A Place of Safety - Derry / New World For Old / Home Not Home

A Place of Safety - Derry / New World For Old / Home Not Home
All three volumes are available in hardcover, paperback and ebook!

Saturday, November 29, 2025

Tomorrow begins my travels, again...

I'm heading up to Toronto tomorrow because my flight to Hong Kong is in the morning, on the 1st, and I don't want to deal with driving a hundred miles, parking, checking in and making it through security before getting on a plane. This trip is already tense enough for me.

I'm not crazy about changing planes in Seoul, except maybe I'll have time for a shower to freshen up. And I'm getting into HKG just after 11pm, so will need to get through customs, get my Octopus card and make the last train by 1am...or take a taxi. Which I'm leaning towards just to make it easier.

It's been 6 years since I've done this fair, so I'm wobbly on everything. But hopefully it will be all right.

My plan is to go back through everything I've updated on Dair's Window while on the flight to Seoul, since it's really a daytime flight for me, and we'll be landing about the time I normally get ready for bed. In business class I get a power connection and more space, so that will be nice. And I hope to be able to nap on the flight between Seoul and Hong Kong.

Being paranoid, I saved everything on my laptop to an external hard drive and will dump a lot of it before departing. I've also eaten all the food that can go bad while I'm away. Got my mail on hold. And everything I've done on DW is on its own little thumb drive.

So all I need to do now is wait to find out where I fucked up...since I usually do, somewhere.

But being away from the fucking insanity of the current administration's actions will be like a vacation.

Friday, November 28, 2025

As a writer, you should read...

...But I'm finding I cannot read other modern writers' works. Their grammar or sentence structure or phrasing or concepts bother me. No idea why. I can read classics well-enough. Usually. I'm not crazy about Oscar Wilde's pomposity in The Picture of Dorian Gray, but no problem with Agatha Christie, Dumas or Tolstoy...though I did feel Dickens liked to pad his novels with extra words.

Also, if the style is simple enough, I can handle it. I like Adrian McKinty's mysteries, and my favorite modern writer is Jay McInerney, especially his short stories. Even Bright Lights, Big City's second person formatting didn't bother me.

But I did a bit of shopping today and went by Talking Leaves Book Shop in the Elmwood Village part of Buffalo, and they had a copy of A Little Life, so I read a bit of it. And I knew I could never read it through. Mainly because of one paragraph. Something like this...

"It's been years since I was kissed," he said. "I don't know what it means, anymore," he said.

In one paragraph, both spoken by the same person, jammed together like that. And my thought is, That second he said is either a typo or poor grammar because it's brutally redundant.

It was the latter. I saw it happen, again, and the narrative went from third person omniscient to first person. I don't really have a problem with that, but to have it happen within one paragraph was disconcerting.

I should add, the only novel of Faulker's I like is The Sound and the Fury, because it's one story told from four different perspectives, including that of a boy who, if I remember right, had Down's Syndrome. And I love the clean, crisp, almost minimal prose of Hemingway while Isaac Asimov's writing style is basic but acceptable, in the Foundation series.

But as I mentioned in a much earlier post, Trust drove me insane with its omniscient third-person telling me everything that's happening instead of showing me.

So I sort of fell into a funk, wondering how best to deal with DW, which was added to when I heard my youngest brother in San Antonio had a severe health emergency and is back to being dependent on people to keep him going. Even though he doesn't want to admit it.

It just reminded me of how I'm getting older and squirrelier...and really resent that.

Thursday, November 27, 2025

Thanksgiving is done...

...and so am I. And that's without dealing with anyone, in person. I made a dinner of baked yam and ham, buttered corn, green salad (since all I had was lettuce) cornbread, and cranberry sauce from a can. Shot my blood sugar through the roof so I spent half the day drinking water and remaining calm.

One good thing about this trip to Hong Kong is, China don't like it when you do political things online. So I'll be doing a blackout from December 1 to December 9. My first reaction is basically to go fuck it, but I've made a commitment and can't let that be interfered with.

Of course, they might not even let me into the country. That's a concern that's been raised by some in the office, considering my FB page, Xitter account, and Instagram...not to mention the liberals and progressives I support in various emails. That would be funny; get all the way there and have to come right back. Maybe I should have a contingency plan, just in case.

It's Friday, about noon in Hong Kong. I have contacts there. If I am refused entry, maybe I could work it out to where I can hand my paperwork off to them. Not a great way to deal with it, but it's the best I can come up with.

I'm also updating my info, everywhere. Cheat sheet for my passcodes. Print out everything I can for the move-in and move-out. And at the same time dealing with serious concerns about Adam's early life in sex work being in DW...

At least, I was until I heard about a book called A Little Life by Hanya Yanagihara. One of its characters has a lot of horrible things happen to him, including sexual assault as a child and forced prostitution...so I cheated and read the outline in Wikipedia. Even that was rough, but nothing at all like DW.

What's even better? It was up for a Booker Award and won a Kirkus, and it's put out by Doubleday Publishing, one of the biggies.

I think this was Adam's way of letting me know I'm being too much of a worry-wart.

Wednesday, November 26, 2025

Dair's Window cover?

Emily Jackson, of Elite Minds, came up with this amazing image to use for Dair's Window...and I don't know how she did it but she got the essence of the story without having read any of it. Just one more reason to deal with professionals. I may ask her to design the book cover, once it's done.

If it ever does get done. I saved the opening chapter to a PDF to send to Emily, to help with future promotion...and I noticed I hadn't attributed the poem that Adam uses near the end of it, to its author. Nor did I have the title. So I went looking for it.

I was pretty sure it was written by Ranier Maria Rilke, but apparently not. It's thought of as being similar in style but not actually his. And now I'm worried I can't use it. His work is mostly in public domain, including translations from the French and German, because he wrote mainly around the beginning of the 20th Century.

But if this is a reimagining of his work in French, or an homage, that could still be under copyright and I'd need permission to use it. When I now have no idea who actually wrote it. Does anyone else?

Aucun ange 
Celui 
Qui s'est faufilé dans mon monde 
Au-delà de la peur de ceux 
Qui ne se soucient de rien. 

Aucune créature 
Celui 
Qui a l'habitude de se régaler 
D'un 
Sans armure 
Au-delà de sa connaissance 
C'est sa seule vérité. 

L'accepter 
C'est mentir à mon passé 
Sans besoin de correction 

Pour moi 
Le connaître 
C'est rejeter tout ce que j'ai 
De moi-même 
Afin de pouvoir reconstruire 
Un monde dont 
Je pourrais être plus qu'une partie. 

La terreur de tout ça 
Est exquise. 
Ma peur 
Me pousse 
À accepter 
La beauté qu'il offre. 
Pour que je puisse me reposer... 
Enfin... 
Enfin... 
Me reposer...

It's just, I really like the poem and feel it fits Adam's story, perfectly. I could offer a poor English translation, if you think that would help figure out the author...

Tuesday, November 25, 2025

Two steps forward, three steps back...

I'm all set to start in on reworking Chapter Seven of DW when the beginning of Chapter Four starts bugging me. It's too easy and nice and calm...so I go back in and give Adam a reason to initiate his wariness about his current situation.

He's used to the visitors being gentle with him. Some don't even want sex, just a moment of companionship with an attractive youth.

This one isn't like that. He's very nearly brutalized by a man who calls him Robert. Indicating the guy is using Adam as a stand-in for someone else...and the decent Christian man is more concerned about Adam's torn shirt than anything.

Then as he's taking hits off a bong in his room, Rory tells him men come to them so they can do things they can't do at home or in the office. And Luc refers to how he was taken out of his home because of his stepfather's abuse.

Which makes Adam grow very unsettled...and consider expanding on his drug use to deal with it.

That wound up adding about six-hundred words to the chapter, even after some cuts. It's still on the short side...2150 words...but it feels a lot more honest.

It's unsettled me, as well, however. Seems I keep working up the easy way into the story and then, just as I get all self-satisfied, Adam comes along and says, "But it needs this." So I get back to work.

I really do wonder, sometimes, if I'm a psycho.

Monday, November 24, 2025

On to Chapter Seven...

Squeegee kids at Queen and Spadina in Toronto, 1996. 

Hanging out at Future Bakery, used cd stores, goth clothing stores, all the amazing vintage clothing stores. So many old greasy spoons where one could procure a $6 pitcher of beer. Speakers Corner and Electric Circus! More clubs and live music bars that covered every genre of music you could think of all the way to Trinity Bellwoods.

Adam's in Toronto and not liking it. Too cold, thanks to the wind coming in off the lake, and too busy thanks to all the construction and people bustling about. Also, everything is in English, first, not as much French. He sets himself up in a youth hostel and works out how to get around, and is realizing he can control his life, if he's careful.

He's rebuilding his world after losing everything. Family. Friends. Home. Shelter. His books. His journal. Everything but the clothes on his back and a book in his hand that's water-damaged. But he's also finding out just how strong he is.

Some of what he lost cannot be replaced, but what matters is he no longer has anyone in control over him. He's his own person. One thing I need to keep in mind is, he's still sixteen so some things he cannot do. And I don't want him to come across as prematurely adult.

But he's also scarred by his parents and brother rejecting him, so he's lived through something few boys have to deal with. He learns early on he has only himself to rely upon. That alters you.

I think this whole part of Adam's life is to establish how feral a creature he is, and how connecting with Dair...and having Dair love him...and growing to love Dair and others surrounding them bring his back to humanity. Decency and love for others.

I guess. I'm not sure, yet. I just know it's going in the right direction, for now...

Sunday, November 23, 2025

Adam now exists...

The broken beauty of this photo
Cuts deep into my soul and
Calls forth wishes and
Dreams of forever…
Doomed to nothing…

Adam's poem when I showed him this image. I don't know poetry so can't tell is this is any good or just plain crap. But he doesn't care.

No poet is born complete...and any who thinks he was, is not a poet.

He's grown something of an attitude about his poetry, Adam has. Here's another bit he wrote.

A silence covers my world
As a blanket
Complete 
Warm 
To leave me cold 
As if it were nothing 
No footstep heard 
No intake of breath 
No cry for one to respond 
To acknowledge 
To let you know 
The silence is not that of life 
Nor is it death
It is nothing... 

I love it when my characters become more real to me than anyone else I know. And I feel that way about Adam, now. 

Saturday, November 22, 2025

Chapters 2 & 3

Read through them both and made some changes. Re-arranged a couple parts to help the flow of the story. Added some details to better explain things while cutting a couple others, to set up Adam's memory of the older gentleman having him read Victor Hugo's poem,

What I had before cut into that impact, but no more. He shares a couple ditties he wrote in his journal, meant as jokes, and he is introduced to Milton Acorn's work, but the poem as noted in my 11/20 post is what shifts the ground under his feet.

I snuck in Adam's deep, quiet hope his parents will come to take him home from that boys home...but he is losing that hope as the darkness in him grows...until he and Reynard fight, and he walks away. The betrayal complete.

I'll go through that, tomorrow, then get onto the next chapter. Can't remember if it's 6 or 7; I've redone the numbering and broke one in half, so no telling.

I don't want long chapters. I've heard from too many readers if the chapter is too long their eyes glaze over. I don't mind doing that. It makes the story seem more immediate. I just am wary of the table of contents. Can they go up to a hundred chapters?

Guess I'll find out.

Friday, November 21, 2025

Taking a pause...

Just for the day. I didn't want to do anything or see anyone, but the book fair in Hong Kong intruded on my peace and I grew pissy. I was polite, but wound up spending a couple hours on it then lots of paperwork to sort through about everything else. And the day's events and...and I never should have gone online but had to and shifted over and................

Now I need to reread everything I have written so I can make certain it's proceeding properly. The part leading up to Adam leaving Montréal was rather draining. It reminded me of an occasion where I damn near walked all the way from Carbondale to Scranton, at night, in boots and a mac, intent on finding a bus to the airport and leaving without a word.

I'd been tricked into traveling up there from Houston, by my close cousins...and learned I had been outed to them and they wanted to know if I was HIV positive. Couldn't do that with a phone call, no; they had to see me face-to-face.

Blindsided me. I wasn't and never have been, and told my cousin so, but that didn't seem make a real difference. And there was so much tension...I didn't want to stay.

I went for a walk to clear my head and just kept walking. Figured I'd ask them to ship my suitcase and things to me. It's about 16 miles and I was probably halfway there when I convinced myself I was overreacting and returned. 

I should have trusted my gut.

I noticed glares of outright hostility from some members of the family, had plans changed, and finally saw that people I'd considered closer to me that my own brothers and sister did not reciprocate. I was a relative, nothing more. If I'd left, I might have been able to never feel that from them.

So...I let Adam take over in DW and do it right. And it's cut deeper than I realized. But feels good.

I just needed space from it to accept that.

Thursday, November 20, 2025

Old and tired...

That's how I was, today. And sick. Apparently a soup I made, hoping to eat healthy, had something in it that I was allergic to. Maybe broccoli or cauliflower? But I spent an hour in the bathroom dealing with it, and now I'm beat. So here's the rest of yesterday's chapter.

On and on my mind pinged, left and right and around and all over, until my thoughts settled on a book my older gentleman had brought me. The memory of it kindly emerged to calm my every thought down to one gentle memory. 

It was an anthology of poetry. In French. The binding green and ornate with gold trim. Its edges worn and faded. 

“I found it in a shop close to here,” he had said. “Just a couple blocks away, on rue D’Antoine.” Then as he handed it to me, he had asked, “Will you read to me this poem?” 

Titled Demain, dès l’aube by Victor Hugo.

He carefully settled onto the chair, with myself at his knee. As his hand caressed the back of my neck, I read, softly, slowly, with tenderness... 

Demain, dès l’aube, à l’heure où blanchit la campagne, 
Je partirai. Vois-tu, je sais que tu m’attends. 
J’irai par la forêt, j’irai par la montagne. 
Je ne puis demeurer loin de toi plus longtemps. 

Je marcherai les yeux fixés sur mes pensées,
Sans rien voir au dehors, sans entendre aucun bruit, 
Seul, inconnu, le dos courbé, les mains croisées, 
Triste, et le jour pour moi sera comme la nuit.

Je ne regarderai ni l’or du soir qui tombe, 
Ni les voiles au loin descendant vers Harfleur, 
Et quand j’arriverai, je mettrai sur ta tombe 
Un bouquet de houx vert et de bruyère en fleur. 

Tomorrow, at dawn, as the countryside is bathed in light 
Will I leave. Because I know you wait for me. 
I will travel through the forest, I will go over the mountain. 
I cannot remain away from you any longer. 

I will walk with my eyes fixed on my thoughts,
See nothing outside, hear no sound, 
Alone, unknown, my back bent, my hands clasped, 
Sad, and the day for me will be as night. 

I will not gaze upon the gold of the falling evening,
Nor the sails in the distance receding towards Harfleur, 
And when I arrive, I will place upon your grave 
A bouquet of green holly...and of flowering heather. 

When I was done, I could not think of what to say, to him. I had joined with a man lost in grief on a journey to the grave of his loved one, and I felt myself pacing him as he strode on and on. And my emotions was close to overwhelming.

No thanks came from me, except with my eyes holding tears. His smile revealed how deeply I had touched him. Then all he did was give me a gentle kiss on my forehead and caress his shivering fingers through my hair...and leave. 

And I knew I would not see him, again. 

Now looking back, with nothing to distract me except a city in slumber passing by, I understood that was the moment poetry had become my obsession. That gentle poem had spoken more deeply to me than any lesson or book or even friendship.

That is when I’d begun to seek a different way to life. Something to grasp onto beyond my day to day existence. Rory, Luc, Eric, they were caught in a current of life that had become too easy and comfortable. Trey, Carlos and Tevean, I could now see they also were entwined in it. Their games. Their posturing. Their arguments. Relying more and more upon a chemical enhancement to keep from facing the truth of their existence. A truth that would eventually destroy them. 

And I had to admit, I was so close to following them until this encounter with Reynard. Even until now.

Because deep within, despite all evidence to the contrary, I had continued to hope my parents would grow to understand and accept me, and come to take me away. But Reynard had killed that belief. 

In truth I suppose I should have thanked him. I might not have given up on that belief until I was already too far along the same path as the others. 

Of course, that Path was still a possibility, for me. I already felt a growing need of something to fill the void that had borne its way into my heart. And to know my books...all of the poems that had brought me life and kept me on the proper path...they were back at that home, and I could not return for them. This hurt my heart even more, since some of them could not be replaced. Old editions. Out of print. Treasures with poems I had copied in careful hand into my journal. 

Which was also there. 

Perhaps what I was doing was a mistake. Perhaps I should return to the home and accept my punishment, then plan for a better organized way out. But my head had no control over my heart...or even my feet, and I could not bring enough thought forward to consider changing my direction. 

I passed into a neighborhood of tight old apartments and new blocks, with more and more residence towers. Ahead, the lights of the city center grew brighter and brighter even as the night grew darker. Clouds boiled in, hinting at late snow. My legs and back were killing me, and I ached horribly, but still I walked. 

Finally, I was entering the city center and an inter-city coach passed, headed the same direction as myself. I watched it continue a few blocks down then turn to the left. When I reached the same place, I found I was on an overpass at rue Berri. A few blocks down, a coach was turning into a side street, followed by another. Somehow, I had managed to find the Station Centrale d’Autobus Montréal.

Fifteen kilometers from the home, I later learned.

I entered the lobby, saw the time was just past two a-m, and noticed there would be a coach to leave for Toronto at six-thirty. I purchased a ticket, found the lavatory, washed my face in wonderfully steaming hot water, cleaned my jacket and jeans as best I could, and sat on a bench, my book open as if I were reading it, but thinking of nothing except that I was nothing. And on that early bus I left my home city. 

Forever.

Wednesday, November 19, 2025

Back to Chapter 5...

I thought I was done with this chapter, for now, but it's become much more demanding and involved and in need of care. So I spent the day on it and let Adam lead me into his deepest thoughts as he walks away from the boys home he was forced to live in.

------------

I know I felt pain from Reynard’s fists and feet, but it registered only in my head, not my heart. It meant nothing to me because... 

Because I was nothing.

I did not really know or...or truly understand what that meant except... 

Except I no longer existed. 

To Maman. Papa. Gra’mere and Gran’pere. Anyone who was of my blood. 

I was dead to them. 

I was nothing. 

Just as I was nothing to that decent Christian man, except to make him an income he never shared. Nothing to Rory except someone he did not like because he could not manipulate me. Nothing to any of the others. 

They would now search my room. Find my money and journal. Toss my books into their library, to be ignored. Give my clothes to the boy who would replace me. And I would be nothing, to any of them. 

How can I be nothing when still I feel the cold? When sharp icy air enters my lungs to be expelled as steam? When my heart beats fast and eyes water against the breezes whispering around me? When still my body aches from my brother’s anger? When one foot sweeps before the other and I move forward? Physically move forward. 

How is this nothing? 

I had no sense of time or place. I felt that it was after nine...maybe almost ten in the evening. The streets were dark. The few businesses closed. No restaurants to peek into with the hope of glimpsing a clock. No one else around to ask. Not that it truly mattered. 

I was nothing, so time was, as well. 

Somehow I found my way to Sherbrooke, which would lead me to the city center, so I continued to walk. Past rough structures and open spaces and areas for parking and commercial buildings, then apartment blocks and restaurants. Joined only by the little traffic of those returning home late from their day. 

I had finally begun to work the wet pages of my book apart so they would not stick together as they dried. My gloves were clumsy so I removed them, and my fingers did not like the icy air. But all that mattered was the care of my Stendhal. 

On and on I walked. In the chill night with only my damp jacket to warm me. But I appreciated how the cold kept my aches to a minimum, and helped the cuts on my face to clot. Sometimes I even put my arm with the still wet part of the sleeve up against my eye, which felt very good. 

Two times cars pulled up to my side, pacing me as I walked, and in them were older men asking me if I wanted a ride. Both times I only gave them a shake of my head and kept going. I could not deal with anyone who wanted anything from me, right then. 

As I continued, my thoughts remained scattered. Anger at Rory for writing my family. Fury at Reynard for finding me. Fear I might be arrested and returned to that decent Christian man’s home. Worries about what I could do. Thinking I should find the Gay Youth Group to ask for their help...then shaking off the thought for fear they might also turn on me. And mixed through it all was a sadness that I was now, without question, an orphan. 

That if I was dead to my parents, they also were dead to me. 

But I could not accept that thought.

Tuesday, November 18, 2025

The beginning of chapter six...

Adam's doing what he must to survive...

-----

This city was more cold than Montréal, from the lake's winds and snow blowing in. It cut through me as I hurried from the coach to enter the lovely, warm terminal. But I could stay in there only for so long; A guard was watching me. A teenage boy just arrived. Alone. Only a jacket to wear against the frigid breezes. No luggage. Early in the morning. Cuts and bruises on his face. Walking like an old man. With no question, he would make a call to the police about a runaway, and I would be returned to that home. So I only used the facilities and made myself leave. 

Toronto was madness. Construction everywhere. Towers of glass leaping to the sky. Hissing traffic. People who rushed about. So much more-so than in Montréal. At once, I was lost in its madness. At least the cold had lessened my pain. The coach had been warm, causing me to ache and hurt if I moved, so I had slept little, but in this city’s wind and snow I was too busy shivering for that to affect me. 

I wandered along Bay Street, growing more and more certain my decision to come here had been a mistake when I happened to notice the back of one of the curved towers of city hall. I had seen photos of it when I still was at school. I thought at least I could sit in there for a while, away from the chaos, and let my mind waken and let me form some kind of plan. 

I quickly strode around to the city hall's entrance, found a small coffee shop inside and had tea and a croissant. Enough to warm me and fill me, for now. 

To begin, I needed money. I had forty-two dollars left in my pocket. I had seen a notice for a youth hostel on a bulletin board at the coach terminal, offering rooms for ten dollars a night. I had known of a hostel up by the ski resort we visited, and had met some of the young people staying there. They loved the communal setting, low cost and close camaraderie, so I had memorized the address off the notice. This might be a good temporary solution, only I did not know where it was. 

So I gathered my courage and approached a guard to ask him. I told him that was where I was staying, but that I was lost. I held my copy of Stendhal in one hand and pretended I was much younger and more foolish, something many people think all sixteen year-old boys are. 

He led me to the information desk and they gave me a local map then showed me the hostel was just over a kilometer away. 

I sighed. "I now see I turned left instead of right," I said, laughing at myself. "My...my mother claims I do everything backwards." 

The woman behind the counter frowned at me. "Your family's at a hostel?" 

"No," I said, focusing on the map to hide my sudden fear. "My friends. We came from Ottawa on the coach, but they are not very easy to travel with. They want to do everything their way." 

The guard was eyeing my face. "You guys got in a fight?" 

I shrugged. "Only some pushing with Rory, and I fell. That is why I paid not much attention when I left the hostel. I was angry and...and I wanted someplace to sit and read my book." I held up the Stendahl. "This, I bought yesterday. But Eric and Rory prefer to run around. I think I am the only one who brought money enough with me." 

"I think you ought to stay someplace else," said the woman. Ooh-la...careful, Adam. 

I shrugged. "Tonight's room is already paid for, and we return to Ottawa, tomorrow. But I will not travel with them, again. They are idiots." 

I thanked them and made myself stroll away. Then I found the hostel and talked the desk clerk into letting me register early, so I might enjoy a nap. 

Enjoy? To wake up stiff and my body aching, stomach empty, and head hurting too much to formulate a plan for my time there? Hardly. I really wanted a long hot bath, but all they had was a communal shower. And I had no clean clothes with me. 

I left to search for a cheap place to eat, and passed a coin laundry close to the hostel. With several people inside, using it. In the middle of the week. While sitting and paying little attention to the washers. And dryers. 

So...I entered. Carefully. Sat on a bench near a long wall of dryers, reading my book, until I saw a man close to my size bring a trolley of his wet clothes over and slop them into an empty one. 

I watched them tumble. Almost mesmerizing. Then I casually looked at him. He was reading a thick book. Probably from university. So I opened his dryer and pulled out two pair of briefs and white socks. They still were damp, but I did not care. I set the machine to continue and hurried back to the hostel. 

I left my new items on the heating grill of my room and stood in the communal shower for fifteen minutes, just letting the hot water soothe me. Fortunately, no one was else around. 

I still was hungry, but I had been hungry before.

Monday, November 17, 2025

Back on track...

This afternoon I worked on Chapter Six, where Adam is in Toronto and getting reoriented. He steals some clothes and starts haunting the coach terminal to let men pick him up and pay him for sex. It's dangerous and he's almost arrested by an undercover cop, but it gets him cash enough to pay for a room in a youth hostel and buy a winter coat at a second hand store.

After more than two weeks of this, he finally gets picked up by a porn producer, and that will be Chapter Seven. So I took a break and went online...

I really need to avoid social media, right now. because I feel like I'm drowning. I inadvertently saw and heard that clip of a caller asking Dean Withers...on his live podcast...to explain why it is wrong to rape children. And he didn't just ask it once. He pursued it. Insulted Dean for not giving him his explanation immediately.

This is on top of Megyn Kelly claiming it's not pedophilia if a grown man has sex with a 15 year-old girl. Megyn Kelly! Who used to be a fukkking attorney and should know better.

Then another guy posted a comment on Instagram about how "leftists want to add the MAPS flag to the gay pride flag." MAPS stands for Minor Attracted Persons Society. The rebranded name for NAMBLA, branching out to include little girls. He thinks we want that filth mixed into the Pride and/or Trans flag.

I'm so repulsed by this, I can't think. I went back to Chapter Six and read through it, again, to try and clear my head but the abject moral bankruptcy of someone even mouthing these questions and comments still tears at me.

I know some of my turmoil stems from me writing that boys in their middle teens are being used for sex in that decent Christian man's home. But I make it clear this is not right. Adam goes along with it because his other choices are juvenile detention or living on the street in winter. It is not a good situation.

It's all but sanctioned by the state and the church. It's hypocrisy defined. And it leads to destruction and death, later. Not once is it justified. So to have someone actually voice that question has shaken me and made me second guess my work...and expanded on my disgust with humanity.

I need to stop, for a while, and ignore the world. It's become too much of a pig stye.

Sunday, November 16, 2025

Beginning of Chapter 5?

Not sure yet, but this works on its own...as Adam is walking away from the boys' home.

-------

Somehow I found my way to Sherbrooke, which I knew would lead me to the city center. So on I walked. Past rough buildings and open spaces and areas for parking and commercial buildings, then apartment blocks and restaurants. Joined only by the little traffic of those returning home late from their day. 

I had the sense that when I walked out the door, it was after nine...maybe almost ten in the evening. Most businesses were closed and a peek into restaurants offered no glimpse of a clock, so could not verify. 

On and on I walked. In the cold night air with only my damp jacket to warm me. But it was enough against the wind. I appreciated how the chill kept my aches to a minimum, and stopped blood from trailing down my face. Sometimes I even put my arm up with the still wet part of the sleeve against my eye, which felt very good. 

Two times cars pulled up to my side, pacing me as I walked, and in them were older men asking me if I wanted a ride. Both times I only gave them a shake of my head and kept going. I could not deal with anyone who wanted anything from me, right then. 

As I continued, my thoughts remained scattered...anger at Rory, fear I might be arrested and returned to that decent Christian man’s home, worries about what I could do to live, thinking I should find the Gay Youth Group to ask for their help them shaking off the thought for fear they might also turn on me, sadness that I was now, without question, an orphan. That if I was dead to my parents, they also were dead to me...and I could not accept that thought. 

On and on my mind pinged, left and right and around and all over, until my thoughts settled on a book my older gentleman had brought me. The memory of it kindly reached out to lead every thought down to one. 

It was an anthology of poetry. In French. The binding green and ornate with gold trim. 

“I found it in a shop close to here,” he had said. “Just a couple blocks away, on rue D’Antoine.” Then as he handed it to me, he had asked, “Will you read to me this poem?” 

It was Demain, dès l’aube by Victor Hugo:

Demain, dès l’aube, à l’heure où blanchit la campagne
Je partirai. Vois-tu, je sais que tu m’attends.
J’irai par la forêt, j’irai par la montagne.
Je ne puis demeurer loin de toi plus longtemps.

Je marcherai les yeux fixés sur mes pensées,
Sans rien voir au dehors, sans entendre aucun bruit,
Seul, inconnu, le dos courbé, les mains croisées,
Triste, et le jour pour moi sera comme la nuit.

Je ne regarderai ni l’or du soir qui tombe,
Ni les voiles au loin descendant vers Harfleur,
Et quand j’arriverai, je mettrai sur ta tombe
Un bouquet de houx vert et de bruyère en fleur.


I will leave. You see, I know you are waiting for me.
I will go through the forest, I will go over the mountain.
I cannot stay away from you any longer.

I will walk with my eyes fixed on my thoughts,
Seeing nothing outside, hearing no sound,
Alone, unknown, my back bent, my hands clasped,
Sad, and the day for me will be like the night.

I will not look at the gold of the falling evening,
Nor the sails in the distance descending towards Harfleur,
And when I arrive, I will place on your grave
A bouquet of green holly and flowering heather.

When I was done, I could not think of what to say, to him. No thanks came from me, except with my eyes holding tears. His smile revealed how deeply I had touched him, and all he did was give me a gentle kiss on my forehead and caress his shivering fingers through my hair...and leave.

Even then, I somehow knew I would never see him, again.

Saturday, November 15, 2025

Chapter Four cont'd from November 12th post...

Did my usual rewriting my rewriting to the point it's ready to move forward to Chapter Five. This is the end of Chapter Four, picking up after Adam and Reynard fight and the good Christian man has stopped it:

“He looked very much like you,” he said. I only shrugged. “And you just happened to run into him? Out here? And so late?” 

My head was beginning to hurt, but my brain had regained some sense. “I had not expected to see him.” 

“Hmm. Why aren’t you in your room?” 

I held up the half-soaked book. “I...I had some money and wanted this...” 

“You’re not supposed to be away from the house.” 

I shrugged. He was being very calm and casual...and then I realized some people had come out of nearby homes to witness the spectacle, so he could not very well be harsh with me. Not in public. 

“You’re bleeding,” he said, just loud enough to be heard by one and all. “Come inside; we’ll clean you up.” 

He led me in to the kitchen and used a wet cloth to dab at the cuts on my face. “How did you get out?” 

I sighed. He was hurting me but I did not want to let him know that. “Over the fence.” 

“I locked the back door.” I smiled and shrugged. “How did you work it? The lock is very good.” 

I took in a deep breath and said, “Ask your friend, Rory.” 

That got me a sharp glance. “Do not get smart with me!” I just looked at him. He almost growled as he said, “You and he are not the best of mates, anymore. Why would he help you?” 

“Money can buy information.” And if you need no further information from him? If you give him no more of your money? Is that why he wrote to my family? Did he want them to come get me? 

He huffed. “So all of the boys know about this?” 

I shrugged. “Ask them.” 

He put some ice in the cloth and pressed it to my eye. “Keep that here. Do not leave.” Then he went downstairs. 

To Rory’s room. 

Where they would talk then search my room. Very thoroughly. Find my money and journal, and I would be in even greater trouble. 

I did not care. My parents said I was no longer of this world. They knew where I was and had no more interest in me. Because of this one aspect of my life. I could not really know what that meant except I was nothing. To Papa. Maman. Gra’mere and Gran’pere. Any one who was of my blood. I was dead to them. 

I was nothing. 

I know I felt pain from Reynard’s fists and feet, but it did not really register. It meant nothing to me. Because... 

Because I was nothing. 

Reynard might convince my parents to come talk to me...

No, no, Papa wouldn’t...but Maman might and...and... 

No. No!

I had sixty loonies in my pocket. I had brought them in case the book of Acorn's poems had arrived. I still held my wet book. I could see the front entrance. So that is when reality took over. 

I set the cloth with ice in the sink, took a brick of cheese and a can of Fanta from the refrigerator, shoved them in my pockets, and walked out that home.

So far as I was concerned, anywhere else would be better than here.

Friday, November 14, 2025

Ignoring social media...

The hell with the world. That helps both peace of mind and allows me to work on chapter four of  Dair's Window. If it is the end of everything decent we've had, at least I'll die writing.

I've removed one character from this part, Loren the gardener. I think I'll put him in Toronto or maybe even Vancouver. Haven't decided, yet, but I do like having him in it.

Something else was Eric's overdose. It felt too Hollywood-ish and I was working too hard to make it a smooth part of the story. I finally decided to pull it, completely. And it works a lot better.

I now have Luc letting Adam know the pot they're smoking has THC in it, which is very addictive. It's the decent Christian man's method of controlling the boys and Rory is his go-between. So Adam stops smoking pot. He starts sneaking out of the home to go to a nearby used book shop and buy books he can't get brought to himself by his visitors. That keeps him sane.

One such book is Stendhal's Le Rouge et le Noir. He doesn't like the ending of it, but otherwise loves the man's prose and characterizations...so makes it a habit to go there once a week, or so.

Until one night he runs into his brother, Reynard, learns his parents have said he is dead, to them, and his world explodes.

I'm going to watch another one of the Thin Man series, tonight. Cleanse my mind of all the shit with the Epstein files and such.

Thursday, November 13, 2025

Bad day...

All the shit coming out about Epstein and Felon47 and how the MSM, Leaders of both parties and our so-called system of justice knew and did nothing about it...I'm beyond livid. And for Megyn Kelly to refer to 15 year old rape victims as adult is mind-boggling.

So I watched movies...like Another Thin Man (1939). And may do more, tomorrow. I need to handle my blood pressure.


 

Wednesday, November 12, 2025

A bit of chapter four...

Adam's been at the home a year, now...


I was hurrying back from the book store and about to turn into the shadows, keeping as quiet as possible, when I noticed a car on the opposing corner. The same type Rav4 as my father’s. Same color. I had not seen it around here, before, and... 

“Adam!” 

Reynard exited the driver’s side. Which made no sense. How did he know where I lived? 

“I’ve been trying to find you,” he continued, rushing across the street to me. “They said you were in that house and...” 

“Who said?” I snapped. His betrayal was still too fresh in my heart to be polite with him. 

“Doesn’t matter. I need to speak with you.” 

“To what purpose?” 

“I should never had told Papa about you.” 

This made me wary. Reynard had never apologized, before. Still it made me a bit less angry. “It is good you think so.” 

“It was a stupid thing to do. If I had thought through the consequences, I would never have done it.” 

I shrugged. “It’s done. Did Papa send you? Maman?” 

“My God, no. They would kill me if they thought I was here. They say you are dead.” 

I felt my breath leave my body. Perhaps even my spirit. “Is that what you came to tell me?” I whispered. 

“No, no, I...I just need you to let Papa know I did not know what you had become until that night.” 

My brain shut down. I could not formulate a single word except, “What?” 

“He thinks I hid your ways from him. And wonders if I have the same sickness. And I tell him over and over, no, I only suspected until...” 

“Stop!” That was the only other word I could think of. None of he said made sense to me. 

“I just...please, Papa does not believe me. He and Maman watch me, constantly. Have begun to control everything about my life to be sure I do not become like you and...” 

“STOP! It’s not enough you killed me?” 

“Killed you? No, no, you are right here and you have a nice home and room and...” 

“Who tells you this? Who told where I am?” 

“Adam, what is happening to me is your fault! I want you to take care of it. End it.” 

My book was in my right hand so I could not grab Reynard except with the other. Which I did, screaming, “How did you find me?” 

He shoved me away, growing angry. “Why are you getting so angry? I’m the one being ruined by your actions!” 

“You tell me. TELL ME!” I screamed that. 

“Here, see this?” 

He showed me the remains of an envelope with my name and this address. In a corner. Like in case of return. And I recognized the handwriting. 

Rory. He always puts a line through his zeroes. 

“No one read it,” Reynard spit at me. “No one wants to hear from you. But I was interrogated for days on whether or not I’d received other letters from you and I said no, over and over and over, but they don’t believe me so you have to tell them so. If you don’t, they will not let me attend Carelton. They think Ottawa is the center for more people like you and...” 

I hit him. 

With my fist...holding my book. 

In the mouth. 

I don’t know which of us was more surprised. 

Blood trailed from his lower lip so, of course, he returned the punch into my face and also my side. I stumbled back and dropped my book. He kicked it, I think without meaning to but still, that infuriated me and I jumped on him. We fell into a bank of snow, howling and kicking and punching at each other like two alley cats fighting over nothing. 

The door to the house opened and the good Christian man came out, snarling, “What are you doing?!” 

I was on my back so Reynard bolted to his feet. Despite the shadows, I noticed his nose was also bleeding and his eyes were filled with madness. He cast a glare at the man then ran off. 

I staggered back to my feet and stood there. Watching him vanish into Papa’s Rav4. And drive away. Into the darkness. 

I was trembling, not from cold. From absolute fury. He destroys my life them wants me to make his whole? As if he has the right to ask for that?

I saw my book was half in a puddle and that added to my anger. I picked it up and realized the man was asking me a question. Very insistently asking. I had to look at him to understand it. 

“Who was that boy?” 

I could not think of what to answer. Just stood there, swaying a little. Not yet hurting...and still rather shocked at how I’d fought Reynard. He had always been bigger and stronger, and it is true I had grown and I was trying to build my own body, a little...but I hadn’t even thought about what I was doing. It was simply reaction to his disgusting demand. 

I heard the question, again, and managed to say, “Someone I used to know.”

Tuesday, November 11, 2025

Here we go...Fascism Central...

This was written nearly 3 months ago, and it's long, but it's important to keep in mind after the Hated 8 in the Senate stabbed us in the back in exchange for...nothing...and the MAGAt Cult continues to rejoice in the idea of destroying the country just to own the libs. It's obscene.

America tips into fascism — 

"Something is materially different in our country this week than last," writes historian Garrett Graff. 

The United States, just months before its 250th birthday as the world’s leading democracy, has tipped over the edge into authoritarianism and fascism. In the end, faster than I imagined possible, it did happen here. The precise moment when and where in recent weeks America crossed that invisible line from democracy into authoritarianism can and will be debated by future historians, but it’s clear that the line itself has been crossed. 

I think many Americans wrongly believe there would be one clear unambiguous moment where we go from “democracy” to “authoritarianism.” Instead, this is exactly how it happens — a blurring here, a norm destroyed there, a presidential diktat unchallenged. Then you wake up one morning and our country is different. 

Today, August 25, 2025, is that morning. Something is materially different in our country this week than last. Everything else from here on out is just a matter of degree and wondering how bad it will get and how far it will go? Do we end up “merely” like Hungary or do we go all the way toward an “American Reich”? So far, after years of studying World War II, I fear that America’s trajectory feels more like Berlin circa 1933 than it does Budapest circa 2015.

I debated in recent days whether this column should be written by our fearless foreign correspondent William Boot, who started satirically chronicling the backsliding of American democracy in January and the willful destruction of the federal government, but it seems more important to write plainly.

Saying that our country has tipped over an invisible edge into an authoritarian state plainly is important — and easier than most in the media and pundit class will pretend it is. They will presumably for some period of time — perhaps even a long period of time — stick to euphemisms (with lines like “No president has asserted such direct and sweeping control over the nation's capital” and “Through immigration crackdowns and cultural purges, President Trump is wielding government power to enforce a more rigid, exclusionary definition of what it means to be American.”) and continue to give voice to “both siders,” but the reality is that only one political party is responsible for this moment. They will say that Trump’s motives are inscrutable or unclear — but the effect of Trump’s governing style is undeniable. 

American fascism looks like the president using armed military units from governors loyal to his regime to seize cities run by opposition political figures and it looks like the president using federal law enforcement to target regime opponents. 

American fascism looks like the would-be self-proclaimed king deploying the military on US soil not only not in response to requests by local or state officials but over — and almost specifically to spite — their vociferous objections. 

The president’s military occupation of the capital has escalated in recent days into something not seen since British troops marched the streets of colonial Boston — even though precisely nothing has happened to warrant it, the Pentagon has now armed the National Guard patrolling DC and armored vehicles, designed for the worst of combat, are patrolling the capital, where they’re colliding with civilian vehicles because war transports are not supposed to be on civilian streets. (Why a 14-ton MRAP is in any way necessary for a domestic police mission is its own worthy line of questioning!)

Word came over the weekend that the president is now drawing up plans and explicitly threatening domestic political opponents like the governors of California and Illinois with similar military occupations — exercising emergency powers in a moment where the only emergency is his own abuse of power.

Civilians who try lawfully to exercise their right to document the abuses of the regime are themselves arrested and charged with felonies through trumped-up charges teeming with official lies. The fact that this military takeover and federal occupation is being done to the city’s residents — and not on their behalf — is evident in how deserted DC has become as residents refuse to enter public spaces where they might have to interact with agents of the state.

America has become a country where armed officers of the state shout “Papers please!” on the street at men and women heading home from work, a vision we associate with the Gestapo in Nazi Germany or the KGB in Soviet Russia, and where masked men wrestle to the ground and abduct people without due process into unmarked vehicles, disappearing them into an opaque system where their family members beg for information.

It looks like a president, who is supposed to be the figurehead of the party of small government, is extorting US companies for the regular act of doing business — earning his good will in recent weeks has required seizing parts of major US companies or imposing bizarre taxes on others in exchange for his personal support.

It looks like a country where our largest and most powerful corporate titans line up to pay tribute personally — delivering literal gold to the president in full view of cameras — and where foreign governments bribe him with largesse as gross as a 747 plane for his personal use after he leaves office, and where media companies have to censor their own staffs in order to be allowed to operate.

It looks like a country where inconvenient figures are kidnapped and disappeared overseas to torture gulags with no due process or dumped in countries where they have no possible connection. Kilmar Albrego Garcia has been punished for months with the full weight of the US government simply because he embarrassed the Trump administration. It looks like a country where the government, devoid of irony, is reopening concentration camps on the site of some of the country’s darkest hours of history where it previously hosted concentration camps. 

It looks like a government where agency by department, people who try to uphold the rule of law are being purged — sometimes for nothing more than personal friendships or because they voiced an inconvenient fact, and where even the loyalists deemed insufficiently loyal are cashiered. Billy Long, the stunningly unqualified former cattle auctioneer placed in charge of the IRS, evidently was removed after he tried to uphold the most basic legal requirements for sharing taxpayer data. 

It looks like a country where Trump assumes he can control and dictate our history, what books we read, our arts, and even our sports heroes. He assumes there is no line between his taste and our nation. 

Just months short of the nation’s 250th birthday, Donald Trump is close to batting a thousand at speed-running the very abuses of power that led to the Founders to write the Declaration of Independence in the first place. Does any of this sound familiar:

  • He has refused his Assent to Laws, the most wholesome and necessary for the public good. 
  • For taking away our Charters, abolishing our most valuable Laws, and altering fundamentally the Forms of our Governments 
  • He has kept among us, in times of peace, Standing Armies without the Consent of our legislatures. 
  • He has erected a multitude of New Offices, and sent hither swarms of Officers to harrass our people, and eat out their substance. 
  • He has obstructed the Administration of Justice, by refusing his Assent to Laws for establishing Judiciary powers. 
  • He has abdicated Government here, by declaring us out of his Protection and waging War against us. 
  • For cutting off our Trade with all parts of the world 
  • For imposing Taxes on us without our Consent 
  • For depriving us in many cases, of the benefits of Trial by Jury 
  • For transporting us beyond Seas to be tried for pretended offences 
  • And so on. 
One could say that Trump has blown through the nation’s constitutional and political guardrails, but a more accurate assessment is that both Congress and the Supreme Court — who have, as I wrote earlier this spring, effectively rolled over and played dead when it comes to their constitutional duty to exert checks and balances — removed those guardrails helpfully in advance. 

In a dissent last week, Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson compared the Court’s current approach, which has allowed Trump to streamroll past the normal constraints of the presidency through one procedural sleight-of-hand after another, to the game Calvinball, played by Calvin & Hobbes. “Today’s ruling is of a piece with this Court’s recent tendencies. ‘[R]ight when the Judiciary should be hunkering down to do all it can to preserve the law’s constraints,’ the Court opts instead to make vindicating the rule of law and preventing manifestly injurious Government action as difficult as possible,” she writes. “This is Calvinball jurisprudence with a twist. Calvinball has only one rule: There are no fixed rules. We seem to have two: that one, and this Administration always wins.” 

The response, meanwhile, by Democrats has been unconscionably weak. It’s no coincidence that governors like Gavin Newsom and J.B. Pritzker have been the leaders of recent days; they are clear-eyed about what is happening. As Greg Sargent writes, “Newsom shapes everything around the brute fact that Trump is serially breaking the law and using government sponsored violence and intimidation to entrench authoritarian power. He accepts this as the core fact of our moment.” 

By contrast, I challenge you to find even a moderately tepid and clear-eyed statement from any national Democrat. National Democrats seem all invisible as the military takes over policing the streets of the capital and prosecuting its crimes. This should be a lay-up to oppose — the most basic duty of any congressional figure, and yet, “House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, along with other senior Democrats, have not been a part of any concerted effort to voice opposition to the occupation.” 

It’s still a party paralyzed by their own creaking gerontocracy; DC’s own nearly ninety-year-old congressional delegate hasn’t been seen in public since the occupation of her city — and her statement protesting it was accompanied by a photo of her at a different, previous, unrelated protest. 

There’s a story that I think a lot about — on September 29, 2008, I went to one of those friendly background lunches that reporters in D.C. do all the time with newsmakers. It was the heart of the financial crisis and a group of us were meeting with Rep. Eric Cantor, a rising star in the GOP and party whip. The House was about to vote on a bailout for Wall Street that effectively everyone agreed was necessary to hold together the global economy — President Bush, Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson, Fed chair Ben Bernanke, GOP presidential nominee John McCain (who had even suspended his campaign to focus on the crisis) and Democratic nominee Barack Obama. Cantor casually told us over lunch that his caucus was going to vote it down. We reporters, many of them far more experienced Hill veterans than me, were incredulous — all of his party’s leaders, the ones in the roles who knew the stake, the ones the party was supposed to listen to and follow, said this was critical — and yet the House GOP was going to let it burn? 

Cantor was right — the House voted down the bailout and the stock market dropped 800 points. The end seemed nigh. 

I remember walking out of that luncheon feeling like I had glimpsed something important. The beating heart of the GOP no longer cared about principles or policy. There was a nihilist wing in control that scared me; they were happy to let it all burn. For years in covering the rise (and return) of Trump and Trumpism, I imagined there was some line that the GOP would not be willing to compromise for greed and power — some incident that would bring party leaders to their senses, some principle or red-line would be unwilling to trade or cross in pursuit of furthering Trump’s agenda. Even after January 6th, I held hope that might be the end. But then Eric Cantor’s buddy Kevin McCarthy showed up at Mar-a-Lago and the rehabilitation tour began. 

It has led here, to this moment, where all three branches of the GOP-controlled government have been willing to torch the republic and democracy that generations of elected officials and citizens have tended for 249 years simply to please Donald Trump and avoid running afoul of his temper. 

Where America goes from here is a story yet to be written. It will surely get worse — Trump’s push now is clearly focused on locking in an illegitimate claim to power. Whether we can come back from this moment is a story yet unknown. But it’s clear today America is different and, even if we fight our way back, it will never be the same.

Monday, November 10, 2025

Sketches help...

 I'd done these in pencil, very rough ideas, so today inked them in to help me picture what it is I'm writing. Now that I have it settled in my head, I can move on to Chapter Four of DW.

Here's the overview of the house. Nice and normal-looking, but with a back entrance to the garage, off an alleyway. Lots of tall bushes and trees.

A covered walkway connects the house to the garage, and I decided not to bother with a raised pool. There are also flower beds along the house, garage and back wall.


This is the 3/4 view. Makes everything a bit more obvious.

Interior downstairs and basement. Staircase leading up, at the back, and also going down to the basement. The door to the garage is also in this area.

The basement has Rory's room and games and TV and such, with a small library.

Interior upstairs, with Adam's room filled in. Six rooms, two bathrooms total.

I'm not of a mind to do the garage's interior.

I also spent some time howling online about the treason of 8 Democrats, who aligned with the GOP to end the shutdown. I don't think they expected the pushback and anger being directed at them. They've already posted videos justifying their decision.

That's the Democratic Party -- once, again, snatching defeat from the jaws of victory. There's still a chance this vile deal won't happen. They have one more vote requiring 60 Senators to say Aye, so they might flip back. But it's not guaranteed.

Just like assurances from the GOP they'd hold a vote on the ACA credits are already vanishing, thanks to Johnson's refusal to promise a vote in the House. To no one's surprise.

I'm so disgusted with them...

Sunday, November 9, 2025

When in doubt, make it up...

I sat down and spent a couple hours working out what I needed for the boys' home in Chapter Three, diagraming and sketching and tossing aside ideas, and searching the streets of Montréal to make sure I could do what I planned to do (thank you Google Maps). And what I came up with is livable. Even believable.

I went up the Island on Montréal to where the yards were more spacious and the St. Lawrence River merged with the Prairies River. I built a corner lot with lots of trees and shrubs, a detached garage in a back corner connected to the house by an enclosed walkway, and structured a house with two floors and a basement.

First floor is sitting room, dining room and kitchen on one side of a center hallway; the other side is the owner's living quarters. Six rooms upstairs, with gable windows, a bathroom and a closet of things. The basement is the game room and library, with another private room for one of the boys and another bathroom.

The garage has been done over into two rooms where the boys go to meet with their visitors. Also, while drugs are not officially allowed that is not strictly enforced. Adam does pot in a bong and smokes cigarettes, and a couple of the boys use drugs to numb being used.

I feel a lot better about it, now. I might add a second bathroom upstairs. I'll think about that. But it would make sense. Maybe one that's just a shower, no tub. And a free-standing pool in back?

I like being at the point where I can fuss over details instead of messy structure.

Saturday, November 8, 2025

Plausibility problem

I've run headlong into an issue that really cannot be shoved aside. Adam is handled as a runaway by the authorities. Because his parents do not want him back, he is handed over to a foster home. Where the owner of the home is really a pimp for the boys staying there. Only boys. Mid-teens.

The intent is for them to have a place to live until they're old enough to handle things on their own. But it's really a male whorehouse, with carefully selected clients who drop by for their fun.

Well, that's raised an issue I cannot get around. Where can this kind of place be situated, in Montréal? If it's in a residential area, neighbors will eventually notice the comings and going of middle-age males into the house.

If it's located in an industrial area that's pretty much shut down after six, it would stand out as unusual and bring unwanted attention. Putting it downtown doesn't work, either, nor in the Old City.

No matter what, the way I have it written now is not realistic. And I'm blocked trying to figure it out. Because the alternative at the moment is for Adam to be homeless and standing outside the bus stations waiting for some old man to pick him up and pay him enough to buy a meal and room for the night.

That or wind up a kept boy for sugar-daddy kind of guy. And neither really works for me.

I've thought of just passing by it, but this part of his life informs on so much else so it needs to work. Otherwise, I'd have to chuck large portions of what I've already written and infused into his story with Dair.

And Adam's not exactly being helpful. The little shit.

Friday, November 7, 2025

I may have to get rid of my car...

I just spent $1000+ getting it in shape for winter. Tires rotated, new oil, full fluids, air filter, tune up with new plugs and distributor cap, oil seepage noted, battery replaced, lubes and labor...and a lecture on how my car's body needs attention. Which it does, but I only have 1 rust spot on it; the rest are just dings.

In the last 12 months I've spent thousands of dollars on it. I love my car, but for that kind of money I could be in a new one that's under warrantee. I like the HRVs, except for all the electronic crap and it not being available with a stick. It would have been the right height for me to get in and out of, though.

Thing is, I can't keep up this kind of expense. $1300 a year for insurance! Things going wrong because the car's 27 years old? And I don't even drive it that much. Maybe 200-250 miles a month. There's been occasions I've gone 2 months before needing to gas up.

But having a car helps so much. Groceries. Dr. appointments. Going into Caladex, now and then. I mean, I could do that on the bus; I managed in LA for nearly 2 years, with no car. But it's a real hassle. And Uber's not that cheap.

Crap, I don't need to be worrying about this, right now. I had the money, fortunately...so I didn't have to hit up my savings. I'm just...just tired of always being on the edge of broke.

Of course, Adam is saying, Let's use this for me. Even more-so, because I have no driving license. To which I reply, It's not the same fucking thing, asshole.

I dunno...maybe the fates are telling me it's time to stop driving before I hurt somebody. Even though I haven't hit anyone in nearly three years, and that time was so slight it didn't cost much to handle.

Shit, is anybody out there willing to gift me half a million bucks so I can move to Dublin or London?

Thursday, November 6, 2025

Nothing on DW, today...

This is what I've been doing. I'm sick and tired of Democrats barely fighting back against the GOP's shutdown of the government and their push towards fascism, so I worked this up and have been spreading it around. Sent it off to both my Senators...Gillibrand and Schumer...and Rep. Kennedy.

It's not much, and I have no idea if it will get any traction, but I have gotten some decent feedback. And this image of the moon caught in a rainbow makes me feel hopeful.

Would you be willing to do the following to fight back against the GOP, on behalf of Democrats?

1. Rallies like AOC and Bernie did? 

  • a. Record them 
  • b. Talk to people 
  • c. Broadcast it on their social media 

2. Hold town halls in across the state? 

  • a. Record them 
  • b. Talk to people 
  • c. Broadcast it on your social media 

3. Hold town halls in Republican districts? 

  • a. “Your rep may not care but we do.” 
  • b. Record them 
  • c. Talk to people 
  • d. Broadcast it on your social media 

4. Make it clear to the MSM Democrats are in Washington ready to talk while Republicans are on vacation? 

  • a. News conferences. 
  • b. Going on MSM and cable news to press the case and keep blaming Republicans for this 
  • c. Argue back when any moderator tries to make it Democrats’ fault 

5. Table setups like Yassamin Ansari outside the Speaker’s office? 

6. Go en mass to the White House to meet with the president? He won’t do it, but the optics would be great for us. 

7. Keep publicizing the hell out of what’s been shut down and how it’s affecting Americans? 

  • a. Museums in Washington 
  • b. Air traffic control disrupting holiday travel and damaging safety

For some reason it's gotten me three message requests on Instagram from women who want to show me their tits. Blocked 'em all. That is NOT my thing. I just hope it resonates with other Democrats and liberals.

Wednesday, November 5, 2025

Discomforting...

I tapped into a part of me I usually try to ignore, today. I sat down and opened a Word doc to add notes to DW...and instead wrote about Reynard appearing outside the home Adam now lives in.

How did he find Adam? Reynard inadvertently reveals Rory, one of the boys in the home, wrote to their parents, but instead of reading the letter, they'd shredded it. Reynard saw the return address in the trash and came to demand Adam help him.

The Lécuyers believe Reynard was hiding Adam's homosexuality and are punishing him for it. Without really knowing what he's doing, he lets Adam know his parents consider him dead, and he acts like it's Adam's duty to clarify that him choosing to be gay was a secret from him as well. 

Deeply hurt, Adam punches him. They get into a serious brawl in front of the home and the good Christian man who pimps Adam out has to intervene. Reynard runs off, and Adam is left bloodied and blank of mind...and aware that the life he was trying to build in that home is no more.

This...part of this...grew out of something that happened to me as a child. I was born with health issues, some very serious. Turned out, my father had knocked up another woman, just before my mother became pregnant, and she'd borne him a healthy son. So he decided he didn't want me or my mother; he wanted to stay with that woman.

My mother and I were shipped off to San Antonio, to live. My mother got married, again, when I was four to man in the Air Force. In order for me to get benefits, I had to be his legal child, so she contacted my father and asked if it would be okay for him to adopt me.

My father, effectively, said, "Yeah, sure, take him. I don't want him." So when I was five, I was given a new last name -- Sullivan. Didn't see anyone in my father's side of the family till I was in my twenties.

The abandonment of this still messes with me and my belief I'm not worthy of being wanted. Doesn't help many other aspects of my life reinforced this feeling. Things I had had no control over. But this is mainly responsible for me being alone for the last forty years.

Adam is bringing this forward...and I'm letting him...but shit, it fucks me up.

Tuesday, November 4, 2025

Not rushing...

I'm fighting my natural inclination to make what I've written good-enough for now so I can jump to the next part, but instead am making myself redo each chapter till they are as tight as I can make them. 

I've almost worked like this, before, but cast it aside once I reached a certain point in the story. I'm not doing that, this time. This book is not going to be good, if I can help it; it will be fan-fucking-tastic.

My initial work with APoS was like that, but more like getting it into order. Roughing it out. Then I began working through each volume A-Z, and that seemed to do right for it. I wanted a bit of sweep to the story as well as centering it in Brendan's life.

With DW, I want it more intimate. No real sweep; just people existing and connecting and ricocheting off each other...

Wow...I just had an image of pool balls clacking all over the table but not dropping into the pockets. Funny.

...Anyway, for that to work I need to have a solid grasp of their stories. Not just Adam's and Dair's, but peripheral characters like Loren...and Rory...and even Reynard, Adam's brother.

He shows up outside the home and wants Adam to say he's okay with how things turned out. Suggests it's his own fault he had to be outed. Didn't expect so violent a reaction. And gets angry when Adam refuses to provide him with absolution.

That'll be in Chapter Four, where Adam winds up beaten by a visitor and decides to leave Montréal. His attitude will be, No matter where I go, it cannot be worse than where I am.

I've done that, myself, but always fallen back into the same habits. I'm hoping I can work with Adam not to let that happen with his story...