522 (CC/UC, AU, Adult, COMPLETE, 09/01/13)

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April
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Part 51

Post by April »

It feels so empty around here! Did everyone decide to go on vacation at the same time or something? :lol:

Well, for the first time in a long time, I'm actually getting a lot of writing done. It's kind of nice. I've almost reached page 1,000 now! This is going to be a really long fic. I've still got a lot left to go.


Ellie:
So glad that your computer issues worked out to your benefit. Can you hook up portable speakers to the new computer? Or do you have to live with what you've got?
I could hook up some portable speakers if I wanted to. I don't know, I'm getting used to the new speakers, and I think they sound good enough. The volume level is fine; it's just that the volume is sort of . . . contained within the computer. But I think I can deal. ;) Overall, I'm really liking my new computer. It's much faster!
Under no circumstances will I EVER be on board with Michael and Isabel being friends ... of any kind! Yuck!
Don't worry, neither will I. And I don't think it'll ever happen. He could never trust her enough to be friends with her.
Vanilla sex is good, but a good thumping is always the best!
I'm in complete agreement with you there. ;)

BB:
I always love the scenes with Michael and the girls. He is just adorable. And adorable dads are so sexy.
Sexiest things ever!
I'm really starting to feel sorry for Isabel. She's batshit insane but now we know why. Everything she does is caused by what happened to her when she was three years old. She needs help but the only thing she thinks she needs is Michael and that's never going to go well.
Yeah, she's never going to get the kind of help from Michael that she wants, and if he's the only person she's willing to let help her . . . well, she may never get the help she needs. :?

Rodney:
You know I might have felt sorry for Isabel with the whole being child raped by her father and Michael the only good guy she's ever known and trusted but doesen't have him.....if it wasn't only for ONE little old fact.

She was the one who cheated on him,broke up with him and left him for Alex! Nope she wasn't heart broke she was the one who dumped Michael.So I do not feel sorry for her in anyway in not having him.Yes I feel sorry for what child Isabel went thru but not what adult Isabel is doing now.
Isabel definitely has legitimate reasons for blaming her father for so many of the problems in her life, but you're right. What she considers to be her biggest problem, not being with Michael, is all her own doing. She has no one to blame for that but herself.


Thanks for the feedback. :)







Part 51








That’s the most adorable onesie I’ve ever seen in my life, Tess thought as she looked at baby clothes on Amazon.com. It was bright blue and had Superman’s giant S symbol on the chest. Her baby would most certainly be super.

A knock on the door jerked her out of her thoughts. She looked up from the computer and saw Max sidling into the studio.

“Oh, it’s just you,” she said disappointedly. “I thought you were a customer.”

“Maybe I am,” he said. “Depends what you’re selling, your designs or yourself.”

She scrunched up her face in confusion, and he motioned to her outfit. She was wearing a short, tight white skirt and a very low cut v-neck sweater. “I can dress like a hooker if I want to,” she said in defense of herself.

“Hey, I’m not complaining.”

She rolled her eyes and added the Superman onesie to her online shopping cart. “What do you want Max? You’re bothering me.”

“Yeah, it looks like you’re getting a lot of work done,” he remarked sarcastically.

“Well, there’s no work to do.”

“That’s what I hear. That’s why I’m here, actually. Liz is really worried she’s gonna lose her job.”

“She might,” Tess admitted. “I might, too.”

“But it’s okay if you do. You’re not the breadwinner. As much as I hate to admit it, that’s what Liz is right now.”

She shrugged, not all that sympathetic towards his plight. “That’s what you get for taking a volunteer job.” She took a few steps away from him, carrying her laptop with her. He sort of . . . smelled bad. Like trailer park.

“It’ll amount to something, you’ll see,” he promised.

“Look, Max, I’m trying my best around here.”

“Are you?” he countered. “Is shopping for baby clothes really trying your best?”

“You and Liz would be doing the same thing if you . . .” She trailed off before she said something potentially insulting. “Never mind.” Max didn’t know that she knew about his fertility problem.

“What?” he pressed.

“Nothing.”

“Finish what you were saying.”

“I don’t even know what I was saying,” she lied. “Just forget it. God, you’re such an ass.” How had she ever dated this guy? He was impossible to tolerate.

He stared at her for a moment, his jaw tightening in anger. “She told you, didn’t she?”

Time to play dumb. “Told me what?”

“That I can’t have kids.” He grunted. “Unbelievable.”

Now she felt bad. Liz was going to catch heck over this. “Max . . . she didn’t mean to,” she assured him. “It just slipped out.”

“I told her not to say anything,” he growled.

“Don’t be mad at her, okay? She’s put up with a lot of your crap over the years.” Liz had agreed to marry a man whom she’d known was a rapist. That had to be some sick and twisted kind of true love. “Relax, okay? I haven’t told anyone.”

“Except Kyle and Maria and Michael, I’m sure.”

“No, I haven’t said one word to them, and I’m not going to,” she vowed. “Because honestly, they don’t care about your problems.” The only reason she cared was that Liz was a sort of friend, and Max’s problems were her problems, too. “God, grow up, Max. You’re not the center of the universe.”

“I used to be.” He shook his head angrily and stormed out of the studio. He was nothing like the guy he once had been. What he was failing to see was that that was a good thing.

~*~*~*~*~*~*~

When Liz got out of class and went home that day, she found her husband waiting for her. He was sitting on the couch, doing his best impression of Alex by downing a beer. He didn’t even look at her.

“I’m afraid to ask,” she said, heading into the kitchen.

“You told her.”

She set her purse down on the counter, pretending not to know what he was talking about. “What?”

“Tess. You told her about . . . me.” He glared at her accusingly.

She wanted to deny it, but there was no use. Max seemed pretty certain. “I didn’t mean to,” she confessed. “I’m so sorry. I told her not to say anything.”

“She didn’t. Not on purpose.”

“It just slipped out.”

He rose to his feet and bellowed, “How does something like that just slip out, Liz?”

“I don’t know; it just did. I was literally in the middle of a breakdown, and it just . . . it just came out. I swear, I never would’ve told anyone on purpose.”

“Well, now she knows, so it’s only a matter of time until everyone else does.”

“No, that’s not gonna happen, Max,” she assured him, nearing him cautiously. He looked like a volcano about to erupt. She placed her hands on his sides, hoping to calm him down. “But even if it did . . . who cares? It’s not like this is something you can control.”

“Which makes it all the more humiliating!” He jerked away from her. “This is humiliating, Liz. I didn’t want anyone to know.”

“Max, it’s not the end of the world,” she kept trying to reach him. “It’s not the end of the world that you can’t have kids.”

“Don’t say that!” He threw the beer bottle against the wall, and it smashed into pieces.

“Why not? It’s true.” He still seemed so unwilling to accept it. “You can’t have kids. And yeah, that’s disappointing. But I still love you.” That had to count for something.

“You shouldn’t have said anything.”

“I’m sorry.” She didn’t know what else to say. She couldn’t take it back now.

“You should be,” he grumbled. “You know, I think you’re letting this head of household thing go to your head. From now on, do what a good woman does and keep your damn mouth shut, unless I wanna shove my cock in it.”

She backed away, thoroughly stunned by those words. She wasn’t sure if it was the alcohol making him say that or if he was saying it all on his own. Max had never been a great guy, but he hadn’t spoken to her like that in years. “I’m sorry,” she said, “I didn’t realize I was talking to Phillip Evans.”

He flinched, and she knew she’d struck a nerve. But in that moment, she didn’t care. Sure, he was angry at her, but she had more than enough reason to be furious with him. He couldn’t give her a house, a decent wedding, any financial support, or kids; and she still didn’t yell at him.

Liz scurried into their bedroom and shut the door. She didn’t want him to hear her crying, but then again, maybe that would knock some sense into him. She wasn’t a bad wife. In fact, sometimes she felt like she was a better one than he deserved.

~*~*~*~*~*~*~

Most of Isabel’s job interviews ended up being a bust. She was off her game and she knew it, had been ever since that debacle with Arthur. She could tell that none of the advertising firms were going to hire her, so she switched tactics and ended up at a bar called The Neon Tiger. It also served as a strip joint—there were poles that came out of the bar counter itself and went all the way up to the ceiling—but the owner, Lee, said he was hiring bartenders. That had to be one of the easiest and most eventful jobs known to mankind. Plus, the pay he was offering was . . . not bad. The Neon Tiger was no hole in the wall. It was a flourishing establishment on the nicer side of town.

“I don’t know, Isabel,” he said as he carried a crate of glasses out from the back. “You ever tended bar before?”

“No,” she admitted, “but my husband’s an alcoholic, so I have plenty of experience.”

He grinned and set the crate down on the counter. “You’ve definitely got the look for it.”

“That’s right. Because I’m a girl. Gotta look hot no matter where I work, otherwise what could I possibly have to offer?”

“Exactly.”

She rolled her eyes in annoyance. “So what do you say? Do I have the job?”

Lee turned to stare at her for a moment, then smiled. “You know what? I like you. I’m gonna give you a chance.”

“Really?” Thank God. She had bills to pay. “That’s great. When do I start?”

“Tonight. Come by around 9:00. And make sure you look as good as you do right now.”

“I will.” She didn’t even look her best, but at least this proved she was smoking hot without even trying. “Thank you so much. I promise I won’t let you down.”

“You’d better not.”

“See you tonight.” She practically skipped out of the bar, feeling good about this new job. Sitting behind a desk typing up memos and sorting files had never been good enough for her. She was a lively, exciting person, and this job was going to be much more fitting.

~*~*~*~*~*~*~

Maria was washing dishes and Michael was drying after dinner when the doorbell rang. When he answered it and saw Isabel standing on the other side, a sinking feeling hit him right in the gut. “What do you want?” he asked flat-out. This usually didn’t end well.

“To tell you I love you again.”

He started to shut the door.

“Kidding,” she added, holding out a hand to stop him. “Sort of.”

Maria came to stand beside him, arms crossed over her chest. “Isabel.”

“Maria. You look tired.”

“Tired of seeing your face,” Maria snapped.

Isabel smiled and said to Michael, “She’s so witty.”

“You got five seconds to explain why you’re here,” he warned.

“Well, as you can see, my beautiful son is in the car,” Isabel said, stepping aside so they could see Garret in the backseat, his face pressed against the window. “I was hoping to drop him off here. I have to work tonight.”

“On which street corner?” Maria asked.

“Very amusing. I just got a new job at a bar.”

“How classy.”

“Let’s not talk class, Maria, because the first time I ever met you, you were dancing topless on some frat guy’s kitchen table,” Isabel revealed. “Now the situation is, Alex has some kind of study thing tonight, so there’s no one to watch Garret.”

“Max and Liz,” Maria suggested quickly.

“Ew, they live in a trailer. He could catch Hep C over there. Besides, I was thinking this would be a great chance to try out Miley and Garret’s friendship arrangement. Your house, your supervision. See? I can follow the rules.”

“I wrote them down, just in case.” Maria took a folded piece of paper out of her pocket and handed it to Isabel.

Isabel unfolded it, looked it over, and huffed. “No telling Michael I love him? That’s crap.”

Maria shrugged. “Take it or leave it.”

She refolded the paper and gave in. “Fine. It’s okay. He already knows.” She grinned at him, and he just rolled his eyes and stood there. These conversations between the three of them were absolutely exhausting him mentally.

“So is this a workable thing,” Isabel asked, “Garret hanging out over here for awhile tonight?”

“No,” Maria shot down the idea immediately.

“Yeah, actually, we had other plans,” Michael informed her.

“Like what?”

“Just, you know . . .”

“Sex,” Maria blurted.

“Sex,” he echoed. “We planned sex.” All of a sudden, he felt Miley barreling through his legs, exclaiming, “Garret!” as she ran out to the car. Garret pushed the door open and climbed out, and the two immediately started laughing and talking.

Isabel smirked as she watched them. “Looks like Miley has other plans.”

“Miley, come here,” Maria called.

She ran back to the house, dragging her friend along with her. “Can Garret play?” she asked excitedly.

Michael glanced down at his watch. It was already almost 7:00. They’d eaten dinner, and they usually tried to get Miley into bed by 9:00.

“Please,” Miley begged, pouting as though she sensed their reluctance.

Michael looked to Maria, willing to let her have the say on this one.

“I suppose,” she grumbled.

“Cool! Come on, Garret.” She pulled him past all the adults into the house.

“I’ll pick him up later,” Isabel said, turning to leave.

“How much later?” Maria asked. “It’s already late.”

Later,” Isabel repeated. “It’s a bar, Maria.”

“Then tell Alex to swing by and pick him up when he’s done studying,” Michael suggested. They really had planned sex for this evening, and he didn’t intend to let those plans fall through.

“I will,” Isabel said, “unless he’s too drunk to drive.” She shrugged. “Think of it this way: Even though they’re interrupting sex, abstinence is the best kind of birth control.” She patted Maria on the shoulder, then spun around and headed off.

Maria slammed the door and growled, “I hate her.”

“Shh,” Michael hissed. Her kid was standing right there, staring up at them with round, puppy dog eyes.

“Hi, Garret,” Maria said, smiling tightly. “I’m Maria. This is Michael. Mr. Guerin.”

He nodded. That sounded very authoritarian.

“I’m Mrs. . .” she trailed off. “Well, we’re Miley’s parents. It’s nice to meet you.”

He just kept staring at them. He almost looked afraid of them. Why? Michael wondered. Were they intimidating? He didn’t want to scare the poor kid. He was probably just nervous because this was his first time playing over at a friend’s house.

“This is Frank,” Miley said when the dog sauntered up to sniff them.

“You can pet him,” Michael told him. “He’s a nice dog.”

Garret reached down and scratched Frank behind the ears, and the dog craned his head back to lick his wrist.

“That’s Macy,” Miley said, pointing to her sister rolling around in the playpen. “Frank’s better.”

Garret smiled and kept petting the pug.

Maria cleared her throat, clasping her hands together nervously. “So, Garret, can I get you something to drink?”

“Not beer,” he mumbled.

She stopped on her way to the kitchen and gave Michael a horrified look. Michael didn’t know what to say, either. How was it possible that a three year-old kid could know what beer was? Worse than that, how was it possible that he knew it wasn’t a good idea to drink it? He knew Alex had a problem, but still . . . at some point the guy had to step up and take care of his kid.

“I was thinking more like juice,” Maria said slowly, pulling open the refrigerator. “So Garret, what do you want to do tonight?” she asked as she poured him a glass. “We’ve got books, games, TV.”

“Toys,” Michael added.

“Frank!” Miley exclaimed.

“I like Frank,” Garret said. “I wish I had a dog.”

Michael didn’t say anything, although he suspected Garret wished he had a lot of things that Miley had. Loving parents were probably at the top of a very long list. Poor kid.

“Daddy, can he paint with us?” Miley asked eagerly.

“Uh . . . I don’t know.” Painting was a messy activity even without toddlers involved.

“Please?” She pouted again.

“Not tonight. Maybe some other time.”

Maria came back into the living room with a small glass of juice for their guest. “Here you go,” she said. “You like grape juice?”

He nodded and tried to take the glass from her, but it slipped out of his hands and fell on the floor. It didn’t break, but the juice spilled all over their beige carpet.

“Oh . . .” Maria tensed and tried not to show it. “That’s okay. Don’t worry about it. I’ll clean it up.” She gave Michael an exasperated look and went back into the kitchen, this time to grab paper towels.

“Wanna play Hannah Montana?” Miley asked, sidestepping the juice.

“How do you play it?” Garret asked.

“I sing and you watch me.”

Garret nodded as the doorbell rang again. Michael went to answer it, hoping beyond hope that Isabel hadn’t come back. Luckily for him, it was just Kyle this time. “Howdy ho, neighbors,” he said, sliding past Michael. When he saw Garret in the living room, he froze, a confused look sweeping over his face. “Whoa. When did you guys have another kid?”

Michael shut the door and leaned back against it, groaning.

Realization hit Kyle like a bullet. “Oh, shit, is that . . .”

Michael nodded.

“It’s a play-date,” Maria explained, bending to soak up the grape juice mess with the paper towels.

“No, not a date.” Michael didn’t like that word in connection with his daughter.

“Right. A session,” Maria corrected. “A play . . . session.” She cringed. Yeah, that sounded weird.

“Hmm.” Kyle smiled at the kids and commented sarcastically, “Looks fun.”

Michael had a feeling it would be fun for them once they got the awkwardness out of the way. But for right now, having Isabel’s son in their house with their daughter . . . it was strange, and nerve-wracking. But they had to give it a shot.

~*~*~*~*~*~*~

The Neon Tiger was crowded when Isabel got there that night. She could barely squeeze through the throng of people to get to the bar. “Lee!” she hollered, trying to get his attention. “Lee! Hey.”

He smiled at her as he poured drinks expertly with both hands. “Isabel. You’re early.”

“Yeah, I hope you don’t mind.” She was over an hour early. A little overtime never hurt anyone. She’d been hoping to get into the swing of bartending before many people showed up, but by the looks of things, this bar was crowded all night long.

“Toss your stuff in the back and get on out here,” Lee instructed.

“Okay.” She headed into the backroom and set her purse in a busted up locker. She covered it with her coat and was about to head back out when she heard whimpering in the corner. She turned on the overhead light and saw a girl wearing a black leather mini-skirt and red corset top sitting in the fetal position, crying. The girl looked at her and managed through tears, “You’re new.”

“Yeah.” Isabel figured she must have been one of the strippers.

“Good luck,” the girl said.

“Thanks.” She must not have known Isabel had been hired for a bartending job. Isabel turned off the light again and went back out to the bar. There were dozens of men crowding the counter, holding up empty beer glasses, shouting, and pointing at her. She walked up to one of them and asked, “What can I get you?”

“Uh, gin and tonic,” he replied, his eyes roaming all over her body. She’d worn jeans and a tight black t-shirt, figuring the attire for this job could be casual.

“Coming right up.” She spun around to prepare the drink for him and bumped into Lee. “Sorry,” she apologized.

“What’re you doin’?” he demanded.

“My job.” She reached for an empty glass, but he grabbed her wrist and stopped her.

“That’s my job.”

She frowned. “Then why did you hire me?”

“I haven’t hired you yet,” he informed her. “This is your audition.”

“For what?”

He glanced across the counter at all the loud, rowdy guys, and she understood what he was saying without even hearing him say it.

“Shake that tail, pussycat!” a middle-aged man with a mustache shouted at her.

“Dance for me, sweetcheeks!” another chimed in.

She felt the familiar feeling of disgust boiling in the pit of her stomach, and she hated herself for being so stupid. Of course he would hire her to be a stripper, even though she’d filled out an application to be a bartender. Men looked at her, and all they saw was her body. No wonder that girl in the back had wished her good luck.

“Dammit,” she swore, climbing up on the counter.

“Yeah!” all the guys shouted, whooping and hollering and chugging their drinks.

Isabel leaned back against one of the poles, looking down at a sea of desperate faces and eager hands. She didn’t want to do this, but in a way, she was surprised that she hadn’t done it before. She remembered her father telling her once that the only job out there for her was pole-dancing.

She lifted her left hand and gripped the cold metal pole, trying not to see three dozen Phillip Evanses in the crowd below her. She didn’t want a repeat freak out of what had happened with Arthur. She needed a job; she needed money. And this was the only way she could get it. For now at least.

She concentrated on making everyone watching her look like Michael. Even if the man was bald, old, and fat, she manipulated his image in her mind to resemble Michael. And once she was no longer looking down at Phillip Evanses and was only looking at Michael Guerins, she felt better. She began to sway her hips to the seductive music booming over the sound system, and then she yanked her shirt over her head.

“Yeah!” the guys roared again as she dropped her shirt behind the bar. She tried to act all into it, and she knew she looked good. But the truth was, she was glad Michael couldn’t see her up there. He wouldn’t have even known her.








TBC . . .

-April
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Part 52

Post by April »

I'm going to make this quick today, so a huge THANK YOU for the feedback to:

Ellie
Rodney (x2)
BB (x3)
Krista (Yes, I still have the same email.) :)
lilah
Neve
Sam


This part's a little lighter, since we've had some heavy stuff lately, so enjoy!







Part 52








Miley and Garret “played” Hannah Montana for about an hour that night, and when Garret’s boredom started to show, Michael made the mistake of suggesting they play hide and seek instead. Hide and seek turned into tag, and tag was exhausting. It took the two kids about two hours of running around after each other before they both fell asleep, Garret on the couch, Miley on the floor next to Frank. Michael and Maria collapsed on their other couch and turned on the TV, both too tired to move Miley to her bedroom.

“I can barely even keep my eyelids open,” she groaned as she snuggled against him.

“Same here,” he agreed. “I wish I had their energy.”

“Even they zonked out, though.” She yawned, not sure what they were watching on TV. “I think it went well, though, don’t you?”

“Yeah. It was a little weird at first, but he loosened up when we did.”

“Yeah. I actually think he’s a good kid. I feel sorry for him.” Looking at Garret as he snoozed on their couch, he looked so tiny and innocent. But who knew what kind of man he was going to grow up to be.

“He’s got a lot of things working against him, that’s for sure,” Michael said.

“Mmm-hmm.” She watched as Chris Harrison came on the television. The Bachelor, of course. It was one of the televised Bachelor weddings. The show had to brag about one of its few success stories, and of course its host was right there in the thick of it. Maria watched as somebody released doves up at the altar and couldn’t help but comment on the ridiculousness of it all. “Oh, what is that? Doves?”

“We’re not releasing doves at our wedding,” Michael said decisively, reaching around her shoulder for the remote. “Why are we even watching this?”

“Thank God we’re not that cheesy.”

He started channel surfing. “We can get pretty cheesy, though.”

“Not dove cheesy. There’s a limit.” She didn’t need a big, extravagant Bachelor wedding. In fact, she preferred not to have one like that. It was just too over-the-top. “We so need to get our asses in gear on this wedding stuff. So far all we’ve got is my dress and the rings.”

“That’s the most important stuff,” he pointed out.

“But there’s a lot of other important stuff, too, like food, vows. A venue. A date.” They had decided on June, but June what? June was approaching rapidly.

“I’m most excited about the food,” he revealed.

“Oh, really? And here I thought you were most excited about spending the rest of your life with me.”

“Well, I’m already spending the rest of my life with you. The wedding’s just symbolic.” He landed on the Sci-fi channel, which was showing some blood and guts movie, and he set the remote down. “Ooh.”

She smiled. “I’m excited about the food, too.” She rested her head on his chest and was content to just lie there and fall asleep when the doorbell rang. It seemed like that damn thing had been ringing all night. “Oh,” she groaned. “Do you think that’s her?”

“Maybe.” He got up and went to answer the door. It was indeed Isabel. She was a few hours earlier than they had been expecting her.

“Hey, is Garret ready to go?” she asked without even trying to come on to Michael. That was strange.

“He’s asleep,” Michael said.

Maria reached over and tapped Garret’s shoulder. “Garret, wake up,” she said. “Your mom’s here.”

He sat up slowly and rubbed his eyes.

“Come on, buddy, we’re going home,” Isabel said from the doorway.

Maria took his little hand in hers and walked him to the door. His hair was all over the place, so Isabel smoothed it down and said, “Go get in the car.”

He waved goodbye to Michael and Maria and did as he was told. He was a cutie.

“That’s it?” Maria said confrontationally. “No annoying comments, no pathetic put-downs? You’ve lost your touch.”

“I had a rough night,” Isabel explained. “Bitch.” And with that, she turned to leave.

“Huh.” Maria was actually a little disappointed. She had about a million zingers stored up, ready to fire them off at Isabel whenever she next got the chance. Michael seemed relieved though.

“Alright, let’s go have sex,” he suggested, picking her up and throwing her over his shoulder.

“Michael!” she yelped. “What about Miley?”

“She’s not goin’ anywhere. Look at her.”

“Michael!” She laughed and let him carry her upstairs.

~*~*~*~*~*~*~

The clerk at the university bookstore looked at Liz confusedly as she piled a stack of textbooks up on his counter. She just smiled and kept piling. Studying wasn’t exactly a high priority for her anymore, so the textbooks were just taking up space in a very non-spacious mobile home.

“You know, you can keep these books through the end of the semester,” the clerk said. “We’ll buy them back then.”

“I know, it’s just that I really need money now. Please?”

He smiled. “I get that. Let’s see . . .” He took the first book off the pile and scanned it. “We’re not taking this one,” he said, handing it back to her. He scanned the next. “Four dollars on this one.”

Four dollars for a huge textbook? Liz though exasperatedly. She was fairly certain she’d paid over two-hundred for it.

“Twenty-five cents,” the clerk announced drearily on the third book.

“Twenty-five cents?” she shrieked. “Oh, forget it, I’ll sell them on the Internet.” She shoved all the books back into her backpack, not willing to settle for such a small amount of money.

“Sorry,” the clerk apologized.

She rolled her eyes, not annoyed with him so much as she was annoyed with life in general, picked up her backpack before she had zipped it, and whirled around. She bumped into another customer, and all the books fell out onto the floor.

“Oh, I’m sorry,” the customer said, scratching his thin beard.

“Crap,” she swore, bending down to recollect her things.

“Here, let me help you,” he offered, kneeling down as well.

“Don’t you think you’ve done enough?” Usually she didn’t snap at people like this, but she was in no mood to deal with a klutz. She’d been pissed off ever since her conversation with Max yesterday, and it wasn’t lessening.

“Um . . .” Her collider inconspicuously slid a few loose tampons back towards her. They must have fallen out along with the books.

“That’s so embarrassing,” she said, quickly putting them away. She looked at the guy, and she felt a little bad about being so rude. He looked nice enough with his bed-head hair and paint-splattered jeans. “Thanks,” she said, zipping up her backpack. She slung it over her shoulders and headed out of the bookstore. He walked alongside her, and they bumped into each other as they tried to walk through the security scanner. One of them set it off, causing it to beep shrilly.

“If you two could just wait there, I’ll need to check your bags,” the clerk said as he went through the motions of a transaction with another customer. Poor guy was the only person on duty.

“I hate this,” Liz grumbled. “Like I would really steal any junk from this place.”

“Yeah, that scanner acts up all the time,” he agreed. “I’m Brandon, by the way.”

“Liz.”

“Nice to meet you.”

She nodded mutely. Small-talk was always awkward.

Suddenly he leaned over and spoke quietly to her. “Hey, you wanna take off?”

“What do you mean?” Was that some kind of way of hitting on her?

“Follow me,” he said, one foot outside the door. “On one, two . . . three!” He bolted, and for some reason, she took off after him, her heavy backpack bouncing laboriously on her shoulders.

“Hey, get back here!” the clerk called, making a pathetic attempt at running after them. He stopped after a few strides, though, seemingly content to let them go.

Liz followed Brandon upstairs through the quiet study area known as The Crib and past the laptop rental store to the Student Union’s food court. They stopped near Starbucks, both of them panting for air.

“Oh my gosh,” she said, feeling exhilarated. “I didn’t know I could run so fast.”

“You did pretty good considering you’re weighed down with books,” he remarked.

“Yeah, really,” she agreed. “And tampons.”

He chuckled.

“Feels kinda good to have some fun again,” she said, trying to remember when had been the last time she’d just let loose and had a good time. In that moment, she actually felt like running a little farther.

“Hey, while we’re up here, we should get some coffee,” he suggested.

“Oh . . .” She tucked her hair behind her ear with her left hand, purposefully giving him the perfect view of her wedding ring. “I probably shouldn’t.”

Either he didn’t notice it or was pretending not to. “It’s on me,” he offered.

Well . . . I am poor now, she thought. If someone was offering to buy her coffee, who was she to refuse? “Sure,” she said.

“Alright, what kind do you like?”

“I don’t know. I could really use, like, a straight shot of caffeine.”

He sauntered up to the counter and jokingly asked, “Can we get one straight shot of caffeine, please?”

“Sure thing,” the barista said.

“Huh,” he said laughingly. “Who knew?”

She smiled. Maybe the caffeine wasn’t necessary, though. She already felt pretty energized.

~*~*~*~*~*~*~

It used to be a completely natural thing for Isabel to show up at Billy’s house. Nowadays, though, it felt strange, almost as if she wasn’t invited there. She hadn’t spoken to him since that night he’d hung up the phone on her. But now it was time to put their relationship to rest once and for all. Obviously he was done with her, even if she didn’t feel quite done with him yet.

When she got out of her car, Lorenzo was leaving the house. “Hey, Isabel,” he said, “haven’t seen you around here for awhile.”

“Yeah, Billy and I have sort of been taking a break.”

“You heard the song, huh?”

She nodded mutely.

“Hmm, well, that’s too bad,” Lorenzo climbed into his beat up junker car and rolled down the window. “Listen, I’m on my way to score some hash if you wanna tag along.”

“No thanks,” she declined. “I’ve got enough problems. I probably shouldn’t add drug addiction to the list.”

He shrugged. “Suit yourself.” He brought his car to life, blasted a hard rock radio station, and zoomed out of the driveway. Isabel waved goodbye to him, wondering if she’d ever see him again. If this was really the end of things between her and Billy . . .

She let herself inside the house and found Billy sitting on top his kitchen table wearing dingy white boxers, an unlit cigarette hanging out of his mouth. He was strumming his guitar, and even though Isabel was no music expert, it sounded out of tune. He stopped playing when he looked up and saw her.

“That sounded like the crap you used to write,” she said.

“I didn’t have any inspiration.” He set his guitar aside and slid down off the table, taking the cigarette out of his mouth. “I slept with someone else,” he muttered, looking at the floor.

“I took off my clothes for dozens of men,” she confessed right after.

His eyes shot up, full of jealousy.

“I’m a stripper now,” she informed him, not proud of it. “If you hadn’t been avoiding me this week, you would’ve known that. I got fired and failed to get my job back because of . . .” She swallowed hard. “. . . my dad.” She decided she wasn’t going to tell anyone about what had happened in her childhood. Billy would just shrug it off and say shit like that happened. Max would probably laugh, and Michael wouldn’t know what to say because his own childhood had been so ideal.

“Ain’t he dead?” Billy asked.

“That doesn’t matter.” Even from beyond the grave, the man could wreak havoc on her existence. “Anyway, now I’m a stripper. And don’t believe it if anyone says it’s empowering because it’s not.” Last night, twisting and turning her naked body around those poles while all those bastards watched, salivated, and tried to reach up and grab her, had been the most degrading experience of her life.

“Why you doin’ it?” he asked.

“Because I need money.”

“I can get money.”

“Really? With what album sales?” she countered. “You see, this is why it never would’ve worked out between us, Billy. I have responsibilities; you don’t.”

“What’re you sayin’?” He took a few steps forward. “It’s over?”

Despite the song, she really didn’t want it to be. “We both knew this day would come.”

“But . . .”

“But nothing. We’re not some epic romance.” She was content to leave it at that. A perfectly anticlimactic end to a relationship that had never been going anywhere to begin with. She turned and started to leave, but he stopped her.

“Neither are you and Guerin.”

She froze. No, she thought, that’s not true. What she and Michael had once had . . . it had been epic. Billy couldn’t understand that because he’d never had anything like that before.

“You know what he’s doin’ while you’re dancin’ on that pole?” he asked, walking up behind her. “He’s makin’ love to his wife.”

“She’s not--”

“She pretty much is. You’re never gonna be happy if you spend your whole life lustin’ after him.”

She spun around, glaring at him accusingly. “It’s not lust; it’s love.”

“For you.”

She frowned and averted her eyes. He had loved her once. It wasn’t impossible to believe he could love her again, even after everything that had happened. They had been making a lot of forward strides lately.

“Did you ever think you could feel that way about someone else?”

“No,” she answered quickly.

“Well, maybe you could.”

She looked him up and down, the disheveled appearance, overall lack of hygiene, and going-nowhere-in-life aura about him. “With who, you?” she spat. Sure, sex with him numbed the pain a little bit, but that was all. He wasn’t good for anything else.

“Just give me another chance,” he pleaded.

“Billy, what’re you . . .” She shook her head, utterly confused by this. A few days ago, he hadn’t even wanted to talk to her, and now he wanted . . . a relationship? A real relationship? “We’re not one of those couples. We’re not any kind of couple. We have sex, we have a good time. We don’t . . .” She shuddered. “. . . feel things.”

“Speak for yourself,” he grunted.

She kept shaking her head, incredulous. “No, you know, we were doing just fine, and then all of a sudden you wrote this song about saving your soul in my arms; and how am I supposed to save you? I can’t even save myself.”

“Then let me save you.”

“You can’t.” There was only one person who could save her.

“You don’t know what I can do,” he claimed. “I can be a good guy. Maybe not as good as Michael, but just . . .” He took her hands in his, squeezing them gently. “Please, give me a chance. I wanna be more than we were.”

“Billy . . .” This was a bad idea. She knew this was a bad idea. It was hard to navigate the waters of all her relationships. Having a boyfriend in addition to a husband while being in love with a third guy altogether wasn’t the easiest thing in the world. Michael knew about Billy and was probably disgusted that she would sleep with him. But then again, his fiancée had done the same thing.

“I have a son to think about,” she said, pulling her hands from him. “You’re an unemployed addict.”

“So is your husband,” he pointed out readily. “And I can give up drugs.”

She rolled her eyes. “Like hell you can.”

“I can,” he insisted. “I will. Just . . .” He took her hands in his again. “Look, I’m not sayin’ we have to figure all this out right now. Just please don’t shut me outta your life.”

Walk away, her mind told her. Shut the door on this chapter of your life and just be done with him.

She let him hug her instead. She couldn’t help it. Even though he was nowhere near as comforting as Michael, there was something about his arms around her that made her feel like things were going to be okay.

He was in too deep. He felt things for her that he shouldn’t have felt. But she didn’t yet have the strength to push him away. Some part of her needed some part of him and wasn’t willing to let go. Yet.

~*~*~*~*~*~*~

When Michael arrived home after work early that evening, the roar of “Surprise!” crashed into him as he walked in the door. Maria, Kyle, Tess, Marty, and his kids were standing around the kitchen table with big, excited smiles on their faces. A banner hanging overhead read Happy Birthday.

“Whoa, you guys.” He was taken aback. A surprise party? Really? Every year they gave him one of these, and every year he failed to expect it. “You guys didn’t have to do this.” There were green and yellow streamers and balloons everywhere, and he glimpsed a delicious-looking cake on the table.

“What, you didn’t think we were gonna forget your birthday, did you?” Maria said, walking towards him.

“I kinda thought you had,” he admitted. “You didn’t mention it all day. Neither did you.” He pointed to Kyle.

His friend shrugged. “We’re sneaky like that.”

“Happy birthday,” Maria said, giving him a kiss.

He grinned. “Happy birthday indeed.” If that kiss was the prelude to some birthday sex, things looked good for him.

“Happy birthday, Daddy!” Miley exclaimed, rushing up to greet him. She hugged his leg and looked up at him with an inquisitive expression. “How old are you?”

“Oh, god, twenty-five,” he replied.

Old,” Kyle teased. Being only twenty-four, he was allowed to make fun.

“Yeah, that’s really old,” Miley agreed.

He patted her head. “Thank you, daughter.”

“Frank says happy birthday, too,” she said, even though the dog was lying on the couch with his face burrowed in between the cushions.

“Thanks, Frank.”

“I think Macy says happy birthday, too,” Tess said, lifting Macy out of her highchair. “Can you say it, Macy? Happy birthday?”

Macy just pointed out him, giggled, and cooed, “Da-da.”

“I was trying to teach her,” Tess explained. “Apparently it didn’t work.” She set Macy back down in the highchair and walked towards Michael with her arms open. “Come here, old man.”

“Older and wiser.” He hugged her, deciding it was best not to point out that both she and Maria were two months older than him. He understood now why Maria had freaked out about turning twenty-five, though. It was a milestone in life.

“Can we not discuss age in front of the oldest man in the room please?” Marty begged, touching some non-existent wrinkles on his forehead self-consciously.

“Sorry about that, Marty.”

“Ah, it’s okay. Come here, Big Boy. Let me squeeze you.” Marty hugged him, letting his hands roam a little too low before Maria swatted them away.

“Thanks for coming,” Michael told his future brother-in-law, turning to Kyle.

“Do we hug?” his best friend asked.

“I think we high-five.”

Kyle raised his right hand, and Michael slapped his hand against it. Very manly. Not at all gay.

“So is this okay?” Maria asked, re-draping a streamer that had fallen. “I know you like to keep things small. That’s why it’s just the family.”

“It’s great,” Michael assured her, always impressed that she went to so much trouble for him. “Thank you so much, you guys. When did you do all this?”

“Today after class,” Maria replied. “Tess helped.”

“I blew up this balloon,” Kyle announced, holding up a green one with a smiley face drawn on it. “It’s clearly the best balloon ever, and I feel like I deserve some credit.”

Tess rolled her eyes at him. “I hung the streamers.”

“I made the cake,” Maria chirped.

Michael stared at her in astonishment, then looked over the cake. “You made that?” It looked professional.

“Yeah. It’s an ice cream cake.”

“Cool.” It was covered in various frosting colors and looked like one of his paint-covered canvases. It said ‘Happy birthday, Michael’ on it, except his name was spelled ‘Michel.’ He just nodded and didn’t say anything.

“Yes, I’m aware I spelled your name wrong,” she said as if she were reading his mind. “It’s hard to write with frosting. I got confused.”

Marty stood behind her, squeezed her shoulders, and teased, “Can you believe it? The girl who once couldn’t make Kraft dinner is now making cakes.”

“I’m so culinary.” Maria smiled.

“Can I blow out your candles?” Michael asked her pointedly, taking a seat at the head of the table, his cake in front of him.

“Ooh, you most certainly can.” She came up behind him, bent down, and whispered in his ear, “Later.”

“Light ‘em, Kyle,” Tess chirped.

“Okay.” He took out a pack of matches and warned, “I kind of have issues with these things,” as he tried and failed to get one lit. Eventually, Tess took them from him, struck the match correctly, and it blazed to life. “Thank you,” he said as she leaned over the cake to light all twenty-five candles. They were arranged around the edges. There were so many of them. Twenty-four seemed like such a smaller number.

“By the way, your mom and dad are gonna call later,” Maria told him. “They sent you a card.”

“I bet it’s got money in it,” he hypothesized.

“I hope so.”

Tess blew the match out after she’d lit all the candles and proclaimed, “All set.”

It’s like a mass of fire, Michael thought, staring at the candles. “How am I gonna blow all these things out?”

“You’re a good blower,” Maria assured him.

He gave her a look, resisting the urge to make the obvious joke aimed at her. “Oh. Maria.”

“Don’t even say it,” she warned. “Should we sing?”

“I think we should,” Tess replied.

“What song?” Miley asked curiously, tugging on Maria’s shirt.

“The Happy Birthday song,” Maria told her. “Do you remember it?”

Miley shook her head.

“It goes, ‘Happy birthday to you, happy birthday to you. Happy birthday, dear Daddy. Happy birthday to you,’” Maria sang quickly. “You got it?”

Miley nodded this time.

“Okay.” Maria moved her hands like the conductor of the orchestra and everyone started in. “Happy birthday to you, happy birthday to you. Happy birthday, dear Michael . . .”

“Daddy!” Miley shouted over them.

“Happy birthday to you.” Maria clapped excitedly. “Yea. Make a wish.”

He grinned up at her, thinking that perhaps he should have made a serious wish about something important. But all he wanted to wish for was another night full of unforgettable sex. So as he blew out his candles, that was exactly what he wished for. He got all but one of them blown out. “Miley, help me with that one,” he said, lifting her up onto his lap. She blew the candle out for him, and he said, “Alright. We make a good team, don’t we?”

“Yeah,” she agreed. “Can we eat it?”

“Can we open presents?” Michael asked eagerly.

“Well do both,” Maria decided, moving the cake around to her side of the table. “I’ll cut the cake.”

“I’ll cut the cheese.” Kyle snorted with laughter, and everyone just stared at him blankly. “We just don’t make enough fart jokes around here,” he said. “Never mind.”

“Open mine first, Daddy,” Miley said, reaching across the table to pick up a hand-drawn card.

“You got me something?”

“Yeah.”

He opened the card, which had several odd circles drawn on the front, and discovered a crayon-drawn picture of himself and Miley on the inside. He was insanely tall, and both of them had legs coming right out of their necks. Above them, she had shakily written I love you Daddy, spelled correctly and everything. “Well, look at that,” he said, his heart swelling with pride. “Is that you and me?”

“And Frank.” She pointed to a round object in the corner with a black face.

“That’s so sweet,” he told her. “You’re such a good artist, you know that?”

“I wanna be like you,” she said. “See, it says, ‘I love you, Daddy.’ Mama helped me write it.”

“She did, huh?” He set the card down and hugged his little girl tightly. “I love you, too. Thank you so much for this. But you’re the best gift I’ve ever gotten, you and your sister.”

At the other end of the table, Marty sniffled loudly.

“Marty?” Maria asked.

“I’m sorry,” he whimpered, dabbing at the corners of his eyes with a tissue. “I’m just touched. I’m practically female, okay? I get emotional about family bonds.”

Maria carefully lifted a piece of ice cream cake onto a plate and slid it towards him.

“Thank you,” he said. “Open mine next, Hot Stuff. It’s perverted.”

“How perverted?” He found a box marked From Marty, took the lid off, and sifted through the tissue paper inside. Underneath was a book called Tantric Sex with a picture of a half-naked man and woman on the cover. “Well.” He put the lid back on the box before Miley could catch a glimpse. “That should be an interesting read.”

“You have no idea.” Marty grinned, doing a complete one-eighty from his tearful self. “Jimmy and I are halfway through the gay males’ edition, and it doesn’t disappoint.”

“What’s gay?” Miley asked.

Marty threw his arms in the air and exclaimed in an especially effeminate voice, “I’m gay, sweetie!”

“I wanna be gay, too,” Miley decided.

“Oh, Miley.” Michael rubbed his forehead before reconsidering. “Wait a minute, that’s not a bad idea.” That would eliminate all the potential pregnancy problems straight teenagers faced, and considering how close she and Garret were already . . .

“Miley, have some cake.” Maria set an extra frosting-covered piece on a plate in front of her.

“Here, this is from us,” Tess said, handing Michael a bag. “Kyle picked it out, so I have no idea what it is.”

“Hmm.” Michael peered down into the bag and pulled out a box of Trojan condoms, the intense ribbed kind. “Condoms.” Next came a box of the lubricated kind, followed by an ultra pleasure kind. “More condoms. And more. Thanks, guys.”

“Yeah, Tess and I don’t need ‘em anymore, so I figured you two could use ‘em,” Kyle said, sounding proud of his gift.

“Michael, I’m so sorry,” Tess apologized, putting the boxes back into the bag. “I thought he got you a real present.”

“Oh, I did.” Kyle reached into his pocket, took out a plastic gift card, and handed it to Michael.

“Oh, it’s a Cockadoodle-Doo gift card,” Michael said, shielding Miley’s eyes. “And it has a naked lady on it.”

“Yeah.” Kyle grinned. “Use it wisely man. They just got their new shipment of adult material in and it looks nasty.”

Michael dumped the gift card into the sack, a bit disturbed by how horny his friend was. “Thanks, guys.” He uncovered Miley’s eyes, and she immediately asked another horrifying question.

“What’s a . . . con-dom?”

They all fell silent and stared at each other with wide eyes. Finally, Maria turned and pointed out the front window, exclaiming, “Look, it’s Hannah Montana!”

“Where?” Miley looked around wildly.

“Oh, never mind. It’s just a squirrel.” She shrugged and slid two slices of cake across the table towards Tess and Kyle.

“Does Macy get any?” Tess asked.

“No, she’s a pig.” Maria gave her a tiny piece anyway, though, and Macy immediately rubbed it all over her face.

“Open your parents’ card next,” Tess said, handing it to him.

“Don’t I get cake?” he asked as he tore open the envelope.

“Oh my god, I forgot to give you a piece of your own birthday cake.” Maria sliced a piece from the middle and gave it to him.

“Thanks.” He took a bite, nodded his head in approval, and proclaimed, “That’s good,” before taking his parents’ card out of the envelope. “This feels substantial,” he said before opening it. When he did, his eyes went straight to the check inside. “Yeah. Daddy got the big bucks.”

“How much?” Maria asked.

“Five-hundred dollars.”

She held one hand over her heart and sighed wistfully. “God, I love your parents. Upper middle-class and not at all scary.”

“We’ll put this towards the wedding. Towards the food.”

“Yes,” she agreed.

“What’re you guys having?” Tess asked.

“We don’t know yet. Something tasty.”

“Well, that narrows it down,” Marty remarked sarcastically.

Michael took another bite of his birthday cake and said, “Mmm.” It was chocolate, rich, creamy. “The cake’s really good, babe.”

“Thank you. I’m glad it turned out.” She finally cut herself her own piece of cake, but before she took a bite of it, she reached for another present, another card. “This one’s from my mom,” she said. “She wants me to warn you that it’s very sentimental.”

“Oh, okay.” He pushed the cake aside while he opened the card. On the outside, it was just a regular happy birthday card, but on the inside, she’d practically written a novel.

“What’s it say?” Marty asked interestedly.

“She wrote a long note saying how glad she is to have me as her son-in-law.”

“Even though you’re not her son-in-law yet,” Kyle pointed out.

“Yeah, but she said she thinks of me that way. And she says she’s really proud of the life Maria and I have made together, and she . . . thinks I’m an amazing father.” He actually got a little choked up as he read through what she had to say. It sounded so . . . final, like she wanted to make sure he knew what she thought of him in case she was suddenly no longer around to tell him someday. “Wow, that’s really nice of her.”

“Aw, can I see?” Maria asked.

He handed her the card, and she got a little teary-eyed as she read through it. She handed it to Marty next, and told Michael to open his last present. “It’s from me, obviously,” she said, handing him a rectangle box. “I’m afraid you’re not gonna like it.”

“Why wouldn’t I?”

“Because it’s clothing.”

“Yeah, clothing’s overrated.” He grinned at her and peeled off the wrapping paper. When he opened the box and removed the tissue paper, he saw a black leather jacket. “Damn. I mean darn.” Kids in the room, limit the cursing. “Maria, this is nice.” He took the jacket out of the box and held it up.

“You like it?” she asked.

“Yeah.” This was going to make people think he was bad-ass.

“I just saw it and thought you’d look so good in it,” she said. “It’s real leather.”

It must have been expensive then. He put one arm in the jacket and asked, “Do I look like Rocky Balboa in the second movie?”

“Yeah, but with better with hair,” she replied. “I’ll be giving you your other presents later.”

“Oh, yeah?”

“Yeah.”

Kyle chuckled and said, “Bow chicka wow wow,” giving Michael a thumbs up. He and Tess would probably watch Miley and Macy for the night, because a guy’s twenty-fifth birthday only rolled around once.








TBC . . .

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LOVE IS MICHAEL AND MARIA.
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Part 53

Post by April »

Just to let you guys know, I'll be back to more full-time Internet access on Sunday the 22nd. :)

Ellie:
I can't believe she went to Billy's to break up with him, only to keep him around for her own selfish reasons. Yeah ... Billy is gonna scream 'stalker/rapist/killer' soon - with Isafreak his victim.
He's sort of obsessed with her the way Isabel's obsessed with Michael. Oh, what a messed up web of obsession! :twisted:

Rodney:
And I swear college textbooks are a freaking scam!!! They charge you forty bucks for a used book and when you bring it back at the end of the year they want to give you eight bucks for it......bastards
It's so ridiculous. And in a few days, I'm going to have to buy another semester's worth of books. :roll: Great.
But it looks like Liz got a bit more back at the bookstore than money......maybe a new cheating thing on the side maybe?
Hmm, you'll have to wait and see. But there's a reason why I threw that scene into that update.
Okay I see Billy going two ways here.He's either going to clean his life up for love and become a better person(which I doubt very much).Or...Isabel is going to dump him and he's going to get even worse and become her(Isabel) unstable stalker.

Which is kind of funny when you think of it seeing how Isabel herself is an unstable stalker.
Billy is definitely going to reach a fork in the road where he can either go one way or the other, either try to be a good guy or continue being a loser. All I'll say is that whatever route he chooses is going to have HUGE ramifications for this fic.

BB:
Yay, an update. I really don't like this one a week updating thing.
I'm not crazy about it, either, although I guess it's been a good thing since I've needed time to get some writing done. I think when I get back to college, I'll probably update twice a week for awhile, because I'm still worried you guys are going to catch up to me! :)
So Liz is joining the hot-sex-with-a-hot-artist-club? That will make all four girls now. I'm not usually in favour of adultery but after Max's sexist outburst and slimeball behaviour, I'm cheering Liz on.
Well, she's met a hot artist now, so joining that club could be a possibility. And he's a nice guy, too, the complete opposite of Max, so . . . it could be tempting.
Clearly I'm the only one, but I still feel sorry for Isabel. She's clinging to Billy because she needs somebody in her corner and Billy is the best she can get. That's a very sad state of affairs.
I have moments where I feel sorry for her, too, and other moments where I don't. But you're right, if Billy is the best she can get right now . . . that's really sad. Of course, if she gave Alex a chance and put in some actual effort with their marriage, things could turn around.

Neve:
I'm not surprised that Isabel chose to stay with Billy, she might like to think she's a raging feminist but truthfully she has aneed to be validated by men and Billy is the only person doing that for her now.
Definitely. Isabel has always been a walking contradiction when it comes to her ideas of male-female relationships. I think she likes to believe that she has power and control over Billy, but clearly he's got some power over her right now, too.



Thanks for the feedback!

Alright, as for this part . . . if you're a One Tree Hill fan or even just a casual viewer, you might notice that a certain scene here is VERY similar to a One Tree Hill scene. Ah, what can I say, the show just sort of inspired me.

I'm dropping by some music today: "Best Not to Think About It" by Athlete. (Just to give you an idea how very similar it is to the OTH scene, it's the same music, too.) Anyway, it's an awesome song that I actually incorporated into one of my promo vids for this fic, too. Click on :? to give it a listen if you'd like to.

This update is a lot less lighthearted. And a lot shorter, too. Sorry about that.










Part 53








Alex holed himself up in his bedroom to study that evening. He had a paper to write and not a huge desire to write it. When he had finished the first two pages, he decided it was time for a break, so he headed downstairs to get a beer. He hoped there were a few in the refrigerator. Isabel liked to get rid of them without his permission.

When he went downstairs, he found Isabel sitting alone in the darkened living room, gripping the neck of a tequila bottle tightly. She must have heard him come downstairs, but she didn’t even look at him.

“So you’re allowed to drink but I’m not?” he said, pointing out the apparent double standard.

“I’m not an alcoholic,” she noted. “I can control myself more than you can.”

He almost laughed at that ridiculous notion. “Yes, you, Isabel Evans, are the picture of self-control, throwing yourself at Michael and--”

“I do not throw myself at him,” she snapped.

He gave her an incredulous look. She didn’t really believe that, did she?

“I don’t,” she insisted, taking another drink. And it wasn’t a small drink, either. It was a huge gulp of straight tequila. It didn’t even appear to faze her. “It’s his birthday,” she said quietly, eyes downcast. “He’s twenty-five.”

Alex sat down on the arm of the couch, trying to think back to his twenty-fifth birthday . . . and he couldn’t. It had only been a year ago, but he couldn’t even remember where he’d been, who he’d been with, or what he’d done. That probably meant he’d been at Rodeo’s downing the drink they’d named after him.

“I remember his twentieth birthday,” Isabel went on, a dreamy look coming over her face as she spoke. “We celebrated in bed all day, only got up to shower—together, of course—and to get the pizza when the delivery guy came by. That was one of the best days of my life.”

“That’s great,” Alex mumbled, not really interested. Over the years, he’d developed a high tolerance for Michael Guerin gushing, but even he had his limits. “If we’re done with the trip down memory lane, we should talk about something.”

“About what?”

“Our finances.” He glanced over his shoulder at the refrigerator, tempted to just go get a beer and head back upstairs to continue on his paper, but now that he was down here, he figured he’d might as well get an uncomfortable conversation out of the way. Money was always uncomfortable in their household. “Bills are starting to pile up,” he said, certain that she was already aware of that. “I know you said you were gonna look for a new job. I just wondered how that’s going.”

“I got one,” she informed him, pulling an afghan down off the back of the couch. She wrapped it around her shoulders and shivered. “It pays . . . really well.”

“You didn’t tell me.” If there was anything their relationship needed, it was a little good news. He thought she would have told him right away. “So where do you work now?”

“A bar,” she replied, not looking at him, “otherwise known as heaven to you.”

He frowned, suspecting that something was . . . off about this job. “Which bar?”

“The Neon Tiger.”

He knew at once after she told him that what she was doing. He’d been to The Neon Tiger before. Max had taken him there years ago for his bachelor party, which had ended up being his first major drinking binge. “And what’re you doing there?” he asked, even though he already knew.

“Well, I’m not serving drinks if that’s what you’re asking.”

“What’re you serving?”

She finally looked up at him. “Myself.”

He felt as though all the breath flew from his lungs when she said that, even though he hadn’t expected to hear anything else. “Isabel . . .” Stripping and alcohol and unemployment and fighting . . . if someone had told him four years ago that his life would be like this, he wouldn’t have believed them for all the money in the world. “You should get a different job,” he suggested.

“Why would I?” she inquired back. “I’ll make a lot of money there. No, it’s not exactly glamorous, but neither was being a secretary. Besides, they have a look-but-don’t-touch policy. I’ll be fine.”

He didn’t want to feel jealous, but he couldn’t help it. Isabel was his wife, and it seemed like he was the only guy in the world he wasn’t allowed to touch her or see her in a sexual capacity.

“I don’t see you making a move to get a job,” she said. “I’m just trying to keep our heads above water. I strip, you get to stay in school. So I think the response you’re looking for is ‘thank you.’”

There had been a time when he never would have let her do something so degrading, a time when she would have refused to do something so degrading. But times were different now, and they were different people. So he muttered, “Thanks,” and left it at that.

~*~*~*~*~*~*~

Maria stood in the doorway and bid farewell to her guests as they left that evening. “Bye, Marty, thanks for coming,” she said, waving to him as he got in his car. Tess and Kyle waved goodnight, too, as they brought Macy and Miley with them across the front yard to their house.

“Miley, be good for your aunt and uncle,” Maria told her. “You, too, Macy. Bye.” She shut the door and whirled around, barely able to keep from pouncing on her man. Michael stood in the center of the living room with his hands in his pockets, looking just a little bit terrified in addition to looking horny.

“Alright, birthday boy,” she said. “Prepare to get laid.” She grinned and sauntered towards him, pushing him down onto the couch. His hands held onto her hips as she straddled his lap and bent to kiss him hungrily. She could barely believe it was just the two of them there, no interruptions, no distractions. An entire night alone.

He scrunched her shirt up and pulled it over her head, smiling in delight as she took her hair out of her ponytail and shook it out over her shoulders. His fingertips were crawling underneath her bra seconds later. As was usual on Michael’s birthday, she was his final present, and he unwrapped her quickly.

~*~*~*~*~*~*~

“Alright, girly, what do you wanna watch?”

Miley bounced on the couch and exclaimed, “Lion King!”

“Oh, that’s the best Disney movie.” Tess located the DVD on the entire bookshelf full of Disney DVDs and put it in the DVD player. “Who’s your favorite character?”

Miley flopped down on her butt. “Scar.”

“Scar?” Tess echoed in surprise. “He’s the bad guy.”

“I know.”

“Oh, you like the bad boys, huh? Michael’s gonna be thrilled to hear that.” She pressed the play button on the remote, but the DVD wouldn’t close. She tried pressing the open/close button, but that didn’t work, either. She furrowed her brow in frustration.

“But I don’t like when he kills, um . . . Simba’s dad,” Miley added on. “‘Cause my daddy says I’m like Simba, only a girl, and he’s like Simba’s dad ‘cause he takes care of me.”

“Michael’s definitely Mufasa,” Tess agreed, pressing the play button and open/close button on the DVD player itself. Nothing worked.

“Wait a minute, if Michael’s Mufasa, does that make me Scar?” Kyle asked from the kitchen. He was scooping a bowl of ice cream for all three of them. Macy was already asleep in the nursery upstairs.

“Hey, Scar’s her favorite,” Tess pointed out. “Kyle, our DVD player’s not working. Can you fix it?”

“Sure.” He abandoned the ice cream and came into the living room, taking the remote from her, obviously happy to be able to be handyman.

( :? )

Miley glanced up at Tess with a concerned look on her face.

“Don’t worry, he’ll get it to work,” Tess assured her. “Why don’t we go upstairs and get you into your pajamas while we’re waiting?”

“I can do it myself,” Miley said.

“Oh, that’s right, you’re a big girl. Well, let me know if you need any help.”

Miley slid off the couch and ran upstairs.

“She’s so cute,” Tess said, staring after her adoringly.

“You realize when we have kids, we’re gonna have to keep ‘em entertained every second of every day?” Kyle pointed out. “Kinda like this.”

“They’ll entertain us.” She watched as the DVD player slid closed and exclaimed, “You got it to work.”

“Yeah.”

“What’d you do?”

He shrugged and handed the remote back to her. “Pressed some buttons.”

“You’re so brilliant.” She squeezed his arm and gave him a kiss on the cheek as the movie loaded.

“I know.” He yawned.

“Tired?”

“Yeah. I’ve been busy lately, building you a nursery, trying to get you pregnant.”

She laughed a little and headed into the kitchen to finish scooping out the ice cream. “Trying to get us pregnant,” she corrected.

“Yeah, it freaks me out to say it like that.”

“Why?” She used two scoopers at once to scoop chocolate ice cream into Miley’s bowl and vanilla into her own.

“‘Cause I’m a guy; I’m not gonna be pregnant. But you are. We won’t stop ‘til you are, ‘cause that’s what you want.”

She frowned, scooping slower. “Well, that’s what we want.”

Kyle hesitated slightly. “Yeah.”

She set the scoopers down, turning to face him. “Isn’t it?”

“I just said yeah.”

“You didn’t sound very convincing.”

“I put together that whole nursery for you, didn’t I?” he pointed out.

“Do you hear what you’re saying? I mean, do you hear how you’re saying it? It’s like you’re doing everything just to please me.”

He flapped his arms against his sides. “Isn’t that what a husband’s supposed to do?”

She narrowed her eyes at him, stunned by all of this. Had she been blind for the past few weeks? Because she really thought he had decided that he wanted a baby, too, not just for her, but for both of them.

All of a sudden, before she could ask for any clarification, Miley came back downstairs, yelling, “I did it!” excitedly. She had put her pajamas on. The top was inside out.

“Oh, good job, Miley,” Tess said, feeling a bit frazzled. “Um . . . listen, Uncle Kyle and I need to talk for a minute.” She opened the drawer adjacent to the silverware drawer and took out a few supplies. “Here’s a pencil and paper. Why don’t you go sit out back and draw us a picture? We’ll be out in a minute.”

Miley took the pencil and paper and sulked outside, almost as though she knew something were wrong.

“Great, now she thinks we’re fighting,” Kyle grumbled, muting the television as the DVD’s menu came on.

“Well, aren’t we?”

“No. I don’t know. I don’t want to, but apparently you do.”

“No, of course I don’t wanna fight, but . . .” She tried to keep her voice as calm and low as possible. “Is there something to fight about?”

“No, we’re tryin’ to have a baby,” Kyle said simply.

“But why are we trying?”

“Because you want one.”

And therein lay the problem with what he was saying. They were married; they were supposed to be a team . . . and he wasn’t speaking about them that way. “See? That’s what’s wrong,” she said. “You should want a baby, too.”

~*~*~*~*~*~*~

Miley glanced up from her drawing when she heard her aunt and uncle raise their voices. She looked inside and saw them facing each other, both talking at the same time.

“Since when do you get to dictate what I want?” she heard her Uncle Kyle say. She didn’t know what dictate meant.

“I’m not dictating. I’m just saying . . .”

“You’re blowing this whole thing out of proportion.”

Miley accidentally dropped her pencil, and it rolled towards the pool and fell into the water. She ran after it. She had barely started her drawing, and she wanted to finish by the time they were done fighting.

~*~*~*~*~*~*~

“Kyle, this is a problem. If you only agreed to have a baby because I want one, it’s not gonna work out. We need to be in it together, and we can’t be in it together if you’re heart’s not in it.”

Even though he hadn’t wanted to fight, Kyle couldn’t hold back. She was making him out to be in the wrong here, and he didn’t think he was. “Tess, how would you know anything about my heart? All you think about is your own.”

“So you don’t want a baby?”

“I didn’t say that.” He wished she would stop putting words in his mouth.

~*~*~*~*~*~*~

The pencil was too far away. Miley sat near the edge of the pool on her knees, reaching for it, but it floated farther out towards the center. She almost had it in her hands. Maybe if she just leaned a little farther . . .

She felt herself fall in before she could reach for the edge. The water was cold and deep. She couldn’t touch the bottom. She flailed her arms and kicked her legs, trying to get back to the top, but she was scared and it wasn’t working. She managed to get her mouth up to the surface, so she sputtered on water and tried to yell for help. But before she could, she went back under again.

~*~*~*~*~*~*~

“I can’t believe you’ve been fooling me this whole time!” Tess shrieked.

“What, fooling you?” he echoed. “No, Tess, it’s not that I don’t wanna have kids; I do. I just don’t understand why we have to have ‘em right now. And you pressure me.”

“I don’t.”

“Yes, you do.”

She shook her head angrily and looked outside for Miley. “Where is she?” she asked, not seeing her. The panic took hold instantly and skyrocketed when she looked out into the pool and saw her niece floating face down. “Oh my god. Miley!”

“Miley!” Kyle shouted, bolting outside. She ran around the counter and followed him.

Miley!

Kyle jumped into the pool and lifted her out of the water. Her hair was plastered to her face, and her eyes were closed.

“Is she breathing?” Tess cried, dropping to her knees at the edge.

“I don’t know.”

“Is she . . .”

“I don’t know!” He handed her to Tess and clamored out of the water.

“Miley? Miley?” She cradled the little girl, sobbing uncontrollably, tapping her cheek to try to get her to come to. “Oh god. Miley? Call 911.”

Kyle scrambled to his feet and was heading back in when Miley coughed up water.

“Miley!” Tess cried in relief.

“Miley?” Kyle crashed back down beside them, peering down at her, picking up her little hand in his.

Miley slowly opened her eyes. She was breathing again.

“Oh, thank God,” Tess wailed, holding her tightly. “Just breathe, sweetie, breathe.”

“Is she okay?” Kyle’s voice was full of equal hysteria.

“Breathe. Just keep breathing.” Tess pressed her face to her niece’s wet hair. “Oh . . . oh, Miley. Oh my god.”

“Miley, we’re here,” Kyle said shakily. “Just breathe, okay? You’re okay.”

“Oh, god,” Tess cried, feeling the rise and fall of Miley’s chest in time with the heaving of her own. “Miley . . .”









TBC . . .

-April
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LOVE IS MICHAEL AND MARIA.
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RiceKrispy
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Re: 522 (CC/UC, AU, Adult, Pt. 53, 08/13/10, Pg. 21)

Post by RiceKrispy »

April, on my way to Palm Springs with my bf and cousins, we were discussing Wisconsin and I mentioned how awesome the cheese is there (my brother lives there and we went to a cheese palace and sampled so many cheeses) and I decided that we have to go there together some day and just eat lots of cheese.
Life is only as good as the memories we make.
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Part 54

Post by April »

Okay, first things first today: I made a promo vid over the summer but haven't gotten around to uploading it to Youtube until now. But here it is if you'd like to view it: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JzRVqoZTka8 Nothing really new there, but I think the vid turned out well. Unfortunately I'm still working on getting a good version of Movie Maker onto my new computer. :roll:


BB:
I'm just glad that you didn't cut before they hauled Miley out of the pool.
I thought about it. :twisted:

Leila: I'm so glad you're back! I missed my stalker. ;)
I'm glad that Kyle and Tess have the needed baby talk. The timing was bad but it was needed. I hope the scare they got from Miley's trip in the pool,isn't a reason for them to abandon the issue.
I think this will be a reason for them to futher explore the issue.

Ellie:
Here I just celebrated a milestone birthday and you try to send me into an early grave?!
:lol: I was trying to send a lot of people into an early grave with that last part. Milestone birthday, huh? Dare I ask what milestone that is? And happy birthday, by the way. :)

Novy: I'm glad you're back, too! It wasn't the same posting here without hearing your feedback.
Loved the ending, lots of good things can be said for animalistic, down and dirty behaviour.
Lots of good things indeed. ;)
I wonder if this Brandon guy will be making more appearances.
Well, he's been popping up here and there for awhile now, so probably.
OMG!!! That was so scary!! Why do you do these things April?
I don't know! :lol:

dreambeliever:
I loved the way you bounced back and forth between Miley/pool and Kyle/Tess.
Well, like I said, it was definitely inspired by a certain One Tree Hill scene. :)

Rodney:
I thought we had all this Kyle/Tess baby stuff straighten out!!
That's exactly what I wanted you to think! But I always said there was more drama for them to come, and this is the start of it.

Krista:
But they're really not cut out for parenthood when they're so absorbed in their own wants and needs.
Definitely not cut out for parenthood yet. They totally dropped the ball on the babysitting duties.
April, on my way to Palm Springs with my bf and cousins, we were discussing Wisconsin and I mentioned how awesome the cheese is there (my brother lives there and we went to a cheese palace and sampled so many cheeses) and I decided that we have to go there together some day and just eat lots of cheese.
Oh, that sounds wonderful. Cheese is a food of the gods.


Thanks so much for the feedback! I'll probably update again on Thursday or Friday.

I've got more music today. It's called "Tess, Don't Tell" by Ivy. Click on :? when you see it if you'd like to give it a listen. Cool song, appropriate lyrics in the chorus.









Part 54








Maria’s toes tingled as she curled up in front of Michael, clutching the blanket to her chest. “Mmm, that was amazing,” she moaned, still on cloud nine from the orgasm that had just swept over her.

“How amazing?” he asked, smoothing his hands over her shoulders as he pressed into her from behind.

“Stargazing amazing.” She couldn’t keep the big, dopey grin from settling on face. She was high on him in that moment, didn’t have a care in the world. They had just had the most incredible sex on their own living room couch. That hardly ever happened. It was a nice change of venue. “I think we just did the position on page forty-six,” she informed him, casting a glance down at the Tantric Sex book from Marty lying open on the floor.

“Really?” Michael peered over her and said, “Huh, who knew we were so skilled?”

“I always knew. But the question is . . .” She turned the page. “Are we skilled enough for the position on page forty-eight?”

“What the hell?” Michael made a face at stick figure visual representation of a position called The Annihilator. “I don’t bend that way.”

“Oh, I’ll make you bend,” she assured him, turning over onto her back. She looped her arms around his neck and pulled his face down towards her, kissing him. He settled in between her legs and propped himself up on his forearms, his entire body enveloping hers. Maybe The Annihilator was a bit too much. This was fine with her. Michael knew how to make an otherwise boring position like missionary phenomenal.

Suddenly, the front door swung open and Tess barged in.

“Tess!” Maria yelped, trying to cover herself up. “What’re you--”

“You guys need to come quick,” Tess cut in. “It’s Miley.”

Maria and Michael both exchanged a panicked look, and within seconds, they were clamoring outside, yanking their clothes on in the process.

“What happened?” Maria demanded. “Is she okay?”

“I think so,” Tess replied.

“What do you mean you think so?”

“She fell in the pool.”

What?” Maria shrieked, and Michael took off running towards Tess and Kyle’s house.

“Kyle and I were talking and--”

“Miley!” Maria shouted, running after Michael. They tumbled inside the house and out back. Kyle was sitting in one of the poolside chairs holding Miley, who was soaking wet and wrapped up in several towels.

“Give her here,” Michael said, taking his daughter.

“Daddy.” Miley wrapped his arms around him and hugged him.

“Oh my god, Miley.” Maria stroked her little girl’s hair as Tess joined them. “How did she just fall in the pool? You guys were supposed to be watching her.”

“We were,” Kyle insisted.

“Apparently you weren’t,” Michael snapped. “God, how could be so stupid?

“We only looked away for a minute,” Kyle said.

“You can’t do that!” Michael yelled.

“We were talking . . .” Tess trailed off and shrugged helplessly. “I sent her outside to draw. I didn’t think . . .”

“You can’t not think when you have kids to take care of, Tess!” Maria roared. “Miley could’ve died tonight!”

“I’m sorry.”

“Sorry doesn’t cut it!”

Miley started to cry, and Michael held her closer. “So she was face down in that water?” He stared at the pool in horror. “Oh my god.”

“I-I looked her over,” Kyle stuttered. “No bumps, no bruises. She’s breathing fine now.”

“Yeah, now,” Maria growled. “God, I can’t even . . .” She held one hand to her stomach as she pictured the scene in her head, her own daughter, floating in the pool. “I feel like I’m gonna be sick.”

“Sweetie, how do you feel?” Michael asked Miley. “Do you feel okay? Do you need to go to the hospital?”

Miley curled up against his chest and quietly asked, “Can we watch Lion King now?”

Tess started to cry.

“Come on, we’re going home,” Michael said, standing, carrying Miley with him. “Daddy’s got you.” He glared at Tess and Kyle, shaking his head, and carried Miley home.

“Where’s Macy?” Maria asked tensely.

“Upstairs in the nursery,” Tess replied.

Maria stormed inside and headed upstairs. Tess followed her, desperately trying to explain herself.

“Maria, I’m so ashamed right now,” she said. “I can’t even believe I let that happen, but it’ll never happen again. I love these girls so much.”

Maria whirled around. “Tess, shut up!” she bellowed, waking Macy up. Macy started crying, and Maria scooped her out of the crib and carried her out of the room. Tess just stood there with her mouth hanging open, looking devastated.

~*~*~*~*~*~*~

Miley fell asleep easily that night. Maria had a feeling she and Michael wouldn’t be sleeping at all. In fact, she couldn’t even leave her daughter’s bedside. She sat on the floor, her head resting against the mattress, and held Miley’s hand as she slept, just watching her breathe.

“Maria.”

She flinched when Michael touched her shoulder.

“Come on.”

He practically had to pull her to her feet and drag her out of Miley’s bedroom and into their own.

“Oh, god,” Maria groaned, sinking down onto their bed. She rubbed her forehead, trying to ease her pounding headache. “This wasn’t how I pictured your birthday ending.”

“It could’ve been worse,” he pointed out, shutting the door. “We should be thankful it wasn’t.”

Maria nodded in agreement, swallowing hard. She couldn’t get rid of the lumpy feeling in her throat. “A few days ago she ran off and almost got hit by a car. Now she almost drowned. We’ve come too close to losing her too many times. I don’t even know what I would do if . . .” She trailed off, shaking her head. “I mean, I can’t even bear the thought of . . .” Again, she let her sentence fade. “I can’t even say it.”

“Something happening to her,” Michael filled in.

“Yeah.”

“Something bad.”

She nodded silently. The scariest part of all of this was that if Tess and Kyle had been one second late in getting her out of that water, something bad might have happened.

“I worry about it, too,” Michael admitted, sitting beside her, “especially lately. I’d lay down my life for that girl, for both of ‘em. And for you.”

“So would I. Without a second thought.” She rubbed her hands against her legs, shuddering. “I can’t believe Tess and Kyle would be so dumb. They’ve taken care of her before. They should know better. And isn’t it common sense? If you have a pool full of water, don’t let the three year-old wander near it alone. What if this, like, damaged her brain cells or something?”

“She seems fine,” Michael said. “But we can take her to the doctor tomorrow, just to make sure nothing’s wrong.”

“And what about the emotional damage?” Maria went on. “This is gonna be one of her first, most vivid memories. God, I’m just—I’m so angry at Kyle and Tess right now. We can’t even trust that Miley’s safe with her own godparents.”

“They slipped up,” Michael agreed.

“That’s understating it.” Slipping up was like giving Miley asparagus to eat instead of green beans, a minor mistake that was easily forgotten. This was something else. “Is it completely crazy for me to wanna lock her up in this house and never let her set foot outside again?”

Michael laughed a little. “No. Right now, I wanna do the same thing.”

“So let’s do it,” Maria suggested, only halfway kidding. “Yeah, I’ll handle all the locks, and you can explain it to her ‘cause she likes you better.”

“No, we can’t get paranoid.”

“Sure we can.”

“We can’t. We’re not gonna be able to hold her hand every second of every day for the rest of her life.”

She pouted. “I wish we could.” She hated the thought of sending Miley off to school someday, or off to college. There were so many dangers out there in the world, and Miley had already encountered a few of them at the ripe old age of three. “You know, before we had her, I always thought kids were like this really distant thing for me,” she said. “And I thought I wouldn’t be a very good mom. But when I got pregnant with Miley, everything changed for me.”

“For both of us.”

“It was like suddenly she was the most important thing in the world.” She touched her stomach, remembering how freaked out she’d been when she’d first read that pregnancy test, all alone in the tiny bathroom of Tess’s old apartment. She could barely even fathom how she’d made it all the way to the abortion clinic, past the protestors, and into the room with the suction machine before she’d changed her mind.

“I remember seeing her for the first time, right after she was born,” Michael said, staring off into space. “And she was so tiny. A month premature. And we wanted to hold her, but we couldn’t because they had to rush her to the ICU. We were scared to death then, just like we are now.”

“God, this tendency for the more dramatic things in life . . .” Maria groaned. “She got that from me. She got all the good stuff from you, like the intelligence and the artistic inclination.”

He put his arm around her, pulling her against him. “She got plenty of intelligence from you, too.”

“Can you imagine what she’s gonna be like as a teenager? I mean seriously.”

He shook his head fearfully. “I don’t want to.”

“Me, neither.”

They sat together in silence for a moment, both dreading what lay ahead, and finally Michael said, “You wanna go sleep on her bedroom floor tonight, don’t you?”

“Can we?” Maria asked hopefully. She wanted to lay there all night, wide awake, and watch Miley sleep. And when she woke up, she wanted to cook her the most extravagant breakfast ever.

Michael sighed. “Yeah, let’s go.”

~*~*~*~*~*~*~

Tess didn’t leave the nursery that night. Kyle took a shower, brushed his teeth, and got dressed for bed, but she just sat in the center of the room, replaying the scene in her mind over and over again. Miley in the pool, Kyle getting her out, her coughing up the water in her lungs . . .

Kyle stood in the doorway, towel-drying his hair, and asked, “You comin’ to bed?”

She shook her head. “I don’t think I could sleep right now if I wanted to. Maria’s right, Miley could’ve died tonight. And it would’ve been all our fault.”

Kyle sighed heavily, looking down at his feet. “I know. We messed up.”

“Messed up big time.” There really wasn’t a word in the English language to describe how colossally they’d messed things up. “Michael and Maria probably hate us now. God, we were so focused on ourselves, we completely forgot about what’s important.” Miley was important. All kids were. “We shouldn’t have even been arguing, not with the girls around. We’re horrible godparents.”

“No, we’re not.” Kyle came into the room and sat down in the rocking chair. “We just made a mistake.”

“You never should’ve started that argument in the first place.”

“Oh, I started it?” he echoed incredulously. “All I said was I agreed to have a baby because you want one. I was being honest. What’s so bad about that?”

“What’s so bad is that I thought you wanted a baby, too. For you.” That entire conversation still had her feeling . . . unsettled. But she was willing to look past it and move on. “But whatever, that doesn’t matter right now. All that matters is that we take what happened here tonight and learn from it so that we don’t make the same mistake when we have our own kids. And I really think that’ll happen someday soon, Kyle. I looked on the calendar, and we should really be trying hard this next week, because--”

“Tess, quit deluding yourself,” he interrupted.

She frowned in confusion. “I’m not--”

“If there’s anything tonight should have taught us, it’s that we are not ready to be parents,” he bellowed, rising to his feet. “We’re not ready to have kids.”

The whole evening felt like a nightmare, and it just kept getting worse. She was ready to wake up now. “Yes, we are,” she insisted, standing up on shaky limbs.

“You are,” he corrected.

She heard what he was saying, but she just wasn’t willing to accept it. “No, Kyle, we’ve been through this a hundred times. We’re ready. I know we’ve had our disagreements, but . . .” She looked around the nursery, feeling as though she were grasping at straws. “Tonight when you-you jumped in that water to save Miley, that was a fatherly thing to do.”

“No, that was a gut reaction,” Kyle argued. “Anyone would’ve done the same thing, especially her uncle.”

She combed one hand through her hair, her stomach twisting into knots. Kyle sounded really . . . steadfast.

“Tess, I’m sorry,” he apologized, “but . . . I don’t wanna have kids.”

She flinched.

“Not yet anyway. I’m twenty-four. I’ve got a career that’s just starting to take off; I own a home for the first time. I haven’t even been your husband for two years yet, and I’m not ready to be a dad.”

The words felt like knives to her heart. She didn’t want to believe them. “Well, when will you be ready?” she asked hopefully. “Next month?”

He just stared at her sadly.

“The month after that?”

He shook his head. “A few years?”

She bit her bottom lip, grimacing as the tears started to fall. “So this nursery has to be empty for the next few years?” she choked out. How was she supposed to walk by every morning and just accept that it was empty? How was she supposed to watch Michael and Maria’s family grow and not want the same for her own? “No, you can’t do this to me, Kyle,” she fought back. “You can’t get my hopes up. You can’t get me all excited for this and then just pull the rug out from under me. It’s not fair.”

“I’m sorry,” he apologized again. “I thought if I gave you what you wanted, everything would be fine. But after tonight, I see things clearer. I can’t be a dad until I’m ready to be a dad, and I’m just not ready.”

She knew he wasn’t saying these things to hurt her . . . but the fact of the matter was it did hurt. It hurt more than anything she could remember, more than finding out her boyfriend had cheated on her, more than all the Mother’s Days without her mom, and even more than seeing Miley face down in the pool.

“You could’ve told me that before we picked out baby names,” she said, “and before I bought baby clothes. I bought baby clothes, Kyle.” She couldn’t help but cry harder. Those clothes would show up in the mail in a few days. “I don’t understand why you can’t just get ready,” she snapped. “We’re married, we love each other, we have a home . . .” Michael and Maria had only had one out of those three when she’d gotten pregnant with Miley, and they’d made it work. They’d done more than make it work; they’d thrived. “We’d be good parents,” she insisted, absolutely positive that their child would grow up surrounded by love and warmth and support. “What happened tonight won’t happen again. We’ll make sure of it.”

“Tess . . .” He gave her a look that made it clear that it wasn’t just about what happened tonight. This was a culmination of all his doubt, and there was so much of it.

She knew she wasn’t going to get through to him. No matter what she said, no matter how hard she cried, he’d made up his mind, and he wasn’t about to change it.

She ran past him, holding in sobs, and tumbled into their bedroom, slamming the door shut behind her. She sank down against the door and let the tears plummet like waterfalls. For the past few months, she’d thought of nothing but having a baby, and now that she no longer had that to look forward to, she felt as if the world had fallen out from underneath her.

~*~*~*~*~*~*~

“Mom, I don’t know what to do.” Maria paced back and forth through the kitchen the next morning as she waited for the pancakes to get done. She’d overdone it a little on breakfast. There was no way Miley was going to be hungry enough for pancakes, an omelet, French toast, and oatmeal. “I feel like a horrible mother. Miley keeps ending up in these near-death situations, and that shouldn’t happen. Especially not when she’s so young.” She wished her mom was there and not just on the phone. It would have made her feel better.

“I understand your concerns,” her mother said, “and I understand why you’re upset with Kyle and Tess. You have every right to be. But things like this can happen to the most attentive parents and godparents.”

Maria flipped the half-formed pancake over with a spatula. “They can?”

“Sure. When Marty was a baby, I hardly ever let him out of my sight. But one time I did. He was just starting to crawl, and he crawled right down off the top of the stairs. He fell down five or six of them before he stopped. And I was mortified. For years, I thought he was gonna have brain damage or some kind of developmental delay. But he didn’t; he was fine. Still, I never forgave myself. I never will.”

Maria wondered if she would ever forgive herself for all the things that had almost happened to Miley, or if she would ever forgive Kyle and Tess.

“It’s natural for mothers to want to be superheroes to their children,” Amy told her. “It’s just not always possible. Sometimes things happen that are out of your control. And it’s scary. But all you can do is keep your kids as safe as possible. It’s inevitable that they’ll get hurt sometimes.”

Maria sighed, wishing it wasn’t inevitable, because the thought of her kids ever being in any kind of pain or danger was the worst thing she could think of.

~*~*~*~*~*~*~

Max showed up to work about ten minutes late that afternoon. Jorge gave him a stern look but didn’t lecture him. Thank God, because Max really wasn’t in the mood for a lecture. Things were pretty tense between him and Liz at home. They hadn’t spoken much since their fight, and whenever they did speak, it was usually something trivial like ‘Do we have any more Hot Pockets?’ or ‘Watch out for the cockroach.’

When Tiffany showed up, he felt better. That girl was sort of a smart-ass, always put him in a better mood. She walked right past him with her head down, though, and went back to her usual corner.

“Hey, Tiff, you up for another game of Blackjack?” he asked, following her. “I feel like I’m finally in your competitive league.”

She stood facing away from him, and unloaded a few books out of her backpack. “I have to study,” she mumbled.

“Oh. Anything I can help you with? Please,” he begged. “It keeps me from having to do any actual work around here.”

She still didn’t look at him.

“Hey, what’s wrong?” he asked. Tiffany was never very animated, but she was usually a little more excited to see him than this. “Oh, is this the cootie phase? You can’t talk to me ‘cause you’re afraid you’ll catch something? Don’t worry, I’m not a walking STD. At least not anymore.” He cringed after he said that. Sometimes it was easy to forget that Tiffany was only twelve years old and probably didn’t need to hear such things, because she seemed a lot older and wiser. “You know what? Forget I said that last part. My dad used to get me these call girls and . . .” He trailed off as she silently turned around to face him. When he looked at her, he couldn’t believe what he saw. Her right eye was swollen, black and blue.

~*~*~*~*~*~*~

“This is bullshit!” Max bellowed inside Jorge’s office that evening. All the kids were gone now, including Tiffany, and he no longer felt the need to try to censor himself. “We have to do something.”

“We’ve done everything we can,” Jorge assured him.

“Really? A girl’s getting hit and all we can do is sit here?”

“I thought you said she told you she ran into a doorknob.”

“Yeah, but that’s the oldest excuse in the book. Anyone can see through that.” He wasn’t sure why he was so fired up about this. He didn’t give a damn about women’s rights, and children’s rights didn’t matter to him much, either. He couldn’t attribute his reaction to an inner moral compass, because he didn’t have one. And Tiffany wasn’t even related to him, not like Garret was. Hell, if it had happened to anyone but her, he probably would have looked the other way and pretended not to notice.

“Max, it was good of you to bring this to my attention,” Jorge said, “but this isn’t our domain, chico. The schools deal with this.”

“And what do the schools do, chico?” Max demanded sharply in return.

“They arrange sessions with the counselor, talk to the parents.”

“Tiffany doesn’t have parents; she has foster parents. And they’re probably the ones who did this to her!” he roared.

“Did she tell you that?”

“No,” he admitted. “But we talk. I infer things. It doesn’t seem like they’re a very close-knit bunch.”

“If that’s the case, the social workers will get involved,” Jorge assured him. “It’s their job to look after her.”

“Oh, and a hell of a job they’re doing,” Max grumbled sarcastically. “They’re the ones who saddled her with those people in the first place.” Max felt like he was going to explode, like all the anger he’d pent up over the past few months was bubbling towards the surface, begging to be released.

“Max, when we have situations like this—and we have a lot of these situations with our kids, unfortunately,” Jorge said sadly, “there’s a . . . protocol, I guess you could say.”

“Screw protocol,” Max barked. “Somebody needs to help this kid. These days, she’s about the closest thing I have to a friend. She talks to me like I’m a human being; she doesn’t think I’m a monster. And I hate seeing her like that.” He had half the mind to accompany Tiffany home someday, meet her foster father, and rearrange his face with his fists.

“So just keep being her friend,” Jorge suggested. “She might open up to you. If she admits to you she’s gettin’ beat on, it’s gonna be a lot easier to get her a different foster placement.”

Max shook his head frustratedly. “That’s not enough.”

“It’s gonna have to be.”

Max curled his hand into a fist, and he couldn’t hold the anger in any longer. He swung at the wall and broke the plaster. His hand hurt like hell afterwards, but he didn’t care. Tiffany’s face probably hurt a hell of a lot worse.

~*~*~*~*~*~*~

After work that day, Tess stopped at Michael and Maria’s. She wasn’t really in any hurry to be home. Kyle had slept on the couch last night and left the house before dawn. She hadn’t seen him since they’d talked about . . . things.

Michael and Maria were in the backyard, playing with Miley and Macy. Michael was pushing Miley on the swing set, and Maria was helping Macy go down the slide. They stopped what they were doing when they noticed Tess.

“Hey.” She felt like an intruder, which was a completely unnatural feeling to have around her friends, her family. “You guys stayed home today?”

Michael and Maria didn’t say anything.

“Hi, Aunt Tess!” Miley called, waving. “Are we gonna watch Lion King now?”

She smiled sadly. “Not today, sweetie.”

Miley frowned.

“Maria, can I talk to you?” Tess asked.

Maria shared a look with Michael, then handed Macy over to him. He held her up with one arm and resumed pushing Miley’s swing with the other. Maria went inside the house, and Tess followed her.

“I am so sorry,” she apologized at once. “You don’t even know how sorry I am. What happened was all my fault.”

Maria hopped up onto the counter, still looking pissed at her. “How could you let that happen?” she asked accusingly. “I mean, if there’s anyone I trust with my kids other than Michael, it’s you. Or at least it was.”

She hated that she’d done something to put that trust in doubt. Even though it had been an accident, there was no excusing it. “Maria, I would do anything for those girls. I love them so much.”

Maria sighed heavily. “I know you do. And I know what happened last night was a mistake. But it’s really hard to just look past it and forget it happened.”

“Then don’t forget,” Tess suggested. “I know I won’t. It was easily the scariest moment of my entire life. That’s why I’ll never let it happen again.”

Maria nodded slowly, easing up on the unspoken anger. “What were you and Kyle talking about anyway?” she asked. “What was so distracting?”

Tess lowered her head, ashamed to admit it. “We weren’t talking; we were fighting. Which we shouldn’t have even been doing with Miley around.”

“What about?”

She swallowed hard. “About having kids. Broken record, huh?”

Maria’s expression changed to one of sympathy. “He changed his mind?”

Tess shrugged. “He never really wanted kids, at least not right now. He was just trying to make me happy, which is usually a good thing, but right now I feel sort of . . . betrayed. And I’ve never felt that way with Kyle.” She might have started crying again had she not shed every single tear in her body last night.

“You guys will work it out,” Maria assured her. “And hey, I’m here for you.”

Tess saw a glimmer of hope in the darkness. “Really?”

“Of course.”

“We’re still best friends?”

“Obviously.” Maria slid down off the counter and hugged her.

“Well, I wasn’t sure,” Tess whimpered. “You were so mad at me.”

“Technically you’re my sister,” Maria pointed out, releasing her from the hug, “so I’m stuck with you. And even if I wasn’t, this friendship has survived bad prom dresses, a messy dorm room, and Max Evans; so it can survive anything.”

Tess laughed a little. “Thank god. I don’t know what I’d do without you, Maria. Things between Kyle and I are so strained right now. I don’t know what’s gonna happen to our baby plans. Maybe I’m just not meant to be a mom.”

“No, you are,” Maria assured her. “Just . . . maybe not right now. Give him time, try to understand where he’s coming from. I’m no expert, but I think compromise is what marriage is all about.”

Tess nodded in agreement, but she still felt . . . cheated out of something somehow. After all, how much of a compromise was it if Kyle got his way and she didn’t?

~*~*~*~*~*~*~

( :? )

Things continued to be uncomfortable that night for Tess and Kyle. They just didn’t say much to each other, which was strange considering they were usually such a talkative couple. They got ready for bed that evening, and the discomfort didn’t let up.

Tess stood in front of her dresser, taking off her earrings. In the mirror, she could see Kyle sitting up in bed, reading a book. Normally she would have asked him what it was about, but that suddenly seemed too casual given the tension.

“So this is how it’s gonna be from now on?” she asked, taking off the rest of her jewelry for the night. “The two of us, giving each other the silent treatment.”

Kyle set his book down and stared at her. “No.”

She turned to face him. “So how’s it gonna be?”

He bookmarked the page he was on and set the book aside on the nightstand. “Normal,” he replied as though it were that simple. “Things will get back to normal. We just need to be with each other right now instead of against each other.”

She crawled into bed and sat up against the headboard beside him, tugging the covers upward. “It’s gonna be kinda awkward,” she pointed out.

“For awhile, yeah,” he admitted. “But that’ll pass.”

She swallowed hard, wondering how long it would take to pass.

“I’m really sorry,” he said quietly.

“You keep saying that.”

“I don’t know what else to say.” He reached over and placed one hand on her knee. “I feel horrible. I feel like I led you on, and I know I hurt your feelings. I never meant to.”

She didn’t say anything, but her feelings were more than just hurt; they were destroyed. “So this is the decision?” she said as calmly as possible. “There’s nothing I can say to change your mind?”

He shook his head slowly. “No.”

She nodded, trying like hell to accept that. But somewhere deep inside, she thought that maybe there was some sequence of words she could say, something that had never been said in the history of the world and would never be said again, something that would make him come to his senses. Stupid.

“So I guess that means I should go back on the pill then,” she said.

“I guess so.”

She loathed the thought, but Kyle would probably never even touch her again unless she did. “I’ll go take it now,” she decided, shooting out of bed.

“Tess.”

She turned back around, wishing he would stop talking again. Uncomfortable silence was better than awkward conversation.

“I still love you,” he told her. “You know that, right? You know nothing’s ever gonna change that.”

She sighed shakily. “I know.”

“And this has nothing to do with you. I’ll be honored to father your children—our children—someday. Just . . .” He trailed off.

“Not today,” she filled in. Maybe it was a good thing they hadn’t extensively discussed kids before getting married. They never would have made it down the aisle if they had.

“And time’s gonna fly by, you’ll see,” he assured her. “Before you know it, I’ll be ready.”

Time was going to inch by. She just knew it. “I have to go take my pill,” she reiterated, heading into the bathroom. She shut the door and let out a heavy, defeated breath. Nothing was working out the way it was supposed to. Her marriage wasn’t perfect, her business wasn’t booming, and her plans to have a baby were now squashed. By her own husband.

She opened the medicine cabinet and took out her birth control. She hadn’t been taking it for awhile now. She wasn’t even sure why she’d kept it. Oh, well. It wasn’t like these things had an expiration date.

She took one pill out of the cycle and held it in the palm of her hand. It was so tiny. How could something so tiny have such a huge effect on her life? And why didn’t it work so well on Maria?

Birth control, she thought with disdain. It wasn’t fair that tiny pills could have control over what happened in her body. She was the real live human being. She should have been the one to have the control.

Without thinking, she dropped the pill into the trashcan next to the toilet. It fell down beneath a bundle of Kleenex and out of sight.

“You comin’ to bed?” Kyle called from outside the door.

“Yeah, just a minute,” she called back, closing the birth control disc. She placed it back up on the second shelf of the medicine cabinet, trying not to think too hard about what she’d just done. It wasn’t that big of a deal. Sure, Kyle didn’t want to have a baby on purpose, but accidents happened all the time. He could adjust.








TBC . . .

-April
Last edited by April on Mon Aug 23, 2010 10:08 am, edited 1 time in total.
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April
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Re: 522 (CC/UC, AU, Adult, Pt. 54, 08/23/10, Pg. 23)

Post by April »

Okay, so since I'm unable to get Movie Maker on Windows 7, I've spent the last few days trying to get acquainted with Sony Vegas. I put together an M+M video that I actually think is pretty decent for a first attempt, but now that I've uploaded it to Youtube, I might be having copyright issues. I'm not sure. It says the video is blocked worldwide, but then right under that it says my video is still available worldwide. Go figure. Anyway, if you guys could just click on it and let me know if it's blocked or not, I'd appreciate it.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fYHKCG5qYCs



Leila:
It's better now than later Kyle would admit to be unhappy in their marriage and as father. It's hard to imagine a man can be a good father when he isn't ready. Kyle knows it isn't time for them to become parents. This is going to end bad.
Yeah, things are definitely escalating into something bad here. Tess and Kyle have both made mistakes, but now Tess is just making it worse.
Question: April, do you enjoy making little children suffer?
It kinda seems like I do. What does that say about me?

Ellie:
So, Tiffany is getting beaten up at the foster parents. Is it the foster parents or an older sibling there? Perhaps making inappropriate remark/sexual advances toward her? There are a lot of messed up things that occur in foster homes. Poor kid. And it's still disturbing to me that Max went all gun-ho on her behalf - the drugging rapist is just one step above child abusers in my book.
Tiffany doesn't talk much about what goes on in her foster home, but you'll get a glimpse of some disturbing stuff later on. And yeah, the fact that Max is the only person who really wants to step up and do anything he can to help her is a little unsettling, but it's actually a huge stride forward for him.

BB:
Oh my God, I can't believe that Tess and Kyle could be so consumed with their argument that they didn't notice a drowning child. The one good thing about it is that it finally gave Kyle the cajones to stand up to Tess and tell her how he really feels about the issue.
It's sad that it took something so huge, horrible, and traumatic for them to finally start communicating about the issue and that Tess has decided to do something so unethical and stupid.

Novy:
I feel terrible for her because Kyle did lead her on (Guys have the worse timing where they think lying would be beneficial. It's never a good idea), and I can see this whole thing destroying their marriage but on the other hand I'm glad Kyle is finally being honest with himself and Tess.
Kyle's intentions were good--he agreed to try to have a baby because he wanted to make her happy--but she's definitely feeling led on right now and is sort of revolting by not taking her pill. She's going to end up like Isabel if she doesn't put a brake on the craziness, though!
This is kind of off topic but I was watching Make it or Break it and they called it STI instead of STD and said they changed it. I found that interesting. Though I don't know these things or quite understand the need to change it. Somethings are just diseases not just infections. Weird.
I never really understood why they changed it.

Rodney:
I have to say I seem to be the only one more mad at Kyle here than Tess.
Really? I'm surprised. I thought that, as a guy, you'd be way more mad at Tess and sympathize way more with Kyle. But at the same time, you do make some valid points. Kyle's indecisiveness may cost him a lot here. They're both to blame, because Tess is now lying to Kyle and he kept his insecurities a secret from her, thus leading her to feel betrayed. But now she's betraying him. It's just a whole cycle of betrayal between two people who love each other and are married, and it's sad.

Guel:
i hope, i really hope, kyle gets to know it, before she gets pregnant and not after. i dont know if the both of them should stay together.
Right now, it's really sad to say, but Tess and Kyle are just not functioning well together, and you're right, maybe they shouldn't be together right now.
I love MM in this. And i really hope that they wont do anything stupid. Of course, there is isabel who would do everyting to get michael, but i hope that they themselves like tess is doing right now, do nothing to endanger their relationship.
Well, even though Michael and Maria are the only couple in this fic who aren't married yet, I've always said that they're the most stable and solid out of everyone, so I don't know if they'd ever get to that point where they could self-sabotage like that.

Eva: Oh, I know what it's like to be playing catch-up on fics. I'm currently doing the same right now. And I don't even have a baby to take care of! How is the little one, by the way?
The characters in this "522" certainly became more mature than in "521". I must say that Maria had a complete turnover and for the best if you ask me. I wasn't always a fan in the first fic. Raising two little children combined with housekeeping and going to school, is very admirable.
Maria's definitely undergone one of the biggest transformations over the years.
What I still miss, is an Alex who's becoming more of the man he really is. Or can be. But maybe he'll change in the 34 other chapters I still have to read. We'll see.
Well, Alex definitely has a journey to go on. It's not necessarily a happy journey, but it's a journey nonetheless.
At any rate April, keep up the good work! And don't post too often! Maybe I can catch up but I don't think the other readers would be pleased with my demand.
:lol: Well, I can't do my signature every-other-day updates yet because I don't have enough written.

Neve:
Michael won't forget that birthday in a hurry.
Yeah, that really sucks that that all happened on his birthday. And it'd been going so well, too.
Thank God Miley is alright. You'd think that it would have given Tess a moment of doubt about whether she and Kyle were ready to have a baby yet. I can't believe after what happened to Miley and after everything that Kyle told her that she would then turn around and do something like that. If only Kyle had been truthful with her from the beginning.
Kyle and Tess are both obviously somewhat at fault for their currently problematic marriage, but at least Kyle took what happened with Miley as a warning sign. Tess is just so stuck on having a baby that she can't even believe for a moment that it's not the right time. Her full-steam-ahead approach will probably come back to bite her in the ass.


Thanks so much for the feedback!

I apologize in advance for this part, because it's mostly all about Max and Liz, and to say that Max and Liz aren't well-liked in this fic is an understatement.
:lol:








Part 55








Liz was scurrying to the commuter parking lot in a vain attempt to get to work on time when she saw the guy from the bookstore coming out of the library with his face buried in a book. Brandon. He was wearing a blue and white plaid flannel shirt and jeans with unintentional holes in the knees. He hadn’t shaved for a few days, and his hair looked tousled as though he’d woken up with it that way and decided not to do anything with it. He definitely looked like an artist, and judging by the book in his hand, he was an artist who enjoyed Shakespeare.

Just walk away, she told herself, continuing in the other direction. She winced as her feet stopped on their own accord and she spun around, walking in his direction. She took out her phone and walked with her head down, pretending to be all interested in sending a text message. She walked straight into him.

“Sorry,” she apologized, trying not to be too obvious. “Oh, hi, Brandon.”

“Liz.” He smiled at her and put the book away. “It’s nice to run into you again.”

“I’m nice to run into,” was her idiotic response. Say something else. “How are you?”

“Good,” he replied.

“Run out of any bookstores lately?”

“No, I’m cuttin’ way back.” He chuckled. “What about you? Did you ever get your books sold?”

She stared at him dazedly for a moment, thinking about how he was like . . . chocolate. He had chocolate hair and chocolate eyes and . . . “What?” She snapped herself out of it. “Oh, my textbooks. No, I have to sell them online, but I don’t know how.”

“Well, I could help you out with that sometime,” he offered. “It’s really easy.”

She smiled. “That’d be great.” God, she sounded dazed, too. What was wrong with her?

“In fact, what’re you doing right now?” he asked. “I could get that done for you today.”

“Oh, I’m actually on my way to work,” she told him.

“Oh.”

She felt like she’d just shot him down, and that wasn’t very considerate. Here he was, offering to take time out of his life to do something for her, even though he barely knew her.

“But if you have some time to kill, you could come with me,” she said. “There’s not actually any work to be done.”

Brandon nodded. “Sure. I have all the time in the world.”

Liz drove to the studio since Brandon only had a motorcycle. He promised to give her a ride sometime since she’d never been on one, and she hadn’t exactly declined the invitation.

“So this is where I work,” she announced, pushing open the door to the studio. “Valenti Designs.” Apparently Tess hadn’t been there yet today.

“Valenti,” Brandon echoed. “Any connection to Kyle Valenti?”

“Yeah, you know Kyle?”

“Yeah, I sold some paintings at his gallery awhile back.”

She thought back to some of the paintings she’d seen there, and it clicked. “Brandon . . . Hughes.”

“That’s me.”

“You did that, um . . . that First Kiss painting. It was all passionate.”

“At the auction, yeah.” He grew a little red.

“I was there. It was really good. I wanted to bid on it but it was, um . . . out of my price range.” She set her purse down on her desk and turned on her computer. “So do you still sell your stuff there?”

“Not anymore. Things kinda went south.”

She gave him a confused look.

“Don’t ask,” he said. “So does Kyle own this place, too?”

“No, actually his wife does,” she replied. “She’s the ex-girlfriend of my husband.”

Brandon took a step back. “Husband.”

“Yeah.” She hadn’t intended to say that, but it was probably best that he knew she was with someone before he got the wrong idea. “So it’s kinda weird.”

“I bet.” Brandon stuck his hands in his pockets and walked around the studio, eyeing the designs on the bulletin board. “This looks like a nice place.”

“Yeah, it is.” She was going to hate packing everything up in boxes when they inevitably had to close down. No amount of advertising seemed to work. The place was still dead as a doornail, although it didn’t seem quite so dead now that Brandon was there. “Once my computer loads, we can do the . . . book thing.”

“Cool. So do you guys get a lot of customers?”

“Not lately. We’re probably gonna have to shut down,” she confessed, “which is really bad because I need this job. I live in a trailer and my husband’s unemployed and I’m trying to afford grad school, but it’s really expensive.”

“Yeah,” he agreed. “I’m taking a few classes. Do you ever wonder why, if an education’s supposedly so important, why does it cost so much? Nowadays it seems like only geniuses and spoiled rich kids can afford it.”

She smiled self-consciously and lowered her head. “Yeah, rich kids have it easy.”

“So who’s your husband?” he asked.

“Oh, um . . .” Here it comes. “Max Evans.”

“Evans.”

“And if you’re thinking of Evans Hotels, you’re not wrong,” she informed him. “Although I guess they’re Hiltons now.”

“Lost all his money, huh?”

“Yep.”

Brandon looked at her sympathetically. “That’s rough. I’m sorry.”

“No, it’s . . .” She was getting used to being poor. There wasn’t much hope of things getting better.

“You know, I just bought a house,” he revealed, sauntering towards her. “First house I’ve ever owned in my life, and it’s definitely a fixer-upper. I think the living room in particular is in need of some serious designing.”

Her heart fluttered in anticipation. Was he . . . offering her and Tess a job?

“Now it’s not gonna be glamorous,” he warned. “I’m talking long hours and low pay; but if you need a customer . . . you’ve got one.”

She gazed at him and couldn’t stop the happy smile from sweeping over her face. “I need a customer.” And she couldn’t think of a better one than him.

~*~*~*~*~*~*~

There was a park not far from the Irvine Rec Center, and it was appropriately called Irvine Park. (Whoever Irvine was . . . he’d made a pretty good name for himself.) Max drove by it every day on his way to work, and when he drove by that day, Tiffany was there. She was sitting on a bench while dozens of other kids, mostly ones who were too young to go to school yet, played in the sandbox in front of her and climbed around on the jungle gym while their mothers and babysitters watched.

Max got out of his car and made his way through the park towards Tiffany. “What’re you doing?” he asked.

“Skipping school,” she replied, squinting her uninjured eye against the sun. Her right eye was still swollen almost to the point of being shut.

“School’s overrated,” he agreed, sitting beside her. He remembered that part of his job description was to encourage education among the kids, though, and he corrected himself. “But it’s good for you and you should go.”

She grunted.

“Are you gonna be at the rec center today?” he asked.

“No.”

“Why not?”

“Because the other kids keep asking me what’s wrong with my eye.” She reached up and touched the sizable bruise, wincing.

“And what do you tell them?”

“That I ran into a doorknob, because that’s what happened.”

I’m not the right person to be doing this, he thought, sighing heavily. He had no skills in this arena.

“You believe me, don’t you?” she asked him.

“No,” he admitted readily. He wasn’t going to play into her story when he knew it wasn’t true. He wasn’t going to enable the excuse.

She pulled her sleeves down over her hands and shivered. “The guidance counselor tried to talk to me today,” she said. “I hate the guidance counselor. She can’t even remember my name. I didn’t wanna talk to her, so I left and came here.”

He rubbed his hands against his legs, a nervousness twisting in his stomach. “I’m not very good at this,” he confessed.

“Talking?”

“Talking about feelings and . . . stuff.”

She laughed a little. “Obviously.”

Sometimes he wished he were a robot, someone incapable of feeling human emotions. Would’ve been easier. “When I was growing up, people thought I had it all,” he told her. “Big house, lots of money, two parents. But it wasn’t as good as it seemed. My dad was . . .” How did he even begin to describe a man like Phillip Evans? “Well, he was a twisted son of a bitch. He beat my mom down for years.”

Tiffany turned her head to the side sharply.

“Verbally, mostly,” he clarified. “He’d tell her she was worthless, good for nothing except sex, and that she had to obey his every word because she was his wife. And once in awhile, I’d hear the sounds.” He pictured himself as a young boy in his bed, holding the blanket up over his face while the battle raged on outside the bedroom door. “His fist, her face. But I didn’t do anything about it, because he convinced me it was normal, said she deserved it. And she covered up the bruises so well with makeup, I couldn’t even see them. If I couldn’t see them, they weren’t there.”

“Your dad sounds like a jerk,” she remarked softly.

“He was. He’s dead now. So is my mom.”

“Did he kill her?” She sounded fearful.

“No, not really.” Although he’d killed her spirit long before she’d overdosed. “The point is, he messed me up. My sister, too. He paid too much attention to me and not enough attention to her. That’s probably why we have one of the great sibling rivalries of all time. It gets intense.”

“I don’t have any siblings.”

“Well, consider yourself lucky,” he suggested. “They’re a pain in the ass.” As horrible as Isabel was, though, he couldn’t hate her. They were so much alike. “We would’ve been different people if he hadn’t raised us the way he did.”

“But you’re a good enough guy,” she pointed out.

He almost laughed. “You’re about the only person who thinks that.” If she knew everything that he’d done, she’d probably be afraid of him. She sure as hell wouldn’t be sitting in the park with him. “My father never laid a hand on me or my sister, but I’d venture a guess that we’re two of the most despicable people to ever walk the planet. Mostly because of him.”

She shook her head. “I don’t think you’re despicable.”

Again, she didn’t know. “I’ve done things, Tiffany, things I can’t take back. I grew up to become him, and that was exactly what he wanted.” It was a constant battle to try to change.

“I think you’re your own person,” she said confidently, “and I don’t care what other people think about you. You’re my friend.”

He smiled at her. “You’re my friend, too.” This was different than his friendship with Alex. They’d formed a bond out of obligation, out of a mutual understanding for what it was like to live a life with Isabel. He and Tiffany bonded just because.

She leaned over and rested her head on his shoulder, and for a moment, he felt like a really good guy, like one of the Michael Guerins or Kyle Valentis of the world. It wasn’t real, but it still put a smile on his face.

“My foster dad drinks too much,” she mumbled. “He doesn’t know what he’s doing. It scares me.”

He figured that was probably the closest she would come to confessing to getting abused. He wasn’t about to press the issue. When she as ready, she would tell him more.

“Sometimes I wish I lived in a real home,” she said longingly, “with real friends and a real family. A real mom and dad.”

He sat there with her in silence, letting the words sink in. A real mom and dad. Tiffany needed parents.

Maybe that was something he could help her out with.

~*~*~*~*~*~*~

“Liz, I have a completely crazy idea.” Max barged into his wife’s workplace and found her sitting on the couch next to another man, a sort of attractively homeless-looking man. They were facing each other and talking, looking up when they saw him.

“Oh, sorry,” he apologized. “I didn’t realize you had a customer.”

“What’re you doing here, Max?” she asked, standing up.

“Max,” the guy echoed. “Your husband.” He rose to his feet and approached Max with his hand outstretched. “Hi, man, I’m Brandon, Liz’s friend.”

Liz has a friend? Max thought, shaking the guy’s hand confusedly. And unlike his own friend, Liz’s friend was somebody her own age.

“Brandon was just showing me how to sell my books online,” Liz explained, shuffling over to her desk.

“Your what?”

“My books. Remember, I was trying to sell them to make some money.”

“Right.” Communication had been a sparse part of their marriage for the past few days. He didn’t know what exactly she was doing with her time.

“Your wife’s a quick study,” Brandon said. “I think she’s got the hang of it now, so I’ll head on out. Max, it was nice to meet you; and Liz, you’ve got my number, so we’ll be in touch about the living room.”

“Sounds good.”

“Bye.” He waved goodbye to both of them, mostly to her, and headed out.

“Bye, Brandon,” Liz said quietly. “Customer.”

“I see that.” As long as that was all he was, there was no problem.

“We might actually be able to keep this place alive after all,” she said. “Isn’t that great?”

“Yeah. So you wanna hear about my idea?”

“Max,” she groaned, “can’t you even pretend to be excited for me?”

“I am,” he assured her, “but I’m more excited about something else.”

“Something good?”

“I think so.”

She stared at him expectantly.

“Alright, you might wanna sit down,” he advised.

“Oh, this can’t be good.” She sat down in her chair.

How do I even start? he wondered. If only he had a script. “So we’ve been through . . . a lot of things these past few months, none of it good. I feel like I’ve robbed you of a lot just by being who I am. The house, the money, the wedding, your relationship with your parents . . . the chance to ever raise a family.”

She opened her mouth to say something, but he kept talking before she could get a word out.

“I know it bothers you more than you’ll admit. You say it doesn’t matter, but it does. It matters.” It mattered to him, as much as he didn’t want to admit it, and not just because it made him feel like less of a man, but because he was starting to think he could be a decent father if he just was given the chance.

“Max, what’re you getting at?” she asked impatiently.

He licked his lips nervously. “Alright, I work with this girl named Tiffany. She lives in a foster home; she’s getting abused. She’s twelve going on twenty-three. She’s so smart, and she’s funny, and she thinks I’m a decent person, which I’m not, but it’s cool that she thinks that. She makes me feel good about myself without even trying, kind of like Garret does, you know?” There were countless instances when he’d wished Garret was his son.

“Max . . .” Liz’s voice was filled with caution.

“She’s a good kid,” he went on. “She’s a good kid living under bad circumstances. I can relate to that. I feel like I wanna help her, like I wanna do something good for a change.” He smiled hopefully, feeling a sort of electricity flying through his veins. “I wanna adopt her.”

“Max!” she hissed, springing to her feet.

“I know it sounds crazy, and I know I said I didn’t wanna adopt, but I changed my mind.”

Her mouth gaped as she tried to choke out a few sounds. “I . . . I don’t even know what to say.”

“Just say yes.”

“Are you out of your mind?” she screeched, flinging her arms around frantically. “I don’t even know this girl!”

“You can meet her.”

“And she’s twelve.”

“So?” It was the older ones who needed adopting the most.

“Is this a joke? You can’t seriously--”

“I am serious.” He frowned. This wasn’t exactly the reaction he’d been expecting. Liz was upset that he couldn’t give her children. This was supposed to have made her happy. “Listen, you and I have yet to do anything good with our lives, but if we did this . . . we could be so good for that girl. And she could be good for us. She could give us something we can’t have on our own. She could be our--”

Don’t say it,” she snapped. “It’s insane, Max.”

“Crazy,” he corrected. There was a difference between crazy and insane. Crazy meant wild, not irrational.

“It’s the most insane idea I’ve ever heard in my life,” she told him. “First of all, even if we wanted to adopt this girl, we couldn’t. We just got married in August, we live in a trailer, you’re basically unemployed, and I work part-time. We would never get approved. Second, I don’t wanna adopt anyone, at least not anytime soon. I know nothing about this Britney girl . . .”

“Tiffany,” he corrected.

“See?” Her eyes were wide and full of fury. “You can’t just spring this insane idea on me and expect me to go along with it! And Max, you really need to take a step back and examine your own motives here. Would you even consider this if you could have kids of your own?”

He clenched his jaw and shifted uncomfortably.

“Didn’t think so. You’re desperate. You’re not trying to help her; you’re trying to help yourself.”

He shook his head angrily. “You’re wrong. I am trying to help her. She’s a good kid; she can grow up to be someone great.” He saw himself when he looked at Tiffany. He couldn’t help it. “But these people are gonna ruin her. They’re gonna mess her up beyond repair! Don’t you care about that at all?”

“Of course I feel really bad for her, but there’s nothing I can do.”

“That’s just it, there’s a lot you can do!” he yelled, feeling a lump rising in his throat. “She’s my friend, Liz. I know it sounds pathetic, but this twelve year-old girl is my only friend in the world.”

“Okay, she’s your friend,” she acknowledged. “She’s not your daughter. I bet you barely know her any more than I do.”

“That doesn’t matter.”

“Yes, it does,” she insisted. “You’re diving into something head-first without even looking. I’m not gonna go along with this. I’m not gonna stand here and pretend it’s a feasible idea when it’s not.”

“So what about being her foster parents?” He felt himself grasping at straws, but he didn’t care. “That’s more feasible, isn’t it? We could do that.”

“I don’t want to.”

“Please, just meet with her,” he begged. “You’ll change your mind.” The fact that he actually cared about a kid who wasn’t related to him spoke volumes of just how awesome Tiffany really was.

Liz stared at him with a mixture of astonishment and horror in her eyes. “This . . . isn’t you,” she said. “This isn’t natural. This isn’t the man I married.”

“The man you married was a jackass,” he pointed out. What was so wrong with trying to do something good for someone else for a change?

“You still are!” she yelled. “Underneath everything right now, you’re still your father’s son. And I’ve accepted that. So quit fooling yourself into thinking you’re some candidate for sainthood. You can’t save this little girl from a life of agony and misery, not when you’re the one who causes it!” She grabbed her purse and stormed past him, out into the hallway and down the stairwell. He stood there alone in the studio, the sounds of their fighting echoing off the walls. Somewhere down in hell, his father was probably laughing.

~*~*~*~*~*~*~

After the non-ideal encounter he had with Liz, Max made the mistake of going to see Isabel. They were two of a kind, him and his twin sister. As much as he hated to admit it, she knew him well. If he needed her opinion on something, she’d give it to him without hesitating.

He strolled into the Neon Tiger before it was open and found her traipsing along on top the bar, trying to learn how to throw herself around the pole like a real stripper.

“Oh, that’s disturbing,” he said. No guy should have to see his sister like that. Thankfully she was clothed.

“Max!” she yelped, stopping what she was doing.

“Alex said you got a job here,” he explained. “My sister the stripper. I had to see it for myself.”

She climbed off the counter and planted her feet behind the bar. “I’m rehearsing for tonight.”

He gave her a skeptical look, sauntering towards the bar. He wasn’t sure Isabel could make this stripper persona work. She was all about female empowerment underneath the bravado. She had to crack at some point.

“It’s not exactly what I wanna be doing, but it pays the bills,” she said, pouring herself a shot of whiskey, “which is more than you can say for your job.”

He sat down on one of the stools. “I like my job. That’s more than you can say.”

She took out another shot glass from under the counter and poured him a drink as well. He wasn’t even thirsty. But then again, alcohol had nothing to do with thirst.

“If I ask you something, will you give me an honest answer?” He picked up his glass and swirled the liquid around inside.

“Is there any other kind?”

“Well, there’s lying, which you’ve proven to be fairly adept at.”

She rolled her eyes. “What is it, Max?”

He stared straight into the glass, looking for his reflection. “Do you think I’d make a good dad?”

“No.” She laughed. “Max, you learn about being parents from your parents.”

“So we’re just doomed then,” he concluded, “and you’re finally admitting you’re a horrible mother.”

“No,” she denied. “Dads teach their sons how to be dads, and moms teach their daughters how to be moms. Our mom wasn’t half as bad as Dad. I mean, she wasn’t great, but . . .” She trailed off and shrugged.

“So you think you’re more well-adjusted than I am?” He chuckled. “That’s a laugh riot.”

She ignored that and brought her shot up to her lips, tossing her head back and downing it. “It doesn’t really matter, does it? Alex told me you can’t have kids.”

He clenched his right hand into a fist, slamming it down on the counter. “Why can’t people keep their mouths shut?” He supposed he hadn’t told Alex not to say anything, but wasn’t it common sense?

“It’s probably for the best,” Isabel went on. “You and Liz would be awful parents.”

“Not unlike you and Alex.”

“We’d be calling Child Protective Services before you even brought the kid home. Besides, Liz doesn’t have the stamina to lose the baby weight. She’d get fat and stay fat, and then you’d cheat on her. Drama, drama.” She smirked. “Actually, that all sounds pretty entertaining. Go for it.”

Maybe she had reason to make such negative assumptions about him if only because she knew him so well. But were those the assumptions everyone made, everyone but Tiffany and Garret? “Maybe I wouldn’t be such a bad father,” he speculated. “I’m a good uncle.”

“Being an uncle and being a father are two completely different things,” she pointed out. “You can be good at one without being good at the other. As an uncle, you have a limited influence. As a father . . .” She sighed. “Well, let’s just put it this way: If there’s any ounce of decency in you, you’d be thankful that you won’t get the chance to mess up an innocent child the way dad messed up you.”

At least he hadn’t come to see her looking for sympathy, because she sure as hell didn’t have any of it to offer. “Thanks, sis, this has been really uplifting,” he muttered sarcastically, taking a drink. Apparently he was the only one who thought adopting Tiffany was a good idea. And not insane.

“Are you saying you actually want a kid?” she asked tauntingly.

“I don’t know,” he mumbled, not willing to divulge that much to her. He wasn’t at the Tess Harding end of the wanting-a-child spectrum; that was for sure. But he wasn’t exactly on the polar opposite end of it, either. “Can I ask you something else?”

“If you must.”

“Do you think Alex would ever hurt Garret?”

She made a face. “What?”

“One of the girls I work with . . . she’s getting hit by an alcoholic dad. Foster dad,” he explained. “I just wondered . . .”

She shook her head. “Alex would never hurt Garret. I wouldn’t let him. Besides, he may be a stupid drunk, but deep down inside, he loves his son. I would say abuse is something you’re more inclined to do.”

“Me?”

“Yeah. It’s not a far stretch from rape,” she pointed out. “And it’s like I said, sons learn from their fathers. Remember when Dad used to hit Mom and she’d lie to us about it?”

He hadn’t stopped remembering since he’d seen Tiffany’s injury. “Did he ever hit you?” he asked his sister, thinking it might explain some of her turbulent relationships with men.

She poured herself another drink and mumbled, “No. He never hit me.”

Max wanted to ask about what he had done. Because there had to be something, something solid and more concrete than this Daddy-never-loved-me crap. But he refrained, because he and Isabel were not each other’s therapists. And since they didn’t even like each other, it was best to keep it that way.








TBC . . .

-April
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LOVE IS MICHAEL AND MARIA.
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April
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Part 56

Post by April »

Leila:
It's kind of bizarre to see Max wanting to do something human and save someone. I like this but it's also obvious that Max sees Tiffany as his chance to redeem himself. Saving her means also saving the last bit that makes hima human being (if you can call him that). His intention is noble but his reason is sucky.
I totally agree, even though Max actually does care about Tiffany and wants to help herhe sees this as his shot at redemption. Redemption is a good word to sum up Max’s whole journey in this fic, but I don’t know if he’ll ever really achieve it. Some readers might think he does, and others might maintain that he doesn’t. We’ll see.

Ellie:
And Max? I know he sensed something when he walked into that studio. Won't this be a crushing blow to his 'ego'?
Normally, the thought of his wife being attracted to someone else, let alone flirting with someone else, would drive Max crazy, but he’s so focused on helping Tiffany right now that he might not pay that much attention.

Rodney:
Liz is right on the fact that due to their....not having any money,living in a bad home not to mention all the bad press on Max Evans...would hurt them in the chance of adoption.But it is nice to see Max actually having a human thought there for a second and wanting to help someone.
Yeah, as irrational and naïve as the idea is, it’s a pure idea, a human idea, and totally a huge step forward for Max.
And I agree with Max and wonder why Liz would want the man she married? That Max was a jerk and even he knows that and said so.
This is a question Liz is going to have to grapple with and ask herself throughout the remainder of this fic.

Novy:
And that's one of my favourite qualities of yours too, always bringing people back and utilities them in interesting ways.
Thanks! I’ve tried to utilize a lot of characters, both major and minor, established and original, in this fic, because I really wanted it to seem like a tangled web of romance and deception. ;) Soap opera. So soap opera. :lol:
He seems like a nice guy.
He really is. Total opposite of Max.
Wow, it is an insane idea. Maybe he can't change but I kind of feel bad for him though. Is he really only fated to be his father's son or does he at all have a choice?
That’s kind of Max’s fundamental question in this fic: Can he ever change, can he ever be redeemed, can he ever possibly be good?
I wonder what Max will think of his self-image if he knew what his father did to Isabel.
Oh, I think Max would be very disturbed. In a very strange, hidden way, he and Isabel do kind of care about each other, so it would be upsetting on that level. But it would also be upsetting to him to know that he’s followed in his father’s footsteps in the way of being a sexual fiend, too. At this point in his life, he’s sick and tired of being compared to his dad.

BB:
They may not be my favourite people but they are really fascinating, twisted characters and a hell of a lot more interesting here than in other fics where they're just perfect.
I appreciate that. I’m re-watching the show with my roommate right now (she’d never seen it until a week ago and now she’s obsessed), and Max and Liz were quite complex characters, especially in Season 2. So to portray them in a fic, either AU or canon, where they’re flawless, isn’t doing them justice, to me at least. But of course this fic is the extreme when it comes to flaws.
Even though Liz a)shot down Max's one good deed ever and b) seems to be headed to Cheater City, I can totally agree with her on both counts. Brandon is a sweetheart compared to Max. Go for it Liz.
Yeah, it would be hard to resist. Brandon’s a lot like Michael and Kyle in that he’s general known as a “nice guy.” He’s even got the artist thing going on, so . . . compare that to Max and . . . yeah.

Guel:
now im asking myself, would liz be interested in brandon if she still were rich?
Maybe. I’m not quite sure. But I think the combination of losing the money, the house, missing out on the fantasy wedding, and now having to deal with a slightly crazy Max could push her over the edge.
she had a good home, a normal life, but the money spoiled her. She the charakter in this fic i dislike the most, even more than isabel.
You’re not alone in that regard. Liz seems to be everyone’s least favourite here (although right now I think Tess is running a close second), and she’s probably my least favourite, too, although I do think she’s one of the most complex characters here, one of the ones I’m still trying to figure out as I go along.

Eva: First off, I see that you’ll be posting a new fic soon. That’s EXCELLENT! Can’t wait.
Though Alex is a slacker without spine at the moment, you can feel there's still a strong soul burried deep down. It makes me hope.
And you should hold onto that hope, because Alex is downright depressing at times, but if he’s pushed far enough, he might fight back at some point.
The sex scene was hot and sweet at the same time. I really could understand Maria: after you gave bird you're just not the same woman anymore. Your body changes: some women get fatter, some women lose weigth AND a bra-cup.
But Michael did the best he could in such a situation: seduce her so she feels attracted again.
Michael-seduction. Works every time. ;)
And like I thought Kyle isn’t completely dealing with it well if he’s having problems when having sex.
Yep, that’s a pretty clear indicator of not-dealing. These little miscommunication problems Kyle and Tess are having have always plagued them, even back in 521, so they’re going to have to find a way to communicate better and get on the same page in this fic if their marriage is actually going to last.

pandas2001: Hey there, I can’ remember, have you left feedback before? If not, welcome to the thread. If so, welcome back! :D
Am I the only one that hopes that Liz doesn't cheat?
I don’t think so. Like you said, she’s stood by Max through so much already in this fic. Cheating now would be a total regression and might do irreparable harm to a marriage that has never really had the chance to get off the ground. And whether you like Max and Liz or not, that would be kind of sad, because they actually do love each other and want to be together.

Sundae: Hey! Welcome to the thread! I love your sig, by the way. (One of my favourite pics of Brendan with that hairstyle.) Is that another Powerpoint or Word art? :lol: I’m still amazed that you can do that.
I have been WANTING to leave feed back for ages...but I just can catch up. I'm slowly getting there...and now you're updating twice a week? There are too many points where I want to stop and feedback but, the story is way past the point and I stop myself. But eff it, I'm gonna start feed-backing as I read. Lol.
I feel the same with some of the fics I’m reading right now, like Double Trouble on the AU without Aliens board. I want to leave feedback for every part I’ve missed, but I know I’ll never get caught up if I do. (Oh, wow, I’m just now noticing that it’s complete. Guess I missed a lot!)
Alex doesn't even look like he cares being so caught up in trying to make money and then the alcohol. Which I thought was kinda weird, because he was strong and fought to uncover the truth when Isabel faked the paternity test in 521. We didn't see much of him, but he looked like a strong figure.
He was, and that’s why it’s so sad that he’s not anymore. Being married to Isabel is ultimately what’s worn him down over the years, what’s led him to become the man he is today. I’ve said all along that Alex is probably the tragic figure of this fic.
Also...wanted to say I'm huge fan of yours since I started reading fan-fic. Too bad I'm late fan-fiction bloomer and it makes me happy that finally for the first time I'm able to feedback your work. Plus...you posting that you're challenging yourself as a writer...I can say that I see a vast difference between 521 and 522...just in the amount of time your spending in describing the scenes and what each person is thinking. So, you're definitely doing it. YAY
Aw, thank you so much! That means a lot. I think I’m one of the few Candy fanfic authors that’s still around from the “olden days,” but I was a bit of late bloomer, too. I didn’t start posting or reading much fanfic until after the show was over. And yes, in that author’s note at the very beginning, I did post that this story was meant to challenge me as a writer . . . and challenge you as readers. You’ll understand that more as the story goes on. All I can really say is that I’m doing some things in this fic that I’ve never done before, writing some things that I’ve never written, and it wasn’t always easy; that’s for sure.



Thank you so much for the feedback! As always, it’s greatly appreciated.

Ooh, another music day. Today I’m suggesting the song “Neon Tiger” by The Killers. Click on :? when you see it if you’d like to give it a listen.









Part 56







Michael was picking up Macy’s nursery when Kyle came to stand in the doorway. Earlier, Macy had decided that it would be fun to take every stuffed animal she owned and throw it on the floor. Now the floor was barely visible.

“Hey, man, how’s it goin’?” Kyle asked.

“Fine.” Michael put her polar bear back in the crib. She liked to sleep with that one.

“I just thought I’d see how you’re doin’,” Kyle said. He sounded casual, but his body language was very tense and nervous. “We haven’t really talked since the pool thing.”

“You mean the thing where my daughter almost drowned in your backyard?”

Kyle sighed. “Yeah, that.”

Michael threw Macy’s snow leopard at him and said, “Relax, you’re forgiven.”

“I am?” Kyle dropped the snow leopard and practically skipped into the disarrayed room. “Thank God. I was afraid I was gonna suffer your fatherly wrath for years to come.”

“Come on, you’re my best friend. You’re my kids’ uncle. I can get past it.”

“It’ll never happen again,” Kyle assured him.

“I know. ‘Cause if it does, that’s when you’ll feel the fatherly wrath.”

Kyle nodded. “Noted.”

Michael chuckled and opened Macy’s cedar chest, tossing some of the stuffed animals she didn’t pay much attention to inside.

“That was very nice, by the way, very threatening,” Kyle informed him.

“Thanks.”

“So listen, Maria said she’s taking Tess out for a girls’ night. I was thinking we should have a night of our own. A guys’ night. Marty could watch the kids. He doesn’t have a pool, so no danger there.”

Michael thought about it for a moment. “You know, that’s actually not a bad idea.” He and Maria needed to let someone else watch the girls again, build back the confidence that not every experience with a caregiver would result in a near-death experience for Miley.

“Okay, so it’s a bro-date,” Kyle decided. “I know just the place.”

“Okay.” Michael had no doubt they’d end up at a strip club on Ladies’ Night. It had happened before.

“I really hope Tess has a good time tonight,” Kyle said, leaning back against Macy’s crib. “She needs it.”

“Is she still beating herself up over the pool thing?”

“No. I mean, yeah, of course, but . . . it’s more than that.”

Michael threw Macy’s favorite teddy bear over Kyle’s head and into the crib like a free-throw. “Maria says you two are rethinking your baby plans.”

“Oh, they’re re-thought,” Kyle assured him. “We decided to postpone that. Or I decided, technically. Tess isn’t very happy about it.”

“Can’t say I blame her. You got her hopes up.”

“I know. I feel terrible about it. But it’s the right thing to do, don’t you think?”

“Yeah,” Michael replied. “If you’re not ready for the responsibility, what else can you do? Although I hope you didn’t back out just because of what happened with Miley.”

“I don’t think I was ever really all the way in.”

“Listen, she’ll understand where you’re coming from eventually. But in the meantime, you need to step up and be the guy she married,” Michael advised.

Kyle made a face. “You mean the horny dork guy?”

“Pretty much.”

Kyle shrugged. “Works for me.”

~*~*~*~*~*~*~

Maria took Tess out to the Cowboy Club that night. It was so nice to have a place to go where they would never be hit on, and to be able to support Marty’s business venture at the same time. Tess had a little too much fun, though—or rather a little too much to drink—and Maria practically had to carry her off the dance floor.

“This girls’ night was a good idea, Maria,” Tess said, not yet slurring her words. “Idea, Maria. I rhymed.”

“You sure did.”

“But it was a really good idea,” she repeated, stroking Maria’s hair. “You’re so smart when you wanna be.”

“Thanks . . . I think.” Maria groaned as she struggled to support all of her friend’s dead weight. “You’re tipsy.”

“No, I’m not tipsy. Look, I can stand straight.” Tess jumped in front of her and stood straight for only a few seconds before tipping over to the left. Maria had to lunge to hold her upright. Tess just giggled incessantly. “I meant to do that. I only had a few drinks.”

“A few too many,” Maria mumbled. “I think we should head on home now.”

“Right. Have to take my pill.” Tess grunted in disgust. “Wouldn’t wanna miss that.”

“Come on, sailor.” Maria tried to steer Tess towards the exit, but her friend dug her heels into the floor in resistance.

“No, let’s stay,” she said. “Please? I don’t wanna go home. There’s a nursery there.” She stumbled over to an empty booth and sat down, looking a hot mess.

Maria sat down across from her, worried. Tess didn’t usually binge like this unless she was really upset. “Okay, don’t hate me for suggesting this, but maybe you and Kyle should go to some kind of couples counseling,” she proposed. “Issues like this can fester and grow and tear people apart.”

Tess shook her head adamantly. “Not me and Kyle. Because we’re . . . adorable. We’re so adorable. We’re just an adorable couple, Maria, and everyone thinks we’re always gonna be that way.”

“You’re not very adorable right now,” Maria informed her.

Tess pouted exaggeratedly. “It’s just so unfair. Michael was younger than Kyle when he found out he was gonna be a dad, and he was okay with it.”

Maria scoffed at that. “Michael had no choice.” And he hadn’t exactly been okay with it. He’d been freaked out as hell and trying not to show it for the entire first and second trimesters of the pregnancy.

“Well, maybe Kyle will have no choice, too,” Tess mumbled almost incoherently.

“What?”

Tess laughed loudly. “Oh, you’re right, I’m tipsy. I don’t know what I’m saying.”

Maria sighed heavily and sadly watched as her friend waved over one of the roaming bartenders. This wasn’t so much a girls’ night as a drown-your-sorrows night, and Tess sure seemed to have a lot of sorrows to drown.

~*~*~*~*~*~*~

“Alright, so bro-date update,” Kyle said as he and Michael walked past the movie theater that night. “We enjoyed the pizza and beer, didn’t we?”

“We did,” Michael agreed.

“And the night is young, so let’s not go home yet. I’m having a thought. Ooh, now I’m having an idea. You know what’s the one thing that could make this night even better?”

Michael slowed to a stop. “Naked ladies?” he guessed.

“Naked ladies!” Kyle exclaimed, an anticipatory gleam in his eyes. “Tess and Maria won’t mind. They accept that it’s a natural part of masculinity to want to see a plethora of chicks without their clothes on.”

“A plethora?” Michael echoed.

“Yeah. Besides, I get the feeling Tess is only gonna be giving me restricted access for awhile, so I need this.”

Michael sighed reluctantly. “I don’t know, whenever I let you drag me to some seedy strip joint, it always goes wrong. Ladies’ Night, remember? Or how about your birthday last year, that place with the transsexuals?”

“They looked very realistic. I was almost turned on.”

Michael chuckled. “Alright, where are we goin’?”

“Right over there.” Kyle pointed across the street at a bar called The Neon Tiger. The name was lit up on a pink neon sign, along with a feminine cartoon tiger wearing only her undergarments.

“Isn’t that the place where they strip on the actual bar?” Michael asked.

“Genius, isn’t it? Coyote Ugly meets Playboy. Be still my heart.”

Michael looked at the place in disgust. If the sign was that trashy, what was it like on the inside? “What kind of girl would do that?” he wondered aloud.

( :? )

“Only the desperate kind.” Kyle grinned, rubbed his hands together mischievously and headed across the street. Michael groaned and followed him.

The inside of the bar was dark and smoky and filled with male customers. Michael felt immediately out of place when he and Kyle walked in. He was probably the only guy there who didn’t really want to be there.

“Oh, Neon Tiger, where you been all my life?” Kyle raved. He looked like a kid in a candy store.

A girl wearing a see-through slip walked by Michael and smiled at him. He ignored her, but Kyle’s tongue almost rolled out of his mouth.

“Oh, yeah, this place brings out the big guns,” he said, cupping his hands in front of his chest to indicate breasts. “What’s wrong with you? Aren’t you excited?”

“Not really,” Michael admitted. “I’d rather see Maria naked than any of these girls.”

Kyle grinned. “Yeah, me, too.”

Michael laughed and slugged him in the arm.

“Come on, man.” Kyle led him up to the bar. There were two girls dancing on top of it in time with the music playing over the sound system, completely naked except for their stiletto shoes. The brunette on the right was twisting herself around the pole like a pretzel. The blonde on the left was facing away from them, standing behind the pole and sliding it up and down her ass crack. Classy women, the both of them. Michael couldn’t even watch.

Kyle pushed his way through the crowd and managed to snag a stool at the counter right as it became empty. Michael sat down beside him and rubbed his forehead, wishing he were somewhere else. He felt like he was surrounded by STDs in there. Kyle didn’t seem to share that feeling as he stared up at the strippers with his mouth hanging open.

“You sit at the counter, you gotta order,” the bartender told them. He was probably the only guy in the room other than Michael who wasn’t transfixed by the nudity.

“Uh, two beers then,” Kyle ordered, his eyes never leaving the blonde. He leaned over and said to Michael, “And one of her.”

Michael cast one glance up at the blonde and then looked away again. You saw one stripper, you saw them all. None of this was real here. The girls weren’t really attracted to the guys, and they didn’t really want to be up on that bar. It was a fantasy, but it wasn’t his.

Even though he didn’t want to, Michael took another look at the blonde. Just her ankle, but he was struck by a sense of familiarity. He slowly followed her body upward, and he thought he recognized the shape of it, the arch of her back, the curve of her waist.

It couldn’t be.

The stripper swung her hips from right to left and back to the right again, then arched her neck back, her long, blonde hair billowing downward. Michael still couldn’t see her face, but he noticed she had a mark on her right hip that looked like a bruise.

He recognized that birthmark. He remembered noticing it for the first time during his freshman year of college, worried that he’d hurt her while they had been intimate, that he’d gripped her too hard. But it wasn’t a bruise. It had always been there.

Isabel.

She squatted, the pole between her legs, and unfolded herself on the bar to the roar of applause from all her spectators. She lay right in front of him, turning her head to the side, and when she saw him, her expression changed from one of forced desire to sheer panic. Her eyes grew wide, and her mouth dropped open. His face probably looked the same to her.

“Holy shit,” Kyle swore.

Isabel clamored up into a sitting position, unsuccessfully covering her exposed body with her limbs. She didn’t take her eyes off him, just kept looking at him with stunned, horrified eyes, even when the bartender snapped, “Isabel! What’re you doin’?”

As the shock started to wear off, the disappointment set in. Michael shook his head slowly, and she blinked back tears.

“Come on, bitch!” the onlookers shouted. “Dance for us!”

She flinched. The woman who had been totally in the zone, concentrated on nothing else but putting on a good show a minute ago, now looked as though she didn’t even know who she was. She climbed down off the counter on the bartender’s side and hurried into the backroom, a trail of angry shouts and frustrated groans following her.

Even though it might have been best to leave the whole thing alone, Michael got up and shoved his way through the crowd.

“Michael!” Kyle called after him, but he didn’t stop. He went into the backroom after her, not sure what he was supposed to say or do in this situation.

She was tying a robe around her waist, her eyes downcast. “You’re not supposed to be in here,” she said. “It’s for employees only.”

He opened his mouth to try to get some words out, but nothing came.

She slowly lifted her head, and he saw shame in her eyes. “Don’t look at me like that,” she whispered.

“Like what?”

“Like you’re disgusted by me.”

He wasn’t disgusted. He just didn’t know what to think. “Why would you . . .” He trailed off, not understanding. Isabel was plenty capable of getting a good job, a real job. “You’re better than this.” If she was ever going to become a decent person, this job would hold her back.

She shrugged hopelessly and whimpered, “I don’t know what else to do.” And then she was crying. It started out with one gigantic sob that almost broke her in half and continued from there. She held one hand over her mouth as shaky, high-pitched wails escaped her. And in a place where everything wasn’t real, her sadness was. He knew she wasn’t acting or pretending to be a wreck. She really was, and despite everything she had done in the past, he felt bad for her. When he had first met her, she had been so full of life and energy, ready to conquer the world. And now she was a stripper. That broke his heart, even though she wasn’t a part of his heart anymore.

He slowly made his way towards her and put one hand on her shoulder, not sure how to comfort her. She slumped against him and cried harder, and eventually, he resigned to hugging her. He couldn’t do what she wanted him to do, be her boyfriend or her husband or the father of her child, nor did he want to. But he had to do something. She’d been a big part of his life once, and he couldn’t just let her run herself into the ground, not if he could help it.

~*~*~*~*~*~*~

When Kyle got home, he wasn’t expecting Tess to be back. His own night, after all, had been cut short because of . . . stripper circumstances. He’d thought Tess might be out until the a.m. She probably was in no great hurry to be anywhere near him.

Maria was tucking Tess into bed, though, covering her with blankets and smoothing her hair back from her face, when he walked into the bedroom.

“Whoa,” Kyle remarked. “What kind of girls’ night did you two have?” His wife was completely out of it.

“She had a more drunken one than I did,” Maria replied, coming towards Kyle. She stopped in front of him and said, “Look, I don’t know what’s going on with you two. I mean, I do; I know about the baby drama. I just don’t know why there has to be so much drama.” She sighed. “All I know for sure is that the last time I saw her binge drink like this, she was dating Max.”

Kyle frowned. She clearly wasn’t dating Max anymore. He was nothing like Max. Couldn’t be. He was a good guy and he loved her. More than anything.

“You might wanna do something about that,” Maria suggested, gliding past him.

Kyle stared at his sleeping spouse, guilt eating away at him. She looked sad. Sometimes she smiled when she slept, particularly if she was having a good dream. Right now, she wasn’t smiling, though. She was probably dreaming about kids.

~*~*~*~*~*~*~

Maria shut the front door and leaned back against it, feeling semi-exhausted. Carrying Tess up an entire flight of stairs was not an easy job.

Michael sauntered down the stairs, smiling at her. “Hey.”

“Hey,” she returned. “Are the girls asleep?”

“Yeah.”

“Did they have fun with Marty?”

“I think so.” He rested his hands on her shoulders and asked, “What about you?”

She shook her head disappointedly. “Not so much. I spent the entire night babysitting my wasted best friend. You?”

“Same, only he was perverted, not wasted.”

She laughed. “Did you guys go to a strip club?”

“Yeah.”

“Which one?”

He scratched his eyebrow, making a face. “The Neon Tiger.”

“The Neon Tiger?” she echoed. “I hear that’s so trashy.”

“It was.” He took one of her hands in his and led her towards the staircase. “Listen, something happened tonight,” he said, sitting down, “and I feel like I should tell you about it.”

She sat down beside him, tensing up. This sounded foreboding.

“Because I don’t wanna keep any secrets from you and end up fighting about it like we did last time,” he explained.

She took a deep breath, forcing herself to stay calm. “I’m listening.” This was Michael Guerin. How bad could it be?

“I saw Isabel tonight,” he blurted. “And when I say I saw her . . . I mean I saw a lot of her.”

Maria felt her eyes bulge in horror. “How much of her?”

“Pretty much all of her. She was one of the strippers.”

The natural outrage dispersed when he said that and was replaced by relief that it hadn’t been for any other reason. “Now why doesn’t that surprise me?”

“It’s not like I sat there and watched her or anything,” he assured her quickly, “or like she gave me a lap dance. The minute I recognized her and she saw me, she stopped.”

Maria pressed her lips together tightly to keep from going on a rant. Although she wasn’t too thrilled with the thought of Isabel being naked in front of Michael, at least it hadn’t happened organically. “I bet this was one of the happiest nights of her life,” she speculated.

“No, I don’t think so. I tried talking to her about what she was doing . . . because I never thought she’d do that. And she started crying.”

“Oh, of course.” Fake tears. Had to be. Real crying required heartfelt emotion and Isabel had no heart to feel any emotion at all.

“I felt bad, so I kinda . . . hugged her,” he confessed.

“You hugged her?” That made the jealousy scale spike a bit.

“Yeah. It didn’t mean anything, obviously. I was just trying to make her feel better.”

She rolled her eyes. “Michael, just because we’re not enforcing the restraining order anymore doesn’t mean we have to get all touchy-feely with her.”

“The only person I wanna get touchy-feely with is you.” He wrapped his arm around her waist and pulled her against him. “Okay? It was just really . . . alarming for me to see her like that. I’m sorry.”

She nuzzled her face against him. “You were just being your usual good guy self. I bet good guys are in short supply at The Neon Tiger.”

“Kinda seems that way.”

“Mmm.” She scrunched his shirt up in her hand and pulled him closer. “I’m glad you told me. Although I’m not sure how I feel about you and Kyle going to a strip club in the first place.”

“It was for him.”

“Right.”

“No, I’m serious. I even said to him—I said, ‘The only naked girl I wanna see is Maria.’ And I meant it.”

“Hmm, well . . .” She tilted her head back and gazed up at him sultrily. “Play your cards right . . .” Hauling Tess up to her bedroom hadn’t zapped all of her energy.

He grinned eagerly, and she got to her feet and pulled him onto his as well, leading him upstairs to their bedroom. When they were together, really together, Isabel Evans didn’t even exist.

~*~*~*~*~*~*~

Kyle surprised Tess the next morning with an entire tray full of food, food that hadn’t exactly been easy for a non-cook like himself to make. He’d woken up early and slaved away on it just so that he had a way to put a smile back on her face.

“Good morning, my beautiful wife,” he said as she sat up in bed. “I made you breakfast.” He held up the tray for her to see. It was sprawling with deliciousness . . . or possibly foodborne illness if he hadn’t cooked the sausage right.

“Why’d you do that?” she asked, sounding genuinely confused.

“Do I need a reason? You’re amazing and beautiful and deserve to be treated like a princess. And what do princesses do? Oh, I think they eat breakfast in bed.” He carried the tray into the room and set it down on her lap, sitting in front of her to show it off to her. “Look, you got your omelet and your hash browns and your kiwi. Is that kiwi?” He wasn’t sure, and she didn’t say anything to confirm it, so he just decided, “I think that’s kiwi. And there’s your French toast and your big sausage; and Mrs. Valenti, I happen to know you like big sausage.” He grinned, hoping she might laugh a little at one of his perverted jokes. But she didn’t.

“That was really sweet of you,” she said, “but I’m not very hungry right now. I actually feel like I’m gonna be sick. Hangover and all.”

“Oh.” He couldn’t disguise his disappointment. “Okay.” That wasn’t at all the reaction he’d been going for. “Well, you’ll be hungry later. We can warm it up then.”

She forced a close-mouthed smile and handed the tray back to him before getting out of bed and heading into the bathroom and closing the door. Kyle picked up a slice of French toast, stared at it for a moment, then dropped it back down on the plate again. “Loser,” he muttered, sensing that he’d just wasted a whole lot of food.

~*~*~*~*~*~*~

Michael woke up earlier than he had intended when Frank started scratching at the door and whining. For a moment, he contemplated just ignoring him and taking a chance that he would piss on the carpet. But then he remembered when that had happened last time and he’d had to spend four hours scrubbing it with a nearly toxic bleach to get the stain out. So he resigned himself to getting up and letting the dog out.

“Go,” he said, shooing him out the door. “Do your business.” He yawned and sat down on his front porch, squinting against the early morning sun. It was a nice day, and since it was the day before Thanksgiving, he and Kyle had given themselves the day off work. Maybe I could take Miley and Macy to the park, he thought. Maria was going to be busy preparing her fruit salad and a raspberry cheesecake in advance of the dinner.

“Come on, Frank,” he groaned as the dog sniffed at a weed without lifting his leg. After what seemed like forever, Frank relieved himself and skipped back towards Michael with his tail wagging and tongue flapping out. Michael stood up to head back inside when a car came to a stop in front of his house. He recognized Isabel as the driver and let Frank back into the house, quickly grabbing a grey sweatshirt off the coat rack as he did so. He threw it on. No way was he going to deal with Isabel in only his sweatpants.

She came towards him, smiling. “Hi.” She was a lot more clothed than she had been last night, wearing jeans and a brown sweater now.

“Isabel.” He shut the door and stuffed his hands into his pockets. “What’re you doin’ here?”

She came up onto the porch, tucking her hair behind her ear. “I just wanted to come by and thank you for being there for me last night. That was probably one of my lowest lows.”

He wondered where cheating on significant others and forging paternity tests ranked on that scale. “I didn’t even know you worked there,” he said.

“It was only my second night. I probably looked like an amateur.”

“No, you looked like a seasoned pro.”

Her cheeks reddened, either out of flattery or embarrassment. “I don’t know if that’s a good thing or a bad thing.”

“I don’t think it’s good.” Now if she’d looked like a seasoned pro at ballet dancing or something, that would have been different story.

“It’s weird,” she said, shifting her purse from one shoulder to the other, “I hate being up there, feeling all those eyes on me, so I try to picture you. I pretend you’re the only guy there. And then last night when you actually were there and you were watching me . . . I felt humiliated. And mortified. And scared of what you would think of me.” She stared at him questioningly. “What do you think of me?”

He shrugged. “I don’t know, Is. I don’t know what to think anymore. I guess I just don’t understand why you would do that. The Isabel Evans I knew had way more self-respect than that. She thought it was demeaning and objectifying, which it is. She knew she could do better and she wanted to do better.”

“Yeah, well . . . Isabel Evans-Whitman is a little different.” She sighed and sat down on the steps, setting her purse down beside her. “Things have just been really bad lately. Alex is still drinking and not working, and I had a job but I got fired. And I couldn’t get it back because of my dad.”

He wrinkled his forehead in confusion. What did her dad have to do with anything? He was dead.

“Don’t ask,” she said.

“Alright, I won’t. So things are bad.” He sat down beside her. “Make them better.”

“How?”

“Get a different job, for starters. A real job, something you can brag about and take pride in.”

She grunted. “That’s easier said than done. I hardly have any experience, my sex appeal’s seriously on the fritz . . .”

“So?” It sounded like she was making a lot of excuses. “Isabel, you’re one of the smartest people I’ve ever met. There’s nothing you can’t do.”

A slow smile crept across her face. “You really think that?”

“Yeah.” He wasn’t trying to boost her ego or give her false praise. She really was smart. “You just have to do something good for a change.”

“But Michael, I can’t just be unemployed. I need money. I’m my family’s only source of income right now. I have a son to provide for.”

“Do you really want your son to grow up knowing his mom was a stripper?” Garret already had enough thunderclouds hanging over his head because of who his uncle was.

“No,” she said determinedly. “No. God, no. You’re right. I can’t do that to him. I need a different job. It doesn’t have to be fancy or extravagant. It just has to be . . . better.”

He nodded in agreement.

“Can you help me?”

He went straight into shaking his head. “I don’t know what I could possibly do.”

“You could give me a job,” she suggested. “At your gallery. Michael, I’d-I’d do janitorial stuff willingly, I swear.”

He couldn’t help but laugh at the ridiculousness of that idea. “Isabel, you can’t work for me. I’m sorry, it’s just . . . some lines can’t be crossed.” She would have driven him crazy as an employee. Plus, Maria would have flipped out.

“I understand,” she said. “But if you hear about anything . . .”

“I’ll let you know.”

“Thanks.” She picked up her purse and rose to her feet. “Thanks for everything. Everyone else I told . . . they didn’t try to stop me from stripping. You’re the only one who did. You’re . . . the only one.” She smiled and left it at that. No desperate ‘I love you’ or any anti-Maria quips. Just a thank you. And that was fine.

~*~*~*~*~*~*~

Billy sparked up his sixth cigarette of the hour as he lay in bed next to Isabel that day. He was trying to cut back on the drugs as part of his effort to show Isabel that he could be a decent guy, but he had cravings he couldn’t ignore. Whenever he got the urge, he smoked a cigarette instead. He got the urge a lot.

“Oh, you should’ve seen him, Billy,” she gushed, snaking one hand down beneath the covers. “He was so noble and valiant.”

“What’s valiant?” he asked, watching the covers start to move ever so slightly as she touched herself.

“I wouldn’t expect you to have a working definition of the word.”

“Is that like valium?”

“You ever heard of the white knight?” she asked. “Prince Charming, lord and savior? That’s what Michael was.”

“Great.” He inhaled all the smoke he could.

“I feel like I’m finally making some real progress with him,” she went on. “I think we might actually get to the point where we’re able to be a part of each other’s lives. He’s extraordinary.”

“So we’re right back to where we started, huh?” he growled. “You’re married to Alex, screwin’ me, and raving about Guerin.”

“Yep.” She pulled her hand out from under the blankets and pressed her index finger to his lips. “Just don’t write any love songs about me and we’ll be fine.”

Then I won’t be writing any songs, he thought. At least not any good ones. Despite his dissatisfaction with the state of their relationship, he was willing to ride it out, so he swirled his tongue around her finger and tasted her. Someday she wouldn’t have to think of Michael to taste so good.








TBC . . .

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LOVE IS MICHAEL AND MARIA.
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April
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Part 57

Post by April »

Ellie:
OMG woman ... are you killing me!
That's my ultimate mission in life. :lol:
Hands down the best part - of course, No Max or Liz. I'm always thrilled when that occurs.
Well, it doesn't occur in this part. Sorry!

Leila:
But I'm surprised about Michael's reaction. He went after Isabel. Why? Let her go. Ignore her. He should know that whenever he goes after her, he gets her hopes up in having something special. Bad move Michael. Don't help the psycho.
Maybe Michael knows that he shouldn't "help the psycho," but he probably also knows that he's the only one who's able to help her. That puts a tremendous amount of pressure on him that he's still learning to deal with.
For the moment, Tess is the most annoying person in fic - at least for me.
I think she's the most annoying person for a lot right now. It's sad, because a lot of people told me she was their favorite or at least one of their favorites at the end of 521. But I've got a master plan for Tess, and this is all part of it.
When will Billy snap? I'm waiting for his crazy, drug addicted ass to go gaga.
Ah, yes, Billy snappage. It could happen sooner than you think, and it could have explosive consequences.

Novy:
I love the soap feel.
Good, so do I. I always try to make it soap opera with a little more substance, though. ;)
If you give her an inch she is liable to take a mile. So I'm very proud of him for being consistent and continuing to make that line very visible and being honest with Maria about it. It makes me not so worried about their interactions.
I think Michael has really learned his lesson and his handling his interactions with Isabel a lot better this time around. Keeping Maria very in-the-loop about it is key, and then drawing a clear-cut line with Isabel, like you said, is also good.
I'm intrigued to see after the pep talk Isabel received what her next move will be. She seems so different in that moment with Michael but then when she was with Billy it's like she's back to being crazy Isabel. So perhaps her move will be a mixture of smart and crazy smart. lol
Well, Isabel's usually a mixture of smart and crazy, but it's usually the crazy that does her in. But I'm glad she seemed so different in that moment with Michael. That's what I was going for.
I think the Isabel seen through Michael's eyes is a very different person in a sense.
Without a doubt.

BB:
Yeah, I think that's key to why Michael is so nice to Isabel. While Maria and others only know the bitchy, manipulative, evil side of Isabel, Michael has also known and loved Isabel at her best and while she has hurt him in the past, I think that because everything worked out for the best and had no real long term ramifications for him, Michael doesn't hate her in the same way as Maria does. Plus, he's a nice guy and he can't help himself.
Wow, I really couldn't have said it better myself. :)
By seeking more from him, Isabel is stopping herself from having anything from him.
You know, I hadn't really thought much about this before, but you're so right. Isabel always finds a way to make her own life worse, and this is probably the biggest way in which she's doing that right now.

Rodney:
I'm not feeling sorry for Kyle here right now.In fact I think getting married has lowered his IQ!
Well, Kyle's never exactly been super intelligent when it comes to women in this fic. He's been known to have his share of dumbass moments.
I'm not against Kyle for not wanting to have a baby.I'm against him for how he led Tess on over it and than just pulled the rug out from under her like that.I don't blame Tess for being pissed off at him.
Right. His intentions were good but his methods were so bad. I think Tess has the right to be pissed, too, but it's the retaliation of not taking her birth control pill that's taking things too far, of course.



Thanks for the feedback! Before I post this part, I should probably mention that there's a total shoutout to Rod's football team, the glorious Crimson Tide. Enjoy!








Part 57








University policy dictated that all classes on the day before Thanksgiving were optional. Not surprisingly, the campus was pretty deserted. Most students didn’t want to attend unless they had to. Alex went to his British Literature class, though, because he knew from experience that sometimes professors liked to cover new material on optional days and then throw that material on the final just to punish the students who hadn’t shown up.

He was walking past one of the dorms when he spotted Liz outside, running around in denim shorts and a tank top as though it were a spring day. She was with some guy, and they were playing Frisbee on the grass. She threw it at him and laughed loudly when it hit him in the side.

“Liz!” Alex called, waving as he approached her.

“Alex.” She froze like a deer caught in the headlights for a moment, then skipped towards him and hugged him. “Hey. It’s good to see you. I’m sorry I haven’t been by to see Garret lately. I’ve just been really busy with school and work.”

“Yeah, looks like,” he said sarcastically, not quite sure what Frisbee had to do with either work or school.

Her friend came towards them, smiling and removing his sunglasses.

“Oh, this is my friend Brandon,” Liz quickly introduced. “Brandon, this is my sister-in-law’s husband Alex.”

“Nice to meet you.”

Alex shook his hand, nodding to indicate the same, then returned his attention to Liz. “So I just wanted to confirm Thanksgiving plans.”

“Plans?” she echoed. “We made plans?”

They’d talked about it briefly on the phone. Nothing was set in stone, but he’d thought for sure she wouldn’t let him be stuck with Isabel on such a big holiday. “Well, I know Garret was really hoping you and Max would be there.”

“Right. Yes, we’ll be there,” she said. “Thanksgiving at your place. We’ll bring food.”

“Or we could just order pizza, keep it casual.” Last year he and Isabel and Garret had gone to Max and Liz’s place for a four-course catered meal. Somehow this year, he just didn’t see that happening.

“Casual’s good,” she agreed.

“Okay. So I’ll see you tomorrow, sometime in the afternoon.”

“Yeah.” And with that, she was right back into playful mode with her friend. He motioned for her to go long, and she giggled as she ran off to catch the Frisbee when he threw it towards her. Alex walked away, peeking back over his shoulder a few times to reexamine the scene. Brandon looked to be about Liz’s age, a year younger at most; and she looked like she was having a great time. In fact, she was showing off the first smile he’d seen from her in weeks. Max probably should have been the one to evoke that smile.

~*~*~*~*~*~*~

“Oh, Macy, you look adorable,” Maria cooed as she zipped around the living room spraying air freshener. “Miley, you look absolutely perfect.” Both her daughters ignored her as they stared at the TV. They were watching the annual Thanksgiving Day Parade on NBC, and the Dora the Explorer balloon was floating by. She set the air freshener down on the coffee table and flittered into the kitchen, retying her loosened apron strings. “Happy Thanksgiving, girls.” This was her day to be a domestic diva, which didn’t exactly come naturally to her but luckily wasn’t an alien concept anymore, either. “And sexy man,” she added, grinning at Michael.

He opened the refrigerator and peeked in at the cheesecake, nodding his head in approval. “Tess is still bringing the pumpkin pie, right?”

“As far as I know.” She peered into the microwave at her casserole, watching the cheesy parts start to bubble. The recipe specifically stated not to microwave it, but . . . whatever. She was innovate. Plus the turkey was taking up all the space in the oven. Damn twenty-pounder.

“God, November’s been a hectic month, don’t you think?” she said.

“Kind of.”

“All this near-death experience and conman stuff.” She was really happy December was right around the corner. That meant Christmas break, Christmas itself, and New Year’s, which was pretty much her favorite day of the year since it doubled as her and Michael’s anniversary.

“Look at my girl,” he said, staring at her and grinning. “Look at the little chef.”

She rolled her eyes. A chef she was not. A mom who could cook . . . sure.

“Potholder in one hand, gravy ladle in the other.”

She threw the ladle at him, and he laughed.

“What can I do to help?”

“Your only job is the turkey,” she informed him, more than happy to stay as far away from the bird as possible until it was time to eat it. “But obviously that’s the most important part of the meal, so if you screw it up, there’s gonna be hell to pay.”

He gave her a sarcastically thrilled thumbs-up. “Great.”

The doorbell rang, so she took off her potholder and went to get it. “Okay, wager,” she said. “Your parents, my parents, or Tess and Kyle?” She didn’t even bother putting Marty in the running since she knew for a fact he’d show up late.

“My parents,” Michael wagered. “They’re very punctual.”

“Tess and Kyle. They’re right next door. Five bucks, okay?”

“Okay.”

She opened the door, and Kyle waved like a dork.

“Shazam!” she exclaimed.

“Crap.” Michael pulled a five dollar bill out of his pocket and set it down on top of the microwave for her.

“Well, hello to you, too,” Kyle said, handing Maria the pumpkin pie. It looked store-bought. “Happy Thanksgiving. It smells great in here.” He kicked off his shoes near the front door and hung his coat up, hanging Tess’s up as well.

“No thanks to your B.O.,” Maria joked.

“Maria DeLuca, ladies and gentlemen, always the comedian.” He gave her fake applause as he joined Miley and Macy in the living room. “Oh, Miley, the parade? Really?” He reached for the remote, but she held it away from him.

“It’s not just any parade,” Maria said, shutting the door. “It’s the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day parade. It’s Macy’s.

“Is it really?” Miley asked.

“No, but we’re gonna let her think that until she’s eighteen.”

“How about some college football?” Kyle suggested, rubbing his hands together.

“I don’t think so. Miley wants to watch the dog show after this,” Maria informed him.

“The dog show?” He groaned. “Alright, get me a computer. I’ll watch the game online. I need to live vicariously through athletic people, you know.”

Maria laughed and turned to Tess. “Hey, how’s my bestie?” she asked. “You’re kinda quiet.” This had to be a record for how long Tess had been in her house without saying a word.

“I’m fine,” Tess replied, sounding anything but fine.

“Not still hung-over, are you?”

“Please, that was so yesterday. Literally.”

“Well, I hate to disappoint you, but we won’t be serving any hard liquor today, only wine,” Maria told her.

“Ha, ha,” Tess deadpanned. “Hey, do me a favor and don’t tell my dad about all the baby drama, okay? I don’t want him to worry about me.”

“Is there something to worry about?”

Tess smiled, but it wasn’t a convincing smile. “No.” She walked over to the couch and sat down in between Miley and Macy, scooping them both up in her arms and hugging them. Maria gave Kyle a stern look, and he just shrugged as though he didn’t know what to do about her, but Maria had a few ideas. Breakfast in bed, for starters. That always made Tess feel better.

~*~*~*~*~*~*~

Isabel wrinkled her nose when she opened the door. “Oh,” she said. “We thought you were the pizza guy.” She stepped aside and allowed Liz to come in. Good God, Liz thought. How desolate am I when Isabel and Alex’s house looks like a palace compared to mine? When it was clean, it wasn’t half bad.

“Hi, Aunt Liz,” Garret greeted cheerily from the kitchen. He was helping Alex set plates and cups on the table.

“Garret, she’s not your aunt,” Isabel snapped.

“Yes, she is,” Alex insisted.

“She’s your uncle’s wife,” Isabel explained.

“Otherwise known as . . .”

“Hi, Garret,” Liz cut in. She wanted him to think of her as his aunt, but there was no need to confuse the poor kid. He was probably confused about enough things already.

“Where’s Satan?” Isabel asked, rolling her hair into a bun on top her head. “I mean Max.”

“Um, I don’t really know where he went,” Liz replied, wishing she were at home with her parents and the rest of her family for their Thanksgiving dinner. “He said he’d be here later.”

~*~*~*~*~*~*~

The houses on Vine Street looked like cardboard boxes. Every single one of them looked unlivable. The front doors were practically falling off, and the windows were boarded up and spray-painted with graffiti. Dogs barked at Max as he walked down the sidewalk, and sewage smells crept up to greet him from the sewer drain. He stopped in front of a white two-story house with a toppled trash can out front. It was surrounded by a rickety chain link fence, and the paint was peeling to the point that it was now half-white and half-brown. Even from the outside, Max could hear yelling.

He walked up the sidewalk to the front door and tried to ring the doorbell, but it didn’t seem to work, so he knocked instead. A few seconds later, a man with vomit tracks in his beard and pit stains on his wife-beater came to the door, bumping Max with his beer belly. He was probably the foster dad.

“Is Tiffany here?” Max asked.

“Ain’t she a little young for you?” The man leaned forward, and Max smelt the alcohol on his breath. “Or are you one of those guys who likes to get the fruit while it’s fresh?”

“I work at the Rec Center,” Max explained, repulsed by the mere thought of what the jackass was suggesting.

Tiffany’s foster dad just stared at him confusedly.

“The Irvine Rec Center where she goes every day after school?” he elaborated.

Still the same confusion.

“No? Is she here?” he asked again.

“Tiffy!” the man hollered, stumbling back inside his house. Tiffany came downstairs a minute later, looking surprised to see him.

“Hi, Max,” she said. “How did you know where I live?”

“Checked your records at the center,” he explained. “Your eye looks better.”

She reached up and touched the now flesh-colored skin. It was still a little swollen, but not nearly as much. Probably still hurt, though, if not on the outside then on the inside.

“So listen,” he said, “it’s Thanksgiving and I’m going over to my sister’s for pizza.”

“Pizza?” she echoed.

“Yeah, we don’t know how to cook a turkey, so . . . pizza. Anyway, I was wondering if you wanna tag along. Unless you’ve got big plans here, that is.” By the looks of it, though, Tiffany’s foster family wasn’t doing anything special. The inside of their house was cluttered with trash and in complete disarray. It kind of reminded Max of his trailer, only it was worse because of the man in the recliner.

“Well, what’s on the pizza?” she inquired.

“One’s supposed to be half pepperoni, half cheese. The other’s half hamburger, half anchovies.”

Her face lit up. “I love anchovies.”

“I know, I don’t get why people hate them so much,” he agreed. “So, what do you say?”

She glanced back inside at her foster dad, then back at him. It didn’t take her long to decide. “Okay.”

~*~*~*~*~*~*~

“So there’s cream of chicken soup in with the cheese?” Sylvia asked, peering into the microwave at the second of Maria’s two casseroles.

“Yeah, it’s misleading ‘cause when you mix it all together, it looks like just cheese,” Maria said as she furiously stirred the mashed potatoes. “Miley tasted it and she was really disappointed. It’ll taste good to us, though.” She was using a recipe Tess had given her for a broccoli-cauliflower casserole. She didn’t particularly like broccoli or cauliflower on their own, but Tess had insisted that they were good mixed together with a cheesy, soupy sauce.

“I’m excited to eat it,” Sylvia said. “You’re doing a great job, Maria.”

“Thanks.” She felt so lucky to have a future mother-in-law who was actually nice and not nitpicky.

“And everyone’s having a great time,” Sylvia went on, looking into the living room. She and John and Amy and Ed had all shown up around the same time about half an hour ago, and everyone was sitting in the living room talking and laughing, watching Macy wobble around while Miley watched the dog show. Marty was the only one who hadn’t shown up yet, which didn’t surprise Maria since he’d had a late night at the club the night before.

“Look at your mom,” Sylvia said. “She looks good.”

Maria watched as her mom opened her arms and Macy stumbled into them. “Yeah, she must be feeling good today,” she agreed. “I’m really glad she was able to be here. Last time I saw her, she looked a lot less lively.”

“Well, the holidays energize people,” Sylvia pointed out. “Or in some cases they zap your energy. How are you holding up?”

“Good. A little tired,” Maria admitted. “I’m just trying to keep from fucking up this meal. Or . . . screwing up. Do I have to censor myself around you?”

Sylvia laughed. “I think giving birth to my grandchildren grants you swearing privileges.”

“Good to know.”

A minute later, Amy joined them in the kitchen and asked, “How’s everything coming along?”

“Slowly.” Maria dumped an entire stick of butter in with the heaping bowl of mashed potatoes and watched as it began to melt instantly.

“Amy, we were just talking about how great you look,” Sylvia said.

“Oh, not really,” Amy said, touching the scarf wrapped around her head.

“Yes, you do.”

“Well, today’s a good day.” Amy smiled. “They all are.”

Maria nodded. “So are you gonna break out the bongos and sing Kumbaya now or later?”

“I’m in a good mood, that’s all,” Amy explained. “So is there anything I can help you with? The gravy?”

“No, I’ve got it under control,” Maria assured her. She had never hosted a dinner for this many people before. Last year, it had just been her, Michael, Miley, and Kyle and Tess because there had been a freak Vegas snowstorm that grounded Ed and Amy’s plane, and John and Sylvia had been on their twenty-fifth anniversary vacation in Paris. It was probably a good thing that they had kept it small last year, because she’d been so pregnant at the time. Even though there were a lot more people this year, she was a lot more able to handle it.

“What about the turkey?” Amy inquired.

“That’s Michael’s bitch.”

“Maria!” her mother hissed.

“What? Sylvia said I could swear in front of her, so I just assumed that extended to you, too.”

“Well, just so long as Miley doesn’t hear you.”

“She doesn’t,” Maria assured her.

“Good. Now, what’s this I hear about her and a boyfriend?”

Maria groaned. “Isabel’s son.”

“Really?” Sylvia sounded surprised to hear that.

“Yeah, but he’s just a boy who’s a friend. It’s problematic, but he’s actually a nice enough kid. Oh, but Isabel’s a stripper now.”

Sylvia’s eyes practically bulged out of her head. “What?”

“Yeah, we should’ve all seen it coming. Some people have a destiny.” Maybe it was a little mean to be happy that any woman was a stripper, but with Isabel, she just couldn’t force herself to feel bad. At all. “You know, I may not have a job, but I still say your son upgraded when he hooked up with me.”

“I’d say so,” Sylvia agreed emphatically. She lifted the boxed-up pumpkin pie from the counter and asked, “Who brought this?”

“Tess,” Maria replied, glancing into the living room. Her best friend was sitting on the couch with Kyle. Miley sat in between them, monopolizing the remote. She and Kyle were having a conversation about the dog show, but Tess kind of looked like she was off in her own world, off in her own thoughts.

“She’s a sweet girl,” Sylvia said. “She and Kyle make a nice couple. Now where’s his dad?”

“I believe he’s in Alabama with a lady friend,” Maria told her, “so he has a lot to be thankful for this year.”

Amy retied her scarf behind her head and asked, “How is Tess? She’s not very talkative today. Ed’s a little worried about her.”

Maria didn’t exactly like lying, but she’d promised not to say anything about the baby drama, and she always kept promises to Tess. “Yeah, she’s just been battling this stomach flu for the past few days,” she fibbed off the top of her head.

“Oh, good, it’s nothing serious then,” Amy said.

“Yeah, nothing serious.” Maria averted her eyes, and when the microwave sounded its finish, she was grateful for the distraction. She carefully took the casserole out of the microwave with potholders.

“Oh, honey, you should let me get that,” Sylvia said. “You shouldn’t be doing any heavy lifting in case you’re . . .” She trailed off.

Maria set the casserole down on top the cutting board. “In case I’m what?” she asked.

“Well, you know . . . pregnant again,” Sylvia finished. “Not that you look pregnant. You don’t. It’s just . . . been known to happen.”

“Well, sorry to disappoint, but you’re probably not gonna get another grandkid for a few years,” Maria informed her. “I gotta graduate and get a job.”

Sylvia nodded. “I understand.”

Maria was about to taste-test her casserole when the front door swung open and Marty bounded in. “Hey, bitches!” he yelled cheerily. “The fun has arrived! And he brought his boyfriend with him.” Jimmy appeared beside him, smiling sheepishly.

“Oh, my boy!” Amy exclaimed, running to hug him.

“Oh, shit, Sylvia,” Maria cursed, “I didn’t know Jimmy was coming. There’s no room for him at the table.” Even with the extra table boards in place, they were smashed together like sardines as it was.

“It’s okay, Maria,” Sylvia said calmly. “Part of being a good hostess is being able to think on your feet. Just get creative.”

Maria stared at the kitchen table hopelessly. Obviously she wasn’t going to turn Jimmy away, but there was just no room in the kitchen. No room at all.

~*~*~*~*~*~*~

After making sure everyone else had a plate full of food, Maria took a seat next to Michael on the couch with a plate of her own. It was amazing, but after all that cooking, she wasn’t even hungry for the meal. “I hope you guys don’t mind eating in here,” she said to her family members scattered throughout the living room. “I know it’s kinda redneck.”

“Don’t worry about it,” Michael’s father said from his seat in the rocking chair. “Everybody eats in the living room when they don’t have company. Why should the holidays be any different?”

“Exactly,” Sylvia agreed. “And the meal is delicious. That’s really all that matters, that and the fact that we’re all here together.” She was sitting next to Macy’s highchair, happily helping her granddaughter eat her food as well.

“Amen,” John said, taking a drink of wine.

“It was just gonna be too crowded in the kitchen,” Maria said, glancing back at the table decorations that were of no use now. Money wasted. Oh, well.

“I like eating in here,” Kyle said. Even though he’d been the third-to-last to get his plate of food, he already had half of it eaten. “I get to stuff my face and watch the game all at once. Two birds, one stone.” He had managed to convince Miley to change the channel after the dog show was done, and now he was totally engrossed in football. “Oh, yeah, Alabama touchdown!” he hollered, throwing his arms in the air. “Roll time!”

Michael made a face. “What’d you say? Roll time?

“Yeah.”

“It’s Roll Tide. God, if you’re gonna be a sports fan, at least be a good one. The Crimson Tide football team.”

Kyle’s face reddened, and he sent an apologetic look at Michael’s father, who was quite the football fan himself. “I’m kinda new to football,” he explained.

“I sense that.”

“I don’t even know who to root for,” he admitted. “I’m just rootin’ for Bama ‘cause my dad might move there if it works out with his lady friend.”

Maria swallowed a piece of turkey—it had turned out perfectly, much to Michael’s delight—and asked, “Kyle, just out of curiosity, were you always picked last in gym class?”

“No. Second-to-last,” Kyle replied. “Stuart Townsend was always picked after me.”

“And what was his problem?”

“He was an amputee.”

Maria laughed. Kyle was just so easy to make fun of sometimes.

“Mmm, Big Boy,” Marty moaned, holding out his plate, “could you slice me some more turkey? It’s scrumptious.”

“Dark meat?” Michael asked, taking the plate from him.

“Why not? It’s bigger,” Marty joked, eliciting a horrified look from his mother. “Sorry, mom,” he apologized quickly. “Yes, dark meat, please.”

Michael got up and headed into the kitchen to get Marty his seconds. He picked up the electric carving knife and remarked, “I feel like such a patriarch.”

Maria smiled at him. “What about everyone else? Does anyone need anything? Miley, do you want some more potatoes?”

Miley nodded.

“Okay.” Maria set her own plate aside and took Miley’s into the kitchen.

“You know, you’re gonna be like the mom on A Christmas Story,” Michael remarked quietly while the chatter resumed in the living room.

“What?”

He sliced part of the turkey’s thigh off for Marty. “Yeah, you know how Ralphie says his mom hasn’t eaten a warm meal in years? That’s gonna be you if you keep this up.”

She scooped a spoonful of mashed potatoes without gravy onto Miley’s plate, making sure it didn’t touch any of the other food, because Miley hated that. “Oh, so you’re saying I should just sit back and let you do all the work?”

“Uh, no, I don’t think I was saying that.”

She gave him a kiss on the cheek and they headed back into the living room. Marty was talking about his club and how he’d met Jimmy there.

“We’re really glad you could join us,” Maria told her brother’s boyfriend, setting her daughter’s plate back down on the TV tray they were making her eat off of. “Michael and I have been pestering Marty to bring you over here for, like, a month now.”

“I know, things were just really hectic for me for awhile there,” Jimmy said. “I got a new apartment and a new job.”

“You used to work for Max, right?” Michael said, handing Marty’s plate back to him.

“Yep, I was his personal assistant.”

“That must’ve been a picnic.”

“Actually, it wasn’t that bad. He’s a decent guy. Sometimes.”

Maria and Michael exchanged a look as they sat back down, and when they looked at Kyle and Tess, they were wearing the same incredulous expression.

“So Tess, anything new on the design front?” she asked quickly in an effort to shift the subject. “Tess is an interior designer, Jimmy, so if you need anyone to fung-shui your new apartment, she’s your girl.”

“I’ll keep that in mind.”

Tess’s father cleared his throat and leaned towards her. “Yeah, sweetie, how is work going?” he asked.

When Tess spoke up, she was quiet and her voice was flat. “I’ll probably have to close down.”

“Oh.” Ed fell speechless.

God, what is her problem? Maria thought, staring at her friend in disbelief. Sure, she was a little pissed about some things, but this was Thanksgiving and she was surrounded by family and friends. She could at least plaster on a smile and pretend to be having a good time. “Uh, what Tess means is that she might have to close down, but she might not have to. Optimism, glass half-full and all that.”

Tess nodded. “Right.”

“What about a next generation?” Marty chirped mistakenly. “How’s that going?”

Tess turned her head sharply to look at him, and behind her back, Kyle shook his head and mouthed ‘No.’

“Never mind.” Marty hunkered down, practically burying his face in his plate.

“Michael, will you carve me some more turkey?” Maria jumped in.

“Yes, gladly.”

“Before you do . . .” Amy set her plate aside and stood up. “If none of you mind, I’d like to say something.”

Maria felt her stomach clench. This couldn’t be good.

“First off . . . Maria, I’m so proud of you for hosting this meal,” Amy began. “Second, I’m so happy to be here with all of you. So happy.” She wiped away tears at the corners of her eyes. “And I intend to be at many more Thanksgiving dinners for years to come, not only because I like turkey and I like all of you, but also because . . . I have a lot to be thankful for.” She smiled, took in, and let out a big breath. “My doctors say I’m cancer-free.”

Maria’s mouth dropped open. The room fell so silent that she could’ve heard a pin drop. This had to be a dream. There was no way she could be hearing her right.

“It shocked me, too,” Amy said, “but it’s true. The chemo worked, just when I thought it never would. All the pain and the stress and the-the hair loss was worth it, because the cancer’s gone. It’s just gone. I don’t even know why it showed up in the first place.”

Maria shot to her feet and crossed the living room to throw her arms around her mom.

“Oh, I know, baby,” Amy cried joyfully. “It’s a miracle.”

“Mom . . .” Marty got to his feet and came to join in the hug, wrapping his arms around both of them.

“I found out a few days ago,” she said. “It was so hard to keep it a secret, but I really wanted to tell you all today. Ed was the only one who knew.”

Maria released her from her embrace and stared at her in astonishment. “You don’t have cancer?”

Amy smiled tearfully. “I don’t have cancer.”

“Grandma!” Miley squealed, running up to hug her grandmother’s leg.

“Oh, come here, you.” Amy lifted Miley up onto her hip. “There’s no way I would miss watching you grow up, you and your sister.” She nuzzled their noses. “I love you both so much.”

“You’re not going to heaven?” Miley asked.

“Not anytime soon.”

Maria held one hand over her heart, watching her mother, her mother who was full of life and not full of cancer. She ran over to Michael and pounced on him, hugging him tightly as everyone else got up to hug Amy. This was the best Thanksgiving news she could have hoped for.








TBC . . .

-April
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April
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Part 58

Post by April »

Well, how was everyone's weekend? I went home and got to spend some time with the new puppy. Plus, I scored free tickets to a Nebraska Huskers football game! Believe it or not, as avid of a football fan as I am, I've never been to a college football game before. It wasn't a very exciting game, because we basically just trounced the opponents, but it was fun for me to get to go at least once before I graduate.


Leila:
Wonder how Isabel and Tiffany will get along.
Well, they're both strong girls, but Tiffany's definitely Team Max when it comes to the Max/Isabel sibling rivalry.
PS: I also don't like when my food touches.
I know, neither do I! It's icky. :lol:

Ellie:
Maria Deluca ... domestic goddess? Whodathunkit?
Being a mom has really inspired her to make some changes!
OMG ... Cancer free? Hallelujah and praise the lord! Thank you for not killing Amy off. Seriously ... Thank You!
I've somehow developed a reputation for killing people off in my fics, but . . . nope, can't kill Amy off in this one.

Novy:
Tess' depression worries me.
It should. She's already jeopardizing her marriage by not taking her birth control pill. She's got some dark days ahead of her, and right now, she's not equipped to deal with them.
I am very worried for poor little Tiffany. I think staying home would be a better thanksgiving for her. I feel like Isabel will make her cry. But maybe we will be surprised and they bond too.
Oh, Tiffany's pretty tough. Probably even tougher than Isabel, so you don't need to worry about her spending Thanksgiving with them. Anything's better than her abusive foster home.

BB:
Yay for Amy being cancer free. Best news we've had in a long time.
I throw in so much bad news in this fic that I have to incorporate some good news once in awhile!
they've all come so far since 521. Maria's even able to innovate a recipe now.
Maria was never really an adult in 521, was she? But she's definitely an adult now.

Rodney:
You put Alabama AND Roll Tide in this story! You are now my most favorite author!!!
:lol: Well, I have a friend who claims to be such a huge football fan, yet we were watching a Bama game one night and he goes "Roll Time!" And I just thought it was funny so I decided to put it in this fic as a little joke for us football aficionados.
I don't blame Tess for being in a funk on Thanksgiving.What she wanted to be thankful for was taking away by her husband.I can't for the life of me understand how everyone can just forgive Kyle for this so easily and tell Tess to 'just get over it'?!
Tess definitely needs someone in her corner right now, preferably Maria, who she can just vent to. But Maria's so busy with executing the perfect Thanksgiving, so . . .
You know I had a thought the other day....part of me would love to see a fight between Marty and Isabel.....to see who'd win.I bet there'd be a lot of hair pulling and bitch calling going on!
Oh, Marty would win hands down! :D


Thanks for the feedback!








Part 58








This is the most pathetic Thanksgiving ever, Isabel thought drearily as she munched on a cheesy breadstick. She and Alex sat on one side of the too-tiny kitchen table, Max and his little friend Tiffany on the other. Liz sat on one end of the table and Garret on the other end in a booster seat. They were all silent until Max started to bitch.

“I didn’t know we were ordering thin-crust.”

Isabel frowned. “What’s wrong with thin-crust?” It was cheaper.

“Nothing, it’s just . . . if I’d known, I would’ve objected.”

“Whatever, Max.” As far as she was concerned, Max had no say-so. She and Alex were the ones paying for it, more specifically her since she was the only one who had a damn job. Hard-earned stripping money wasted on a dick of a brother who couldn’t be bothered with thin-crust pizza.

“Well, Tiffany, it’s nice that you could join us,” Liz said, fake-smiling. It was hard to miss how uncomfortable she was with the entire situation. From the moment Max had shown up with the little girl in tow, she’d been a bundle of nerves. “We didn’t know you were coming. But it’s nice to have you here.”

“It was kind of a last-minute thing,” Max said.

Isabel leaned back in her chair and crossed her arms over her chest. “I think it’s great. Max is compensating for his inability to have a child by taking in a stray.”

“Knock it off,” Alex snapped.

Isabel just smirked at her brother. It wasn’t hard to figure out. There was no way Max would invite some kid over for Thanksgiving dinner out of the goodness of his heart, because there was no goodness there. He was a selfish boy with selfish motives.

“Garret, you want one with anchovies?” Alex asked as his son reached towards one of the boxes.

Garret nodded.

“Are you sure?”

He nodded again.

“Okay.” Alex gave him a the last of two slices with anchovies, and he took a bite and made a face of disgust.

“He’s really cute,” Tiffany said.

“Isn’t he?” Isabel agreed. “So what’s your story, honey? Does your family not celebrate Thanksgiving? Not that this is any great celebration here.”

“They’re not her family,” Max corrected quickly. “They’re her foster family.”

Oh, god, he’s even farther gone than I thought. Isabel stared at her brother in awe. He was really trying to be paternal, and it was so creepy.

“I don’t think they do anything,” Tiffany said quietly.

“That’s a shame. There’s a lot to be thankful for right now.” Isabel picked at the polish on her fingernails. “For instance, I’m thankful for my son, who is smart and wonderful and talented, just like a certain male individual who likes to paint.”

“I’m thankful for Jack Daniels,” Alex muttered.

“I’m thankful for . . .” Liz looked around helplessly. “This food.”

Isabel laughed at the pathetic-ness. That was what you said you were thankful for when you had nothing else to say.

“I’m thankful for Miley,” Garret chirped, causing Isabel to hold one hand to her chest, close her eyes, and sigh wistfully. That was just music to her ears.

“Where are all your parents?” Tiffany asked. “I mean, I know Max said his and Isabel’s parents are dead, but . . .” She looked at Alex.

“My mom died when I was younger,” Alex said. “My dad’s in Florida.”

“Oh, Alex, don’t be so modest,” Isabel teased. “He’s in prison in Florida.”

“Isabel.”

“And Liz’s parents disowned her.”

“They did not disown me,” Liz barked. “Um, Tiffany, what Isabel’s trying to say is that sometimes when you grow up and get married, you make a new family, and you start spending the holidays differently. It’s not better or worse; it’s just . . . different.”

Isabel snorted. “It’s worse.” Because of her relationship with Max, Liz had gone from being a nice girl with a nice family to a wretched girl with a wretched family.

“Max said you were bitch,” Tiffany said. “I believe him.”

Max laughed, almost choking on his pizza.

Isabel smiled at the little girl. “I like you,” she said despite the name-calling. “You’re sassy. I could totally see you as my niece. Don’t you agree, Liz?” It was pretty obvious that Liz and Max were on separate pages regarding this whole Tiffany thing.

“Can I have one with anchovies?” Liz asked, avoiding the question. “Please?”

~*~*~*~*~*~*~

“Aw, look at them.” Sylvia draped a blanket over her son and almost-daughter-in-law as they lay on the couch that evening, completely out of it. Maria was literally on top of Michael, drooling on him, and he was too asleep to care.

“They are zonked,” Kyle said. “They’re exhausted.”

“Well, hosting such a big meal can take a lot out of you,” John said.

“Yeah, I guess.” Kyle had effectively avoided hosting a holiday meal all the years, and he didn’t intend to give up that tradition anytime soon. “Hey, Michael, wake up,” he said, whacking his friend’s head.

“Huh? What’s goin’ on?” Michael asked sleepily, barely opening his eyes as he lifted his head.

“You and Maria are asleep on the couch. Your mom and dad are gonna put your kids to bed and spend the night here. Amy’s gonna go stay with Marty, and Ed’s stayin’ with me and Tess.”

“Oh.” Michael put his head back down.

“Why the hell are you so tired, man? Maria did all the work.”

“I know. But . . .” He yawned. “We’ve been havin’ so much sex lately.”

“Okay, dude, your parents are standing right here.”

Sylvia laughed and lifted a similarly sleeping Miley up off the floor. “Goodnight, son. Bye, Kyle.”

“Bye.” He waited until both she and John were upstairs to say to Michael, “They’re gone now. You can talk about sex all you want.”

“Mmm-hmm,” Michael said, already on his way back to sleep.

Kyle chuckled and shook his head. He looked around for Tess and found her outside, saying goodbye to Amy as she climbed into the car with Marty. Then she and her father headed across the yard towards their house.

He glanced back down at Michael and Maria, at the way they were wrapped around each other, more like one person than two. He and Tess had slept on opposite sides of the bed facing away from each other last night. That just didn’t seem right.

~*~*~*~*~*~*~

“Did you have a good Thanksgiving?”

“Yeah.” Tess felt like a little girl again when her father put his arm around her shoulder and pulled her to his side. Sometimes she wished she were a little girl. Things had been easier then.

“Your pumpkin pie was good,” he said.

“It was store-bought.”

“Oh. It was still good, though.”

She unlocked her front door and they went inside.

“Your house looks great,” her father said. “Very clean, very tidy.”

“Thanks.” Maybe it was so clean because she had nothing better to do, no kids to look after and play with and take care of.

“What’s wrong?” Ed asked. “Why are you so quiet?”

She shrugged. “I’m just tired.

“I’ve never known you to be tired on Thanksgiving.” He stared at her confusedly. “It’s just that stomach flu, right? Nothing more?”

“Stomach flu?” she echoed. Where had he come up with that?

“Yeah, Maria said you were sick with it.”

“Right.” Maria had been covering for her all day. “I have been. Stomach flu.”

“Unless it’s another kind of nausea.”

“Trust me, it’s not.” She sighed and went into the kitchen to store her leftovers in the refrigerator. Kyle had insisted on taking a small bowl of the casserole, a larger bowl of potatoes, and about three rolls. There had been some pumpkin pie left, but Tess didn’t want it and neither did he.

“You have a lot of leaves in your pool,” Ed remarked, looking the back door. “Do you swim in there a lot? Amy and I hardly use ours.”

Tess wrapped her arms around herself, flashing back to Miley floating face down in that water. “You heard about what happened, didn’t you?”

“With Miley?” He nodded. “Yeah. But honey, you can’t beat yourself up over that. Is that why you’re so sad?”

“I’m not sad,” she lied.

“Is everything okay with you and Kyle?”

Just as he said that, Kyle walked in the front door. “I’m gonna go get sheets on the guest bed,” he said, hurrying upstairs as though he knew they were talking about him.

Tess tried to smile at her father reassuringly. “We’re fine.”

“Okay, if you say so. I’ll go help Kyle with the sheets.”

“You don’t have to.”

“It’s no problem.” He squeezed her hand in his, then headed upstairs. Tess made her way over to the sliding glass door, pressing her forehead against it. The water in their pool was clear and blue, but her father was right. There were a lot of leaves.

When she couldn’t stand the sight of the pool anymore, she headed upstairs to get changed into something more comfortable. She was walking by the nursery and couldn’t resist casting a sideways glance inside. Much to her surprise, her father was standing in the middle of the room, looking around.

“Daddy?”

He turned around. “Sorry. I forgot where the guest room is.”

She joined him in the nursery, feeling almost suffocated in there. So many reminders of what she didn’t have.

“I think I’d be a little too big for that bed,” he said, motioning towards the crib. “It’s nice, though. I just came in to take a look. I guess this means you two have decided to have a baby.”

She hung her head. “I decided. But it’s probably not gonna happen for awhile, so don’t get too excited.”

“Oh, keep your hopes up. You never know when it’ll happen.” He patted her on the shoulder and walked out of the nursery. With him gone, she allowed herself to think of the birth control in her medicine cabinet, all the little pills that she didn’t intend to take.

“You never know,” she agreed, staring determinedly at the crib.

~*~*~*~*~*~*~

“Liz, let’s go!” Max called, glancing down at his watch. It was already after 10:30. “We still have to get Tiffany home.”

“Give me a minute,” she called back from the bathroom. “I’m touching up my makeup.”

He rolled his eyes, never understanding the female sex’s compulsive need to touch up their makeup, especially when they weren’t going anywhere.

“I’m really in no hurry,” Tiffany said, shuffling past him out into the front yard. Max watched as she squatted down and plucked a yellow dandelion, putting it in her pocket. Maybe she didn’t know it was technically a weed.

“Thanks for coming,” Alex said, joining him on the porch.

“That’s what she said,” Max joked, unable to resist. Alex cracked up a little, too. “Hey, thanks for having me. All of us. Does this mean we’re friends again now?”

“I don’t know. You still fired me,” Alex pointed out.

“But because of that, you decided to go back to school. So it all worked out.”

“I guess,” Alex agreed. “It looks like you’ve already found a new best friend, though.” He pointed to Tiffany, who was now blowing on the wispy grey kind of dandelion and watching in delight. “She seems like a really nice kid.”

Max smiled. “She is.” He was so glad Isabel hadn’t said anything about her eye.

“You’re not thinking of doing anything crazy, are you?”

He frowned. “What do you mean?” He was sort of a crazy guy. Wasn’t it inevitable?

“Like trying to adopt her,” Alex clarified.

Max took a step back, trying not to have any reaction. “No, of course not.”

“Because it’s not that you wouldn’t make a good dad,” Alex kept on, seeming to sense that he was lying. “You’re a good uncle, and I gotta think some of that would transfer over. But you’re just not at the right place in your life to be taking on such a huge responsibility right now.”

When would he be at that place? What if he never was? “Are you drinking less?” he asked his brother-in-law.

“What?”

“You’re doling out advice. You’re thinking about someone else’s problems instead of your own. It’s strange, so I just thought . . .”

Alex laughed and shook his head sadly. “No, I’m not drinking less.”

Liz came out of the bathroom a moment later and pushed past both of them. Her makeup didn’t look any different than it had when she’d gone in there. “Let’s go,” she said. “Bye, Alex.”

“See ya. Wait, Max.” Alex grabbed his arm and kept him from going just yet. “Listen, I saw something the other day, and it’s probably nothing, but I feel like I should tell you about it just in case.”

Oh, crap, Max thought. What was going to go wrong in his life now?

“Yesterday, I saw Liz on campus with a guy,” Alex revealed. “Kinda scruffy, shaggy hair. I think she said his name’s Brandon.”

Max felt the worry seep from his body. “Oh, that guy.”

“You’ve met him?”

“Yeah, he seems like the Michael Guerin type.”

“I’m just saying . . . you might wanna keep an eye on that.”

Max frowned. “Why?” Liz had never gone for the Michael Guerin type. “What were they doing when you saw them?”

Alex lowered his head and mumbled, “Playing Frisbee.”

“Well, red alert. If that isn’t cause for alarm, I don’t know what is.”

“Look, just because your wife takes a vow, that doesn’t mean she’s gonna uphold it. Trust me, I know.”

Max glanced back inside the house at Isabel. She was walking around the kitchen with the dishtowel in her hand, talking on her cell phone. Probably to Billy.

“Liz isn’t Isabel,” he said.

“I know, but--”

“But nothing,” Max cut him off. “I can’t be bothered with mindless speculation right now. I’ve got other things to think about, important things.”

“Max!” Tiffany called from the car. She was one of those things.

“I wasn’t trying to upset you,” Alex said. “I just thought . . .” He trailed off and shrugged. “Never mind. I should’ve known you wouldn’t want my advice.”

Did he want the advice of a miserable alcoholic? No, not really. He and Liz were fine. They’d gone through a rough patch ever since they’d gotten married, but they were weathering the storm together. He wasn’t about to be as unhappy as Alex was. Ever.

He left Alex to his alcohol and walked towards the car to take Tiffany home.

~*~*~*~*~*~*~

When Michael awoke, he didn’t know where he was at first. He wasn’t used to waking up and seeing his living room. It took him a few minutes to get oriented and realize he was on the couch, lying flat on his stomach. Maria was literally lying on top of him, using his shoulder blade as what must have been quite the uncomfortable pillow. Judging by the sun filtering in through the blinds, it was early morning. He couldn’t even recall falling asleep. The last thing he remembered was pumpkin pie. It all got a little hazy from there.

“Maria.” He twisted his arm up and around to nudge Maria’s side. “Maria, wake up.” She wasn’t heavy by any means, but he couldn’t move very well with her on top of him. “Maria?”

She didn’t budge.

“Okay, then.” He groaned as he pushed himself up, and she tumbled off him.

“No,” she moaned, curling up on the couch.

He sat up on the middle cushion, yawning and rubbing the sleep out of his eyes.

“What’s going on?” she murmured sleepily. “Why are we on the couch?”

“Fell asleep.”

“Seriously? I don’t even remember.” She readjusted the pillow beneath her head and closed her eyes again as though she wanted to try to go back to sleep.

“What do you remember?” he asked.

Her eyes snapped open again, and she smiled. “That my mom doesn’t have cancer.”

“She doesn’t have cancer.” He bent down and kissed her, completely unconcerned with the morning breath factor.

“Mmm,” she moaned, rubbing her hands against his chest. “Our lives are . . . better than most people’s lives.”

“Yeah, they are.” He kissed her again, holding himself up on his forearms.

“Good things happen.” She looped her arms around his neck. “Like this, right now . . .” She kept kissing him. “This is a good thing.”

All of a sudden, they were joined in the living room by his mom of all people. “Good morning,” she chirped as she came downstairs.

Michael shot up. “God, Mom.” He had never forgotten the time Amy had walked in on him and Maria having sex. Ever since then, he was terrified that one or both of his parents were going to do the same.

“Good morning, Sylvia,” Maria said, tilting her head back to smile at her.

“I hope you two don’t mind that John and I slept in your bed,” she said, heading into the kitchen with a coffee mug in her hand. “Don’t worry, we didn’t do anything.”

Michael made a face of disgust. “Gross.” There were certain visuals that he didn’t need in life, and that was one of them.

“I’m gonna go take a shower,” Maria announced, slithering out from underneath him.

“Hmm, maybe I’ll . . . not join you,” Michael said, catching himself. “Because my parents are here.”

She laughed and headed upstairs.

“Oh, Michael,” his mother said as he got up and went into the kitchen, “believe it or not, I’m aware that you and Maria are having sex.”

“And here I thought we were doing such a good job of hiding it.”

She poured herself a cup of coffee and took a sip. “That was such good news yesterday, about Amy,” she said. “I’m so happy for her and Maria.”

“Yeah, me, too.” Maria had stayed busy over the past few months with school and her responsibilities as a mom, but she’d been stressing about Amy the entire time, even when she hadn’t talked about it.

“It’s nice that she’ll be around to watch her grandkids grow and watch her daughter get married and graduate.”

“Yeah, Maria’s kinda nervous about that.”

“About getting married?”

“No, graduating.” He opened the cupboard and took out a Santa Fe State mug, pouring himself a cup of coffee as well. When he took a sip of it, he grimaced. His mother had put all sorts of flavoring in it. He rarely drank coffee, but if he did, he liked it black.

“Why’s she nervous about graduating?” Sylvia asked.

“No, don’t get me wrong, she’s really excited about it. She wants to be done with school. But she’s just worried she’s not gonna get a job.”

“Oh, she will. And any child would be lucky to have her as a teacher.”

“I’ll tell her you said that.” He sat down at the kitchen table, yawning again. The clock on the microwave read 7:30. That was way too early on the day after a massive holiday.

“So I hear Isabel’s embarking on some . . . unusual employment these days,” his mother said, sitting beside him.

“Maria told you, huh?”

She nodded.

Great, he thought. Time to do damage control. “Alright, Mom, first off, I didn’t even wanna be at that strip club; it was all Kyle’s idea. And it’s not like I got a lap dance from anyone. The strippers were on top of the bar.”

Sylvia’s eyes widened. “Maria didn’t tell me that part.”

“She didn’t?”

“No. I knew Isabel was a stripper but I didn’t know you actually saw her strip.” Her voice started to rise with hysteria. “My god, what were you doing at a strip club? That’s filthy! That’s immoral!”

“That’s Kyle.”

“Oh, goodness, I didn’t care to know this. Maria’s okay with this?”

“She was dancing with male strippers not all that long ago.”

“What?”

“It was for her mom’s bachelorette party,” he explained. “I mean, she wasn’t a bachelorette because she was already married, but . . .” He trailed off and shook his head, abandoning the cause. “So yeah, Isabel’s a stripper.”

His father treaded downstairs and asked, “What’s going on down here?”

“Our son is a sex fiend!” Sylvia shrieked.

“I’m not—Kyle is!” he protested.

“Come to think of it, this explains the two kids in three years.”

His father came up behind him and placed one hand on his shoulder. “You went to a strip club, didn’t you?”

“It’s not like I’ve never been to one before.”

His mother gasped.

“Oh, crap, I just made it worse, didn’t I?” he realized.

“Yes.” John smirked. “Yes, you did. Welcome to my world, son.”

“Honey, I try to be hip, I try to be a cool mom,” Sylvia said, “but this is just too much.”

“Her first serious boyfriend dumped her for a stripper a long, long time ago,” his father explained.

“Oh, I see.”

“Thirty years later and I’m still not over it,” she grumbled.

“Why were you at a strip club?” his father asked. “Early bachelor party?”

“More like for Kyle’s amusement. Isabel was there.”

“Isabel was . . .” His father literally took a step back, a mixture of surprise and intrigue etched on his face. “You mean she was . . .” He trailed off again. “Oh. That must’ve been very . . . interesting.” He started to grin. “Oh, boy, I bet she was really . . .”

Sylvia glared at him.

“Horrible,” he said, averting the crisis. “Just horrible to look at.” He laughed nervously and declared, “I’ll be upstairs.”

Once his father was gone, Michael apologized to his mother. “I’m sorry I went to a strip club . . . and that your ex scarred you for life.”

“Well, as far as debauchery goes, I suppose you could do a lot worse.”

“I just don’t know what to do now,” he admitted. “Part of me thinks I should avoid the entire situation like the plague, but then the other part of me thinks I should try to help her.”

“What would you do for her?”

He shrugged. “Try to help her find another job.” It wasn’t much, but it was something.

“I don’t know if she deserves any help from you,” his mother said, her everlasting disdain for Isabel showing through. “I never liked that girl when she was your girlfriend. I especially don’t like her now. Can you imagine what your life would be like if you’d kept believing you were the father of her child? All our lives . . .” She trailed off and shivered. “I don’t know. What does Maria think about this?”

“She hates her . . . more than I do. I don’t particularly enjoy having her around, but . . . I think Maria understands why I might feel compelled to do something.” Think was pretty much the key term there.

“I always knew I raised a good son,” Sylvia said, “but if you help her, you’re even more generous than I thought you were.”

“It’s just . . . she’s a parent, too, you know. Her son is Miley’s best friend. If I help her out, maybe it’ll help him out, too. He shouldn’t grow up with a mom who’s a stripper. I mean, if you’d been a stripper, I’d be so messed up.”

“Maybe, I was,” she joked. “Okay, clearly I wasn’t.” She reached over and placed her hand atop his. “Michael, I can’t tell you what to do, but you have a good head on your shoulders and an even better heart in your chest. Whatever decision you make will be the right one.”

He sure hoped she meant that and wasn’t just saying it because she was his mom.








TBC . . .

-April
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LOVE IS MICHAEL AND MARIA.
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April
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Part 59

Post by April »

Ha, I love this. Everyone's, like, polite, and then there's BB going "Hurry up!" :lol:

Well, my teaching experience was a good one today. I got to lead a class discussion, and it all felt really natural. Guess that means I'm in the right career field.

Leila:
Might the others see that Max is trying to be a good human being? I'm still doubting his intentions. He wants to redeem himself but is going the wrong way. He probably should start with his life and then try to change others. He should start with his marriage and his wife's family.
And this is definitely Max's problem right now. He's so focused on helping Tiffany that he's ignoring those closest to him, especially Liz. And whenever he pays any attention to her, it seems like he's just fighting with her.
I really think that Tess have a wrong image of marriage and what it takes to make it work.
Definitely. I think Tess thought her marriage would be a perfect, unblemished fairytale and that she and Kyle love each other so much that they would never have any problems to work through. And that obviously isn't the case.

Ellie:
$10 bucks says that Liz was on the phone with Brandon ... who's with me? Any takers?
Hmm, well, that's not really a suspicion that'll be confirmed or not, but I was definitely hoping someone might take it to be that way.
Oh why is that nursery still up? Talking about a walking sore! And yet again, she purposefully plans on not taking her birth control. Oy! Does she not want her marriage?
She wants her marriage, but right now, she seems to want a baby more.

BB:
I totally love Michael's parents. His mother is awesome, she's so cool and switched on. And his father is just on the right side of sleazy. I love them both.
:) I haven't really done much writing where Michael has loving, cool parents. Usually I keep it a little closer to the canon and have his parents be abusive, dysfunctional, or absent, but it's been a nice change to write his family like this.
Isabel and Tiffany together could be very interesting. How would Max ever cope with two strong women opposing him?
Well, I don't think Tiffany would ever oppose him. She can stand up to Isabel, though, and Max would really enjoy that.
Garret is really a chip off the old block - The block being Isabel. His obsession with Miley is very similar to his mother's on Michael. I really hope he doesn't veer off onto the crazy, psycho path like Isabel. Although with her obsessive genes and Alex's addictive personality, Garret is screwed.
Oh, I wouldn't give up on Garret yet. ;)

Novy:
That was great to see Tiffany fight back with Isabel. The whole thing made for a very interesting thanksgiving. What a contrast to Michael and Maria's. (there were a lot of contrasts in this part. It was cool)
Thanks, I like to play around with contrasts a lot in this fic, mostly contrasts between the Core 4 and their family and then Isabel, Alex, Max, Liz, and Garret . . . and now Tiffany, to an extent.
I wish Tess would tell someone how sad she is. But I'm sure her dad recognizes there is something a miss.
Yeah, he does, but if she won't talk to him about it, there's only so much he can do.

Claire051991: Hey, welcome to Fanatics! Is it alright if I just call you Claire? Is that your real name? Or is there something else you want to be called?
I really enjoy reading this. For some reason I have trouble finding well-written Roswell stories.
Thank you! You can find a lot of well-written stories on this site. There are a lot of talented authors. I'd be happy to give you some recommedations, too, if you want.
On the one hand I'm inclined to feel Tess has a right not to be taking her pill. It is her body to do what she chooses with. Equally, Kyle has a right to know to what end her mind is made up.
Definitely. If Tess doesn't want to take her pill, that's one thing, but she should have told Kyle, "I'm not going to keep taking it, and I felt like you should know."
Surely Tess ought to know secrets are not constructive between married people? I really want her to be grown up enough to realise this is partly why Maria was cross with Michael not too log ago.
That's right, Maria was pissed at Michael because he was being secretive. Tess is just too upset right now to make the correlation between that and what she's doing.

Rodney:
Okay I really don't know what to say about Kyle/Tess that I haven't said already.The two are at opposite ends and won't meet in the middle anytime soon.
Especially if they keep not talking to each other about it.
It's immoral to go to a strip club? Uhhhhhh not that I've ever been to one of those places before.....no not me.......uhhh most go to church now to say some prayers.....bye!
:lol: Hey, tomorrow night is Ladies Night at this place a few blocks down the road from my apartment . . . and I'm SO THERE! :lol:


Thanks for the feedback!








Part 59








As 8:00 a.m. neared, Liz found herself standing outside Dollar General, the store that sold horrid products at amazingly low prices. She and Max were near the front of a line of at least two hundred people that coiled all the way around the block. Some of them looked as if they were getting ready to run a marathon, stretching and jumping up and down as they waited for the doors to open.

“Max, do we have to do this?” Liz whined, pulling her coat tighter. It wasn’t even warm. Stupid thing. “I’m freezing my implants off out here.” Why had she ever let him convince her to get those?

“Are you kidding? It’s Black Friday. It’s a tradition,” was her husband’s response.

“For who?”

“For us.”

“Since when?” They’d never done the day-after-Thanksgiving shopping before. One year they’d sent Yolanda out to do it for them and she’d inexplicably come home with half her head shaved.

“Since now, Liz. You’re lucky I didn’t wake you up earlier for the stores that opened at 4:00 a.m.” He took a handful of newspaper clippings out of his pocket and showed one to her. “Look at this. One roll of toilet paper for two cents. Does it get any better than that?”

Liz stared at the coupon sorrowfully. “This is what we’ve been reduced to?” What kind of pathetic people got excited about toilet paper?

“Let’s just try to make the most of it,” he suggested, peering over the heads of the people in front of them. He glanced down at his watch and said, “They should be opening soon.”

“Can’t wait,” she muttered. This wasn’t how she liked to spend the day after Thanksgiving. She liked to spend it getting all the Christmas decorations out and setting up the tree. But when she’d woken up and remembered that they had sold all their decorations and had no space in the trailer to put a tree, she’d agreed to tag along.

“That was really nice of you to invite Tiffany to spend the day with us,” she said to fill the silence. They had pretty much gone home and gone to sleep after driving the little girl home that night. She felt it was something they needed to talk about, though.

“But?” he prompted.

“Nothing, it’s just . . . I wasn’t expecting to meet her, that’s all. I didn’t even know what to say.”

He sighed disappointedly. “You didn’t like her.”

“No, she was sweet.”

“But you didn’t like her.” He grunted in disbelief. “How could you not like her?”

“That’s not what I’m saying, Max. It just felt . . . forced, like you were trying to force her to be a part of our family.” She still didn’t understand his reasoning. What was the point of taking her away from one twisted family and introducing her to another? “I hope you’ve given up on adopting her.”

“I guess,” he mumbled. “According to everyone who’s not me, it’s a really stupid idea.”

“It’s not stupid. It’s just . . . it’s the first genuinely kind thing you’ve done for anyone other than me or Garret. That’s why it throws everyone for a loop, including me,” she explained. “But now that I know adoption’s not off the table, maybe that’s something we can think about someday, a few years down the road when we have a real home and super steady jobs and a couple wedding anniversaries under our belts.”

“A few years down the road?” he echoed. “Tiffany will be emancipated by then.”

She felt the frustration coursing through her. It was as if everything she said wasn’t good enough for him. He was being so stubborn and immature. “God, I’m trying so hard to be understanding,” she said, holding back tears, “but I feel like everything I say upsets you.”

“Ditto.”

Before she could say anything more, she heard someone call her name.

“Liz!”

She turned around and saw Brandon squeezing through the line towards her.

“Hey,” she said, the tears receding. “What’re you doing here?”

“Oh, I love Black Friday,” he replied. “It’s practically a holiday in itself. I didn’t even go to sleep last night; I was so stoked.”

She laughed. That much was obvious. His eyes were a little red and there were bags underneath them. He still looked really good, though.

“I’ve got my eye on some acrylics here.”

“Acrylics?” she echoed. Somewhere deep in the recesses of her brain, she knew what that word meant, but it got a little hard to think around him sometimes.

“Paint.”

“Oh, right.” She blushed, embarrassed. “Do you remember my husband Max?”

“Yeah, nice to see you again, buddy.” Brandon extended his hand for a handshake, but Max bolted in the opposite direction when the store doors opened. The masses went with them.

“And there he goes,” Brandon remarked.

“Yeah.” Nice of him to wait for me. “You’d better hurry,” she advised, “get your paint before it’s gone.”

“Come with me,” he said. “I don’t want you to get trampled.”

She smiled and followed him into the store. They weaved through crowded aisles full of junk before getting to the acrylics. Brandon must’ve had the entire store mapped out in his mind, because he knew exactly where to go.

“This is crazy,” she commented, wishing she had a video camera so she could capture the chaos.

“Isn’t it great?” He picked up a bottle of blue paint and was examining the label when a burly man collided with Liz, practically knocking her over.

“Oh!” she yelped, losing her footing. She fell against Brandon, and he caught her. She found herself face to face with his chest while his hands were on her hips, and she knew she should back away. But she didn’t. She looked up at him slowly, and his warm brown eyes were full of passion, but not the destructive kind.

Oh, no, she thought. This was not good.

~*~*~*~*~*~*~

Maria and her mom went out for a walk after lunch that day, before Amy had to leave for the airport. Miley went over to Tess and Kyle’s place to swim (under strict supervision, of course), ever the insistent child even though it was starting to get chilly out; so Maria brought Macy along, letting Amy push her down the sidewalk in her stroller. She hooked Frank onto his leash and brought him along, too. The dog was getting so fat and needed some serious exercise.

“So what did you think when they told you?” Maria asked her mom as Frank lifted his leg on a fire hydrant.

“Told me what?”

“What do you think? That you’re cancer-free.”

Amy smiled and pushed Macy’s stroller around rather than over a large stick. “I didn’t believe it at first. I thought I was having some fantastic dream. I knew I was feeling a little better, but I didn’t know why. I kind of assumed I’d developed a tolerance for feeling crappy.”

“It’s weird how, all of a sudden it was just there, and now all of a sudden it’s gone. Not that I’m not glad.”

“It is weird,” Amy agreed. “But it’ll never really be gone. The memory of it will always be there, and I’ll never forget how lucky I am to be alive. Although I suppose that’s a good thing.”

“Yeah.” Maria rolled her eyes when, after only four steps forward, Frank lifted his leg and peed on a bush. “It’s kinda like how after Miley fell in the pool, I realized that every single day with her is a treasure. Not that I didn’t know that already, but . . . I just really know that now.”

“Well, I didn’t mean to scare you,” Amy said apologetically as though cancer were something she’d asked for.

“Look, Mom, I know we weren’t exactly close while I was growing up, but I’m glad it’s different now,” Maria told her. Now that the cancer scare had come and gone, she realized just how scared she’d been, just how much fear she’d been bottling up inside.

Amy smiled, her eyes sparkling with energy and life. “I’m glad, too.”

~*~*~*~*~*~*~

Michael agreed to go around to some stores that afternoon because he knew things were tense between Kyle and Tess at home. His friend needed a break, and he needed condoms, so he picked some up for half-price.

They had decided not to have the gallery open that day, but as they were driving by, they noticed a flood of people in the adult video store next door, so they got out of the car and went inside. It was so crowded that they could barely walk.

“Hey, Ralph,” Kyle said to the store manager. “I didn’t know Cockadoodle-Doo did the whole Black Friday thing.”

“Well, that’s my fault for not advertising better,” Ralph muttered. The poor guy had terror in his eyes, and his hair was practically going grey as he stood out the counter, frantically scanning the barcodes of movies, swiping credit cards, doling out change, and fake-smiling at his customers as he sent them on their way with pornos in hand.

“Doesn’t seem to have hurt your business,” Michael remarked. Maybe he and Kyle should have opened the gallery that day. It seemed as though every person who lived in Santa Fe was out and about shopping. The traffic on the way there had been moving at about one-mile per hour. Ridiculous.

“You look a little understaffed,” Kyle remarked, and Michael nodded in agreement. It looked like there was only one other employee on duty, and she was out on the floor talking to customers, trying to sell some guy a movie called Squirt It on My Back.

“I had a female employee who accused a male employee of sexual harassment,” Ralph explained, “so I had to fire him. And then of course she quit, too.”

“Okay, Ralph, you’ve convinced me.” Kyle hopped over the counter and announced, “Give me the cock.”

Michael stared at him in horror for a moment before realizing his friend was referring to the black polo shirts with the screeching rooster on the left side that all Cockadoodle-Doo employees were required to wear.

“Hmm.” Kyle shook his head, silently warning Michael not even to make the obvious joke.

“You don’t have to help, Kyle,” Ralph said.

“I want to.”

“Yeah, he’s avoiding his wife,” Michael added.

“I am not,” Kyle denied. “Okay, maybe a little bit. Things are just kinda strained right now. I need something to do to keep my mind off it.”

“Okay, have at it.” Ralph reached under the counter and grabbed an extra shirt tossing it at Kyle.

“Thanks.” Kyle tugged the shirt on quickly and pointed to a man in a corner who was trying to act like he wasn’t looking at bondage porn when, in reality, he clearly was.

“I’m gonna go convince that man to buy some porn,” Kyle declared. “And then I might buy some myself.” He grinned confidently and marched off to his target customer.

Michael leaned over the counter and picked up a job application off the top of a stack. “So it sounds like you have a few openings,” he remarked.

“A few.” Ralph was still checking out movies for customers at a near light-speed pace. “Know of anyone I could hire?”

Michael stared at the application in his hand. Only one name was coming to mind.

~*~*~*~*~*~*~

Isabel set the application down on her kitchen counter, looking confused. “A video store?”

“An adult video store,” Michael clarified. It was definitely more exciting than the regular kind.

“So, what, I’d be a clerk?”

“A Senior Customer Sales Assistant.” That was what Ralph had called it.

“Otherwise known as . . .”

“A clerk, yeah.” It was better than nothing, though.

“How much does it pay?” she asked.

“Not very much. Probably about half as much as you’re making now. But you don’t have to take your clothes off, and that’s priceless.”

She smiled and half-heartedly picked up the application again, seeming reluctant. “I don’t know . . .”

“It’s right next to my gallery.” He knew that would get her to make up her mind.

“Well, that’s all the persuading I need,” she decided suddenly. “I’ll fill out the application and drop it off tomorrow. Do you think I’ll still have to interview?”

“Yeah, but he’ll hire you,” he assured her. “He’s desperate.”

“Gee, thanks.”

“No, not that you’re a last resort. He just said the job’s yours if you beat everyone else to it.” He couldn’t help but feel like he was giving her the wrong impression about all this, so he wanted to clarify a few things. “Listen, Isabel, we’re not gonna carpool to work or go get lunch or anything like that. You know that, right?”

She frowned in disappointment. “Why not?”

“Because I don’t want to.” She was a dark, depressing, dramatic person. He didn’t need any of that. He could handle small doses of her, but anything more than five minutes of interaction was a little too much. “Besides, Ralph wants to hire you for the night shift, 4:00 to 11:00 p.m. four nights a week.”

“Are you serious?” She made a face and sarcastically grumbled, “Great hours. Well, I guess it’s what I’m gonna have to settle for.”

“Yeah, I know it’s just a job and not a career, but you gotta start somewhere, you know?” Considering the fact that almost all employers wanted to see a college education on every adult’s resume nowadays, she could’ve done a lot worse.

“Yeah, you gotta start somewhere,” she agreed, staring at him as she spoke. “Even if that starting point is far from where you wanna end up.”

Speak for yourself, Michael thought. I’m exactly where I wanna end up and with exactly who I wanna end up with.

“Michael?”

He turned around when Alex joined them in the kitchen. He was still wearing a t-shirt and sweatpants, looked like he’d just gotten out of bed.

“Oh, hey, Alex,” Michael greeted, not sure how anyone could be lazy enough to sleep until 3:00 in the afternoon.

Alex looked at him critically. “What’re you doing here?”

“He’s helping me out,” Isabel answered for him. “Thanks, Michael.” She took a pen out of one of her kitchen drawers and headed upstairs with that and the job application in hand.

Michael smiled at Alex awkwardly, not quite sure what to say.

“Sorry my house is such a pig-sty,” Alex apologized, reaching into the refrigerator for a beer. “Want one?” he asked, popping the tab on a can of Bud Light.

“No.” The first thing this guy did when he got up was have a drink? Michael couldn’t even fathom that. When he got up, he had to rush through his own shower and morning routine to get Miley and Macy up, help get them ready for daycare, take care of the dog, and get breakfast ready if Maria was busy. There was no time to drink. And really, at such an early hour, who wanted to? Besides an alcoholic, of course.

“So I’m just gonna go,” he announced, feeling uncomfortable. He wasn’t about to stand there and watch a guy who wasn’t even his friend start on down the path of getting wasted, so he headed for the front door, stepping over a pile of laundry on his way.

“What’re you doing, Michael?”

He stopped.

“Or should I say, what’s she doing to you?”

He turned around, narrowing his eyes. “What?” Was Alex already drunk?

“Oh, come on, you’re a smart guy. I’m sure you can figure it out.” Alex brought the can up to his lips and gulped. “She’s luring you back in.”

Michael almost laughed, because that couldn’t have been more ridiculous. “Oh, really?”

“Yeah, she’s getting inside your head, making you think she’s changing when really, she’s just conniving.”

Michael shook his head. “She’s not making me think anything. All I did was find her a job.”

“She already has a job.”

“As a stripper. Did you know that?”

Alex lowered his head and mumbled shamefully, “Yes.”

“And you didn’t do anything to stop her?”

“I couldn’t do anything to stop her.”

“You’re her husband. I don’t care how much of a bitch she is to you. If you marry a girl and father a child with her, you gotta make sure she doesn’t throw her life away,” Michael argued. “This shouldn’t be my responsibility. You need to step up.”

“Oh, well, I’m sorry,” Alex apologized sarcastically. “I’m sorry I don’t have all the answers. I’m sorry I don’t have it all figured out. I can’t compare to the great Michael Guerin.”

Michael rolled his eyes and ignored that jab, turning to leave again. He’d never said he was great. But he knew he was good.

“Sorry I’m not perfect,” Alex barked.

“I’m not, either.”

“My wife thinks you are. Hell, even my son thinks you are,” Alex grumbled. “He came home the other night after his play date with Miley and told me he wants to live over there. ‘Cause Miley’s mom and dad are really cool and they let her have a dog.”

“And they’re not alcoholics,” Michael added pointedly. Being a decent parent really wasn’t that hard. “You know, until today, I didn’t have a problem with you. But now that I hear all these excuses, I lost all respect for you.”

Alex downed the rest of his beer in astonishingly quickly and tossed it into the trash. “Has your life ever been bad, Michael?” he asked point blank. “Do you even know what it’s like?”

“No,” Michael admitted, “because I do things to make my life good. So quit with the pity party. Stop making excuses. Put down the beer and act like a man.” He doubted Alex would take his advice, so he left it at that and walked out. Anything else was likely to go in one ear and right out the other.

~*~*~*~*~*~*~

Michael felt relieved to get home. Dealing with Isabel and Alex had been stressful, and he just wanted to relax.

“Daddy’s home!” Miley exclaimed, rushing to greet him. She and Macy were on the living room floor, playing with stuffed animals. Maria was on the couch with her laptop on her lap, typing furiously.

“Hey.” He lifted Miley up and hugged her, watching as Macy climbed to her feet and waddled towards him. She got going a little too fast for her own good and bumped into his leg, unable to stop in time. She fell onto her butt and frowned but didn’t cry.

“She’s pickin’ up the pace,” Maria remarked, her eyes fixed on the computer screen.

“Yep,” he agreed, setting Miley back down. “Unit plan?”

“Unit plan.” She made a gagging sound.

“Did your mom leave?” he asked, sitting beside her.

“Yep. So did your parents. They all said they’d be back for Christmas, though. What does that mean?”

“Uh, that they’ll be back for Christmas.”

“Do we have to do another meal?” Her eyes were wide and fearful as she asked the question. “Because honestly, there’s only so much holiday a young cook can handle.”

He chuckled. “Don’t worry about it.” Wasn’t it Tess and Kyle’s turn to host one of those things?

She kept typing, talking at the same time. “So I was thinking, after I get done with this tonight, we should teach Miley about 911. I know we taught her last year, but she was too little. She doesn’t remember. And with everything that’s happened lately . . .”

“Yeah, that’s a good idea.” He watched Miley and Macy as they got back down on the floor and started playing again. Miley looked more interested in actually telling a story with the stuffed animals, whereas Macy was most interested in putting their ears in her mouth.

“I got Isabel a job,” he blurted, knowing there really wasn’t going to be a good time or place to say it.

“What?” She closed her computer and set it aside, standing. She pulled him up off the couch and into the kitchen so they were out of their daughters’ earshot. “Are you serious?”

“Yeah.” It sounded really weird when he said it out loud.

“Well, that’s . . . really nice of you. Too nice, but whatever. You’re you.” She crossed her arms over her chest and said determinedly, “I’m okay with it.”

He was no body language expert, but she didn’t really look okay with it. “It’s at the video store next to my gallery,” he added.

“What?” she shrieked, stomping her foot. “I’m totally not okay with it! Michael! This isn’t good! Now she’s gonna be there all around you all the time.”

“No, she’s gonna work nights,” he explained. “I won’t even see her.”

She sighed heavily. “I don’t wanna talk about this right now.”

“Why not?”

“Because I was feeling stress-free and now I’m not. You know, I’ve tried to understand things, but I wish there weren’t ‘things’ to understand. You have these secret meetings with her and you hug her and watch her strip. And now you find this job for her. Honestly, Michael, there’s only so much a girl can take.”

He hated that he was upsetting her, but he liked to think she knew him better than that. “Don’t you trust me?”

She rolled her eyes. “Of course. Of course I trust you. I don’t trust her.”

“You don’t have to. Just trust me.”

She groaned exaggeratedly and ran one hand through her hair. “How would you feel if I was doing all these nice things for Billy?”

He thought about it for a moment and admitted, “Pretty pissed off. And a little confused.”

“Exactly.”

“But that’s different. He tried to take advantage of you.”

“Isabel tried to take advantage of you,” Maria pointed out. “Not in the same way, obviously, but metaphorically or whatever.”

“Paternity test,” he registered. “Actually, I think that's more of an analogy. Whatever, you just gotta trust me, I haven’t forgotten about that. I’m never going to. But I was with Isabel for two years; you were with Billy for two weeks.”

She opened her mouth to say something, then closed it again and muttered, “Point taken.”

“And it’s not just about her, you know. Whether we like it or not, her son and our daughter are best friends. We gotta help that kid out, for his sake and for Miley’s. And that involves helping Isabel. And I didn’t even do very much. I just picked up an application and gave it to her.”

She crossed her arms over her chest again. “That’s all?”

“That’s all.”

“I mean, I get what you’re saying about Miley and Garret, but . . . God, I hate her. But you know what? You could probably tell me anything right now and I wouldn’t hold it against you. I’m still on cloud nine about my mom.”

“And you should be.” Maybe this didn’t have to be such a big deal.

“Will you just do me a favor and make it clear to her that this doesn’t mean anything?”

“I think I already have, but I will again, if I have to,” he promised.

“Thank you.” She leaned in and kissed him.

“By the way,” he spoke against her lips, “about Alex . . .”

“Alex?” She pulled away, frowning confusedly.

“Yeah, I decided I don’t like him. I know he’s kind of your friend, but . . .”

“Well, no, I realize he’s not exactly a ray of sunshine,” she acknowledged, “but he saved your ass way back when. I don’t not like him.”

“I know. But he just makes a lot of excuses, and I don’t have any respect for that. I’d like to think that I’d never be like that, even if I had ended up with Isabel.”

“Hmm.” She hooked her fingers into his belt loops and pulled him close again. “I’d like to think you never would’ve ended up with Isabel.”

He smiled at her, rubbing her shoulders. “Me, too.” He and Maria were meant to be together. Isabel was going to understand that someday, because underneath all the craziness was still an actual human being capable of rational thought. Maybe once she accepted what everyone else already knew to be true, then she and Alex could both move on with their lives.








TBC . . .

-April
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LOVE IS MICHAEL AND MARIA.
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