My Beloved Max (MATURE) Ma/Ma {COMPLETE}

All finished stories from the Unconventional Couples board, the Crossover board, and the Alien Abyss boards will eventually be moved here. See those forums for descriptions.

Moderators: Anniepoo98, Itzstacie, truelovepooh, Erina, Forum Moderators

User avatar
Midwest Max
Addicted Roswellian
Posts: 461
Joined: Sun Aug 03, 2003 8:11 pm

Post by Midwest Max »

I think only one more part after this one ;)


Part Twenty

It’s past midnight when Max finally comes to bed. He and Michael have been watching the football game, laughing like children as they good-naturedly rib one another. When it was time for Allie to go to bed, I excused myself as well. I’m glad that Max has Michael - someone who is just like him, the only person who is just like him – in his life. I felt the need to give them some space and just let them be guys for an evening.

But I have news to tell Max. Or at least I think I do. I listen to him brushing his teeth in the master bath, then I feel the mattress dip as he tries to get into bed without waking me. I’m not asleep – I’ve been lying here in the dark listening to them laugh like old times, wondering if I’m pregnant again. Without saying a word, I back up slightly, bumping my body into his, letting him know I’m awake.

Letting out a sleepy sigh, he wraps his arm around my waist and gives me a kiss on the side of the head. I know he must be exhausted, what with working all day then entertaining Michael all evening. And I know he’s got to get up early for work tomorrow, but there’s something I need to find out. Taking his hand in mine, I slide it down my body so that his palm is lying flat against me, below my belly button. I’m sure he thinks I’m going to drag his hand down farther than that, but when I stop I can almost feel the confusion coming off him in waves.

Then he’s moving away from me quickly, the lamp suddenly blazing in the room. I think I just got my answer. I sit up on one elbow and squint over my shoulder. Max looks like he’s just been caught peeing on the rose bushes.

“I am so sorry,” he says, a plethora of emotions swirling in his eyes. He’s shoved all of the way to the other side of the bed, up against the headboard. If I didn’t known better, I’d think he was cowering away from me.

I shift my weight, sitting up beside him. His eyes are round as they watch every one of my movements. I give a little sigh and brush my hair away from my face. “So it’s true, then.”

He nods mutely.

I hold my face in my hands as I try to process Max’s confirmation. I’m not sure how to feel about it. I certainly hadn’t planned on being pregnant again so soon. But I also don’t feel the dread I thought I would. I just feel kind of…numb.

“I was irresponsible,” Max announces.

I drop my hands slowly and turn my head to lift an eyebrow at him.

He draws in a breath, like he’s bucking up for the consequences. “I take full responsibility.”

I can’t help it – I burst out laughing. Max looks stung. I reach over and touch his arm while I try to contain myself.

“How noble of you,” I laugh. It’s so typical of him to want to take responsibility, to ease the pain of the world even if it means taking the blame for something that isn’t entirely his fault. “I think you had a willing partner.”

He concedes – slightly. “Yeah, but I – we should have been more careful. I know this isn’t what you wanted.”

That’s true. But it’s also not what I didn’t want. That’s as confusing as the inside of my head gets these days. Now that I’m looking at nine more months of pregnancy, I don’t entirely hate it.

“What do you want to do?” Max asks softly. “We can do…whatever it is you want to do.”

I meet his gaze and realize what he’s telling me – if I want an abortion, he’ll go through with it. I can see in his eyes that that definitely is not what he wants, but if I want it, then he’ll go along. It’s somewhat amazing to me that most of us assumed having children with the hybrids would be difficult, that babies would only come through some miracle. But we don’t seem to be having a problem in that department.

I bite my lip and shake my head. “No, Max, I don’t want an abortion.”

He practically wilts with relief, though he says nothing. I can see it in those eyes of his – they will always betray his emotions – he wants whatever is growing in my belly very badly.

“So,” I say, sliding down under the covers. “Here we go again, huh?”

He nods and slides in beside me. Reaching over, he rubs my shoulder. “You know I’ll be there for you, every step of the way.”

I nod. I know he will. When I was pregnant with Allie, he was always there, almost to the point of irritating me. Sometimes when you’re sick, you just want to be left alone. But even at my most unattractive, Max had no problem holding my hair out of the way while I puked.

“What is it?” I ask him quietly.

He grins, his beautiful face flooded with joy. “A boy.”

A boy. An heir to a throne he will never see and never take. I know Max loves Allie with all of his heart, but I can see that having a son is just about making him burst with pride.

“What do you want to name him?” I ask next.

Max’s grin widens. “I want to name him after my father.”

*****

Eighteen hours later, we sit in the car outside of a cheap motel. The paint is peeling from the exterior and the neon vacancy sign flickers against the darkening sky.

“Are you sure you don’t want me to go with you?” Max asks tenuously from the passenger seat. In the back, Allie is snoozing obliviously in her car seat.

I shake my head. “No. You stay here with Junior. I can do this.”

He takes my hand and offers me a wan smile and a kiss on the cheek. “I’ll be right here if you need me.”

“I’ll be okay,” I tell him as I reach for the door handle. I want to believe I’ll be okay, that I can do this without falling apart. I tell myself not to get too stressed – I have Junior Number Two to think about now.

The November air is brisk as I walk toward a door with the number six on it. Behind it lurks my biological father, back from the past to beg forgiveness. When I phoned earlier to ask if I could stop by, he sounded surprised and elated all at once. I, on the other hand, feel neither of those emotions. I’m not really dreading this, I’m just not looking forward to it. It’s like having a dentist appointment looming at the end of the week when you know you’re going to get poked and prodded.

Straightening my jacket, I reach out and knock on the warped wooden door. In seconds, Carl answers, his face old and craggy. He can’t be more than fifty, but he looks fifteen years older than that. Has cancer done this to him? Or was it his lifestyle?

“Come in,” he urges, stepping out of my way.

I glance back at Max once, then step into the motel room. The air is thick with cigarette smoke and I immediately regret having worn this suede jacket – looks like a trip to the dry cleaner for it. I guess that cancer hasn’t slowed down his self-destructive habits any. For some reason I flash on Michael lighting up on Mae’s doorstep and I think I may need to start a personal quest to pester him into quitting. I can’t bear the thought of Michael slowly suffocating to death.

“I’m glad you came,” Carl says, easing himself down on the foot of the unmade bed. Most people would have straightened the bed if they knew they were getting company, but not my pop. “Do you want to sit?”

I shake my head and take up a spot by the window, leaning carefully against the old frame. “I have questions,” I tell him.

He nods. “Sure. Go ahead.”

“Are you married?”

“No.”

“Did you get remarried after you left mom?”

He nods. “Yes. Twice.”

Twice. Twice in twenty years. That’s some track record. But I really don’t care about his wives. “Do you have any other children?”

He shakes his head. “No. Just you.”

Just me. So it’s not like he’s occupied his time with rearing other kids. That fact leads me to believe he never wanted to be a father. “Why are you here?” I question gently. Of course, I already know the answer, but he’s the last person I will let know that my husband is an alien and already figured out the big secret.

At my question, he looks down to the floor and I wonder if it’s shame that has turned his gaze away from me. “I felt like I needed to make up for lost time.”

“Why now?”

He gives a shrug. “Why not?”

I can’t help the snort that escapes from my lips. “Why not? Why not ten years ago? Why not twenty years ago? What took you so long?”

Carl reaches over to the nightstand to retrieve his cigarettes. I’m making him nervous, though that hasn’t been my intent. Like Michael said, all I really want is answers. As Carl begins to light the cigarette, I remember that I’m not the only other person in this room – I’ve got a passenger that doesn’t need to have that crap circulating in his body.

“Could you not do that please?” I ask.

Sheepish, he lets the lighter die and tosses the cigarette onto the nightstand.

“Why now?” I repeat.

He draws in a deep breath and immediately coughs. I wait patiently while his body heaves with each raking breath. Finally, he wipes his nose and exhales slowly, spared from choking this time.

“Me and kids,” he begins.

“What about them?” I prod.

He looks up at me, just a hint of regret in his eyes. “I’m not good with them.”

Really? I can name a dozen incidents that I can remember from his short time in my life that point to that fact. Tell me something I didn’t already know.

“Then why did you have me?” I ask.

He shrugs. “We didn’t mean to. You were an accident.”

I will not let this stranger see me cry. His words cut straight into my heart, knowing that he and my mother never really wanted me. I think of Allie out in the car, who was also an accident, and how different her life will be from mine. I think of the growing life inside of me, accident number two, who will also not have the childhood I did. Allie and the new baby were accidents, and regardless of their beginnings they will have parents who love them. What Carl has just told me was that I was a mistake, one that he needed to run from.

Even though I’ve tried to hide my hurt, it must be apparent because he looks guilty. “Your mom loves you very much,” he says as a verbal Band-Aid. “She always did.”

“And what about you?” I manage. “You never did, did you?”

He holds his hands out, palms up. “I didn’t really know you. You were just a little kid, you know? How do you know a little kid?”

I shake my head, my heart filling with pity for him. “My daughter isn’t even a year old yet and I already know her. I know what she likes, what she doesn’t like, what makes her laugh. How can you say you lived with me for five years and never knew me?”

He doesn’t have an answer for that. After a long, uncomfortable pause, he offers, “But I want to know you now.”

And now I know. I know that I don’t want him to be a part of my life. He never wanted to be a parent to me and he’s only here to see if maybe he missed out on something good or to ease his conscience for being a bad parent.

“It doesn’t work that way,” I explain quietly. “Parenting doesn’t start when your children are already grown. I may have needed you when I was a kid but there’s nothing I need you for now. You can’t say that you don’t like kids, that you’re not good with kids and then run away, leaving them to struggle to grow up and adjust with only one parent and then come back when the work is all done and announce you want to be a father now.”

He looks at the floor again and I feel a pang of remorse. I didn’t come here to destroy him – I don’t have that much hate built up inside of me. I only want him to understand that there isn’t a place for him in my life.

“I’m not a victim anymore,” I tell him. “Maybe once upon a time your leaving tried to destroy me. I have too much pride to tell you what Mom and I went through trying to get by with just the two of us after you left. You hurt her. You hurt me. You made our lives difficult, but I survived that. I got by because of me. If anything, your leaving made me strong. And you can’t take that away from me.”

He draws in a tenuous breath. “I’m sorry.”

I give a shrug. “It’s too late for sorry. I appreciate your making the attempt to find me, but I’d also appreciate it if you’d just let me live my life. I took a friend’s advice and I’ve moved on now.”

He raises his head and I see no tears, only maybe the realization that he can’t fix this one. He’s defeated.

“I don’t hate you,” I say. “I don’t wish you any ill will. But you’re a stranger to me and I’d rather it remain that way.”

He nods his head once.

“Okay.” I start to move for the door. Before I go, though, I feel a tug of protectiveness toward my mother. “Oh, by the way. I’m asking you to not pay one of these visits to Amy. It took her a long time to get back on her feet and she doesn’t need you coming around to confuse her.”

He sets his jaw and I can’t determine if he had planned a trip to Roswell or not. “Done.”

“Thank you.” I give him one last look, then walk out the door and close it behind me.

As I walk toward the car, I don’t feel relieved, I don’t feel like the biggest bitch in the world, and I don’t feel sad. I don’t feel much different than I did when I walked in that hotel, except for maybe one thing.

I feel a small sense of peace. Michael was right – I got some answers. They weren’t the ones I wanted and the confirmation that my father never even liked me was painful. But at least now I know.

And I can take Liz’s advice to stop running and put the past behind me.

tbc
User avatar
Midwest Max
Addicted Roswellian
Posts: 461
Joined: Sun Aug 03, 2003 8:11 pm

Post by Midwest Max »

Here it is - the end :( Thanks to all of you who hung in there with this truly depressing story - I admire your fortitude :lol: There may be a sequel some day, but I'll probably take a little rest now that this is finished. It was rather draining to write, since a lot of it hit very close to home. I'm thinking of maybe writing a holiday fluff fic next (since this last chapter put me in the mood ;) ) but we'll have to wait to see what the muse has in store for me.


Part Twenty-One

I’m in love with another man.

He arrived right on time, all seven pounds eight ounces of him. I was there this time, conscious for his birth, unlike his sister’s.

I kept myself healthier during my pregnancy with him. Not long after I last saw my father, Max and I went to the Footlocker and picked out a pair of nice running shoes, then he and I ran every day until I got too big to do it comfortably. Eventually Allie also got too big to put in the sling, so bought a stroller that would handle the abuse of being pushed at a rapid pace and we took her along with us. Some days we would run far, others would be short trips. But we dedicated ourselves to staying fit, and it paid off in the delivery room.

We bought another crib and assembled it in our last remaining empty bedroom. As she did last time, Mae arrived with her paints and a ladder and started on her masterpiece. Instead of fairytale creatures, this time she painted planes on the ceiling and trains running on tracks around the perimeter of the walls – a little boy’s dream room. I wasn’t so uncomfortable this time, so I helped out. Well, I painted and then many times Mae good-naturedly went behind me and fixed what I’d done, but I felt like I contributed nonetheless.

Brandon Phillip Evans came into the world after only a few hours of labor. While I can’t say it was painless, it was nothing compared to recovering from Allie’s C-section. This time I got to see him as soon as he emerged and I will never be able to describe the emotions that ran through my body. I remember looking up at Max and seeing tears running down his cheeks, unabashed at his feelings. The doctors asked if he wanted to cut the cord and he seemed more than eager – I had to remind myself that when our last child was born, Max missed all of this, too. He had probably been sitting in a waiting room somewhere, worried sick that his wife and child were going to die.

Because I got pregnant with Allie in early October and with Brandon in late October of the following year, and because Allie was a month early, their birthdates fell mere days apart. Allie is exactly one year and three days older than her little brother.

Brandon has a full head of dark hair and suspiciously obvious ears. He’s almost five months old now and I think his eyes are also going to be dark. Whereas Michael couldn’t see anything of Max in Allie, I can see nothing of myself in Brandon. He looks like his daddy. Period.

It’s Christmas Eve, mine and Max’s two-year anniversary. Since travel is nearly impossible for us at this stage with an infant and a toddler, we invited the families here to our house for the holiday. Our little bungalow is rather crowded, I must say. To top it off, Allie has been on her feet for a few months now and everyone is cautious of plowing her over.

But it’s a good feeling, to be surrounded by the people who are special to us. Of course all of the Evanses came – including a heart-broken Isabel, who recently split with her pharmacist fiancé. I’m not sure what the story is there, but she’s putting up a good front, smiling like the glamour girl she’s always been. I hope if nothing else, being surrounded by people who love her will ease her pain this holiday.

I had given up hope that my mother would make it to spend the holiday with us. I’ve more or less accepted the fact that she’s really done the best she could. No, she will never be mother of the year. But maybe, just maybe, she did everything in her limited power to give me a decent upbringing. Maybe it wasn’t what I wanted or expected, but maybe it’s all she had to give. And I have to accept that. I have to realize that I’m not her, that I’m not a child anymore and that living back when I was isn’t helping anything. So when she didn’t show up, I let it hurt for a few moments because I can’t turn off my emotions entirely and then I concentrated on the people who did show up.

Until Michael arrived. He was late, of course, but he had a present for me that turned out to be his reason for being late this time. I’m like my mom in one respect – she doesn’t like to fly either. So Michael took it upon himself to drive her all of the way to Chicago so we could be together for Christmas. They hit a bad storm in Iowa and it delayed them. Needless to say, I was stunned when I answered the door. I couldn’t believe she was here. I couldn’t believe Michael had burdened himself so much by trapping himself in a car with her and driving that far.

I couldn’t believe Max knew all of that was in the works and never said a word.

So here we all are – the Evanses, Michael, Mae-Ling, my mom, and mine and Max’s little family, smashed into our little home on Christmas Eve. Across the room, I see Phillip getting another cup of eggnog from the punchbowl, his brow furrowed in concentration. Then I see that Mae has cornered him and must be rattling about some theory of hers. I smile that he genuinely seems interested – for all of her rather unusual ways, Mae has a talent for drawing people in, for making them feel at ease with her. Apparently even a powerful attorney who only debates “facts” is willing to hear her theories of the cosmos.

My eyes shift over to Max, who is cradling his son against his chest while he chats with Michael and Isabel and my heart swells at the sight. He is such a wonderful father to both of his children. I glance toward the floor and find Allie wrapped around his knee, her little face turned upward as she constantly chants, “Daddy.” He looks that way, too, then hands Brandon to Isabel so he can pick up his daughter. Wearing a red velvet holiday dress, Allie wraps her arms around his neck and kisses him on the cheek before resting her head on his shoulder. Brandon reaches over and yanks her hair, which is finally long enough for me to curl and put up in a ponytail.

In the kitchen, my mother and mother-in-law are making appetizers. I protested them doing anything to help out – I wanted them to be guest of mine – but they insisted. It seems to have worked out as they appear to be swapping recipes. Mrs. Evans is one of the most patient people I have ever met and I’m starting to understand where Max gets it from. She even has a calming effect on my normally-spastic mother, who is listening attentively and not flitting around the kitchen like the world is going to end if we don’t get cheese puffs on the table immediately.

These are all good people. They have their faults, but then again, they’re human. We all have faults. God knows I have mine. But under it all, these are the people who matter – friends and family who will always be there. I know that now. When I went to speak with my father that day, I saw what it was like to truly not care about anyone else and I didn’t like what I saw. I don’t think Carl Deluca ever had anyone else but himself in mind whenever he made a decision. I believe the way to live a healthy, happy life is to put healthy, happy people in it. Having him as part of our lives would not have been a good thing and I don’t regret making the decision to ask him to leave. Sometimes I wonder if he’s still alive of if he’s succumbed to his illness, but it’s usually a fleeting thought.

I know that Carl was human, too, that he made mistakes. I’m sure that he wasn’t an entirely bad person underneath, but try as I might, I’ve never been able to dredge up a pleasant memory of him. Maybe that’s due to the fact that I was so young when he left – maybe my brain wasn’t capable of retaining the kind things he’d done, maybe it only wanted to remember those things which had the most emotional impact. It’s too bad that bad things weigh heavier in the memory than good things.

But I’ve stopped dwelling on them. My days are no longer haunted with visions of my youth, of being spanked for wetting my pants, of being chastised for burning myself on one of his cigarettes. I don’t dwell on anything anymore – I look forward to each new day with my beautiful little family and I see hope, not anxiety over what tomorrow may hold.

Max is beside me, taking my arm, his grin wide. Briefly, his eyes travel down my red sweater; I know he loves it when I breastfeed – he likes how big my breasts get. Horny toad.

“Do you hear that?” he asks.

I shake my head. “Hear what?”

“Outside.”

He takes my hand and leads me to the door. As he pulls it open, I hear music that my human ears hadn’t picked up over the din of voices in the house. On our doorsteps stands a small group of carolers, bundled up against the Midwest winter night. As our guests pile in behind us, I can’t help the grin that comes to my face as I remember moving from house to house caroling when I was a teenager in Roswell. Allie squeezes between me and Max and he bends to hoist her into his arms, shielding her against the cold.

My eyes scan over the group of carolers as I’m filled with the Christmas Spirit, a warm glow that starts in the pit of my stomach and radiates outward. My gaze lands on a tall boy and a shorter girl in the back row and I cock my head slightly. They seem familiar in an odd way…

“Pretty, huh?” Max says to Allie as she points and jabbers at the singers.

I smile up at him and wrap my arm around his waist, giving him a tight squeeze. The carolers finish their song and our guests applaud as they begin to move to the next house. Before they go, though, the girl from the back row glances over her shoulder…and winks at me. My eyes sting as I realize who she is.

Max kisses my cheek. “Come inside, sweetie,” he says, turning to follow the rest of the crowd into the house.

But I stand and watch the carolers at the next house, then the next until I can no longer see them, until I can no longer see her. Silently, I mouth the words, “Merry Christmas, Liz.”

Michael is beside me, digging in his coat pocket for his cigarettes. I wrap my arms around my body to ward off the cold and eye the pack of smokes.

“Do you know what I want for Christmas?” I ask him.

He puts one of the cigarettes to his lips and reaches for a lighter, shakes his head.

I reach over, take the cigarette from his lips, take the pack from his hand and crush them both in my fist. He raises his eyebrows in surprise.

“I want you to be here next Christmas,” I answer.

He pins me with a long stare, then he nods his head in acceptance. I won’t give him a long lecture – he knows what he’s doing is bad for him. But maybe by letting him know someone cares, he’ll stop it.

“Let’s go back inside,” I offer. “It’s freezing out here.”

Inside, the house is warm and full of people I care about. I take a sleepy Brandon from Isabel’s arms and go back to put him in his crib. I lay him down, then rub his back in slow circles until his breathing falls into a steady, slow rhythm. He’s low maintenance – just like his father.

I reach to turn out the lamp, but Max’s presence in the doorway makes me jump.

“What are you doing?” I whisper, holding my hand to my thumping heart. “You scared the shit out of me.”

He only grins as he reaches past me and turns off the lamp. As my eyes adjust to the darkness of the room, I see he is holding something over my head.

“What’s that?” I ask.

“Mistletoe,” he whispers back in a laugh. “You’re under it, so I guess I’m going to have to kiss you.”

Without further preamble, he scoops me into him, his lips instinctively finding mine in the dark. He’s warm and strong and I will never love anyone the way that I love him. One of his hands comes up to cup my full breast.

I pull away with a giggle. “Now, now, Mr. Evans. I don’t think groping is in the rules of the mistletoe.”

“Yeah, I know,” he agrees sheepishly. “But there are too many people in this house and I couldn’t wait to get my hands on you.”

“They’ll leave eventually,” I smile at him.

He returns my grin, accepting the fact that his “present” is just going to have to wait. He leans his forehead against mine, then pulls me in for a tight embrace.

“Happy anniversary, Maria,” he says over my shoulder.

I squeeze him in return. “Happy anniversary, Max.”

We pull apart and head back to the living room, where our friends and family are gathered to open presents. Allie, of course, has chosen the largest one regardless if it’s hers or not. I laugh at her as she struggles to pull it from beneath the tree.

Beside me, Max chuckles as well. I study him as he watches our daughter declare war on the huge package, his eyes creased at the corners with unadulterated affection. Stepping closer, I slide my arm around his waist and he brings his over my shoulders.

This night is perfect and I no longer worry that it’s too perfect. We have friends and family around us. We have two beautiful, healthy children. We have a warm, comfortable home. And I have a wonderful husband who still wants me, even after bearing two children.

I bury my face in his shoulder and breathe in his scent. By all rights, he should have fled when I started my insecure, downward spiral into depression. But he didn’t. He stayed by my side, helping me cope with abandonment and rejection. All I needed was to trust him enough to let him help me. I know that not every day will be bliss – we will have our ups and downs, we will have our trials. But I also know that he will always be beside me, that he isn’t going anywhere. He is the kindest, most generous, most patient person I have ever met.

He is, simply, my beloved Max.

THE END
Locked