Belovèd
"You will recall that my assistant, Father Raddley, had requested through you that Catherine MacKenzie, Ph.D.,The letter was signed by the archbishop at the bottom with his usual flourish.
a professor of English literature on your faculty at St. Francis, join him at the Chancellery some weeks ago for a
discussion centering on the crucial role of the Church in maintaining an appropriate level of academic freedom without
unduly confusing the minds and hearts of young Catholics in our care.
"We were stunned when not only did Dr. MacKenzie refuse our attempt to offer her our godly admonitions
concerning some of her public statements critical of the Church, but saw fit to criticize roundly our views on academic
freedom on the campuses of Catholic colleges and universities along with some of our teaching on social issues
such as the evils of homosexual conduct. She also faulted us for failing to speak out forcefully on the evils of the Iraq war,
the use of torture in military prisons, and the increasing utilization of capital punishment in this country.
"Although we were all in substantial agreement about the evil of abortion, she also dared to fault the Church for attempting
to use the government to impose our views on abortion on non-Catholics as well as general insensitivity in the way we
deal with Protestants and persons of other religions.
"She also castigated the hierarchy of Holy Mother Church for minimizing the importance of the laity in the saving work
of our Lord Jesus Christ in this world.
"To top all else else, she dared to lecture us on our 'extreme' views on papal supremacy which vitiates, according to her,
the key role of local bishops as well as the importance of ecumenical councils and national episcopal conferences of bishops.
"We were shocked by her views, and she resisted all our attempts to correct those views to bring them into conformity with
Catholic faith and teaching. Although I did not excommunicate her, I invited her to examine her conscience in order to
gauge whether or not she should continue to receive the Blessed Sacrament in light of her lapses in doctrinal matters.
"I strongly urge you to review the fitness of Dr. MacKenzie to continue teaching young and impressionable Catholic
young people in an institution purporting to be a Catholic institution of higher learning. Although professors of English
literature, unlike professors of theology, do not require a license from the diocesan bishop to teach in our colleges and
universities, it seems appropriate at this juncture to remind you of your responsibility to maintain the purity of teaching and
theological views among your faculty which are consonant with the Catholic magisterium.
"My hope is that you will see your way clear to rid St. Francis University of the pernicious influence of Dr. Catherine
MacKenzie on our young scholars at your earliest opportunity.
"Please advise."
Catherine wasn't feeling well the next day, but she shrugged
off feeling a little dizzy and taught all her classes. She
thought she had done an especially good job in her last class
discussing Gerald Manley Hopkins, an English poet who had also
been a Roman Catholic priest. Feeling tired after class,
she went back to her office to rest for a few minutes instead
of heading directly for her car to drive home.
She had no sooner sat down in her comfortable desk chair than
she saw stars, her left arm went numb. and she lost consciousness.
When she came to, she saw from the digital clock on her desk that
she had been passed out for at least thirty minutes. When
she reached for the telephone to call home, she noticed that her
left arm was weak, although she could still move it. She
punched her number into the phone keypad and sat back.
"Hello?" a boy's voice said.
"Hello. Who's this?" Catherine asked.
"This is Mark. Is this you, Catherine?"
"Yes, Mark. Is Cam there?"
"Yes, m'am. He's in his room, I think. I'll get
him."
Mark put the phone in the kitchen down, walked away, and shouted
up the back stairs for Cam, who was just on the way down.
Catherine could hear those big feet clomping down the stairs a
minute later.
"Your mom," Catherine heard Mark say.
"Mom?"
"Yes. Cam, I need some help, I think."
"What's the matter?"
"I'm not feeling well, sweetheart, and I need you and Kevin
to come and take me to the hospital."
Fear stabbed through the boy, and his chest tightened.
"Where are you?"
"I'm in my office at school."
"I'll be right there, Mom. Hang on, now. I'm
leaving right away."
Cam hung up the phone, knowing this must be serious, because his
mother would never ask for help frivolously.
"KEVIN!" he shouted at the top of his lungs.
"WHAT?" Kevin shouted back from the TV room.
"COMMERE!"
Kevin knew from the sound of his partner's voice that something
was very wrong, and came running from the TV room back to the
kitchen.
"Grab your shoes," Cam said. "Mom is in her
office feeling sick, and we have to take her to the hospital.
Right now. Let's move it!"
Kevin's dark complexioned face turned white, and he ran back to
the TV room to get his sneakers.
"Guys," he told the boys, "Catherine is sick at
school, and Cam and I are taking her to the hospital. We'll
call you as soon as we know something." He pulled some
cash out of his pocket and gave it to Carl. "Order
a pizza or something for supper, OK?"
"Yep," Carl said as all the boys looked at each other,
worried.
By the time Kevin had run out the back door in his sweat socks,
still carrying his sneakers, Cam had backed the Camaro out of
the garage and was waiting for him.
"What do you think is wrong?" Kevin asked his partner
as he climbed into the car and started to put on his sneakers.
"I don't know," Cam said. "This scares the
hell out of me, though, because Mom would never ask for help unless
she was in real trouble."
They rode without speaking for a few minutes, with Cam breaking
all the traffic laws in his haste to get to St. Francis.
"Please, Jesus, don't let this be bad," Kevin said,
breaking the silence. He wasn't big on prayer, but this
seemed to be the time for it.
Cam stole a quick glance from the road at his partner, whose hands
were clasped and his head down.
"It's gonna be all right, Kev," Cam said, instinctively
offering the comfort that he was far from feeling himself.
Cam slid the Camaro into a parking space next to Catherine's car
in the faculty parking lot, and the two of them sprinted for Catherine's
first floor office in the Arts and Sciences building.
Catherine hadn't taken the lock off her door when she had entered,
and the boys couldn't get in. Kevin took off his T-shirt,
wrapped it around his fist, and smashed the glass with "Catherine
MacKenzie, Ph.D." in gold letters written on it. That
brought a custodian around the corner of the hall on the run as
Kevin shook out his shirt and put it back on.
"HEY!" the custodian yelled.
Paying no attention, Cam reached carefully through the shards
of broken glass and turned the inside handle. He snapped
on the overhead light, and there was Catherine sitting at her
desk, unconscious again.
"What the hell are you boys doing?" the custodian said,
looking in the door at them.
"It's our mother," Kevin said. "Call 911,
will you, please?"
The boys checked on Catherine's pulse and respiration while the
custodian used the desk telephone to summon the EMT's. Catherine
was breathing, but her pulse was thready, and she looked pale
and didn't respond to them until Kevin touched her face gently.
She awakened and looked up at Kevin as tears soundlessly coursed
down his cheeks.
"It's all right, dear," Catherine said to him.
"It's going to be all right. Don't cry."
"I won't," Kevin said, and then muttered to Cam, "I
lost one mother. I'm not losing another one."
Cam put an arm around his partner's neck and kissed his cheek,
then letting go in order to hold his mother's hand.
"Mom, are you in pain?" Kevin asked.
"No, not really," Catherine said, and then added presciently,
"I think I'm having a stroke."
They heard the sound of sirens approaching the building, and the
custodian left to meet the EMT's and guide them to the office.
A moment later the paramedics came through the door rolling a
gurney and carrying their bags of supplies.
"Whadda we got?" the guy in the lead asked.
"This is our mother," Cam said. "She called
us at home to come and take her to the hospital. We found
her unconscious, and she's been going in and out of consciousness
since we've been here. She said she thinks she's having
a stroke."
"What's your mother's name?" the medic asked.
"Catherine MacKenzie," Kevin said.
"How old is she?"
"43," Cam said.
"Young for a stroke," the paramedic said almost to himself.
"Step back, if you will." He put a stethoscope
around his neck and checked Catherine's pulse as the other paramedic,
a woman, put a blood pressure cuff around Catherine's upper arm.
The male paramedic keyed his shoulder radio. "Marin,
281 onsite at St. Francis University. Patient is 43 year
old female. Pulse, 95. BP, 200 over 120. Patient
is currently conscious and responsive, and believes she is having
a stroke."
A voice on the radio came back with some instructions that were
incomprehensible to Cam and Kevin except for "Bring her in."
"Catherine, we're going to put you on our stretcher and take
you to the hospital, OK?" the woman paramedic said, emphasizing
her words to make them clear. "We'll treat you in the
ambulance."
"Yes," Catherine said.
"Mom, we'll be right behind you," Cam said.
Catherine nodded and smiled.
The two paramedics picked her up gently from her chair, put her
on the gurney, covered her with a blanket, and rolled her out
through the broken glass on the floor. The two boys followed
them out to the ambulance still sitting at the curb with its red
lights flashing. The boys went to the Camaro, got in, and
pulled up behind the EMT's vehicle. The ambulance soon took
off, it siren shrieking and horn blaring. Cam turned on
his headlights, and as the ambulance went through traffic lights,
he followed right on through the intersections close behind it
all the way to Marin General.
The paramedics pulled into the emergency bay, and hospital staff
joined them as they removed Catherine from the ambulance and wheeled
her into the hospital. The paramedics passed on to staff
the patient's vitals as they rolled along. Cam found a place
to park, and the two boys ran into the waiting room. They
introduced themselves to the receptionist, and said they would
be standing by for news about their mother, Catherine MacKenzie,
who was just brought in. Then they went and sat down in
those abominable plastic chairs, and Kevin put his head in his
hands and began weeping silently again.
Cam put his arm around his partner and spoke quietly into his
ear.
"Kev, I know from the experience with you when you were hurt
that crying doesn't really cut it in these situations. If
you have something to say to God, get your ass into the chapel
and talk to him. That's my advice. That's what I did."
"Shit, I can hardly locate a holy place, let alone knowing
what to say or do when I get into one. You know that.
I'm not God's favorite person, and for good reason."
"Well," Cam said, "you're in luck, then.
The priests say he's in the business of forgiving and listening,
so maybe you should get right on it. I'll wait here for
any news from the doctors."
Kevin sighed and wiped his eyes as Cam turned him loose.
"All right," he said, getting up and checking out the
signage for directions to the chapel. He walked away, guided
by the oft-followed blue line in the tile floor. Even in
the midst of his fear and turmoil right then, Cam's eyes were
glued to Kevin's sweet, muscular ass in his Levi's as the boy
left.
Cam pulled out his cell phone and called home. Carl answered
the phone.
"Carl, it's Cam. We're at the hospital."
"Thank God you called," Carl said. "We're
all worried."
"There's no news yet. One of the paramedics muttered
something about a stroke, but we don't know. It seems as
if Mom can move her arms and legs, so we don't know what the deal
is yet."
"All right," Carl said. "I'll tell the guys.
I know this probably sounds stupid, but I'm actually praying,
if you can believe that."
"Thanks, man," Cam said. "Did you guys get
something to eat?"
"We ordered a pizza, and it should be here any minute.
Do you want us to save you some?"
"No, eat up. I have no idea when we'll get home."
"OK, Cam. Let us know."
"We will. Thanks for holding down the fort. Feed
Sam, will ya?"
"Already done," Carl said.
"Thanks. We'll talk to ya later." He snapped
his phone shut and broke the connection.
Kevin had not yet returned from the chapel when a doctor came
out of the emergency treatment section about thirty minutes later.
"Mr. MacKenzie?"
Cam stood up and walked over to him. "Yes, sir,"
he said.
"Dr. Rondapour," the man said, introducing himself as
they shook hands. "We want to run some more tests on
your mother," the doctor said, "but we think she's had
a slight stroke, although there doesn't seem to be any impairment.
We're giving her a blood thinner and some medication to get her
blood pressure down. Do you know if she is already taking
a blood pressure medication?"
"I don't think so."
"All right. We have her personal physician's
name, and we'll be contacting him in a few minutes. We're
going to admit her and keep her overnight for observation."
"Yes, sir. Can my brother and I see her before you
take her upstairs?"
"Yes, give us a few minutes, and the receptionist will let
you know when you can come back to the treatment room."
"Thank you," Cam said, and he went back and sat down
just as Kevin walked back into the waiting room looking much calmer
than when he had left. He walked over and sat down beside
his partner.
"The doctor just told me that they think Mom had a slight
stroke, but there's no impairment, I guess. They're running
more tests, and they're going to keep her overnight for observation."
Cam said. "We can go back and see her in a few minutes."
"Thank you, God," Kevin said, looking upward, and then
looked at Cam. "If I ever give you a hard time about
going to church again, just kick my ass, willya?" he said
to him.
Cam couldn't resist. "Did you have a little 'Come to
Jesus' meeting in the chapel?"
"Yes, and if you kid me about it, I'll kick your ass!"
Cam put his arm around Kevin again.
"All right. I'm sorry. I'm not laughing at ya.
The last thing I want to do is tease you about is praying.
I know about praying! And I know what good things
can happen when you do pray."
The telephone on the receptionist's desk rang. She answered
it, hung up, and waved the boys over.
"You can go on back to Treatment Room 6," she said.
"You have five minutes before they take your mother up to
her room."
"Thank you, m'am," Kevin said, and they hotfooted it
back to Room 6. Catherine was lying on a treatment table
in a white hospital gown with her eyes closed when they went in.
An IV was running into her arm.
"Mom," Kevin said, taking her hand and kissing the back
of it.
"How are you feeling?" Cam asked, bending down and kissing
her forehead.
"I feel fine," Catherine said. "I want to
go home."
"I think they're going to keep you overnight for observation,"
Cam said. "They're giving you a blood thinner and some
blood pressure medication."
"I'm glad to know that," Catherine said tartly.
"These doctors don't tell you anything."
"Mom," Kevin said, "you gave us a scare."
"I know," Catherine said. "I'm sorry.
But thank you for coming to get me." She looked at
the boys with amusement. "How did the window in my
office get broken? Did one of you break it?"
"I did," Kevin said. "Your door was locked.
You can take it out of my allowance."
"That's one bill I'll be more than happy to pay myself,"
Catherine said. She paused. "What are the boys
eating for supper tonight, I wonder."
"Pizza," Cam said. "I talked to Carl."
"I can't let you boys live at home alone," Catherine
said. "You need supervision."
"We'll be fine, Mom. You're going to be out of here
in no time," Cam said. "Anyway, Kevin will keep
us all in line."
"True dat," Kevin said. "They'll either do
what I tell them to do, or I'll kick their butts!"
"That's what I'm afraid of," Catherine said. "I
need one of you to do me a favor tomorrow."
"What?" Cam asked.
"Call Fr. John Reilly at St. Francis and ask him to cancel
my classes for two days. Two days only. I'll be back
after that."
"I'll call him," Cam said, suspecting that his mother's
estimate of when she'd be back teaching was a little optimistic.
A nurse and an orderly came into the treatment room.
"Time to go upstairs, Mrs. MacKenzie," the nurse said.
"You boys will have to excuse us."
"All right, Mom," Cam said. "We'll go home
and supervise. You have a good rest tonight, and Kevin and
I will be here to see you in the morning,"
"No, you go to school like you're supposed to," Catherine
instructed.
"We'll see you in the morning," Cam contradicted.
"You sleep well tonight."
Kevin bent down and kissed her cheek, and Cam followed suit.
The two boys watched as the nurse and orderly wheeled her out,
and then walked slowly back through the waiting room and out into
the parking lot.
"By the way, nice job getting us here, Mario," Kevin
commented on Cam's driving on the way to the hospital. "It
was white knuckle time all the way."
"I just did what you've always taught me," Cam said.
"'Traffic lights are only advisory,' you always say."
Kevin shook his head and laughed as he got into the Camaro.
"You're such a cute little shit," he said, "In
fact, you're cuter 'n sackful o' puppies!"
"Well, shet my mouf," Cam said. "You're goin'
southern on me."
"Not yet," Kevin said. "That comes later--I'm
gonna give you an Australian kiss tonight."
"What's that?"
"It's the same as a French kiss, but it's down under."
Cam laughed, and then pulled out his cell phone out of its holster,
handing it to Kevin. "Call Alex and John," he
told his partner, "and then call Ian and Mary. They
need to know what's happened to Catherine."
Kevin complied. Everyone he talked to was shocked and concerned,
and everyone offered to come to San Rafael immediately.
Kevin dissuaded them until they knew more about Catherine's condition,
but Mary Carson said she was going to drive up the next day from
San Francisco and stay until Catherine was back on her feet.
The support from everyone made the two boys feel good about their
"family."
The Emrick and Carson boys surrounded Cam and Kevin in the kitchen
when the two walked in the back door. They gave them what
information they had on Catherine's status, and tried to reassure
them that everything would be all right. Cam could see that
their housemates were worried. Kevin informed them that
Mary Carson would drive up the next day to stay until more was
known about Catherine's condition.
"Yeah, you slackers better straighten your asses up right
now!" Kevin told the guys. "We need some discipline
around here!"
They all groaned, and William Carson asked Kevin and Cam if they
had eaten. When they said no, William surprised them by
having them sit down in the breakfast nook while he made them
some shaved turkey sandwiches and heated up some soup, and served
them. Kevin returned thanks, remembering to name Catherine
for healing. He and Cam ate hungrily as the other guys sat
around the table and talked. Despite their anxiety about
Catherine, Cam had the definite impression that the four guests
were settling in and glad to be right where they were living.
When they had finished eating, Kevin collected their dirty dishes
and put them in the dish washer. Cam stood up from the table
and gave William a hug, patting him on the back.
"Thanks, man," he said. "That was nice."
"Yep," William said, smiling. "You're welcome."
They all went into the TV room and watched some Jackass re-runs,
and then headed upstairs to bed.
Cam and Kevin were no sooner inside their bedroom behind closed
doors than Kevin took Cam's face in his hands and kissed him deeply.
"I love you so much," he said. "And I'm in
lust with your body. I'm guessing you know that by now."
Cam didn't respond. He put an arm around his partner and
and a hand behind his head, and squeezed him tightly to his body.
They just stood there in the middle of the room for several minutes,
unmoving, saying nothing. When they let go of each other,
Kevin sat Cam down on the bed and stripped him down, admiring
the beautiful body that emerged as he did so. Then Kevin
was out of his clothes in a split second, and they lay in bed
holding each other, looking at each other in the dim light of
the bedside lamp.
"You're fucking beautiful, Kev," Cam said as he nuzzled
his partner's face.
Kevin smiled and bent his neck to lick and kiss Cam's right nipple,
taking it gently between his teeth.
"Oh," Cam said.
Partly lying on his partner and partly on the bed, Kevin kissed
and licked and sucked his way slowly down Cam's glowing body until
he lay between his stretched out legs. He took Cam's balls
in his hand, nuzzling them with his nose and licking them, and
then he took the head of Cam's rigid penis, velvet over steel,
into his mouth, and just held it there. It wasn't long before
Kevin tasted a few drops of Cam's sweet precum. Kevin began
to run his tongue around the corona of his partner's cock as Cam
groaned. He kept the boy teetering between heaven and earth
until Cam pulled away and turned his body around in a sixty-nine,
taking Kevin right down to the root of his dick, reveling in the
male smell of his groin. Now it was Kevin's turn to groan.
The lovers kept stimulating one another, on the brink time and
time again and then pulling back from ecstasy, until Kevin went
over the edge and gave Cam a giant mouthful of his semen.
That sent Cam into orgasm, and each of them drank down his lover's
essence, making sure he received the last drop of the sweet load
that was like a gift.
In the afterglow, Cam eventually turned himself around and pulled
Kevin up to the head of the bed, covering the two of them with
a sheet. Cam held his partner gently as they drifted off
to sleep, loving each other and loving what they had done for
each other, their worry about Catherine temporarily submerged
in rest.