Authors: K.Z. Snow
older and savvier than Jonah when Pankin had
snared him, but he’d been pulled in just as deep.
And he’d also begun to assume responsibility.
“So what finally ended it,” he asked, “once
and for all?”
“My disgust grew stronger than all the other
feelings combined.” Jonah’s gaze flickered
uncomfortably to Dare’s face. “I told my mother.”
“What happened?”
Jonah faced forward without blinking. “She
didn’t believe me.”
“Oh God.”
“The harder I tried to convince her, the worse
it got. She thought it was sour grapes on my part,
that I’d wanted more of Reverend Clay’s attention
than I was getting, so I was trying to launch some
vendetta. Then she said, ‘He ain’t only a preacher,
he’s a married man with a child. You’re probably
the one who’s a fag, Jonah. You have some sinful
desire for him and he never returned it, so now
you’re hell-bent on revenge.’”
Heartsick and incredulous, Dare shook his
head. No wonder Jonah had started drinking at
such an early age. No wonder he’d fucked around
indiscriminately and resisted identifying as gay.
Not only didn’t he want to think Clayton Wallace
had shaped his sexual identity, he didn’t want to
lend credence to his mother’s claims.
“You were very brave,” Dare whispered.
“No,” Jonah said tonelessly. “Just desperate.”
“You’re wrong. You’re the bravest person I
know.” Jonah had initiated their relationship, after
all, and he’d done it seeking catharsis. Dare hadn’t
done squat but try to hide within Pepper Jack. If
Jonah hadn’t approached him, Dare knew he
would’ve probably pissed away his life toting
around the foul burden foisted on him by Howard
Pankin.
Jonah still refused to accept Dare’s
admiration. “If I was so brave, I would’ve done all
the right things. But I didn’t.”
“Nobody ever does all the right things. That’s
why the word
regret
exists. Just keep in mind you
did the best you could for a kid your age.” They
continued to sit close, to touch absently, then
withdraw, then touch again. “So what happened to
the preacher?”
“About three weeks after I stopped going
there, the church closed.”
“You mean Wallace just folded up his tent
and moved on?”
“More or less. He pretty much vanished in the
middle of the night. I heard from one of the other
congregants that he’d left a scrawled sign on the
inside of the door. I went to see it for myself.
To
all my dear friends and followers: It is with the
utmost sorrow I must inform you of a medical
crisis in my family. We can no longer afford to
keep the church going or give my ministry the
time it deserves. Each of you shall remain in our
prayers. Humbly Yours in the Name of Jesus
Christ Our Savior
, and he signed his name.”
“You memorized what he’d written?” Dare
asked. It certainly wasn’t out of the question,
considering how long that hypocrite had been a
part of Jonah’s life.
“Not consciously. It just stuck with me. I
knew right away it must’ve spooked him when I
stopped showing up. I think he was afraid I’d
finally grown a pair and I’d start talking. Or maybe
my mother told him I already
had
started talking.”
“Did you ever find out where he went?”
“Not until I got out of rehab and looked him
up on the Internet. Before then I didn’t
want
to
know. I just wanted to drink it all away. Eventually
I found out he ended up in Florida. Then in 2010
he was involved in some drug deal gone bad or
something, and he was shot. Fatally.”
“Jesus.”
Jonah’s mouth quirked wryly. “I doubt
he
was
behind it. But maybe a Jesus was.” He gave the
name its Spanish pronunciation.
“So Wallace never had to face justice for
what he did to kids like you?”
“I don’t know,” Jonah said. “Maybe he did
but got released. I never paid for a criminal
background check. Or maybe he was shot because
he was fooling with some boy, and the cops
mistook it for a drug situation.”
“At least he’s gone.”
“Yeah, at least he’s gone.”
“Did you ever tell your father and sister what
Wallace did to you?”
“No. There was no reason to. My father’s an
alcoholic, so we were never close, and Josie’s got
problems of her own. My mother might’ve spewed
around
her
version of events, but Dad wouldn’t
have given a crap one way or the other and Josie
wouldn’t have believed her. So it’s a dead issue to
everyone but me.” Jonah got up.
“And me,” Dare said, reaching for Jonah’s
hand. They smiled wanly at each other as their
fingers curled, joining for a moment.
Chapter Fourteen
“BE RIGHT back,” Jonah said. “Can I get you
anything?”
“Maybe a glass of water.” Dare loved that
voice, such a soft, mellow tenor, so easy on the
ears, so hypnotically persuasive. He watched
Jonah walk away and felt another swell of
yearning.
This guy was getting to him like no other man
ever had. He only hoped he wasn’t being misled
by their mutual empathy, the rare and private
connection they’d forged through shared suffering.
It wouldn’t have been fair to either of them to
mistake that kind of kinship for genuine attraction.
Jonah returned and, with a pallid ghost of a
smile, handed Dare a glass of ice water. He drank
from the glass he’d poured for himself and then set
it on the coffee table as he resumed his seat.
“What about you?” Jonah asked. “Did you
finally tell your folks? They seem a lot more
enlightened than my mother was.”
“They are. Always have been. But I wasn’t
too enlightened myself. I felt like a criminal.” Dare
had never told anyone. Not, that is, until Howard
Pankin’s arrest had officially and publicly branded
him a child molester. And that didn’t happen until
Dare was twenty-three.
Dare
2009
IT WAS on the local news at five. Wouldn’t you
know, my family had gathered that evening.
The four of us spending time together was a
rarity, given my father’s schedule and the fact
Carver and I had jobs as well as our own
apartments. But there we were: Dad and Carver in
the living room, sitting in front of the TV; Mom and
I in the kitchen, preparing dinner.
I didn’t hear the report.
But I did notice my dad come into the kitchen,
frowning. I knew the look well. It meant he’d
heard something disturbing, only he wasn’t sure
how to process it.
He looked at me and said, “Didn’t you spend
a lot of time at some resale shop near the old
neighborhood?”
My stomach plunged. My face might’ve too.
I’d avoided that shop for nearly a decade, as much
as it tugged at me. For three fucking years or more,
from the ages of fourteen to seventeen, I had to
fight the impulse to return.
I hated myself for feeling that way.
Hated
myself. I even used to bang my head against the
wall, literally, as if that would dislodge all
thoughts of that godforsaken backroom.
At least things got better once I graduated
from high school and we moved to Waterford.
Yeah, I’d quit Howard. After two years I
couldn’t stand it anymore, feeling defined by him,
like he’d become my second skin—a filthy and
diseased skin. I knew damned well what a sick
fuck Pankin was and that he’d been using me. So I
shed him… but it wasn’t easy.
Over time the urge to go back diminished.
Being away from him let the truth
really
sink in.
What finally destroyed the lure of Over the
Rainbow for me was going to college, meeting
guys my age who were interested in me.
Too bad that didn’t obliterate my memories.
Thanks to them, my stint at UWM was doomed. I
dropped out halfway through my junior year.
Barely made it
that
far. My head was a mess. I
couldn’t concentrate, had trouble sleeping.
Relationships were out of the question. I couldn’t
seem to get close to anyone.
“Yeah, I used to go there,” I finally said in
answer to my father’s question. I hadn’t moved
from the center island. Even my fingers hadn’t
moved from the endive I’d begun to slice. “Why?”
“The owner,” Dad said, “was arrested and
faces a slew of charges, all relating to sexual
activity with minors. Boys, specifically.” He
paused but kept watching me.
“Wow,” I whispered, and barely managed to
eke out that one dry syllable.
Stasis. That’s all I remember in the minutes
following my father’s announcement. I was the
centerpiece of a frozen tableau. Even my mother’s
Fiestaware seemed to be staring at me through the
glass-fronted cabinets.
“Did he ever make advances to
you
?” Dad
asked. I could tell from the sound of the question
that the possibility alone infuriated him.
My parents hadn’t watched me that intently
since the day I was born.
They knew I was gay, just like they knew
Carver was gay. They’d always been completely
accepting and supportive. I’m not sure what I was
afraid of, but all I could manage was, “Uh….”
Then Carver jumped in. He’d just entered the
room. “Most likely,” he said. “Dare spent an awful
lot of time at that shit hole, and he
was
a cute kid.”
“Daren?” It was my mother’s voice,
quavering. She laid a hand on my arm. I felt her
fingers trembling against my skin. She was
terrified.
I made my way to the kitchen table, our
breakfast and lunch table, and numbly slid into a
chair. “Yes… but it’s all right,” I think I said. “It
ended a long time ago.”
They swooped in on me then. At least my
parents did. Carver just sort of sauntered over. He
seemed smug. I got the impression this was one
more reason for him to feel superior to me.
I can’t clearly remember how the rest of that
evening went, except that I felt trapped and
suffocated and wanted to escape. The flurry of
questions, my mother’s weeping, my father’s
reddened face and bulging jaw, Carver’s
undisguised contempt. None of it was supposed to
be happening. I’d gotten through those two
misspent years without involving anybody else.
Then I’d stuffed the dust of Over the Rainbow
Resale, and those xylophone notes, and Howard
Pankin’s sawing breath and sweaty hands, into
some mental crawlspace and boarded up the door.
“You have to go to the police.”
“You need to get into therapy.”
“He can’t be allowed to walk free and keep
victimizing innocent children.”
“Why didn’t you say something? Why didn’t
you come to us? Why, why,
why
?”
They bombarded me with all that and more. I
hadn’t told them the whole truth, though. Not even
most
of the truth. I couldn’t. The details were too
nasty. Revolting. Worse yet, I felt complicit.
I
felt
nasty and revolting.
Howard Pankin himself spared me the agony
of having to relate the tale over and over again. To
the police. On the witness stand. And he spared me
the agony of having to face him in court.
The day after he was arrested, he hanged
himself in his jail cell.
I’ve never cried so hard in my life. I actually
cried myself sick. And fuck if I know why.
JONAH remained quiet and thoughtful after Dare’s
admission. “Even nine or ten years later,” he
finally said.
“Yes.”
Slowly, Jonah nodded. “That’s the most
insidious part—isn’t it?—how they burrow their
way into us, make us dependent on their attention,
make us think they’ve bonded with us in some
unique way.”
“It is.” Dare knew that was why he’d bawled
his eyes out after Pankin’s suicide. He hadn’t
wanted to face the reason, but he knew. Pankin
was the only person other than his parents who’d