I wanted to write a story that dealt with the ramifications of infidelity for those outside the nuclear family. There is no sex in this story.
*****
My name is Tommy Callahan, and I'm a coward.
I've known what's been going on for over a year and I've done nothing. I guess that puts a lie to the canard that twins have similar personalities; my brother would have said something immediately. My best friend, Michael, would have as well. Hell, he would have marched over there and taken a stand the day he found out.
Cassie Lakter, nee Callahan, is my cousin. She lives across the street from me with her son and Phil, the husband she's been cheating on. I've known him since we were in our early teens. He would come down to the garage my father owned and hang out with my twin Jim, Michael, and me after hours as we worked on our cars. He's a great friend, an excellent father, and a clueless husband. The problem is that I love Cassie like a sister.
I know what I should do, what I should have already done. Like I said, I'm a coward. Now I'm in a position where I don't have a choice. I have to take a stand.
* * * * *
I had been waiting for the call since I saw the prick she was fucking leave through their back door and enter the woods that separates their homes. It took her almost ninety minutes to notice her son was gone. Ninety goddamn minutes since my heart stopped, watching that three-year old wandering so close to the edge of the street, while his mother was on her back for some loser who'd been best known for trying to reenact "frog baseball" in middle school.
Sitting in my recliner, I kneaded the muscles of my bad leg. Hurtling across the street to intercept Alex before he wandered into traffic had left the already aching muscles screaming, and I couldn't take a painkiller, not when I needed to keep an eye on the boy. I picked up the phone as soon as it started ringing.
"Tommy, Alex, he's missing! I can't find him. Alex is missing." She was frantic. Good.
Taking a deep breath, I started. "I have him, Cassie. He's with me."
"Oh, thank God. I'll be there in a minute."
"No." I practically growled the word. "Don't come here."
"You're bringing him back?"
"Aren't you going to ask me why I have him?"
She paused. "Sorry, I was out of my mind with worry. Good. He's with you." She hesitated again, voice querulous, doubtful, wondering. "Why don't you just bring him over? You can tell me when you get here." There was a feeling of dread underlying our conversation.
"Have you cleaned up yet, Cassie?"
"What? Cleaned up what?"
"Yourself, I guess. And wherever you were fucking John."
There was silence and then her voice was filled with restrained panic. "No, Tommy, I, I don't know what you think—"
"Don't you want to know where I found my Godson?" I struggled to keep my voice even. "While you were fucking your unemployed, redneck neighbor, your three-year-old ran toward the road, chasing an abandoned kite in the gutter. All he could see was the bright yellow body and the red tail. Traffic never slowed. Did you even hear the honking or screeching of tires as I was almost hit running across the street? Trying to save your son!"
Words came tumbling out, falling over each other. "No, no, Tommy. No, I'm so sorry. He was in his room, he... I'll come get him."
"I don't think so, Cassie. I'll wait for Phil to come get him."
I could hear tears in her voice and her ragged breath as she tried to continue. "Tommy, you can't tell Phil about this. You need to... Tommy, you're my cousin. I swear, it'll never happen again. No one knows, and I'll never see John again. It'll destroy us, Tommy. Please. No one needs to know."
"I've known since Christmas of last year. What makes you think no one else knows? You think Phil doesn't have any suspicions? None at all? Why's he been working out of town so often? He's a senior partner. He can get some first-year flunky for that. "
"What? No, no, you're wrong. He... Tommy, I'm begging you. Don't destroy my family. Don't, just, please. Phil doesn't need to know. It'll never happen again."
"I'm not trying to hurt you, Cassie. I've let it go for a year, but now I don't have a choice. Not once Alex was put at risk. I'm sorry."
Our conversation slowed to a halt. She was likely trying to find a way to convince me and all I could think of was Phil, what I owed him and how I let him down. Loyalty and love were like food and drink to me. They were what I lived on, what sustained me, and I had sacrificed one for the other. In the darkest times of my life, Phil stood at my side.
I don't think there was a time when my closest friends didn't know I was gay, just like I knew that they were into girls. It was different than the nineties, the eighties or, God forbid, the seventies. I wasn't at risk, or at least the same risk, as gay men and women were then. That doesn't mean that there weren't times when bigotry spoke louder than rationality.
There were three occasions when I was a teenager when words and taunts weren't enough, and someone thought it would be fun to beat the crap out of the gay kid. I guess the third time was the charm, because I was never bothered after that. It didn't matter how many guys they had with them, I immediately had my brother, Michael, and Phil at my side and we never, ever backed down. Michael almost killed one of them the third time and word got around. My femur was broken in two places and I needed six surgeries in three years, but no one bothered me again.
I know how lucky I was and still am. I had friends and family that supported me. Many didn't. Things could have been very different. Do I stand with my cousin or with the man who's had my back since we were teens? I've struggled with that for thirteen months and just chose not to choose. I'm a coward, but I no longer have the luxury of not choosing.
"Just stay home, Cassie. I'll text Phil at five and have him come pick up Alex."
Her sobbing grew louder and her voice less distinct. "Tommy, please. It'll kill us. Please. I'm coming over."
"I love you, Cassie, but you're not welcome in my house right now. I've fed Alex and I'll keep an eye on him. He'll be fine. He's safe and cared for. You know that."
"No, I'm coming for my son."
"Then bring the cops and Child Protective Services, 'cause that's the only way you're getting him and if I see you coming across the street, I'll call Phil immediately."
"How can you do this to me, Tommy? After everything we've been through together? Do you know what this will do to our family? To my father?"
Of course I did. This was going to devastate the family. When her mother died, Cassie's father fell apart. She lived with us for almost two years until Uncle Tony was able to pull himself together. My mother loved her like a daughter. My family had always stood by me, but I didn't know how this was going to shake out.
* * * * *
Their divorce was final in a hundred and twenty days.
Phil was torn, I could tell. He was grateful that I had gotten Alex to safety and had finally told him what was going on, but too much time had passed. I'd known for too long and hadn't told him. That betrayal was too deep. When he had Alex, I wasn't able to see my Godson.
Remaining silent cost me one of my dearest friends.
Speaking up cost me my cousin, my pseudo-sister.
When she had Alex, I wasn't able to see my Godson. There was nothing from her. No imprecations, no screaming matches, nothing. It was as if I had died and was no longer a part of her life. To her, I was gone.
My soul had been cauterized and I couldn't feel anything. There were two times when something broke through and I'm glad I wasn't near Cassie either time. I'd never hit a woman, but I'd never been pressed like that.
The first time he came running towards me when he saw me getting out of my car after work. They were on the front lawn and all I could think of was he how he was again rushing to the street. This time Cassie was there. She raced after him, grabbed his hand and yanked him back. Yanked. Hard. She almost lifted him off the ground and he started crying. So did I. Turning, I went in the house and pulled out a fifth of Jack. I stared at my bottle of pain killers for too long before I took the whiskey to the back porch.
The second time was the day before his birthday. She waited until I went out to the front with the lawnmower before she took the boxes from Amazon with my gifts, unsteadily walked to her garbage cans and threw them out, staring at me the entire time. I distinctly heard the clinking of bottles in the recycling bin as she stumbled into it on her way back inside.