because I can always be as deep as a puddle on a dry, sunny day. The first is a stand-by: one of Tom Ford’s Private Blend fragrances – ‘Champaca Absolute’. I was debating it while picking out a birthday cologne with Andy, but I wasn’t quite ready to give up the Amber Absolute I had my eye on (and rightfully so as that was soon-after discontinued). Now, I’m ready.

While Mr. Ford’s Private Blends are on the pricey side, it’s still a bit less than Frederic Malle’s ‘Dans Tes Bras’ from Barney’s, which would be my second choice. (A hint for those unwilling/unable to shell out the $240 price for the bottle: you can request three 30 ml travel size bottles for about $90. They don’t tell you that upfront, and the bitchy guys on the 2nd level of the Boston store at Copley Place will help you even less, so stick to the friendlier perfume ladies downstairs.)

As for bags, all my life I have wanted a leopard tote, and DKNY has finally produced a simple version without the fancy buckles and gaudy chains that accompany so many bags (really, the leopard alone is gaudy enough). This one is on sale at Lord & Taylor right now (and would make a much more economical substitute for the Christian Louboutin and Jimmy Choo leopard shoes that run much higher… see, I’m not unreasonable.)

And if all else fails, there’s always my Amazon Wish List

Now… what is it that YOU want for Christmas?

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Holiday Pause

Last year around this time I made a trip to Boston in which I did a day or two of holiday shopping – not to actually find many gifts, but just to enjoy the season in Boston. Setting aside the time to simply walk and wander, to take in the holiday displays, enjoying a cocktail or two, and spending moments with a few of my closest friends made it more fun than the harried, rushed, and stressed out holiday shoppers for whom finding gifts was only a tedious chore. It’s a practice I put into play at various times during the season, whenever I need to be reminded of the meaning of Christmas. Whether it’s taking an extra five minutes at lunch to watch the Christmas trees going up, or sitting down in the middle of the mall while the whirlwind of frenzied activity swirls around you, it’s good to stop and let the craziness flow by. It’s not about the gifts and the excitement, but of slowing down and realizing what we already have. The pause is what’s important, the time to be still is what matters.

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A Very Bad (But Oh-So-Good) Santa ~ The Holiday Card 2007

This was a quick one-off shoot behind the local Price Chopper, taken by Andy, that had me enjoying a bit of Jack and a smoke. It was more beloved than I anticipated, and has entered folklore in that I recently had someone ask if I was going to do another card like the one where I was puking behind a dumpster. Any time the truth gets twisted in such a manner means a story has made the rounds more than once. As Oscar Wilde noted in one of my favorite quotes, “The only thing worse than being talked about is not being talked about.” As you can see, there was no emesis behind or in front of the dumpster, just some swigging and smoking.

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Douchebag of the Day: Tank Carder

A quote from football player Tank Carder: “I don’t agree with being gay or lesbian at all, but saying faggot doesn’t make me a homophobe, it’s just a word.”   As an alternative to our Hunk of the Day feature, we also have to look at the ugly side of humanity too, and in this case it’s the homophobic words by Tank Carder. And sorry, but calling someone a faggot in a derogatory fashion (and there’s really no other fashion in which to do it) does make you a homophobe. For more hateful nonsense from Mr. Carder, see more of the story at Outsports.

One more thing – If you’re going to start hating on things over which people have no control, let’s talk about the name ‘Tank’. One can always change one’s name, unlike one’s sexuality.

{UPDATE: His latest Tweet, as of last night, was the following: “I was not bashing the gay community in any way…if you knew me you would know I wouldn’t do that. Again I’m sorry if you were offended.” Yeah, ‘I’m sorry if you were offended’ is not an apology. It’s kind of like saying, “I’m sorry you’re a homophobic prick.”}

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The Revelation ~ Part III & Epilogue

Early in the morning, while it was still dark, a truck had plowed the winding road to the Perkins Home for Adults. Father Daemon’s old Dodge now climbed the cleared path, the heater just starting to warm the car as he pulled into the Clergy’s reserved parking spot. A stand of trees surrounded the back of the low building; gusts of wind were scattering clumps of snow from their limbs. Inside the entranceway, Father Daemon added his galoshes to an assorted collection of muddy boots; he was not the first visitor of the day.

“Good morning, Lucy,” he whispered to the tired-looking attendant at the reception desk.

“Hello Father,” she said with a half-hearted effort to smile. “He’s been awake for a while. Upset about the snow or something.”

Father Daemon did not approve of her flagrant tone, eyeing her critically then walking down the bright hallway. The pastel wallpaper and faded flowers of the carpet found no forgiveness in the fluorescent light. It is a harsh hallway, Father Daemon thought – how many have lost hope here? A fake ficus tree in a plastic-lined wicker basket stood in the corner at the end of the corridor, not quite obscuring a dusty air vent.

The last room on the right was labeled “Vener, William”, and below the name was a list of food restrictions. It gave the place the feeling of a hospital, and the decorations and efforts of the staff to downplay this aspect only made it sadder. Father entered the room quietly, confronted by a stringent odor of some unseen antiseptic.

Monsignor Vener was sitting up in the bed, staring out the window and mumbling something under his breath. His wet lips moved unevenly, the right side of his face having been ravaged by the worst of his strokes a year ago. Wisps of white hair were combed back thinly against his skull, and his pale blue eyes were coated with a cloudy film. In his hands he worried a wooden rosary. Father Daemon moved into his line of vision, blocking the window.

“Good morning, Monsignor. The snow is pretty, isn’t it?” Father began. “I always enjoy the first snowfall of the year.” He waited for a reply. “And then my enjoyment diminishes with each succeeding storm.”

With a shaky hand, Monsignor placed the rosary on the bedside table. Father Daemon pulled up the metal chair beside him. It screeched along the linoleum floor. Monsignor jerked his head to the sound, as if surprised that someone else was suddenly there. He cast an annoyed glance at Father Daemon, who received it with a patient ache. “How are you doing?” Father asked.

Monsignor looked beyond him, out the window. The snowy scene seemed like a cocoon, all gauzy filament, silky strands, and impenetrable encasement. He would be gone soon enough, and with him his silent power. It no longer held much sway. One of the last of the cloistered priests, from a time when the church could keep the world at bay, when God was still feared and revered, he had somehow survived this long, but the end was near. Age and failing health had taken him away from the only home he’d known. This place was not home. God was not everywhere.

Father Daemon held the elderly man’s hand. His skin was thin but surprisingly warm; the veins were the color of bruises. Father explained that he was visiting his niece for her birthday the next week and wouldn’t be in to see him. He decided to take a chance.

“Would you like to meet Brother Logan? He’s been doing a fine job helping out. I’m hoping he thinks about coming back to us when he finishes.”

Monsignor cut him off sharply. “No, I don’t want to meet him!” he roared. “Don’t bring him here.” Then the old man started to cry, pulling his hand away from Father Daemon and hiding his eyes.

It was time to leave. He had been trying to find a way to explain to Monsignor that his health was such that he wouldn’t be returning to the church, but that would not come to pass today. For now, he allowed Monsignor to think that there was still hope – perhaps he would let him believe in that until… until it was done. He left the sobbing man alone.

The land was quiet beneath the blanket of snow. Father Daemon sat in the car without moving, relieved and guilty, reveling in and regretting the silent absence of the sounds of his mentor’s weeping.

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It was the second snowstorm that wreaked destruction – a violent Nor’easter, swirling and circling back over the town, a mass of unstable air hovering and dumping inches of snow and ice, accompanied by hurricane-force gales of bitterly cold air. The parking lot between St. Ann’s church and the rectory had been plowed twice, and Father Daemon was digging the Dodge out for his trip the next day. Brother Logan joined him. They piled shovelfuls of snow against the rectory wall, slowly freeing the car, and still the wintry mix kept falling.

“Think you’ll make it out tomorrow?” Brother Logan asked, brushing a coating of snow and ice off his shoulder and arm.

“Oh yes, yes – we’ve seen far worse in these parts.” He didn’t want to be absent from his niece’s birthday party. “I’ll be fine.”

The men finished and went inside. They watched the Winter Storm Warning advisory then went to bed.

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The first snow day of the year inspired John’s usual ruckus in the Crawford house. Jesse had listened wanly to the school closings at John’s repeated insistence – grateful to sign that school was cancelled, then to roll over and let his little brother rush downstairs to bug their parents.

Mr. and Mrs. Crawford were secretly upset that there was no school – it only made everything more difficult, but they indulged their youngest son, outfitting him in a heavy snowsuit and thick foam boots, setting him free in the gated backyard.

“Can you check in on them?” Mrs. Crawford asked as she watched John from inside the living room.

“Not today,” he said. “They’ll be fine. Jesse’s still asleep. I’ll talk to him… He’s old enough now. John will be okay. I’m home by three, I’ll make sure.”

“All right,” she sighed, uneasy but acquiescing. “I’ve got to go. I’m already late.” She threw her purse over her shoulder and waved good-bye to John from the back door. He wasn’t looking her way.

Mr. Crawford called upstairs, “Jesse! Jesse, we’re leaving. Your brother’s outside – keep an eye on him! Call the office if you need anything.” He didn’t wait for a response. In the backyard he waved his hands to get John’s attention. The boy was focused intently on making something, his back to the house and Mr. Crawford. His hands dug into the snow; it bit at the tender skin of his wrists, where the mittens didn’t quite meet the sleeves. He flung a handful of snow into the air and studied the pattern it made as it landed on the untouched blanket of white.

Mr. Crawford swore and put his coat on. His brown Oxford shoes sunk deep into the snow as he waved his arms wildly. Exasperated, he gathered a snowball in his hands and lobbed it in John’s direction. It fell short a few feet, while John continued to play, not glancing in Mr. Crawford’s direction. A second snowball flew through the air over John’s head, the boy still looking down.

“Goddamn it!” Mr. Crawford yelled, his hands raw and red and wet with melted snow. He packed a third snowball, rounding and solidifying it into a hard sphere of ice. Aiming to the right of John, he threw hard and watched with horror and immediate regret as it slammed into the back of John’s head.

The boy looked up, then around, and, feeling for the back of his head, started wailing. Mr. Crawford ran through the knee-high drifts of snow to his crying son. “Shit,” he said, trying to catch his breath. “Shit.”

He reached John and pulled his hat off, examining his head through the wet hair. There was no blood. He couldn’t have thrown it that hard. Mr. Crawford signed frantically to him, “Are you hurt? Are you okay? I’m so sorry… I was trying to get your attention…”

His khakis were soaked to a dark tan, and the cold was starting to register. John’s sobs had subsided. He returned to playing as if nothing had happened. Mr. Crawford put his hat back on and asked one more time if he was all right, explaining that he had to go to work.

“I’m good,” John signed, after impatiently removing his mittens.

After he had changed, Mr. Crawford went into the boys’ room and told Jesse to watch John. Jesse mumbled assent and listened to his father’s retreating footsteps. He wanted only to sleep.

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The Olin home was awake to the sounds of the radio and an endless list of school closings, the kitchen filled with the aromas of breakfast. A coffeepot perked away on the counter, releasing its pungent steam. Elise was standing over the stove, stirring a skillet of scrambled eggs. Her Mom sat at the kitchen table in a flannel bathrobe, idly flipping through a damp newspaper.

“These are almost done, can you get the toast going?” Elise asked. Mrs. Olin got up and pulled a loaf of bread from the pantry. She struggled with the small twist-tie, finally handing it off to her husband. “David? Would you? My arthritis today…”

He took it from her and asked, “How many?”

“Elise, are you having toast?”

“Just one piece, please.”

“One for me too,” Mrs. Olin said.

Mr. Olin brought out four pieces of bread, putting two into the toaster and laying two on the counter. He put the loaf back in the pantry. As he stood in the doorway, he watched his family. His wife and daughter moved together at the stove, Elise transferring the eggs into a bowl held by his wife. They were almost exactly the same height. Elise would be taller soon, but for now they were equally matched. He listened to their shared laughter as some of the eggs fell onto the floor, smiling at their good fortune. If spilled eggs were the worst part of the day, it was worthy of laughter.

“Elise,” her Mom said as she set the eggs on the table, “Would you walk Cooper after breakfast? You don’t have to go far in this snow. I am just feeling this weather today.” She rubbed her wrists in her hands.

“Sure.” The eggs warmed Elise’s stomach. Cooper trotted into the kitchen, staring up at Elise for a treat. She tossed him a bit of toast with jelly on it.

“Elise,” her Dad warned, “No eggs for him. He’ll get sick.”

“I know, I know.” She watched Cooper’s expectant expression. It felt good to be needed.

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“Are you sure you don’t want me to go with you?” Brother Logan asked. Father Daemon had loaded his overnight bag in the car and was going over some last-minute instructions.

“Really, it’s fine. You forget that we’re accustomed to such weather – and this wasn’t even a very bad storm. You wait… but I don’t want to frighten you. Thank you, I’ll be fine,” Father Daemon reiterated. He paused and went over things in his head. “Now, just make sure that the church is locked by 8 PM. You probably won’t get anyone today anyway, not in this weather. People will brave the elements for food, movies, parties, but not for prayer. Maybe someone young like you will change that. We’ll need it, if we’re going to survive. I have faith!”

Father Daemon gave Brother Logan a friendly tap on the shoulder, crinkling his eyes with a benevolent smile. He believed in his church.

“Call when you get in, if you would,” Brother Logan said seeing him off. The Dodge started up and crunched through the plowed snow. He watched it turn out of the parking lot and disappear behind the snow banks and then the church.

There was all of today, tonight, and a bit of tomorrow. Opening his wallet, Brother Logan thumbed through a few dollar bills and retrieved the crumpled paper that had Jesse’s phone number on it. The hall clock chimed ten times, and then the rectory was silent.

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The heavy snowfall had muffled the world. Jesse traipsed through the hallway to his parents’ bathroom, relieving himself at the toilet – the steady stream of dark yellow urine steaming on the cool porcelain. Why was their room always so cold? He shivered from the pissing and the air.

Pulling the drapes back from the tiny bathroom window, he looked down at the white landscape. In the middle of it sat John, the bright red of his snowsuit the only spot of color in the vast sea of snow – a trampled path radiating outward from him.

Jesse flushed the toilet just as the phone started ringing. He knew it wasn’t his parents.

“Hello?” he said weakly, then cleared his throat.

“Jesse? It’s Brother Logan.”

“Oh… hi,” he stammered, “How are you?”

“I need to see you.”

In a few years Jesse would recognize that insistence for what it was; for now he heard the urgent voice of a man he loved – and it was love, Jesse admitted to himself.

I love him.

He is why I live.

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He trudged through the thick snow. John had promised to stay in the backyard. He’d be in trouble for leaving him, but maybe he’d be back in time. He didn’t care either way. Brother Logan had asked for him, and he had to attend.

Not all of the sidewalks had been cleared, and Jesse found himself ankle-deep in some spots, not minding or even noticing the chilled, wet state of his shoes. Brother Logan had finally called on him, and they would resume their – he struggled for the right word – connection? Relationship? Affair? There was no name for it yet, and it didn’t matter.

The parking lot was empty – just the recent tracks of Father Daemon’s car remained. When Brother Logan swung open the rectory door, Jesse could not stifle a smile.

“Oh, you’re so cold,” Brother Logan said, putting his hands on Jesse’s cheeks, then cupping his ears. Jesse felt the usual rise when he was with him, and followed him silently down the hallway, kicking off his sneakers outside the bedroom. He closed the door behind him.

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Elise opened the door and Cooper flew out onto the snowy walkway that her Dad had just finished shoveling. The dog ran into the thick snow, jumping up and shaking its head. Elise walked carefully to the sidewalk and turned right. She folded her arms across her chest and hunched her shoulders as bits of snow fell from the trees in the wind.

The sky was impenetrably gray. It felt like dusk despite the early hour. She cut through the back lot of St. Ann’s, not admitting to herself that she was going to walk past Jesse Crawford’s house. The old priest’s car was gone and she walked through its tracks, not noticing the footprints that led to the rectory door. At the corner of the building, Cooper lifted his leg and started peeing. Elise looked around guiltily, then hurried over to the patch of yellow, throwing some fresh snow over it with her mittens.

Figures moved in the window. A lamp glowed on a desk, and beyond that Elise could see Jesse removing his winter coat. She watched through the half-closed blind as he took a man’s shirt off. She stared and wondered and decided to wait for Jesse to tell her about it. She understood then that she would never have him. She didn’t know if it upset her, or if she felt relieved. There would never be tension between them. Yes, it was relief.

When Jesse and the unknown man kissed, she brought her fingers to her lips, then turned and ran. Cooper barked and followed her home.

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Father Daemon had forgotten the birthday gift for his niece. He thought about it half an hour into the trip. Swearing, he turned around. It would cost him an hour at least, probably more with the bad roads, but the whole point of the trip was his niece’s birthday, and he had searched everywhere for the perfect present.

He pulled up to the church, not wanting to park and run the risk of getting stuck. He was also trying to avoid Brother Logan, who would probably riddle him with more concern about driving in the weather.

The door to the rectory was open a crack. Father Daemon cautiously entered. There were puddles from melted snow on the floor, the dirty wet tracks of sneakers, and then the pair of them outside Brother Logan’s door. One of them was lying on its side. Father Daemon bent down and inspected it. The brightly-colored high-top was the style that the kids were wearing. It belonged to a boy.

From inside the bedroom came a subdued creaking of the bed. Father Daemon put the sneaker back on the floor and quietly walked away. He stopped at his own room and picked up the birthday present, then closed the door on his way out. It was too cold to leave it open.

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The bed that had at first felt frigid, starchy, and spindly now cradled them comfortably in warmth. It was done. The hopes that had spun happily out of control the night before felt foolish and frightening now, and though the warm body and strong embrace of the man behind him felt good, it offered scant assurance. Jesse was still alone.

The oil lamp was burning, the low blue flame almost invisible but for the thin stream of smoke that signified it was still on. Jesse went over and turned it up, trying to add some warmth to the room. The flame brightened and the smoke became thicker. Logan watched his naked body before the lamp, a scene of unbearable beauty, sickening in its temporal fleetingness. Jesse shuddered and jumped back into the cramped bed.

The joining of their bodies had felt glorious. He pulled Brother Logan close to his chest. The fingers of his hand were thick, and rougher than Jesse’s. Was this love then? Two people staving off the cold, uniting and separating and still bound to one another – and did Brother Logan feel the same? Jesse wanted to ask, to end his doubt either way, even if Logan didn’t return the feeling. But what would he do then?

There was emptiness behind the man’s eyes when Jesse searched them, a distance that spanned back to a time before Jesse was even alive. He could not surmount that past, and he didn’t know if he could make the present matter more.

“I have to get back and help my brother shovel,” Jesse finally said. He didn’t know what he was doing.

“So soon?” Logan asked. “Father won’t be back until tomorrow,” he pleaded, a sparkle of mischief in his eyes once again.

It was all Jesse had. How long would it be before the glint was gone? He kissed Brother Logan, moving down to his neck, to his chest, suckling on his nipples and the small patches of hair surrounding them. Logan closed his eyes, remembering his dead brother. The memories came at awkward times. Beneath the weight and moving tongue of Jesse, Logan shifted, and his gaze found the oil lamp, focusing on its wavering light and curling ribbons of black smoke.

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For most of the ride home the next day, Father Daemon had tried to determine exactly what to say to Brother Logan, but when he pulled into the church lot he decided to wait. All traces of the boy, whoever it was, were gone from the rectory. Dinner was on the stove and Brother Logan came out of the kitchen to greet him.

Maybe that was it, maybe it was a one-time deal. He weighed the greater good with this single incident. There were unsaid rules and protocol that were followed at other churches – mysteries that could be cloaked in silence and a strategically-employed blind eye. At his most shameful he thought that Monsignor Vener could be blamed if it ever came to that – then he banished the idea, hating himself for the very notion.

Yet that would have been what the once-wise man did in this situation. No conflict, no noise, no messiness. It was easier then, though. No one questioned the church – all-powerful and all-knowing. Father Daemon felt himself spanning the old and the new. His greatest interest was preserving the institution that meant so much to him. The decision was made. There was no other way. This was the sort of mess that came from sin – it contaminated everyone, it stained everything.

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She was waiting for him when he came out of the house the day after the storm. The snow was already dirty and gray. Parts of it had melted and frozen again in the night, leaving a rumpled, rough surface of bumps and ridges. The street was a muddy mix of salt and dirt, the pavement dark with wet run-off. It was no longer pretty.

Elise wore an old pair of boots, still caked with sediment from the last winter. Her hair peeked out from beneath a knit hat that she pulled down over her ears. Jesse joined her, zipping up his coat and shaking off his own damp hair. They walked together past St. Ann’s. She waited for him to tell her, but he never spoke. Already he was different, already he was removed, and if he seemed happier today, she knew why. The sense of loss she felt was something she did not understand, nor did she know why she moved closer to him, or why she felt safer in his presence. The love of friendship was pure and lasting; in many ways it trumped that of romantic love. That is what she told herself on the walk to school, as Jesse strode beside her – quietly and respectfully, and oblivious to her unkempt hair hidden by a hat, and the dirty boots that she’d wear throughout the day.

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Brother Logan was sitting at the kitchen table – a small, mustard-tinted formica circle, edged with a band of ridged metal. He sipped at black coffee, unable to finish the second half of wheat toast on his plate. His thoughts went to the boy – flashes of smooth skin, the slippery gloss of his lips, the need in his eyes, in his actions, in the way he held onto him. It reminded him of the ones who came before, the small handful of men and boys he had almost loved – whom he could have loved if it had been possible.

A pair of rickety wooden shutters hung in front of the kitchen window, their slats slanted open to let in the light – so harsh at this time of the year, bouncing from sky to snow and everywhere in between, and so bright that the windowpane was only a square of brilliant white. It hurt to look out of it.

Father Daemon swept into the kitchen, fully dressed in his robes for daily Mass. It was not yet eight o’clock in the morning, and he did not want to draw this out.

“I saw what happened here yesterday,” he began, holding his hands up to quell any protest. “I came back because I forgot the birthday present, and… I know.” He paused there, standing next to the counter and looking down on the unknown man at his kitchen table. He breathed in deeply, folding his hands together, intertwining his hands.

“Brother Logan,” he began again, “I think you would make a good priest. But you cannot stay here. I won’t have you endanger this parish. I’m not going to mention anything to anyone, on the condition that you end this, and then leave. I will contact the Bishop and put in for a transfer.”

Father Daemon studied the face of the man before him. It hadn’t registered shock, or even surprise. Perhaps it had happened before. He refused to dwell on it, leaving the room brusquely and heading to the church. It wouldn’t be difficult to move him. There were always churches with dislocated priests, always empty spots to fill. And maybe he had learned his lesson. He said a quick prayer for him and entered the back door of St. Ann’s.

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That Sunday an eerie thaw broke up the January chill. A thick fog settled over the area – swirling clouds gathered at ground level, and the morning had an other-worldly glow to it. The banks of snow oozed water vapor, seeping into the ground and revealing forgotten fences and the barren sticks of ice-ravaged brush.

The Crawford boys stood in the driveway waiting for their father to back the car out. They breathed in the ripe smell of ozone – a displaced scent of spring and summer storms. Mr. Crawford drove the short distance to the church, taking his time, waving other drivers before him. John was staring out at the foggy street. He could smell the freedom of spring already, even if it was months away, and he wanted to be outside.

The family sidled into their front pew. Jesse kept a furtive watch out for Brother Logan. He’d made up his mind to go to confession if he was hearing them this morning. He had to talk to him again, even if it was under sacramental guise. Craning his neck, Jesse turned to look at the new organ. Its main frame was complete but it remained under construction. Dusty drop cloths and scaffolding were stacked on each side of it, framing the rosewood façade. The middle three pipes, the largest ones, had been installed, soaring upward to the rafters, and Jesse studied the slits in them, about a third of the way up their length. He wondered what sort of sound they would emit, how the notes would fill the church, and if he would still be there to hear them. John never would – he could only gauge their power through the vibrations.

“Good morning,” Father Daemon announced from the altar, opening his arms wide and accepting the expected reply.

“Good morning, Father,” they answered.

“For all of our visitors, let me extend a greeting of welcome to our church, and to everyone who attends St. Ann’s. I’m glad to see all of you here.”

Jesse looked around impatiently, mumbling the prayers and moving his mouth to the hymns. The confessional was dark. As Father began his homily, the congregation sat back in their pews. After droning on for about fifteen minutes, Father Daemon changed his tone from the preachy to the practical, pricking Jesse’s attention.

“And on a bittersweet note, this week we bid goodbye to Brother Logan, who has been called onward to the next stage of his… journey. His training that is. I would personally like to thank him for all of his help.”

There was a brief spattering of applause, when in fact most people had no idea who Brother Logan was. Even now, he was nowhere to be seen. Father Daemon immediately launched into the next topic. Only Jesse noticed the jarring switch, the abrupt end of the mention of his name. With those few words, Father severed Brother Logan from the dominion, and protection, of St. Ann’s.

Jesse was stunned. His stomach dropped and turned inside out, while an oily sweat broke out on his forehead. He covered his mouth, thinking he might throw up, fighting the welling tears, lost so suddenly and inconsolably. John was kicking his leg; Jesse almost raised his arm to strike him, and then the loud shuffle to communion stifled his rage.

Why hadn’t he said anything? Surely he’d known. And for how long? It was a subtle betrayal, one that might otherwise have cut Jesse deeply enough for him to let go, but not now, not when he felt this way, not after having given so much.

Dazed, he let his mother out of the pew, following her to the start of the line for communion. He opened his mouth to receive the Body of Christ from Father Daemon, whispering “Amen” in a choked sob. He swallowed the brittle wafer with some difficulty, moving to the right and sipping, for the first time, the Blood of Christ. The stale red wine burned his mouth, and he was grateful for the pain. It cut downward along his throat, settling discontentedly into the bowels of his belly, smoldering there but offering no succor.

There was no way to explain his state to the family. They rode home in silence, unaware of the pain their eldest son was in, occupied only with the strange mellow weather in the middle of winter.

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At the house, Jesse went directly to the phone book, looking up the number for the rectory. He waited for his mother to change out of her church dress and head downstairs, then slowly, quietly turned the rotary dial of the phone. Sliding down against the wall, Jesse sat on the floor listening to the distant ringing. Brother Logan picked up, his cautious voice small and removed.

“Father Daemon said you were leaving. Why didn’t you tell me?” Jesse asked. He didn’t want to sound desperate, but Logan recognized the panic in his voice, and part of him felt it too.

“I’m sorry, Jesse. I didn’t know myself. Father Daemon saw us the last time you were here.”

“When? How?”

“It doesn’t matter. He knows about us and I have to leave.”

“Where will you go? Around here? Another church near here?”

“Probably not. I don’t know yet, it’s up to the Bishop.”

“Does the Bishop know why?”

“No, I don’t think so. Father Daemon has been very kind.”

“When are you going? It can’t be right away.”

“I don’t know, Jesse,” Logan sighed. “Most likely soon.”Jesse didn’t know what to make of the man’s tone – partly annoyed, partly resigned, and somewhat dismissive. He didn’t seem all that concerned about the situation. The phone cord was knotted; Jesse absently unwound it, then watched it curl back into a tangled mass.

“Can I see you? To say goodbye?” he asked timidly.

Brother Logan was struck by how young he sounded, how like a kid. He was almost three times as old as Jesse, yet he had allowed Jesse to lead him. Who was at fault? And, again, did it even matter?

“You can come by today after four o’clock, but you can’t stay long. Father will be visiting Monsignor and then the hospital,” Logan explained. “I’d like to see you too,” he added.

It was enough for Jesse. It had to be. He went into the bedroom to lie down, drawing the blind and shutting out the fog. A few months ago the world was open, and the idea of Brother Logan was a happy inspiration. This morning it was closed, claustrophobically contained by walls of fog, closing ever inward – an irrevocable suffocation. Jesse heard John coming up the stairs. He closed his eyes, pretending to sleep, as John burst into the room.

John found a light jacket in the bottom of the closet and rushed back out. The front door slammed shut. Jesse embraced the silence, grasping at its emptiness and giving in to the sorrow. Folding himself into a fetal position, he turned to the wall, silently convulsing, weeping for the first time since the summer he broke his arm, almost three years ago. It lasted for about an hour, subsiding and starting up again, until finally he welcomed sleep and momentary oblivion.

When he awoke shortly before three o’clock, he remembered the lack of consciousness, glad for the fleeting forgetfulness, and intent on forcing a way to find it again.

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He told his mother he had to help Father Daemon out at the church for a while.

“Be back in time for dinner,” she yelled after him. “Five thirty!”

He was gone. In the backyard John was running back and forth. He had dug down through the snow and reached the lawn, but the ground was still frozen. The bottom half of his pants were soaked, and his boots were covered in a slushy mix. He looked to be having a swordfight, parrying and blocking his unseen foes. A heavy mist swirled around him, obscuring his face.

Jesse walked through the dense air, unable to see more than ten or fifteen feet ahead of himself, moving out of habit and instinct and a propulsion made up equally of dread and desire. He knew this would be the last time.

The spires of St. Ann’s were lost to the fog. Even as Jesse walked along the side of the church, its upper half could not be seen. As the rectory came into hazy view, Jesse gulped back another urge to vomit. He stopped walking. Brother Logan was waiting for him there, the door was half-way open, but he didn’t have to go in.

It was the first time he really had a choice, and a rare moment when he was fully aware of growing up. Sadness and resignation had been abstract ideas. He knew when he was supposed to feel that way, but had always pretended. The passing of a family pet, the death of a grandparent, the suicide of a classmate – his sadness had been one of principal and respect, but never of pain or loss. Brother Logan had awakened his access to sorrow, bringing him to life, even as it felt like it was killing him.

Jesse walked into the rectory. The fog closed behind him. Brother Logan came out of his bedroom at the other end of the hallway, his eyes swollen and red. Jesse ran into his arms and sobbed violently.

“Shh, shh… it’s okay. You’re all right,” the man whispered, stroking Jesse’s hair. He brought them into the bedroom, sitting down on the bed.

“You can’t… you can’t go. Please don’t leave,” Jesse sobbed into his hands. Brother Logan watched the boy cry and he joined him, pulling his shaking body close. The two of them rocked on the bed that way, holding each other, until there was nothing left to do.

Jesse stood up and stated calmly, “I’m coming with you, wherever you go.”

Brother Logan shut his eyes. He had imagined, even hoped, that Jesse would say that, and now that it had been spoken he was lost.

“That’s not possible,” he replied quietly. “You know you can’t. Your life is just starting.”

“I know what I want. I’m not a kid. And you know that.” Jesse started to cry again.

“Come on, let’s go outside for a bit,” Brother Logan said gently. He led Jesse to the back door, leaning his shoulder against it and pushing hard. It was stuck. He rammed it harder with his whole body and it gave way. The bright fog crept in as Jesse and Brother Logan stepped out of the rectory.

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The kitchen was warm. Mrs. Crawford cracked open a window, picking out a few dead leaves from the pot of devil’s ivy that sat on the windowsill. The oven alarm went off, a low buzzing that grew into an excruciating screech. Mrs. Crawford turned down a boiling pot of broccoli and crossed the kitchen to the oven. She peered inside, a scorching wall of heat hitting her face, and saw that the chicken was done. She turned the oven off, leaving the door slightly ajar. Turning back to the stove, she ran into John.

“God!” she said, annoyed. She squatted down and held him by the shoulders. “Is your brother home yet?” she signed.

John shook his head no.

Mrs. Crawford hesitated, but there was still some light left, and it was only a few blocks to St. Ann’s. The smell of spring was making John antsy; he’d been tugging on her legs since he’d come inside, getting underfoot as she tried to finish dinner.

She signed to him, “Can you find him at the church and bring him home?”

John nodded vigorously.

There was quiet when he left. She turned the stove off completely and moved the broccoli to a cool burner. Dinner was almost done. She had a few minutes, and, guiltily wishing the boys would take their time, went upstairs to lie down. She only needed a few minutes.

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The back of the church was littered with work lamps, and a thin coating of sawdust covered the floor. Tools and saw were scattered around the organ. John looked around but couldn’t find Jesse anywhere. He made his way up the aisle. At the front of the church he turned around and took in the organ, high in the back, its pipes running to the very top of the cathedral. They shined a bright bronze in the spotlights. It would be completed soon.

He went into the dark back room of the office, but no one was there. John walked past the altar and out the side entrance. Behind St. Ann’s stood the rectory. The front door was open and a sliver of amber light cut through the fog. John approached cautiously, unsure that Jesse would be there. He opened the door all the way and waited for someone to come.

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Behind the rectory was a small cemetery. Brother Logan and Jesse walked through it, bits of wet ice crackling beneath their feet. Enough snow had melted to reveal an irregular path of slate stones that led into and among the graves. Naked trees framed the little yard, their girdling roots twisting around the wayward iron fence. It tilted precariously, bending low to the ground in some spots, rising upward at the posts.

“Jesse, when my brother died, I was with him. He told me to live my life. I didn’t really listen. Not like I should have. But you can. You remind me of him,” Brother Logan tried to explain.

“Did you fuck him too?” Jesse asked out of petulance and defiance.

Logan raised a fist and Jesse waited for the blow. Instead, he took the boy’s face in his hands and kissed him. Jesse pulled away, but Logan wouldn’t let go ~ he was glad to be forced, enthralled by the power the man had over him. He stopped struggling and spoke.

“You’ve shown me this life, what this life could be, and now I have to go on without it. How can you do that?” He pounded his open palms against Brother Logan’s chest. “You made me start to believe. You showed me that love… was its own form of faith… when I didn’t believe in anything else… and I still don’t believe… but I might, I might have, with you.”

Enveloped by the fog and hidden from the world, they held onto each other. The last moments with someone you love, knowing you will never them again, are different than saying goodbye to someone who has died. They will still be out there somewhere, living on without you, perhaps loving others and finding happiness on their own.

They kissed, tenderly at first, then desperately.

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John walked into Brother Logan’s room, drawn by the flickering light of the oil lamp. He explored the small space, briefly touching the lamp that burned hotly into heavy black smoke. A stack of books was on the corner of the desk, along with an old wooden box bound by a lock and key. It opened with a click, and inside he saw a familiar gold rosary and a picture of Jesse from a newspaper clipping. It showed him in mid-air, going for a rebound at one of his basketball games. He doesn’t understand why these things are in this box.

Outside the window, he notices Jesse and Brother Logan and sees that they are crying. Frightened and confused, he is unsure what to do. He looks around and thinks about hiding under the bed before noticing the little closet in the corner. Opening the door, his eyes rest upon a pile of blankets. Not realizing how cold he is, he goes into the closet and crawls under them. He pulls the door almost shut and waits. It is cozy here. As the day fades, he falls asleep. The oil lamp burns on the desk, throwing long shadows across the room.

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They had to go inside. This time, Jesse led them. He held onto Brother Logan’s hand, the pair of them moving as one. Amid urgent whimpers and kisses salty with tears, they stumbled back into the bedroom, grasping at each other, unwilling to separate. The two of them stripped, a ravenous tearing off of clothing, then struggled against each other on the bed, fighting off what little time they had left and taking it out on the other. It was almost over.

Bleed into me.

Cry all of your tears and blood and semen into me.

Fill me with you.

After this, I may die.

It would be all right, after this.

It would have been worth it.

From the hallway, the phone rang, breaking them apart. Logan thought about not answering it, then jumped up and scurried into the hallway naked.

‘I cannot leave him,’ Jesse thought.

He will not allow it to happen. They will not be parted.

Jesse stood up and walked over to the desk. He picked up the oil lamp and smashed it down. The glass broke, and burning oil ran over the wooden floor. He knelt down, pressed his hands into the oil and raised them, burning flesh and flowing blood before his eyes. He looked up towards the ceiling, flames refracting in his tears, tiny rivulets of fire running down his face. Grabbing onto the fractured base, he threw it against the desk, spraying fire everywhere. His hands felt for fiery glass, sweeping up shards of it, seering himself with the fire and the flood of blood.

Brother Logan moved rapidly, tackling Jesse with the bedspread and dragging him out of the room. He smothered the fire on him and tried to pry the broken glass from Jesse’s grasp.

“Jesse, please, please… Why!? Why did you do it?” he wailed, horrified at the charred blood on Jesse’s hands. The boy was still awake, eyes open but vacant.

Brother Logan rushed back into the bedroom and tried to pull the mattress over the fire, but it had spread beyond, engulfing the desk and chair. Choking on the smoke, Logan grabbed the clothes that weren’t burning and ran out of the room, slamming the door behind him.

In the closet, Jesse’s little brother slept, eyes closed to the flickering flames and ears cut off from the crackling roar, surrounded by a shroud of smoke, suffocating soundlessly in his sleep.

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Father Daemon and the old Dodge arrived at St. Ann’s to the chaotic scene of fire-trucks and a fire unit spraying the back of the rectory down. Smoke billowed forth from the building, blending seamlessly into the thick fog. Near one of the trucks, Brother Logan and a tall boy huddled together inside a blanket, Logan in a pair of wet black pants, the boy naked but for the blanket. It was the new altar server. There was no pretending now; Father would have to speak with the family.

No one reported anyone else in the building until Jesse’s parents ran up the driveway, their faces turning from concern to panic to horror and disbelief.

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Three days later, Father Daemon stopped by the Crawford house. Elise Olin answered the door, shaking his hand and bringing him into the living room. He stepped gingerly among the mourning family and friends, asking to speak with Mr. and Mrs. Crawford. Elise brought him to Jesse’s parents, then left them alone.

“I am deeply sorry for your loss,” he began. They eyed him warily. “I wish… I don’t… I don’t know where to begin. I want you to know that Brother Logan is being moved. If you want to go any further with charges regarding what he did to Jesse… that’s up to you. At this point I am just very sorry for your loss, and it is up to you. I don’t know if it would help. This is a terrible loss, none as worse as that of a child so young…” and he trailed off.

Jesse had been standing at the doorway listening. He entered the room. The three adults turned toward him. That it was Father Daemon who cared for him – enough to risk everything he was risking in offering the chance to charge Brother Logan – moved Jesse more than anything his own parents had done.

They couldn’t have saved him. They had forgotten that he still needed protection.

“I’m so sorry,” his mother sobbed.

He looked at her with wonder. He didn’t understand.

“I’m sorry for not protecting you, for letting this happen to you.”

It suddenly struck him – his vulnerability, his innocence, and his haphazard disposal of it. He was supposed to be sad. His own mother was sad for him, but he did not feel it. He only wondered why it was such a big deal. They had been quiet over things that seemed to matter much more than this; why the sudden flood of concern? It started to irritate him, and he walked out of the room.

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Elise was standing in the corner of the kitchen, staring out of the window. She had been coming over every day, helping out with the food and answering the phone and door. They’d hugged the first time she was there, but he hadn’t spoken to her since. He went up to her and looked out the window.

“Do you think we have enough food?” he asked, referencing the overflowing counters of platters and plastic-covered dishes. Elise forced out a smile. He didn’t look at her. “I did it, Elise. He died because of me.”

She reached up and put her hand on his shoulder. Jesse withdrew from the touch, then hurried out of the kitchen. He couldn’t talk to anyone. As he walked through the crowded living room, people parted silently to let him pass. They looked at him strangely, a mix of pity and suspicion – this sad, tall boy who had just been made an only child, with his two bandaged hands and burned arms. He went upstairs as the doorbell rang again.

John’s bed remained unmade. His parents had not entered the room since he died. Jesse had had to live there, alone with everything that was left of John. His toys and action figures were scattered about the floor. A model airplane was propped up on the desk, unfinished – an act of creation forever stalled. Jesse couldn’t bear seeing it. He threw the plane into the metal garbage can, where it splintered into a heap of broken balsa wood and plastic pieces.

Jesse stood over John’s bed before crumpling onto it. He could still smell John as he cried into his pillow, writhing and wishing it had been him. Tears soaked his bandaged hands. His baby brother had been sacrificed, and the fire had cauterized Jesse’s heart ~ burnt and sterilized it, scoured and sealed it, removing any bit of tenderness that remained.

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A few Sundays after John had been buried, the Crawfords returned to St. Ann’s for the last time. Jesse hadn’t spoken much to his parents, even when the three of them had gone to a professional counselor. His brother was gone and it had been Jesse’s fault. He couldn’t explain when they asked if he knew why John had been there. Their grief didn’t allow for them to notice Jesse much, and he was thankful for that. In his intentional, careless act he found the destruction he so desired. The craving had been satisfied, and he had inadvertently killed his brother in the process. Now there was nothing left to do. His fate was set, his heart hardened. All that remained was a cold ambition fueled by emptiness – an emptiness he knew would be his lot.

The counselor had suggested attending mass again, and Mrs. Crawford wanted to get it over with, to end it in some way, for good. It was early March, and the fractured family walked stoically to their front pew. The renovation of the organ had been completed and the interior of the church had been painted anew. It was brighter, but somehow colder. Jesse looked over his shoulder to the back of the church, where the magnificent organ shone brilliantly in the sunlight of the unforgiving end of winter.

The immense wooden monolith sounded, its upper notes falling then rising in rapid arpeggios. As the organist struck the lower keys, Jesse felt the moaning bass notes rumble through the church – sounds that hadn’t been heard in that sacred space for decades. It shook the pews and columns and stained-glass windows. It would have been what John felt. Pigeons flew from their nests, dust fell from the rafters, and the power of the sound rendered the congregation absolutely silent.

Jesse allowed the moment to overcome him. He began to cry – silently and convulsively – over his lost brother, his lost lover, his lost childhood. He couldn’t stop. His mother put her arm awkwardly around him and he pushed it away. His father pretended not to notice. There was no peace here. Jesse shut his eyes and slowly it subsided. He would not cry again.

The Crawfords moved away that Spring, not telling any of their friends. Jesse left his childhood there. 

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E p i l o g u e

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A glass of red wine stood between them, deep burgundy in the candlelight. The man wore a tailored suit, a tightly-coiled tie knot centered precisely at his neck, and cuff links of jade framed with gold; the woman sat upright with crossed legs, her elegant black dress topped by a light sweater. She wore a thin necklace of gold, and a simple wedding band.

He would always be unknowable to her. It was part of his charm. He would never be predictable or safe. She loved it, but had realized early on that it was exactly what would keep her from being with him. Not that he had ever shown the least interest. The pull of such detachment kept her close. She accepted that and guarded it. She could be unknowable too, or at least pretend. His affection, though limited, was genuine, and few others had been granted that much.

They had been in sporadic contact, but had never spoken about that year. Now, two decades later, they found themselves crossing paths in a city not far from the town in which they were born, and Jesse had finally told Elise how it had all happened.

“So that’s why you left,” she said. “We never heard the story. Mom and Dad just assumed it was because of John. I wish you had told me then.”

“I know, I’m sorry. Didn’t feel like talking to anyone about anything.” Jesse tried to change the subject. “It’s good to see you.”

She gave him a perfunctory smile that soon faded.

“You know that wasn’t your fault, Jesse.”

She reached for his faintly-scarred hand. Drawing it away with a shrug, and his quick, sheepish laugh, he said, “I know… No, I know.”

His early prediction had come true – she was pretty, with short, bobbed hair, a ring on her finger and a new name – “Mrs. Abrams,” she said with a lilting laugh.

“Elise, I’m sorry I didn’t tell you about Brother Logan then. I didn’t know if… I didn’t know how… and then John… it seemed, well, I don’t know…”

She did not mention that she knew, that she had seen them together. It didn’t matter; it was so long ago. “Have you seen him since then? Brother Logan?”

Jesse sipped at the glass of whiskey in his hand. “Once. A few years ago. Right after it all happened, I had tried to find him, but couldn’t. It wasn’t as easy then. And when I could have… it didn’t seem worth the bother.” He looked away.

“Well, how did it finally happen?” she asked.

“It was in a café, when I was out West. I was sitting there reading a newspaper and he walked in, and I knew it was him. He was still a priest, well, I mean, he had become a priest and was wearing the collar and the outfit.” Jesse took a quick sip of his drink. “He was balding, and heavier, and not as handsome as I remembered him, but still vaguely attractive to me – in the same way as when I first met him I guess. We looked at each other briefly, but he didn’t recognize me. He ordered a coffee to take out, then he was gone. That was the last I saw of him.”

“Did you ever think of finding him and pressing charges, or at least of calling him out on it? For what he did to you?” she wondered critically.

“Who’s to say it was wrong?” he asked seriously. “I was thirteen years old. I remember. I remember I wanted him. I wanted his attention. I wanted his affection. I wanted him to love me. I remember that he never forced me, never manipulated me. And I remember knowing the difference. Was it abuse if I wanted it? If I welcomed it? Not to sound full of myself, but I was quite an intelligent child, and at thirteen I was smarter than a lot of adults. I didn’t know it then, but now I see. And I’d always felt emotionally more mature than my friends, so I knew I could handle it. Who knows, maybe I’m still fooling myself. Maybe I’m a sad, sorry victim who can’t see the damage that’s been done to himself. But does anyone really believe that? You know me. I’ve always been too self-aware to be duped so grandly. And certainly not by a Priest.”

He had a playful sparkle in his eyes. He was enjoying this scandalous bit of his past. It was part of the myth. It was tough to tell whether he was really hurt by it, or whether it had happened at all. Elise had stopped trying to figure him out.

“I mean, I invited his advances. When he looked around furtively before we did anything, I disrobed proudly, daring the world to look upon what he was about to do to me. I wanted everyone to see what we shared, to see how beautiful it was, how pure and innocent and sacred it seemed. To this day I bear no shame for what we did. That doesn’t mean anyone else should be put in my position at such an age, but for me, well, it didn’t turn out badly. Not because of him.”

“So you think it would be okay for you to do that with a thirteen-year-old boy?”

“Absolutely not!”

“Even if he asked you? Even if you were invited? And he said he was all-knowing and aware of what he wanted?”

“No. Because the only person that I trust to handle that at such an age is… was… myself. I’m sure there are others that could, but I’m not going to be the one to test them. Besides, I like them older.”

Elise had listened to the story. She sipped her wine. He had finally told her what she had waited to hear. The boy she had loved had become a man, and he was still, somehow, in her life. She had not tried to escape the past like he had, and they had found their way back to each other.

“It’s good to see you too,” she said.

Jesse smiled and swallowed the rest of his whiskey. His lips engulfed an ice cube and he took it into his mouth, crushing the cold between his teeth. He had always been hungry for love.

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The Revelation ~ Part II

The next morning Elise was late. She grabbed a tattered scarf from the closet and hurried out the door. Circumventing the corner of the street, she took a short-cut behind St. Ann’s. As she passed the rectory she slowed, noticing a new figure through the side window, a window in which the blind was customarily drawn. His head was bowed as he turned the pages of a book. Elise didn’t have time to dwell; when she reached Jesse’s she forgot to mention it.

Mornings were cold now. Most of the leaves had been stripped from the trees by rainstorms and wind, leaving wiry gray skeletons against a dismal sky. She moved closer to Jesse to block the wind. He allowed her near because it was safe. She didn’t have the false glee he found in other girls’ eyes, the way they laughed and tittered at everything he said; nor did she possess the hunger he sensed in Brother Logan.

Jesse was tall beside her, but she never felt small with him. There was affection in his eyes when they spoke, an unsaid understanding fostered from a common childhood. Even entering adolescence, they maintained a close, chaste friendship – more familial than friendly in fact.

“When’s the next basketball game?” she asked to pass the walk.

“Tomorrow. It’s away.”

“And this was going to be the one I attended. Damn.”

He smiled. No more was said. At school, they separated again. When the day was over he waited a little while for her, then walked home alone. The days were getting shorter.

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The seventh of November was the first decidedly frigid day of the season. Snow threatened from the dark sky, heavy clouds hung low and stretched in every direction. Winter was close. Jesse didn’t feel the sense of anticipation that he usually had on game days. He went distractedly from class to class, barely bothering to pretend to pay attention. As the last bell rang and the boys boarded the bus, he stopped to take in a deep breath of frosty air. It bit his lungs, and he was reminded that he was, indeed, alive, and part of this world.

On the ride out of town, the sun went down and the early dusk of Daylight Savings Time settled over the journey. The bus trundled along and Jesse tried to read a little in the fading light. He was behind on the book assignment for English. His friend Daniel slept beside him, his head now and then falling against Jesse’s shoulders – an oddly intimate motion, undulating with the swaying of the bus, repeated several times over. Out the dirty window, a gray landscape rushed by. Distant homes glowed beyond harvested fields. Intermittent highway lamps threw sweeping shadows, raking lines of yellow light over the bus seats and onto the roof.

The bus pulled into the parking lot and Daniel awoke.

“Shit, we’re here,” he yawned. Jesse was vaguely disappointed that the quiet was over. He slung his backpack over his shoulder and let Daniel out of the seat. They walked in with the other boys. It was already dark.

Jesse watched the Junior Varsity game, clapping a little later than everyone else, as hazy thoughts of Brother Logan were conjured and transfigured before dissipating, then more clapping, and Jesse late again. He trudged down the bleachers past his teammates. The hallway was empty, hushed after the noise of the gymnasium. At the water fountain he bent down and drank, wiping a bit of water from his chin.

He leaned back against the wall, allowing the back of his head to gently knock against the cement. Muffled shouts, squeaking sneaker treads, and the staccato squeals of the referee’s whistle could be heard through the doors. Jesse envisioned Brother Logan there, pushing him back against the wall, kissing him violently on the mouth, devouring him, tearing through him. He wanted to fight back, then let it happen, then stop it, and begin again. The varsity team burst into the hallway.

“Come on Jesse, time to get ready,” Coach called as the team filed into the locker room.

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Following their win, the boys were rowdy. Jesse had done all right in the game, even though Coach had called him out for being distracted and not focusing. He was glad it wasn’t a home game. As the team boarded the bus, Jesse hung back, waiting for his friend Daniel, who would also bring him home once they got back to the school. He didn’t feel like joining in the celebratory yelling and boasting that was coming.

It was at least an hour’s ride back home. He and Daniel sat near the front of the bus, a few rows behind the driver and Coach, and far from the boisterous group packing tightly into the back.

They were still in their game shorts, their sweat had cooled, and suddenly Jesse felt cold. As the bus sped along, the boys’ legs bumped against each other. Jesse could feel the hair on Daniel’s calf. In the dark, Jesse couldn’t tell if Daniel was looking at him, then he felt his hand being pulled onto Daniel’s hard-on. Outwardly Jesse didn’t react, then his own erection was being hidden by his jacket and Daniel had his fist around it.

They held onto each other, held fast, amid the raucous shouts of the other boys, spilling then hiding their milky mess in dim light and baggy shorts. Throughout, Jesse thought only of Brother Logan, interspersed with visions of the bloody lance wound in the side of Jesus. They never spoke about these episodes, leaving them hidden in the night. Boys were boys, and playing around didn’t mean anything, so long as it went unacknowledged. It would be different with Brother Logan; Jesse knew it would be.

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In their bedroom, the Crawford boys lay awake. Jesse had finally come to bed after showering and trying to finish the last of his math homework. The final problem was impossible to figure out. He had written out a long series of equations that would likely pass muster with Mr. Whelchel’s cursory glances. It no longer mattered to him.

Alone in bed, Jesse let the visions of Brother Logan come over him – stealing in with the night, skirting past the shadows. He saw him, felt him, opened his legs and invited him. On the precipice of sleep and wake, he tottered languidly along, his hand running absently down his stomach to the swirls of light brown hair surrounding his cock. It lengthened lazily in his hand as he listened for the deep regular pattern of breathing that would signify John’s sleep. Not that it made any difference.

“John,” he whispered hoarsely. “John, can you hear me?” There was no reply. He hadn’t said these words in months, maybe a year. When John first lost his hearing, Jesse constantly tested him, clapping his hands, snapping behind the ears – all in a vain effort to make it untrue, to pull John out of his soundless fog. He remembered one terrifying incident of shaking the boy and screaming at him, right in his face, and John yelling back, strange wordless moans, animal sounds of primal fear, and then the pitiful, unbearable wails of his crying, all wavy vowels and dripping spittle. It was the second time Jesse’s mother had hit him – an automatic slap, hard across the cheek. That was years ago. The only other time she ever struck him was when he said he didn’t know if he believed in God. He was a little boy then. Her actions came as such a shock, so hard and swift, that he vowed to always lie about whether he believed.

He looked at the black silhouette of the crucifix and imagined Brother Logan nailed to the cross. It was little consolation, and he fell asleep in exhausted frustration.

Mr. Whelchel did not check his math homework the next day.

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“For the next few weeks, Brother Logan will be hearing confessions, so if anyone wants to partake of the sacrament, particularly during Advent, you are always welcome. We’re available according to the schedule, and we encourage all of you to make use of this blessed sacrament.” Father Daemon glanced at the Crawford family, ever-present on Sunday mornings. Beyond them his eyes connected with a few chosen parishioners; he smiled at a little girl running into the aisle, even as she squealed upon being picked up by her mother.

Mrs. Crawford shot a disdainful expression at the child before breaking into an unconvincing half-smile. Jesse saw the change. He watched the mother carry the squirming child away.

“The Gospel today is a fitting reminder for us as we celebrate Thanksgiving next week. For many of us, it is a time not only to give thanks for what we have, but also to reflect on what we should really be thankful for. Not the material possessions or money or cars, but our fellow brothers and sisters. Our family and friends and loved ones. The people who we love – that is what we should be most thankful for. The more I see of the pain and suffering in this world, the more I feel that our love for one another is the only way to heal.”

Jesse wasn’t listening, occupied instead with imagining Brother Logan in the confessional, planning what he would say, how he would confess, whether he would do it face to face or behind the screen. It had to be behind the screen – a face to face confessional was too thrilling, too daring. He wouldn’t confess everything then. No, he wouldn’t go at all.

Turning his attention to the altar boys, he stared at their hands, folded neatly in their laps. The boy on the right was twirling his thumbs around each other. Jesse wondered if he was nervous. Both of them had sleepy eyes, and both had yawned a number of times since mass began. Father Daemon’s sermon showed no signs of concluding.

Jesse looked toward the confessional. Inside Brother Logan waited to hear the sins of the congregation. The small light at the doorway was green, meaning it was okay for someone to go in. Once that happened, the light turned red, and someone was confessing. This morning, no one was in line.

Following the lengthy homily, the light in the confessional went out. Brother Logan emerged, closing the wrought iron door behind him. Its latch clanged loudly, echoing throughout the church – the sound of finality, of something being over. He stood there, arms folded across his chest, as Father Daemon began blessing the gifts. When the Eucharistic ministers made their way to the altar to hand out communion, Brother Logan joined them in line, taking the wafer on his tongue. He stood to the left of Father Daemon at the head of the center aisle.

Jesse filed out of the pew, following Mr. Crawford.

“Body of Christ,” he heard Brother Logan say to his father. It was his turn. “Jesse, the Body of Christ,” Brother Logan repeated to him, pressing the wafer into his hand and holding it there while engaging his gaze.

“Amen,” Jesse replied. He placed the wafer on the tip of his tongue then pulled it slowly into his mouth. Behind him, Mrs. Crawford advanced.

“Body of Christ,” Brother Logan repeated.

“Amen,” she whispered.

Jesse and his family knelt after returning to their pew. John watched the surging line of people, restlessly turning his head and straining to find a schoolmate or friend. Jesse stared furtively at Brother Logan the entire time, hoping for some sign of recognition – a smile, a look, a glance in his direction – but there was none. After the last person took communion, Brother Logan accepted Father Daemon’s tabernacle and brought them both to the back of the altar.

Father Daemon returned to his chair and sat down, pushing his flowing robe out around his legs as he surveyed his congregation from the high vantage point of the altar. Row after row now relaxed, sitting back in the pews after rising awkwardly from their kneeling stance. As the people settled, Father rose, extended his arms outward, and said in a loud voice, “Let us pray.”

The altar boy to his right scrambled up with the book. Father looked down on the boy’s black hair as it shined in the bright spotlights of the church. They seemed dimmer to Jesse during the day. The boy, younger and much smaller than Jesse, held the heavy book high on his chest as Father Daemon located that Sunday’s final prayer.

After mass, Jesse stopped his parents at the door. “Wait, let me run in and check the altar boy schedule quick,” he mumbled before heading into the church office. Father Daemon was still greeting the departing people, shaking hands and blessing babies. The two boys who had served mass rushed out, almost bumping into him in their haste to escape. Inside the hallway to the office, Jesse searched the wall for his name on the schedule, and waited. He saw the date in December and made a display of going through the remaining Sundays on the calendar, tracing them slowly with his finger. He repeated the action, pretending to read through it all again, but he couldn’t wait any longer. Around the corner, Brother Logan suddenly appeared.

“Oh, Jesse, hello.”

“Hi… I just wanted to check the schedule, for when I served next,” he explained.

“Sure, sure. Let’s see,” and Brother Logan stood beside him looking over the calendar. “Ah, there you are – a few more weeks and you’re up,” he said. He was so close, yet Jesse couldn’t discern any scent on him.

He searched his eyes, waiting for him to continue the conversation, until finally he mustered the boldness to ask, “Umm, maybe since I haven’t done it, for a while, just that once, you could practice with me again, if you have a free night? I mean, serving mass, practice for that.”

“Oh… well,” Brother Logan paused and Jesse immediately regretted asking. “Sure… Yes. Actually, that’s a good idea for Advent – just some minor changes in the mass you should know.” Brother Logan looked back at the calendar. He tried to focus and force the impure physical reaction of his body below the surface. It shouldn’t stir him like this. He took a step to the side, away from Jesse, feigning a closer look at the days. “How about tomorrow, same time?”

“Any… wait, no, I have basketball tomorrow… and Tuesday too. Can you do it Wednesday?”

“The day before Thanksgiving?”

“Oh, right…”

“It’s not a problem,” he hastened to add. “I can, but is that when you want to do it?” Brother Logan asked. “It will be quiet actually. Father Daemon is going out of town for the holiday.”

“Yeah, I can do it then. I won’t have to get up early the next day,” he laughed, and adjusted the swollen cock in his pants. Brother Logan pretended not to notice, but Jesse saw that he had seen.

“So, I’ll see you then, on Wednesday,” and Brother Logan walked abruptly back into the office recesses without turning around.

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He had left the noisy holiday preparations to his mother and John. Aunt Ellen had come over to help with the cooking, and the kitchen was filled with steaming pots, red burners, and a scorching oven. Heat was pressing against heat, and the stifling scene was too much for Jesse. John ran excitedly around the first floor of the house, racing imaginary cars or chasing made-up criminals. He was hiding under the kitchen table when Jesse left the room. Mr. Crawford had retreated to the den, responding to the occasional cries for help from Mrs. Crawford, but largely being left alone with his television. Jesse would be early if he left now, but it didn’t matter. No one noticed as he walked out into the brisk November evening.

Fallen berries from a thorny hawthorne tree stuck to Jesse’s feet as he hurried to the church. The rotten fruit spread into the soles of his sneakers. On the steps of the church he scraped them off; two small clumps of desiccated flesh, crushed stems, and torn leaves fell to the ground in shades of maroon and brown.

Jesse was early, and found the doors of the church locked. He walked around the immense building to the back. Father Daemon’s car was gone from the lot. The door to the rectory was open just a crack, and the warm yellow light from within was just starting to glow brighter than the dimming sky. As Jesse leaned forward to open the door, it swung in suddenly. He tripped on the top step and fell into Brother Logan. Their arms held each other up, and Brother Logan’s ready laugh boomed loudly in Jesse’s ear. They stayed that way a little longer than necessary, separating finally in the tiny entryway, and that was the moment that Jesse was certain. It was warm here, and the smoky scent of a wood-burning stove added to the cozy atmosphere.

“Sorry I’m so early. Had to get out of the house,” he offered. Brother Logan scanned his person, eyes hastily darting over his face, chest, stomach, thighs, legs, and back up again. Just being in his presence, hearing him speak, gave Jesse an instant erection. He tried pulling it into his body, in the end opting to fold his hands over it in some blasphemous quasi-prayer pose.

“You know what, we can do it in here,” Brother Logan said, swallowing nervously. “The practice. No sense in opening up the whole church. If that’s all right with you.”

“No problem,” Jesse answered, his voice hoarse. He cleared his throat. The two of them stood there, both hearts galloping wildly, taking quick, then deep, gulps of air.

Jesse walked up to Brother Logan, grabbed his head, and pulled his mouth to his own. He slid his tongue in, hungrily groping for some bit of faith to take away with him. Brother Logan pulled him off. Out of breath, he stumbled back against a wall.

“Jesse,” he began. Jesse slammed his mouth back onto him, and Brother Logan finally kissed back. He had to. Powerless over his desire, he had tried valiantly to suppress it. If only Jesse hadn’t wanted it so badly. He could control himself, but not when the object of his desire was actively pursuing him.

They kissed violently, grappling and pressing their bodies close, thrusting against each other. Brother Logan managed to maneuver their conjoined selves down the hall. At the door to his bedroom, he pulled away.

“Wait,” he whispered huskily. “We can’t.” He turned into the room. Jesse followed. He took off his coat and dropped it on the floor, closing the door behind him. The space was dark and gray. “I shouldn’t…” Brother Logan’s voice trailed away. “I’m sorry, Jesse. That was wrong. Please…”

Jesse leaned into his pleading lips, kissing him gently now. Brother Logan turned away and stared out the little window.

“It’s okay,” Jesse said softly. “I want you to.”

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He had known the room would be plain. A desk was pushed in front of the lone window, its chair tucked neatly beneath it. The dirty window blind was pulled half-way down. A wooden crucifix hung above the bed. In the corner, a closet door was shedding its latest layer of paint. The bottom of it was splintered, a ragged edge of peeling wood, but the door-knob looked like it was made of crystal – a tiny sparkling orb in a room of dull, drab surfaces. It was out of place here. An oil lamp stood alone on the bedside table, the only bit of ornamentation in the simple surroundings. Brother Logan went over and lit it with a match, telling Jesse it had been a gift from his brother, before he died.

“Oh. I’m sorry,” Jesse mumbled quietly.

“Thanks. It was a long time ago.”

The lamp gave off a soft, wavering light, and a steady stream of black smoke when it burned too brightly. The top of the hurricane glass was coated with a thick layer of soot. In the corner of the room an old radiator hissed, the only noise apart from the ancient creaking floorboards.

This is where it would be done. Brother Logan stood before him. He closed his eyes as Jesse reached out and unbuckled his belt. Suddenly Jesse’s mouth was on him, engulfing him. He ran his hand through Jesse’s hair, massaging his head in small circles. Jesse dove into the dark whorls of Logan’s crotch, trying to extract the essence of him, taking as much into his mouth as he could. He gagged at one point, rearing back with watering eyes and returning to the flesh in front of him.

They were naked then in the small bed. Jesse thought he saw Brother Logan spit into his hand, and suddenly he felt the warmth and wetness of his hands, opening him up, easing him into it.

Jesse hadn’t been sure that this was how it would happen. He looked ahead of him at the small gash in the headboard. The smooth dent was lighter than the surrounding wood, breaking up the curved line of the board. What had struck it? Jesse thought of odd objects – a wayward hammer, an aluminum baseball bat, the thin leg of a desk stool… and then there was Brother Logan, the fur of his chest brushing against Jesse’s back, silky, not wiry like he’d imagined. It was the sensation of something soft before the impaling. Snippets of prayers came to him.

This is my body, it will be given up for you… 

Logan wasn’t gentle at first, and the immense pain, followed by the shock of fear, caused Jesse to cry out. He was inside him, pushing through, tearing him apart. Logan did not let up.

Thy will be done, on earth as it is in heaven…

Jesse clenched his fists beneath the pillow and put his head down into the rough sheets. His body tensed and he pulled himself off of Brother Logan’s cock. The pain was too great, but he wanted it so badly.

Lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil… 

Turning around, he caught Logan dribbling more saliva into his hand, then rubbing it onto his cock, and Jesse’s ass. His smile was gone, replaced by the same earnest gaze that had first arrested Jesse’s attention. It was a look of concentration, a look of serious intent. Jesse turned to face the wall, eyeing the peeling plaster and a cobweb in the corner.

Pray for us sinners now and at the hour of our death… 

The pounding did not last long. Logan let out a small sigh with his final thrust, then quickly pulled out, furtively covering the blood and shit stains on his cock, hiding it from Jesse as he stepped into his plaid boxer shorts.

For the kingdom, the power, and the glory are yours, now and forever… 

Back on the small bed, Brother Logan kissed Jesse on the mouth. Their tongues met, darting at each other, flickering like the tips of flames. Jesse pulled away, and Brother Logan moved his kisses lower, traveling down along his smooth chest, over the pink nipples to the small, dark patch of pubic hair and Jesse’s circumcised erection.

He outlined the cock with his tongue, then took it all in. Jesse’s head went back, his body involuntarily pushing itself deeper into Brother Logan’s mouth. He, too, came quickly. Brother Logan rested his head on Jesse’s thigh, looking through the mound of hair and cock to Jesse’s chin, pointed upward at the ceiling. In the far corner of the room the radiator sputtered, releasing its pressure in a series of short hisses.

Brother Logan suddenly spoke, his tone markedly altered. “We have to keep this secret, no one can ever know.” Stern yet pleading, trapped by his own words and the world outside the tiny bedroom.

Jesse understood, not in a childlike trusting way, but in his own head he knew that to tell anyone would ruin what they had. Not only that, it would endanger the chance for them to do it again. Already he couldn’t see beyond a time when Brother Logan was not his sole passion, his only real inspiration.

Nothing more was said. None of Jesse’s questions were answered; none of them had been asked. He hadn’t known how to ask them. Silence seemed easier, and acquiescence was the province of adults. Jesse had felt older since he was a child.

They got dressed in the hushed quiet of fallen dusk. Outside it was dark. A late Autumn rain was clinging to the tree leaves, tearing the very last of them from their hold and pulling them down. In the wind, brittle twigs broke, shriveled berries were plucked from their perch, and everything was falling from the sky.

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Beneath the steaming showerhead, Jesse scrubbed himself clean, unaware of the bit of blood that ran down his legs. He took his time, slowly lathering himself and remembering Brother Logan inside of him, then himself in Brother Logan’s mouth, and the feeling of someone swallowing his semen, sucking it out of him and draining the drops that usually fell on his own stomach.

This, then, is love. Giving up oneself willingly.

He felt like a grown-up, the only moment of doubt coming when he sat down on the toilet. A sharp, burning pain so intense he immediately started sweating, his eyes glazing over with tears. He held it in at first, but at length expelled everything. It hurt to wipe himself, but he forced his way through it. In the toilet, ribbons of blood flowed outward from his stool. He grimaced, then flushed it away.

Even so, it had been worth it – worth all of it.

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On Thanksgiving morning, Mrs. Crawford swept into the boys’ bedroom, gently shaking Jesse and John until they were awake. “Come on Jesse, we’ll be eating soon. And I need a little help.” The phone rang and Mrs. Crawford ran out into the hallway. Jesse heard her polite, muffled replies, picking out his name and wondering if it was Brother Logan. He heard the phone being hung up, then his mother came back into the room. “Jesse, that was Mrs. Olin. They need some milk, just a cup I think. Elise is on her way over – can you get it ready for her?”

Jesse groaned. “Mom, I’m not showered. I just got up.”

“Thanks Jesse,” and she was gone.

John turned over and signed to Jesse, “What? What happened?”

Jesse waved him off, pulling on a sweatshirt and trying to tame a patch of unruly bed hair. “Screw it,” he muttered to the mirror.

Downstairs he opened the front door before Elise had a chance to ring the bell. She stood on the front step looking out toward the street. “Hey,” he said. “Come on in.”

She had been to Jesse’s countless times, but never felt completely comfortable there. Something about the family was odd. It wasn’t just that they had a deaf son, nor could it be said that Elise’s family was any closer to normal – it was something else. A ‘hollowness’ was how she tried to describe it once. All the hardwood floors, the empty echoes of footsteps, and Mr. and Mrs. Crawford, always kind and polite, always engaging and talkative with Elise’s parents, but never quite the same with the children. Though they doted on John, for necessary reasons, they remained somehow distant. Their children were part of what they were supposed to do. Elise had never witnessed them act in any way unkind or cruel, but in Jesse she sensed something missing.

“Do you want the whole carton? Or what should I put it in?” Jesse asked in the kitchen. A savory smell of herbs filled the space, and Elise noticed the turkey under a mound of foil on the counter.

“Oh shoot, I forgot the measuring cup. Do you have a glass or something I can borrow? My mother is making a cake at the last minute – something about not having enough dessert. Like we need ten things for six people.”

“Hey, we have an entire twenty pound bird for the four of us.”

“Aunt Ellen isn’t coming?”

“No. Better offer I guess,” he joked.

He wanted to tell her about Brother Logan, but he wasn’t sure. She thanked him for the milk, then hurried through the light rain to her home, spilling a bit of it on the way. There was just enough for the cake. Her mother was grateful.

The rainy Thanksgiving holiday passed, and the long weekend went by quickly. Jesse recounted his time with Brother Logan, going over the events in detail, slowing down the moments he wanted to savor, glossing over the disturbing parts with a vague, dismissive unease. In church that week he watched for him, but he was not there. The confessional was closed, the light neither red nor green, only dark. Father Daemon made no mention of him, and Jesse did not wait around after mass. When Brother Logan called the house that night, part of Jesse was surprised, but mostly he was relieved.

“Jesse, hello, how are you?” Brother Logan asked.

“Good. Glad you called,” he said, smiling a little. “Didn’t see you at church today.”

“Are your parents there?”

“Umm, yeah. I mean, they’re upstairs, not right here. Why?”

“And you haven’t told anyone? About us?”

“No.” Jesse was somewhat hurt. “I told you. I’m not dumb, or a kid.”

“I know, I’m sorry. You’re not… How are you? I’ve been thinking about you.”

It was what Jesse needed to hear. He closed his eyes, releasing a sigh of worry and suddenly foolish regret. “I’m fine,” he said, then, in a lower tone, “I’ve thought about you too.”

There was static on the phone, but they were both there. Jesse thrilled at the connection. He assumed Brother Logan was feeling it too, and wasn’t entirely wrong.

“Do you have time this week for another practice?” Jesse ventured. Brother Logan let out a sigh, then paused.

“Yes. Wednesday afternoon. Father Daemon will be on a retreat.”

Jesse didn’t say anything.

“Are you sure?” Brother Logan asked.

After a moment Jesse answered, “Yeah. See you then.”

He hung up the phone.

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“I told Father Daemon I would help out at the church after school, with their renovation stuff,” Jesse announced at dinner the next day.

“Oh, that’s great,” Mr. Crawford said through a mouthful of potatoes.

“What would you be doing?” his mother asked.

“It’s volunteering… it’ll look good on my transcript for college,” he added.

“Good for you, sport,” Mr. Crawford finished.

He was growing away from them, and their exchanges, though never extensive, nor very emotional, were pointed enough lately that any sort of excitement or interest Jesse showed was met with easy assent, if not outright approval.

“You’ll have to bring John,” his mother added, exerting one final bit of control.

“What? Why?”

John was eating his dinner without looking up, attempting to wrangle a decent portion of peas onto his fork. Frustrated, he started to jab at them.

“I have meetings for the next three weeks, you know that,” Mrs. Crawford replied in her matter-of-fact way. Jesse recognized the tone, and knew it would not be changed.

He made one weak attempt. “John can be alone for a few hours,” he began, wondering if this was indeed the time they would agree.

“No, he’s ten years old,” his mother immediately answered.

Jesse went on silently picking at the last of his dinner while formulating a way around watching John. He looked over at his baby brother, fighting with his peas and unaware of Jesse’s resentful gaze. It wouldn’t be difficult. John was easily manipulated most of the time. Jesse would find a way.

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He didn’t wait for Elise to walk home with him on Wednesday. John would return from school an hour after him, so Jesse hurried into the shower. It was one of his favorite parts of the day – alone in the house while Mr. and Mrs. Crawford were at work and John was still at school. He thought briefly of masturbating, but decided to wait. Toweling himself off, he looked into the bathroom mirror. A blurry vision of his face showed through a cloudy film of condensation. He wiped it off with his towel, studying his body and trying to see it through Brother Logan’s eyes. He turned around and admired his backside, spreading himself open and straining to see what he looked like.

With the towel around his waist, he walked to the bedroom. The sun slanted through the window – bright white through the leafless trees. Jesse laid back on the bed, hands behind his head, ankles crossed, staring at the crucifix.

Father forgive me, for I have sinned…

He got up and pulled on his clothes.

John had only been home a short time before Jesse whisked him back out. They walked briskly to St. Ann’s. “Mom said you have to come with me to practice, but you can just wait in the back of the church,” Jesse signed. “It won’t take long. Just don’t tell them.” He started to walk away. “And don’t go anywhere else,” he signed forcefully. John agreed. He had a bag of cars, and the long aisles of the church made good race tracks. Jesse took a final glance at his younger brother, down on his hands and knees, pushing a small car beneath the pews.

Behind the church, Jesse trotted across the small lot. It was windy and cold, and he had left his jacket with John. He put his hands in his pockets, driving them down and cupping his balls for warmth. Brother Logan wore a sheepish smile as he let Jesse in. Once the door was closed, Jesse attacked him, darting his tongue into his mouth. Brother Logan held him close, running his hands over his back, then around his butt, pulling Jesse into him.

They sealed their mouths together, then exchanged deep breaths – Jesse inhaled as Brother Logan exhaled – they were one then. Light-headed and dizzy with oxygen deprivation, Jesse pulled back, raising his shirt over his head – then Logan’s hands over his chest, Logan’s mouth and teeth on his nipples, Logan leading then following him into the bedroom.

Thrown face-down onto the bed to the harsh scraping of metal against wood, Jesse unbuttoned his pants just as Logan pulled them off. His bare ass felt the cool rush of air, then his cock rubbed the bed sheets, thrusting against the mattress, fucking it while Logan watched, rapt and unable to stop himself. In one swift motion, Logan spread Jesse’s legs open, then probed the boy with his tongue. Jesse squirmed, unaccustomed to the sensation, not knowing whether to laugh or cry out in joy at the pleasure of it. He squeezed, clenching his hole shut, but Logan was relentless. Pulling the boy onto his haunches, Logan spread him open with his hands, then delved into the hole with his tongue again. Jesse held onto his erection, ejaculating in furious spasms, his body bucking beneath Logan’s relentless touch, shooting the thick cream onto the bed and collapsing on it. He lay there listening to Logan rub his own cock, faster and faster before the guttural moan, the splashes of warm, runny semen on his back and butt. He waited for Brother Logan’s kiss, but it didn’t come. Instead, Logan handed him a towel, and the boy cleaned himself off.

“I have to go,” he announced when dressed again. “My brother is waiting. Thanks for the lesson,” he grinned mischievously.

“Oh, sure,” Brother Logan laughed, then stared at Jesse seriously. “Anytime… Really, anytime.” He kissed Jesse finally, knowing then how badly the boy wanted it, and suddenly recalling the importance of a kiss. “Hey, come here,” he said as Jesse was turning away. He folded him tightly in his arms before letting go. Jesse left him like that, standing alone, naked, hands awkwardly covering his flaccid penis.

Outside, the wind quickly chilled his damp t-shirt. Jesse hastened into the church and ran his hands through his hair. John was still waiting in the back, pushing two cars along the wooden rail of one of the pews. He looked annoyed as Jesse rushed down the long aisle. “That took forever,” he signed.

“Sorry,” Jesse mouthed, picking up his backpack and walking out the door of the church. “We were practicing for Christmas mass. Just be glad you don’t have to serve yet,” he signed.  John was already ahead of him.

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Elise and her family did not celebrate Christmas. They shared a relaxed Hanukah tradition, exchanging a number of smaller gifts, but that wasn’t their big holiday. December was spent accommodating the bombast of the rest of the town. Another reason she got on so well with Jesse was his disinterest and absolute apathy regarding the whole Christmas season.

She waited for him after school. They had missed each other more than usual the past few weeks – Jesse busy with basketball and Elise staying home with the flu for a stretch.

“I wasn’t sure, but I decided to wait, hoping the rain might let up,” she said as he joined her on the path home. A steady light drizzle fell, coating them both with a fine film of gray water droplets. Neither of them said more until they were within sight of St. Ann’s, and the corner where Elise turned home.

“Any plans for the holiday vacation?” Jesse asked. Elise looked upward, the icy mist stinging her eyes, and the sky growing ever darker.

“Not really. Mom was talking about a trip to Florida, but I don’t think Dad wants to go. What about you?”

“No, nothing special. Probably babysitting John.”

They were almost at the corner.

“Hey,” Elise slowed her pace, “Do you ever resent that?”

Jesse slowed with her. “Watching  John?”

“Well, the whole thing.”

He knew how much Elise liked John. She had once defended him to a group of kids ridiculing him behind his back. John didn’t know, and Elise never explained, but Jesse had seen.

“At first, maybe a little. Not now, not anymore. He’ll have it hard enough.”

“Do you ever resent your parents? They seemed to handle it well, both of you, at least from what I could see. But I don’t know…”

“They did their best, I think,” he interrupted. Elise knew not to press. The two of them stood at the corner. Across the street was St. Ann’s, rising into the low clouds, hiding the brighter bit of gray sky that obscured the spot where the sun should be.

“Well, see you tomorrow,” Elise said before walking away.

Jesse crossed the street towards his house.

“Hey,” Elise called, her voice bouncing off the church, “Call me, if you want.” She ran the rest of the way home.

As he passed St. Ann’s, he looked back towards the rectory. Father Daemon’s black Dodge sat in the parking lot. Jesse continued on, head bowed, pelted by drops of ice. A menacing sky was opening up. Sleet and freezing rain, driven by a bitter wind, were coming down heavily by the time Jesse ducked into the house.

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“I’ll be back by eight,” Mrs. Crawford explained, first out loud, then by signing to John. “Dinner is all ready – just heat it up. Your father should be home after me.” She rushed into the bathroom to apply lipstick. “Jesse,” she said confidentially, smacking her lips together, “Make sure he works on his report. No T.V. until he does it. Please.” He nodded and went back upstairs. He listened to his mother shuffling below. There would be a few hours when he and John were alone.

Though he was never sentimental about Christmas or exchanging gifts, he wanted to give something to Brother Logan. His eyes scanned the messy bedroom. A rumpled t-shirt hung half-way over the clock, hiding the red numbers on its face. Jesse pulled it off. “4:37 PM” it read.

The bureau the boys shared had a thin top drawer. John could not yet reach it, and by default it had become Jesse’s own private storage area. He didn’t keep his truly secret mementos there, but a few birthday cards, academic certificates, some small basketball trophies, and a collection of religious items were all shoved into the space. A gold rosary, a gift from his first communion, was pushed into the back corner, while a cloth scapular, with its faded picture of the Sacred Heart of Jesus and promise “Whoever wears this at the time of their death shall be saved from the eternal fires of Hell” was wrapped around a few laminated prayer cards, gifts from his Grandmother.

He retrieved the rosary, running the beads through his hands, trying to remember what prayer each bead represented. This would be his gift to Brother Logan. He could think of nothing else.

“Jesse, I’m going,” his mother yelled up the staircase.

“Okay,” he said, not certain that she heard him. The door closed and he listened as John turned on the television.

Inside his desk, Jesse rummaged for a box for the rosary. There was a plastic one that once housed a watch, but it seemed improper. He picked through dirty pennies, broken pencils, and a cigar box of baseball cards. The back of the drawer was pitch black. As he switched on a light, Jesse felt along the rough wooden drawer bottom, bringing forth first a rusty matchbox car (one of his father’s childhood toys), and then a tiny bag of worn red velvet. Inside the bag was a miniature set of playing cards, featuring an ornate ivy pattern and bordered by a band of dull bronze.

Jesse took the cards and placed them back inside the drawer. He got up from the desk, picked up the rosary, dangled it over the open bag, and dropped it in. It fit perfectly. He pulled the two strings and the pouch puckered shut.

Downstairs, John sat before the television set, intently reading the white Closed Captioning lettering that scrolled across the bottom of a cartoon. Jesse stepped in front of him. “I have to run out for a minute,” he signed.

“Where?” John asked. Jesse could tell he was going to be difficult.

“Just out,” he signed, trying to be patient.

“Can I come?”

“No. I’ll just be a second.”

“I want to go,” John signed, standing up. It was now a challenge. Jesse was tired of it.

“No. Stay here. I’ll be right back.”

John grabbed his arm as he headed to the door. “I’ll tell,” he signed with a triumphant, bratty smile. Jesse turned around, stared at him sadly, and shrugged. John had never seen his brother about to cry. Confused, he sat back down in front of the television. Jesse walked out of the house.

The rain and sleet had stopped, and only a cruel wind remained. The walk to St. Ann’s seemed longer, fighting the wind and the dark, and the nagging thought of John left alone. Jesse almost turned back, but quickened his pace instead. Without a coat, the wind bit at him, driving through his untucked shirt, ensnaring his wrists and ankles, and wearing away at his ears and nose. It was a damp cold, the worst kind, but he pushed through it for the chance to see Brother Logan.

St. Ann’s church was dark, wet with the dreary weather. If Father Daemon’s black Dodge Diplomat was there, Jesse had decided not to take the chance. Nearing the rectory, he saw the car in the parking lot. Disappointed and cold, he ducked into the covered doorway of the church, hidden in shadow and shielded from the wind. Suddenly struck by the helplessness of his situation, he took a few angry steps towards the rectory, then stopped. He couldn’t do it, not tonight.

Feeling for the rosary in his pocket, he willed that Brother Logan would come out. The unforgiving wind swept past; night had arrived early. But Jesse wasn’t certain. Peeking around the corner, he eyed the old Dodge again and gave up.

When he got home, John was still in front of the television. Jesse gave him a quick sign of ‘Thanks’ then trudged upstairs. He could not eat.

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Elise was not on the corner when he passed St. Ann’s the next morning. He had purposely avoided looking back at the rectory, not wanting to see Father Daemon’s car there and be reminded of the previous night. He waited for a bit, then headed to school alone. It was a clear December day, with holiday tinsel sparkling garishly in the harsh sunlight, and the pathetic sight of exposed extension cords, unforgiven by the barren trees.

In his pocket the rosary pouch was warm against his thigh. Its presence there calmed him, a talisman of the – what? – Love? – Faith? – whatever it was that he felt for Brother Logan. Throughout the day he would delve into his pocket for it, and always the same reassurance. He wondered if Brother Logan was thinking about him at those moments, if he had the same presence in his life. It made him uneasy, the doubt, but it was also thrilling. To have someone in the world that had so permeated his existence, that could have him risk everything and that willingly, was an intoxicating exhilaration. He rode on that headiness as the day dwindled, and it brought him back to the rectory on his way home from school.

The sun had given way to a high layer of clouds. There was no trace of blue in the sky. Father Daemon’s car was gone. He might still be there, but Jesse had no choice now. The idea of Brother Logan impelled him, and the rosary, hot in his pants, drove him on. Determined, he stood on the steps of the rectory door, pushing the ragged buzzer and knocking three times.

“Jesse, why are you…?” Brother Logan stammered before Jesse interrupted.

“Sorry, for not calling or something. I was on my way home and had a Christmas gift for you,” and he reached into his pocket to retrieve the rosary. The velvet pouch was not coming out easily, and Jesse had to use both his hands to extract it – one to hold his pocket open, the other to pull the bag out. Even as he did so, the pouch stuck to the lining, pulling it inside out and dropping a couple of coins and a tissue onto the ground.

“Wait, not here,” Brother Logan said, looking past Jesse and around the lot. He came out and closed the door behind him. “Let’s go into the church. Father Daemon will be back soon. We can say we’re practicing if anyone asks.” He actually didn’t know what to say if anyone was there, and Jesse’s appearance had set him off-balance. He had forgotten that the other person was always an unknown, that Jesse might not be wholly agreeable to terms and conditions, and that attraction and lust were too often confused with affection and love. And yet he did feel something for this boy, something that maybe he hadn’t felt with others, but how could he know so soon? And why even pursue the possibility? Brother Logan held the door for Jesse and they walked into the church together.

A nativity scene had been set up on the left side of the altar over a large square of gaudy green astroturf. Wooden figures representing Mary and Joseph stood behind an empty manger, surrounded by a collection of wooden lambs and other animals, while an angel was suspended above, twisting slightly on a wire. The baby Jesus figure would be added on Christmas eve. From a set of speakers on each side of the altar, Christmas music was being played for anyone who wanted to stop by and pray before the nativity.

They stood there for a moment, neither speaking. For Jesse it was enough just to be near him, to look at him and wonder at the both of them together. The blueness of his eyes was perpetually startling – not the watery pale color of a weak sky, but a deeper hue, imbued by indigo, tempered by sapphire, and tinged with cobalt.

“Here,” he said softly, handing Brother Logan the velvet bag. “Merry Christmas.”

A song Jesse had sung as a child was playing in the background.

Come they told me, pa rum pum pum pum
A newborn King to see, pa rum pum pum pum


Our finest gifts we bring, pa rum pum pum pum
To lay before the King, pa rum pum pum pum,
rum pum pum pum, rum pum pum pum,


So to honor Him, pa rum pum pum pum,
When we come.

Brother Logan opened his palm and accepted the gift. He worked two fingers into the pouch, opening it up and pulling out the rosary. A sad, confused smile formed, his lips wavered, and Jesse had to look away briefly. 

Baby Jesus, pa rum pum pum pum
I am a poor boy too, pa rum pum pum pum.


I have no gift to bring, pa rum pum pum pum
That’s fit to give the King, pa rum pum pum pum,
rum pum pum pum, rum pum pum pum.
 

“You probably have the grand deluxe version of a rosary, but it’s the only religious thing I could think of to give, and maybe you don’t have a gold one?”

Brother Logan was touched. “No, you keep this,” he said, pushing it back towards Jesse. “To pray.”

“No, really,” Jesse insisted. “I don’t do much praying… I want you to have it. I have nothing else to give.” Their hands touched, the rosary between their fingers. 

Shall I play for you, pa rum pum pum pum,
On my drum?


Mary nodded, pa rum pum pum pum
The ox and lamb kept time, pa rum pum pum pum.


I played my drum for Him, pa rum pum pum pum
I played my best for Him, pa rum pum pum pum,
rum pum pum pum, rum pum pum pum.

Jesse knelt before him. He bowed his head and looked upon the scuffed mounds of Brother Logan’s shoes. Their tattered condition made Jesse sad. He reached up and hugged him. Brother Logan bent over and hugged him back.

Then He smiled at me, pa rum pum pum pum
Me and my drum.

The opening minor chords of ‘God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen’ broke their reverie. Jesse got up, his tall frame wispy and ungainly next to Brother Logan’s compact form, his coiled muscles and broad, firm shoulders.

“Thank you, Jesse.” Brother Logan’s eyes turned down. He couldn’t bring himself to look at the boy in front of him. What had he done to him? Did the boy even know? And would he do it again? His eyes watered.

“It’s really nothing. I was almost embarrassed to give it to you, but since you’re into the church and everything…” Jesse chuckled a little, knowing how foolish he sounded, and keenly aware that it was a cute thing to say. Logan kissed him through his laughter, and then nothing was funny.

A distant clicking – the closing of a door – sounded above the Christmas music. Someone had entered the church. Jesse looked to Brother Logan, whose face was stricken with panic before it eased into a questionably serene expression. He pushed the rosary into his pocket, dropping the velvet pouch. The footsteps were coming from the other entrance and Father Daemon’s silhouette appeared in the far doorway.

“Brother Logan?” he called.

“Oh, hello Father. I was just going over the advent mass with Jesse here.”

Father Daemon eyed Brother Logan and hesitated. Looking over at Jesse he saw the boy’s blank face and tried to discern anything out of place, any indication of something…inappropriate. On the contrary, the boy appeared bored and rather removed from the whole scene. Father Daemon turned his attention back to Brother Logan.

“He wanted some extra practice for when he serves this Sunday,” Logan said smoothly.

Jesse wasn’t bothered by the ease with which he lied; he only thought about the fact that Brother Logan had been aware of when he was serving next. So Jesse did matter then.

“Very good, very good,” Father Daemon said. “It’s basically the same, a few minor changes is all,” he continued dismissively. “I’ll leave you to it. See you on Sunday, Jesse.” Father Daemon disappeared the way he had come.

“You’d better go,” Brother Logan said sternly.

“Sure, I have to get home anyway,” Jesse said, pretending not to notice the chilly tone. He walked out of the church.

Brother Logan bent over to pick up the rosary pouch. He held it in his hand, running his finger over the thin velvet, worn bare in spots and discolored with age. Had Father Daemon seen?

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The blood-red bracts of countless poinsettias lined the marble façade behind Jesse as he took his seat to the right of Father Daemon on the altar. He was not as nervous this time, even as he almost tripped on his cassock going up the three steps. The church was getting fuller – it would be like this until Christmas Eve, when everyone showed, holy for one night in their finest attire.

Jesse studied the crowd. Brother Logan had not been in the back, nor was he in the confessional. He searched for him behind the rows of people, hoping he was there directing them to seats or preparing to come up for the Eucharist.

High in the back of the church, the organ renovation continued. Each week a little more had been done, the scaffolding continually rearranging itself and the drop-cloths shifting discernibly. It wouldn’t be ready in time for Christmas, Father Daemon had explained earlier, but maybe by Easter it would be heard again. In the meantime, the small organ that had been plugged in on the altar made its pitiful sound, barely heard at the back of the church.

Jesse sat behind the nativity scene. He could see the back of the manger. The word “Xmas” had been spray-painted across it in white, destroying any sense of symbolism. He had not heard from Brother Logan since he dropped off the rosary, and he wondered if he’d done something wrong. Father Daemon hadn’t seemed concerned when he found them in the church. The ruse was believable, and Jesse was adept at appearing nonchalant, the key to successfully fooling people. Maybe it was a stupid present. A rosary for a clergyman? He couldn’t decide.

He thought of the moment that he got down on his knees and hugged Brother Logan. The side of his face had been against Logan’s crotch, his cheek must have brushed Logan’s cock, and his hands had cupped Logan’s butt. At the time it wasn’t erotic, but now it was giving Jesse an erection. He shifted uncomfortably in the stiff wooden chair.

The lector was almost finished with the second reading and it would soon be time to stand for the Gospel. Jesse thought of the baby Jesus, absent from the manger. He tried to remember what it looked like. The wooden figures of Mary and Joseph knelt before the empty spot. Jesse wondered if they had fucked, if Jesus hadn’t been the product of their lovemaking. Sex and religion seemed hopelessly intertwined sometimes, and he was forever fighting with his lack of faith. He had wanted to ask Brother Logan about it, but now that was mixed up too.

The organ played a weak introduction and the congregation sang ‘Alleluia’ as Father Daemon made his way to the pulpit.

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After church, the Crawfords drove the few blocks to their house. Elise Olin was walking her dog as they got out of the car.

“Hi Elise!” Mrs. Crawford shouted. “How’s your Mom?”

“She’s well. She said she had a nice time at dinner the other night.”

“Tell her I said hello,” Mrs. Crawford called, following John and Mr. Crawford inside.

Jesse went over to her. The sun was strong and, though the air was frigid, there was no wind. “Hey,” he said. “How’s Cooper?” and he bent down to rub the dog’s neck.

Elise watched him with her dog. He smiled and laughed when Cooper jumped up to lick his face. “Coop’s good. Still crazy. How’s all at the Crawford house?”

“Crazy too. Your parents were over for dinner the other night.”

“Yeah, I heard. Sorry I couldn’t be there,” she said sarcastically.

Jesse squinted into the sunlight, trying to see her face. She turned away, covering her nose with mittened hands. “Damn, it’s cold today,” she said, her breath coming out in a cloud.

“Well, tis the season,” Jesse answered. “But it is pretty bad. I’m going inside. See you Monday?”

“Yeah, sure. I’ll be here.”

Jesse jogged into the open garage. Elise called for Cooper and the two of them continued walking up the street until it was time to turn.

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He had wanted to call Brother Logan, but was afraid that Father Daemon might answer. Stopping by the rectory was not an option now. The church was busy with the fast approach of Christmas, and he had no reason to give if he and Brother Logan were discovered together again. He could do nothing but wait.

John was running excitedly around the house, playing another imaginary game, grunting and acting out surprise ambush deaths by invisible enemies. His grunts were not like those of other boys – the strange, shapeless sounds instead indicative of someone who has not heard himself since he was three years old.

From their bedroom, Jesse listened as his brother ran up and down the stairs. He was waiting for Mrs. Crawford to put a stop to the noise by finding John and leading him outside. One of the benefits to having a deaf sibling was that his parents often forgot that Jesse could still hear, resulting in a lot less yelling, as well as being privy to a lot of things he wasn’t supposed to know. It also meant that the only way to stop John from doing something was to physically go up to him and get his attention.

Jesse stood at the top of the stairs as John bounded up, catching him by surprise. He signed to keep it down while he was trying to study. John rolled his eyes and ran back downstairs as loud as ever. It was a battle Jesse always lost – fighting with a deaf brother about the noise level.

In the hallway, he picked up the phone and checked the dial tone, instantly ashamed of himself. Was this love then? Being driven to distraction, unbearable anticipation, and repeated, unjustified disappointment? He had tried to push Brother Logan from his mind, but the effort served merely to enforce the infatuation. He alternated from a giddy belief in a happy ending, certain that Brother Logan felt the same, to a hopeless despair of doubt that he even cared or thought about Jesse at all.

He’d had crushes before – on boys and girls – but none had ever seized him like this. It was invigorating, really, and for Jesse, who’d never felt passionate about anything, and who had in fact never truly cared about anyone, not even his own parents, it was a grand, terrifying, affirming jolt that jump-started a faith in humanity – maybe even a belief in something greater – a glimpse of a God whose existence he’d hitherto dismissed.

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Christmas came and went, and still no word from Brother Logan. Jesse spent the break moping around the house in-between the odd basketball practice and Sunday mass. Whenever he was out he would look for him, finding his visage briefly in the faces of similar strangers, his heart jumping each time – a delicious moment of panic and happiness, and the relentless let-down when the man proved false. So the last days of the year passed, Jesse in his feverish state, and Brother Logan – silent, absent, lost. When the first proper snowfall arrived, Jesse welcomed it, thankful for the hushed, drawn-out death knell that marked the onslaught of winter.

It fell steadily through the night, swelling the ground with its drifts, leveling the barren, the ugly, the fallen, and the dirty with its power of pristine transformation. John watched the snow come down, running from window to window to try to gauge its accumulation, while Jesse lurked upstairs, removed and unconcerned with ‘how much’ and ‘how high’ and ‘how fast’, as his brother relayed it all to him.

Closing the door to their bedroom, Jesse switched on a desk lamp and sat down in the hard, unforgiving chair. He opened his backpack and took out the thick book of Collected American essays, thumbing through to his reading assignment – an apt short story, ‘Silent Snow, Secret Snow’ written by Conrad Aiken.

Fine crystals of ice were thrown against the window; static tapping at the pane. Jesse skimmed through the story, not understanding it, searching vainly for a recognizable plot and giving up before he reached the end. He switched the lamp off. Through the window, the blue-gray night threw shaded luminescence into the room. The rest of the world was white.

There would be school tomorrow. They never cancelled it for the first snowstorm. John’s excitement was pointless.

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 To Be Continued…
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The Revelation ~ Not Quite A Feel-Good Holiday Tale ~ Part I

In sacrilegious honor of today’s Holiday Card, I present the annual posting of ‘The Revelation’. Though set during a holiday season, it’s not quite warm and fuzzy, but it’s got ‘The Little Drummer Boy’ in it, so… pa-rum-pum-pum-pum.

 

THE REVELATION

By Alan Bennett Ilagan

Staring at the body of Christ, Jesse Crawford jerked off beneath the basketball-covered sheets of his bed. In the burgeoning light of an early Sunday morning, the bronze patina of a crucifix held his gaze. He focused on the thin torso of the figure, and the space right below his navel. The smudged face, full of sorrow and anguish, did not betray pain, but the notion of hurt and suffering drove Jesse on, and he stroked faster.

Struggling with himself, he tried turning the image of Jesus into a woman. Squinting his sleepy eyes, he took blood from the thorns and painted the lips red. He gave the dark flowing locks a lighter tint, and softened the mouth and cheeks. That was as far as he got. The rest remained stubbornly male. The small, dark nipples, the smooth flat chest, the midsection that tapered into the teasing folds of cloth. One of the most revered symbols of the world was a half-dead, half-naked man, and it was to this image that Jesse furiously rubbed his cock.

His brother John slept quietly a few feet away, his breathing slow and measured. The red digital numbers of an alarm clock glowed between two twin beds, hovering in the air above the debris of two boys. It was just after seven o’clock. Jesse looked over at his brother. A mass of wavy brown hair was all that peeked out from the blankets. He looked back at Jesus. His hand slowed. It was all getting muddled together. He gave up and threw the covers off, still hard.

The bed let out a small groan as Jesse sat up. His legs hung over the side as he studied his brother. He wanted John to get up and share the dread of having to go to church in a few hours, and, later, of Jesse’s lesson. A flicker of resentment and quick guilt pulsed through him. It wasn’t John’s fault that Jesse was the first. The fear rose in him again. He pulled a pillow over his lap and kicked John’s bed. His little brother rolled over and looked at him.

“Why are you up so early?” John signed as he yawned.

Jesse shrugged. He was embarrassed to admit he was nervous. John hid his hands beneath the blankets and pulled them over his head. It was too early to get up. Jesse’s erection had gone down.

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He walked tentatively downstairs. Mr. Crawford was in the family room, his face hidden entirely by a mottled gray newspaper. The television droned on in the background, unwatched. Jesse’s mother must be in the upstairs bathroom. Jesse walked past his father and into the empty kitchen. A box of doughnuts was on the table and the smell of coffee filled the room. Sunlight streamed in through the slatted window blinds. Rows of shadow and light alternated along the patterned linoleum floor. Jesse sat down and watched the dust particles moving through the sunbeams. He opened the box of doughnuts, glanced in, and shut it. They would not help his hunger.

Mr. Crawford padded into the kitchen, wearing his bed slippers over dress socks. A crisp white shirt was tucked into his gray wool pants, and a diagonally-striped tie hung in a loose knot around his neck. He placed a hand on Jesse’s shoulder before going to the sink and washing his coffee cup.

“Ready for practice this week?” he asked. “Where’s John?”

Jesse didn’t answer.

“You’ll do fine,” Mr. Crawford murmured as he left the kitchen. Upstairs, a low buzzing indicated that Mrs. Crawford was now drying her hair. John’s sudden pounding down the stairs jolted Jesse from his empty zone. He reached for a jelly doughnut before John got to them.

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Outside on the sidewalk, Elise Olin passed the Crawford house with her dog, a thin dalmatian she had named Cooper. The creature skittishly veered off onto the neighbors’ lawns before scampering back to Elise’s side, repeating this action to her slight annoyance. Elise’s dark brown hair looked black in all but the strongest light, and she kept it tied back in a simple braided ponytail for as long as anyone could remember. A shiny, unwavering fringe of bangs veiled a rather high forehead. Elise was not pretty yet, but she might be one day.

The sunny Sunday morning had been glorious for a walk. Turned out in a plaid pea coat, Elise closed her eyes and took in the morning sun. Soon the warmth would disappear with the coming winter. She breathed in deeply, trying to find some last bit of summer, but it was already gone. Fall was here. The Crawford house was behind her now, and she relaxed.

Rounding the corner onto her street, Elise walked beneath the shadows of a tall line of maple trees, their leaves fluttering and shuddering in the first flush of Fall. This street was cooler than Jesse’s, perpetually in the dim recesses of light. The trees were older, and the houses closer together. The dog stayed nearer to her here, as if calmer and more secure, with less of a need to act out. Elise hesitated at the steps to her house, unwilling to let go of the Sunday solitude. As the dog promptly laid down upon her feet, Elise’s mouth turned up in the slightest of smiles.

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St. Ann’s church sent up her gray Gothic spires a few blocks from the Crawford house. Erected in 1917, a sturdy stone edifice comprised the front of the church – its base a bulky set of enormous concrete blocks. Upon close viewing, tiny fissures could be seen snaking their way through the walls, but the structure was strong.

The pale, putty-colored monolith was interspersed with narrow strained-glass windows, high and unreachable – intricately-color-blocked renderings of obscure saints, faded and dull with grime in the light of day. Layers of pigeon droppings were caked on the lower window ledges like dried pools of dripping marble. The back of the church was covered with a thick growth of Boston ivy. In the winter the scars showed more clearly on the façade – the vine had attached itself to the stone and was slowly and insidiously pulling off the face of the church. And still, the strength of the building had not been compromised.

A much smaller stone building was hidden behind the church, forever in the shadow cast by the tall steeple. This was the rectory, which housed the priests. Though a few minor renovations had been made inside the priests’ quarters, the exterior of both the rectory and the church had remained largely the same since 1917. Behind the rectory was a small cemetery, cloaked by a few ancient maple trees.

Surrounding the grounds was a mostly Polish population of families and homes that radiated outward for a few blocks, before giving way to a larger European background. Jesse’s family used to walk to Sunday services when the boys were quite young. Now they took the car.

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Both of the giant entrance doors were propped open for Mass, the faded wood of which were buttressed by bands of dark steel, indented by the pounding of mallets or hammers many years ago. The Crawford family walked through them absently. John no longer marveled at the immense frame, looking instead for the holy water font. He reached up and put his hand into the chilly water, them made a careful sign of the cross, wiping the smudge of water from his forehead with his other hand. Mrs. Crawford put her arm around him and led the family into the church.

Paint-splattered scaffolding had been assembled on both sides of the great hall, as well as over the back entrance, above which the old organ stood on a second floor balcony. The Crawford family paused there, the sense of space inspiring a fleeting hush. An ongoing renovation was underway, the main goal of which was to restore the pipe organ to its former glory. Patrons had been called upon to “give until it hurts” in recent weeks, but the project was still in danger of running beyond its allotted schedule. Mr. Crawford walked forward to the family’s usual pew near the front of the church.

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Midway through the mass, Father Daemon stood for his homily, eyeing the organ above the rows of people. He didn’t like asking for money, but it was a large part of his job now. It didn’t ease his conscience any when he worked it into the sermon.

“As you heard in the Gospel, today’s lesson is, at its heart, one of faith – an unyielding faith in God, no matter what the sacrifices or hardships that God asks us to make. It is what some might call a blind faith.”

Father Daemon railed on this theme for some time. It was one of his favorite sermons, made more powerful in its abstract theory and blind belief – an idea that realists didn’t bother to refute, and science largely ignored. This re-affirmed him, and he mostly believed it did the same for his congregation. He returned to its essence whenever he doubted himself.

“And so we ask you to have faith in our own church, as we undergo our renovation,” he said with a smile, motioning to the organ that loomed over the last few pews. “As you know, our organ has been chosen as a restoration project, and with your generous help we hope to have it fill this great church with glorious music once again.” A small spattering of applause grew into a hearty wake-up for those who were asleep.

Jesse turned around, straining to see the dusty, cloth-covered mass of pipes and wood that constituted the once-grand organ. He snickered a little and, nudging John, rolled his eyes.

Father Daemon continued, “And in other news, we have a new addition to our clerical staff. I’d like to formally introduce Brother Logan, who will be helping us out for the next few months, and it is certainly needed right now, particularly given Monsignor’s recent illness. Brother Logan comes to us directly from Rome, where he has been on sabbatical for the last year. Please join me in welcoming him to our church, and I’m sure he will be an excellent addition.” Father Daemon extended his open hand to indicate the man standing unobtrusively beside the confessional. The man, dressed all in black, gave a small wave and smiled. Jesse leaned forward and saw his bright blue eyes take him in. Turning to John, he rolled his eyes again, but then looked back at the man, who also looked back at him. John nudged him, but he waved him off. He didn’t feel like explaining it.

At communion, Brother Logan made his way up to the altar to help distribute the gifts. Jesse watched him closely, hoping to catch his blue eyes again, and trying to hide his interest from his family. Logan looked too young to be a priest, but maybe a Brother was not yet a priest, or maybe just a priest-in-training. He didn’t know. Watching him as he executed his motions was all that mattered now. His actions were earnest and grave, and this serious demeanor seemed sad and lonely. His dark hair was cut in the sharp closely-cropped military style, probably a leftover from an army stint, Jesse guessed.

Though he fought the thought, Jesse found him handsome. His mind raced to an image of Brother Logan naked, and he strained to find any outline of his body through the black shirt and pants he wore. Jesse bowed his head and closed his eyes. He couldn’t stop it. The image of Brother Logan filled his head. He saw him taking off his pants. He tried inserting a woman in the scene. He watched Brother Logan kiss her, and then he was kissing Jesse, and then he was fucking her, and then he was fucking Jesse, and Jesse didn’t know how it would feel, but he wanted to feel it. The bells rang, and he remembered his lesson later that day. He shuffled his feet, willing his erection away before the lines for communion began.

After mass, the Crawford family filed out of the church with the rest of the parishioners. Father Daemon greeted them warmly, shaking their hands and mentioning that he’d see Jesse for practice that evening. John walked by without shaking the priest’s hand, already heading impatiently for the car.

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“What time is your altar boy practice?” Mrs. Crawford asked after the family returned home.

“Seven o’clock,” Jesse mumbled, annoyed.

“Do you want a ride?”

“No. I’ll walk.”

“You sure?”

“Yeah.”

Mrs. Crawford stepped past Jesse and headed upstairs to change. John was watching the close-captioned television with their father as Jesse sat down alone in the kitchen. The light had changed and the sun had moved. Someone, probably John, had left the doughnut box half-open. Jesse shut it, but the top popped back up. He didn’t bother again; doughnuts weren’t good the next day anyway. There was time for a nap, or he could start his homework. The nap sounded better, but he picked up his backpack in the hallway as he went upstairs.

Dropping it at the foot of his bed, he untucked his shirt and laid down. On the ceiling he traced the faint outlines of a group of glow-in-the-dark stars that no longer emitted any residual light. During the day they were the palest yellowish-green in color. Jesse found the one that was missing two of its points, torn off in the giddy first rush of putting them up. He closed his eyes, secure that John would wake him soon enough.

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The doors to the church were closed when Jesse arrived a few minutes before seven, but at his tentative pull they proved unlocked, opening with surprising ease despite their great size. Upon entering, Jesse saw that the grand hall was empty. It seemed bigger and cavernous, and somehow colder. Without the lights on it felt spooky – shadows loomed behind statues, while peaceful stone faces gained menace in the dark. There was a different kind of quiet, born out of darkness and mystery.

The dilapidated organ stood beneath dusty shrouds, hovering over the back of the church like an ominous monster, hidden in the background, waiting to pounce. A large marble façade backed the altar. Statues of Jesus, Mary, and some other Saint he didn’t know loomed high above them. There was a walkway behind the structure, with a few hidden closets that stored candles and holders and extra chairs.

Jesse walked down the side aisle towards the front of the church. At the West entrance, he saw a shadow move along the floor and approach. He stiffened and stood up straight, expecting Father Daemon. Instead, Brother Logan appeared. Jesse felt a chilly thrill, coloring at his thoughts of that morning. They both spoke at once.

“Hi, I’m looking for…”

“You must be…”

“Sorry…”

“Jesse…” Brother Logan put up his hand. “You go first,” he laughed.

“I’m here to see Father for an altar boy lesson.”

It was the boy from that morning’s mass, the tall one in the front row. “Yes, I thought so. Good. He asked me to do it, your lesson. He was called out. I’m Brother Logan. So, you’ve never served mass before?” Brother Logan spoke quickly, breathlessly. He was a little shorter than Jesse, and the pale skin of his scalp showed through his short, dark hair. His body was bulkier up close, more substantial, matching his full lips. “Let’s get some light in here first,” he said, patting Jesse on the arm as he passed him, locating a row of switches behind the entrance door. Jesse breathed in as he walked by, trying to locate some sense of what he smelled like, but the air was blank. Spotlights flooded the altar area as the clicking of switches echoed throughout the church.

‘This place, this moment… this is holy,’ Jesse thought. He didn’t know if it was the quiet of the church or the company, or both. As the lights came on, he could study the nape of Brother Logan’s neck. Two broad strokes of dark downy hair disappeared into the high collar. Jesse wondered if he had a hairy chest. As he turned around, he caught Jesse staring.

They looked at one another just long enough to have it mean something. Jesse gazed into his watery blue eyes, sparkling and shining of their own accord, and was transfixed by the benevolence of his smile, directed only at him, or maybe not, but it had to be, didn’t it?

Brother Logan walked to the center of the church, in front of the main altar. Jesse followed, watching his deliberate manner of walking and attempting again to gain a small note of what he smelled like, some bit of aftershave or soap or laundry detergent, but still he found nothing.

“How old are you?” Brother Logan suddenly asked.

“Thirteen. Why?”

“Oh, you carry yourself like you were older.”

Jesse tried to stifle a smile. “I’m just tall,” he said sheepishly.

As he guided Jesse through the Mass, Brother Logan felt a familiar suppressed stirring. He tried to think back to when he was thirteen. There were feelings then. A few wet dreams. A strange sensation he felt when around certain men showering in the gym or working out. Then his long dry spell of self-imposed sterility. The church was a way out of it, his answer to a gnawing ache, where solitude and quiet were accepted and expected.

Brother Logan watched Jesse as he approached the altar, his tall, slim figure lost in an oversize t-shirt and deep blue jeans. Wavy, chestnut-hued hair was brushed haphazardly forward over his forehead and curled around his ears.

“All right, let’s walk through it. That’s the only way I learned it.”

“You were an altar boy?” Jesse asked.

“Many years ago,” Brother Logan laughed. “But I started a lot younger than you.”

“And you still wanted to become a priest after this?”

Another laugh. “Well, actually, no. I went into the army after school, and after that I started my training for the priesthood.” The smile left his face. “So, let’s go to the entrance and walk through it now.”

Jesse felt silly as he and Brother Logan walked in together, side by side, as he would do in a few weeks, yet there was something else to their walking together – a sense of union, a shared, secret bond between the two of them alone, one that might give strength and nourishment and sustenance in lonelier times. It was a moment he saw himself remembering many years in the future.

“The altar boys will bow with Father in front of the altar, then go up to your seats,” he explained. The motions of Mass seemed much smaller now, quicker and easier than the drawn-out sequence that constituted previous Sunday mornings. Brother Logan made it sound simple. With his guidance and easy explanations, Jesse’s worry faded. In his company, Jesse felt empowered, almost excited about being a part of this piece of church. It was a happiness he equated with faith, a faith whose existence he continually doubted. Was having faith in Brother Logan the same as having faith in his religion? He hoped so.

Jesse’s stomach growled. He hadn’t eaten since morning. In the presence of Brother Logan he’d forgotten his hunger, satisfied for the moment just to be with him. After they finished running through the final part of the mass, they walked together to the back of the church, where Jesse had come in.

“So, I think you’re ready. To be an altar boy.”

Jesse wanted to say something, to prolong this moment. He wanted to stay with Brother Logan a little longer, but all he could muster was some talk about basketball, and how he had just made the starting line-up.

“Hey, that’s great! Good for you.”

Jesse mumbled something in agreement, unconvinced that basketball mattered that much.

“Do you need a ride? Home?” Brother Logan seemed unwilling to end their conversation as well, but Jesse didn’t appear interested in further talk.

“No thanks. I can walk. It’s just a few blocks away. And I like to walk.”

“So, if you want to play some one-on-one, let me know. I could use the challenge,” and he shook Jesse’s hand with both of his. It was warm, and encompassed all.

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“How’d it go?” Mr. Crawford said absently as Jesse walked into the family room. “Dinner’s in the oven.”

“How was it?” Mrs. Crawford asked, walking in distractedly. “Where’s John? Did he get his homework done?”

“Good,” Jesse said as he ran upstairs.

“In his room, I think,” Mr. Crawford replied, going back to his newspaper and giving an occasional glance toward the television.

“Dinner’s ready!” Mrs. Crawford yelled after Jesse. “Bring John down with you.”

In their bedroom, John was sitting on the floor assembling a number of metallic robots, forming two groups to face off against each other. He looked up upon feeling Jesse’s foot-falls on the wooden floor.

Who can say where love is borne and why? A kindness in his eyes, the thoughtful furrow of his brow, the gentle but firm grip on his shoulders – all these came to mind when Jesse thought of Brother Logan. There was compassion in his intent, a sense of protection Jesse felt but didn’t understand. He watched John wage his war, crashing his toys into each other, unable to hear any of the noise.

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The common room of the rectory was lit with two amber lampshades. A television emitted the dull applause of a game show audience as Father Daemon sat in a slip-covered easy chair. Reddish wood paneling covered the walls and the once-thick shag carpet, rust in color, was worn thin in front of the couch and chair. Father sat up when Brother Logan came into the room.

“Oh, you’re back,” he said.

“Yes. How did… Jim do?” Father Daemon asked.

“Jesse.”

“Right, of course. How was it?”

“He was good. Very nice boy.”

“Good, very good,” Father Daemon said, then went back to watching the game show. Brother Logan sat down in the corner of the couch, looking around the depressing room. As a commercial came on, Father Daemon lowered the volume, turning to Brother Logan. “You’re probably accustomed to more spiritual quests, but this is how we do it here. Nothing too fancy. I hope you don’t find it too dull. We do rise early though, so it’ll behoove you to get rest.” He smiled weakly. Brother Logan acknowledged it with a nod of his head.

“Oh, that’s fine. They watch a bit of T.V. in Rome too.”

Father Daemon returned to his game show. When it was done he rose. “Well, Brother, welcome. We’re glad to have you here.” He followed this with a confidential whisper. “Monsignor isn’t what he used to be, but he’s glad too. You’ll meet him tomorrow, maybe. If he’s up for it. Good night, Brother.”

The room was still. Sounds of a creaking door being closed, then the turn of a lock. Brother Logan let out a deep breath and leaned back into the couch. Closing his eyes, he thought about the boy.

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Jesse walked to school with Elise Olin.  There was an early frost on the lawns and the cold fog of a Fall morning swirled around them. These were mostly quiet walks. Jesse felt comfortable enough with Elise not to try to fill the silence, and Elise usually kept to herself. It had been this way since nursery school, both children thrown together at any early age and not caring to question parental friendships and neighborhood proximity. Even so, they weren’t especially friendly at school, sitting at different lunch tables and traveling in separate packs. They walked together in the morning though, and sometimes after school. Elise couldn’t tell if she felt friendship, or a sort of familial love for Jesse, or if it was moving in a different direction.

Jesse felt her by his side. He mentioned the altar boy practice, and meeting Brother Logan, then stopped short when he saw her looking at him strangely. He hadn’t realized that it was the most he’d said to her in weeks, and in the awkward silence that followed he waited for her question, but it never came.

The sidewalk turned into the school parking lot, with spikes of grass gone to seed poking through the cracks and resting against the curb. Elise walked to her small group of girlfriends as Jesse headed over to the corner to a couple of his teammates. They were talking about basketball, but Jesse wasn’t listening. The bell for class rang and he ambled away without saying anything.

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The first Sunday Jesse served as an altar boy was in October. He couldn’t sleep the previous night, dreading the thought of being in front of all those people. Would he make a mistake? Would they all know? The thought of Brother Logan being there left him conflicted as well. More than anything else, he wanted to make him proud, to prove that he was good and smart and worthy of his attention. He thought of what Brother Logan had said about Jesse seeming older. It emboldened him.

He looked over at the boy putting on his cassock and surplice. His name, according to the schedule, was Brian. He was a year older than Jesse, and had spiky hair, held in a stiff pose by gobs of dried gel that was flaking off the ends.

“This is your first time?” he asked.

“Yeah.”

“Don’t worry, it’s easy. Father Daemon guides you through most of it. I’ll help you out too.”

Jesse didn’t know if he should trust him, but he smiled and said, “Thanks.” He searched the musty closet for a cassock that fit his elongated body. He hadn’t grown into himself yet, but he wasn’t awkward. He moved with ease, possessing a preternatural precision and grace despite his height. He couldn’t see this yet. He only knew that he was good at basketball, and he didn’t have to try.

Assembling at the entrance to the church, the boys peered out to see the standing congregation. Father Daemon looked down and rested his hand on Jesse’s shoulder. He began to sing the opening hymn in a loud voice. His eyes studied the exposed skin of the neck and the pattern of Jesse’s hairline as it tapered down into his collar. Underneath his robe he adjusted himself, then gave Jesse a light push forward.

The two boys walked into the Church as the parishioners stood. Father followed behind them, bellowing the song and pretending to read the hymn book as he looked at the boys’ awkward gait before him. Reaching the altar, all three bowed before climbing the steps to their seats. Jesse tripped on his Cassock while going up the steps, but he didn’t fall. His face burned red. It felt like everyone was looking at him. After reaching his seat, he turned around and looked up to Father Daemon. He was singing and looking out to the congregation. No one but his parents seemed to notice that this was his first time serving, and their faces betrayed little.

Following his homily, Father turned with a flourish and walked back to his seat. He motioned for Jesse and Brian to stand, and both rose to their feet.

“We believe in one God…” Father began, and the rest of the congregation took over the Apostle’s Creed. The altar boys began the preparations for communion. Jesse nervously carried the water and wine, and Father Daemon put out his hands to be washed.

They made their way to the front of the altar, where Jesse made his only mistake. He knelt down when he should have remained standing, but tried to pass it off as a genuflection. His back was to the congregation so he couldn’t see if anyone was looking at him. Out of the corner of his eye he watched Brian for signals. It would be time to ring the bells soon and Jesse didn’t want to mess up. He went through the four moments in his head, recalling Brother Logan’s hand on his as they rang the bells together.

Father raised his voice,

“Take this, all of you, and eat it.

This is my body and it will be given up for you.” 

He raised the host and Jesse turned the bells in his hand. Their ringing was abrupt, but tiny in the vast expanse of the church. Father lowered the host and bowed.

“He took the cup. Again he gave thanks and praise.

He gave the cup to his disciples and said,

‘Take this, all of you and drink from it.

This is my blood –

it is the blood of the new and everlasting covenant.

It will be shed for you and for all so that your sins may be forgiven.

Do this in memory of me.’” 

He raised the chalice. Jesse rang the bells for the second time.

The tricky one was coming up. Father would place his hands over the offering and Jesse was supposed to ring the bells as he intoned the words,

“Lord let your spirit come upon these gifts

and make them holy so that they may become

for us the body and blood of our Lord Jesus Christ.”

He rang them at the right moment and felt a wave of relief. The hardest part was over. Tasteless wafers and cheap wine had been transformed into the body and blood of Christ by the words of a Priest and the timely ringing of a bell.

Father Daemon raised the gifts high above him and sang out in a clear voice,

“Through him, with him, in him,

In the unity of the Holy Spirit,

All glory and honor are yours almighty Father,

Forever and ever.”

 The make-shift interim organ sounded weakly and the rest of the mass passed in a haze. As they bowed and exited the hall, Jesse and Brian walked back to the changing room as Father Daemon stood by the door and greeted the departing crowd.

Brother Logan was waiting in the back room. “So, good job guys!” he said cheerily. Brian eyed him warily, then shook his hand.

Jesse said a quick, “Thanks.”

The changing room was also used for storage. Shelves overflowed with candles, hosts packed in plastic, rusty candle holders, incense burners, and altar cloths. Brian quickly took off his surplice and cassock, hung them messily on a hanger, and said a curt goodbye.

“Hey, thanks,” Jesse called out. With a small nod, Brian left.

“So, how’d it go?” Brother Logan asked as Jesse unbuttoned his long cassock.

“Good, I think.” Even though his regular clothes were on beneath the cassock, he felt strange as he pulled it off. It was different than a jacket or coat, and removing it in front of Brother Logan had the faint implication of intimacy. There was a minor exhilaration in the action. He turned around to hang up the black robe. In the reflection of a framed picture of Jesus, Jesse saw the gray silhouette of Brother Logan in the doorway, and he knew he was watching him.

Father Daemon entered in a rush, brushing by Jesse and Brother Logan.

“The boys did a great job,” Brother Logan said, then, looking at Jesse, “A perfect first-timer.”

“That’s right, excellent work Jim… err, Jesse. Thank you!”

Jesse put on his denim jacket and walked toward the door.

“Yes, thanks Jesse,” Brother Logan said. “Let us know if any of your friends would want to help out too.” He walked over to Father Daemon. “We could use a few more boys – the serving schedule is getting thin.”

Brother Logan just saw him as a kid, and the realization stung Jesse. He left the holy men to their discussion and walked out of the office to find his family.

Brian’s mother was talking to Mrs. Crawford, “I told Brian to help him along and watch out for him.” Brian was at the door telling his Mom to hurry up.

“Hey, nice job, sport,” Mr. Crawford said. John was smirking behind them.

The family walked to the car. A wind was blowing brown leaves off of the maple trees and the cold snap of Fall bit through the sun.

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Mrs. Crawford had made her usual Sunday dinner of spaghetti and meatballs. It was John’s favorite and he was hungrily forking a heaping pile of pasta onto his plate. A coriander of extra spaghetti sat steaming in the kitchen sink. Jesse washed his hands in the corner of the steel basin, trying to avoid splashing the pasta with dishwasher soap. He dried his hands on a damp towel and watched his family from across the room. They sat around the circular table with one empty chair left for him. Over them hung a low ceiling lamp, its center bulb shining directly down onto the family dinner. The glowing table was a warm world of food bowls, full plates and tall glasses, the stuff of nourishment and life – and Jesse had no part in it. His empty chair was pushed slightly away from the table, left at an odd angle and a little out of place in the perfect scene.

Jesse paused, listening to the delicate clinking of utensils and the occasional thud of a glass of milk being set down. It should have felt safe, but he found no comfort there, thinking instead of Brother Logan’s double-handed grip as he shook hands, and the smile Jesse wanted so badly to believe was meant only for him.

“Can you grab the butter, Jesse?” Mrs. Crawford asked.

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He was doing his homework alone in the kitchen when the phone rang.

“Hello, this is Brother Logan from St. Ann’s. Is Jesse there?”

“This is Jesse.”

“Oh, hello! Father and I were talking, and since you did such a great job today we were wondering if you could help out at an altar-boy training next week.” Jesse felt the nervous excitement that he was coming to associate with Brother Logan. Blood rushed into his cock as he tried to register what was just said.

“Umm, yeah. Sure, I think so. We don’t have basketball practice on Sunday,” he finally managed to blurt out.

“Oh good. Thank you so much. I think it’ll help you too. Be a little more comfortable, I mean. How about the same time and place then. Do you need a ride? Or anything?”

“No, it’s no problem. See you then.”

“Okay then. I’ll… well, yes, see you then. Thanks again. Bye.”

“Bye.”

Mrs. Crawford padded into the kitchen, startling Jesse. “Oops, I’m sorry! Who was it?”

“That Brother from the church, Brother Logan. Scheduling another altar boy practice next week.”

“Do you need more practice?” his mother asked.

Jesse was getting aggravated. “It’s to train someone else I guess.” He pretended to go back to his homework. Inside, he thrilled at the chance to be alone with Brother Logan again.

At school that week, Jesse found it difficult to concentrate. When his friends tried to engage him in basketball talk or Halloween prank plans, his mind wandered to his next meeting with Brother Logan. He listlessly apologized when they called him on not listening.

“What’s wrong with you lately?” his friend Daniel asked, catching up to him in the hallway.

“Sorry, just scattered. Tired I guess.”

“Aww, come on. Who is she?” he teased.

“No girl,” Jesse said, breaking into a wide smile. Daniel gave him a quick punch in the shoulder and ran off to class.

His basketball coach also noticed the shift. Jesse had been one of the best players, and a promising addition to the varsity team, but Coach could see the boy was relying on his height and natural talent without working very hard for any of it. He kept his praise to a minimum, hoping Jesse would rise to the challenge and find his own way out, but it only seemed to quiet him. For his part, Jesse noticed very little of the subtle changes he had fostered in those around him, and if they were acting differently, well, what did it matter, really?

Only one man inspired him, and as he arrived at the church a few minutes early for their meeting, he’d forgotten all the silly things that had happened at school that week. At the door, Brother Logan looked surprised, but happy.

“Oh, Jesse. I’m so sorry… I tried calling, but figured it was too late. We’ve had to cancel the practice… the other boy won’t be serving after all…” Brother Logan murmured, his voice trailing off without explanation. Jesse was just happy to be with him again, and if they were alone, so much the better. “Did you want to go through mass again? Just for you? I feel bad you came out here for nothing.”

“No, I mean, I live right here. I think I know the mass, but I wanted you… to ask you, I mean, a few questions about stuff,” Jesse began nervously, trying to make up some excuse to stay.

“Sure,” Brother Logan said. He paused, looking to the side. “Come on back to the rectory.”

It was a crisp autumn afternoon, a throwback to summer, even if the sun was lower and the shadows deeper. They walked quietly out of the church and through the small lot, leaves crunching beneath their feet. Jesse shuffled along behind Brother Logan, dragging his sneakers on the pavement. Inside the rectory the smells of cooking mingled with the musty scent of old wood. “Father Daemon is making the hospital rounds, I’m just getting dinner ready.” He turned to look more closely at Jesse. “Again, I’m sorry about the mix-up and canceling practice. So, what did you want to talk about?” he ventured, not wanting to scare the boy away, but still maintaining an appropriate distance. He returned Jesse’s gaze.

Jesse’s eyes traveled to Brother Logan’s belt, and the creases in his black pants.

“Umm, you know how you said you were an altar boy, and then later you wanted to become a priest… and, umm, how did you know? I mean, what you wanted to do?” Jesse looked down, then back up at Brother Logan’s belt. A dull silver buckle, well-worn and tarnished almost black in spots, was fastened above his midsection. Jesse couldn’t stop himself from looking at Brother Logan’s crotch. Logan saw the look and turned around to step into the kitchen. He came back with his arms folded on his chest.

“Hmm, I guess deep down I always knew, and then a series of events… the army, my brother’s passing… life changes you could say, brought me to this point in my path. But I still don’t know if you ever really know what you want to do.”

“Well that’s… disheartening,” Jesse replied, laughing a little and trying to skip over the dead brother comment.

“I know, sorry. There’s never an easy, clear-cut answer. But you’re too young to really worry about that now, right? You should be having fun.”

Being discounted for his youth always bothered Jesse; coming from Brother Logan made it much worse. He swallowed the bitterness and narrowed his eyes. This time it was Brother Logan who looked, and as Jesse caught him staring he gave up a sly smile.

“Anyway, thanks for talking a little. I’m kind of glad there wasn’t another boy here,” he said, backing away.

“Was that all you wanted? To talk about?”

“Yeah… yeah, that’s it.” He turned to open the door. “Oh, one more thing,” he said, facing Brother Logan again. He paused. His eyes surveyed all of him. “Are you ready?”

“For what?”

Jesse summoned a daring smile. “For the Fall?”

Brother Logan appeared confused, then matched his amusement, “Not yet… almost.”

Outside, someone was burning leaves. Smoke hung in the cold air. Jesse walked home alone.

“Did anyone call while I was out?” he asked after entering the house.

Mr. Crawford was watching television. After a minute he replied, “What’s that, sport? No, I don’t think so. No one called.”

Jesse walked through the room to go upstairs. “Hey,” Mr. Crawford called, “Do you have a basketball game this week?” he asked.

“Yeah, but it’s away.”

“Okay. You need a ride?”

“No, Dad, the bus will bring us. Thanks though.”

“Okay, sport.” He went back to his program.

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 To Be Continued…
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Striking the Christ Pose ~ The 2006 Holiday Card

Coinciding with my 2006 project ‘The Revelation’, this was a religious-themed photo card that I, once again, expected to upset a few people, but it went largely ignored. It remains one of my favorites (even if I was later schooled that my lance-wound was on the wrong side, and much of the stigmata was cut out of the final shot). The crown-of-thorns also got some party wear that year, accompanying the release of ‘The Revelation’, proof that all these accessories get more mileage than one might imagine.

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Milking the Goats

From the first time I walked into the Beekman 1802 Mercantile, I knew I was in the presence of beauty and goodness. A line of mossy goat-shaped topiaries greeted us at the entrance, and the slightly sulphurous air of Sharon Springs gave way to some heavenly amalgamation of soaps and seductive scents. It was both relief and respite, wonder and comfort, welcome and unexpected. The Fabulous Beekman Boys had registered peripherally on my radar, but until we made the quick pilgrimage to Sharon Springs (which turned out to be only about 45 minutes from where we live) I never bothered to look deeper into their story. I had no idea what I had been missing.

While staying at the American Hotel, we had tried the soap on the premises – this golden globe of Beekman 1802 Goatmilk soap, that glided over the skin and lathered its moisturizing magic as an antidote to the dry air of the Autumn. Only a few steps down the road was the Mercantile where it originated, so it was only fitting that this was my official introduction to all things Beekman. On the brisk gray morning, when dead leaves were swirling along the sidewalk, it was like walking into a peek of paradise.

Since this past Saturday was the big ‘buy local and support small business’ day, it seems fitting to highlight a business like the Beekman 1802 Mercantile, which does more than its part to lift the surrounding community. It doesn’t hurt that their soap is some of the best in the business. I was especially fond of the ‘Autumn’ version, with its spicy essential oils and all-natural ingredients. According to the label, “All Beekman 1802 goat milk soaps are handmade and chemical-free, using the maximum possible percentage of pure goat milk. Their unique high butterfat content ensures that they’re exceptionally moisturizing, while their chemical-free recipe makes them ideal for sensitive skin.”

Initially, I thought their soap-cutter was a supercilious invention – something that I loved, but didn’t really need. After butchering this lovely block of soap with a kitchen knife (don’t tell Andy), it sort of is a necessity, and a wonderful one at that. I want it for Christmas, along with more soap – but I want to pick it up myself. Part of the magic is in making the journey to Sharon Springs.

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