Page 15 of Innocent


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At that time, that was the closest I’d ever come to anyone knowing my secret.

I was Al and Melissa Walsh’s son, after all. Good, proper churchgoers who’d been issued a heavier burden than most by God, and yet they’d persevered.

I was their miracle. Their blessing. Their proof that their faith in God was justified.

And while my parents were far from rich, my father was well-known in the community and highly respected, because he helped keep the local farms running with his mechanical skills.

Now that I’d flown by myself, I ended up taking more trips to visit Mimi, sometimes even just a long weekend. She used any excuse she could to fly me down for visits.

Mimi never mentioned the evening she held me as I cried, but I met more of her friends from diverse backgrounds. I learned how to play mahjong, amazed everyone with my artistic skills, and realized that there was a rapidly deepening divide between me and my parents that couldn’t be sustained much longer.

I got to play drag queen one night and rocked a rendition of “Chapstick.”

Hallelujah.

My disguise was in serious danger of slipping and exposing me.

Then the summer between seventh and eighth grade happened.