The Pathway is Broken (CC AU, TEEN) Outline - 3/31 (WIP)

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cardinalgirl
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Post by cardinalgirl »

AN: Thanks to Anniepoo98 for agreeing to beta for me. She's an angel. :)


Part 10

“Michael, I’m sure she’s not spying,” Liz said, shaking her head after Michael explained what he’d been talking about. “She’s probably just looking for some extra cash.”

“So why doesn’t she work at her mom’s shop? Come on, Liz, the fact that she’s coming in today, after what happened here with Max yesterday doesn’t hit you as kind of weird?”

Liz shrugged. “The sign in the window just barely went up. She probably just wanted to get a head-start on the competition.”

“No she wanted a head-start on us, Liz. Which means that Max Evans doesn’t trust you as much as you think he does. Which means that I don’t trust him.”

Liz let out an exasperated sigh and glanced at her watch. She was already five minutes late getting back from break. “Michael, I’m sure this has nothing to do with Max. And even if it did, what do you want me to do about it?”

Michael shrugged. “Maybe talk to your dad? You know he’s going to ask you about her if he actually considers hiring her.”

Liz shook her head. “I can’t do that. We need the help. When Agnes heard about the shooting she started demanding double-pay, something about ‘hazardous working conditions,’ Dad had to let her go.”

Michael rolled his eyes. “Yeah, well, no great loss.”

Liz barely suppressed a frustrated groan. “Michael, what’s gotten into you? Can’t you just look for the positive in this?”

He looked at her like she was insane. “Positive? What is positive about this?” he gestured in the direction of the seating areas in front.

Liz took a breath and sighed. She’d seen Michael confrontational before, of course, but usually it wasn’t aimed at her. “Maybe this will give us a chance to get to know her. Them. All of them. We need to give them a chance, Michael. You need to.” She bit her lip, wanting to ask him something, but hesitating. She knew it wasn’t a good idea to push him, but she also needed to know. “Have you even thought about talking to Max and Isabel?”

Michael shrugged roughly, speaking low and harshly. “What difference does it make? One alien, three aliens, it doesn’t really matter. It still doesn’t explain what the hell we’re doing here or where the hell we’re from.”

“But this isn’t fair to them,” Liz argued, thinking about how obviously suspicious of her Isabel and Maria already were. If she kept lying to them things could get bad, fast.

As Michael opened his mouth to respond, Jeff Parker called from the back room. “Lizzie?” And as he caught sight of them in the kitchen he came in, arms folding across his chest, giving them a kindly but stern look. “Liz, Michael, can we save the gossip for off-hours, please? We have customers out there, you know. It’s the middle of the dinner rush.”

Liz turned a contrite face to him. “Sorry Dad. We’re almost finished here. Right Michael?” she asked, turning an only slightly-nervous smile to him.

“Right, Mr. Parker,” he agreed, but as soon as Jeff nodded and backed out of the room, he turned back to Liz, and she could hardly read the expression in his eyes as he spoke. “Liz I’m sorry, I just can’t be worried about what your new friends think of you right now. Or me for that matter.”

“Michael—”

“Look, I just need some time, okay?” He nodded towards the front. “Now get out there before your Dad really gets annoyed.”

Liz turned to go, but as she got to the doorway of the kitchen she turned around again. “Michael…” she waited for him to turn, and he raised an eyebrow at her. “Just… try to be nice to Maria. For me.”

He shrugged, but gave a half nod, so Liz turned and threw herself back into role of waitress extraordinaire. She couldn’t remember ever looking forward to closing time more than today. She’d been running on pure adrenaline the last two days, ever since the shooting, and she had the distinct feeling that she was going to crash, very, very soon.

Just as the thought crossed her mind, her eyes caught on the image of Max Evans sitting in his favorite booth, textbook in front of him, and he looked up, meeting her eyes, and giving her a slow, humble smile.

It was like a sun-lamp was turned on over her heart, and she smiled back, before turning to her section. As she took orders from Table Three, she thought of all the years she’d watched him in that booth, seeming so lonely and evasive, of all the times she’d met his eyes and he’d turned away almost in a panic. Maybe a smile from him was just a small change, but Liz knew without a doubt that it was the sign of things to come, and for some reason the thought sent a thrill through her like she’d never felt before.

When she handed the order over to a grim-faced Michael, though, her stomach twisted uncomfortably. Things in her life were changing, all right. But was it too much, too fast?

And how much of her old life would she have to give up for this new one?

*************

“She wanted to meet with Max, and then what?” Kyle prodded, after Tess had gone over what she and Isabel had talked about. Neither of the boys was particularly surprised that their guess about Max and Isabel had been right, though of course it was still a major deal.

Tess shrugged, rolling her neck as she did so, and looking out the window at the passing desert as night was falling. “I didn’t think it was the best idea tonight. That’s bound to be a long meeting with everyone, and I’m not really up for a late night.”

Kyle was immediately rubbing her shoulders from where he sat in the back seat of the rabbit, and she couldn’t stop the satisfied smile from coming to her face. She knew that their relationship had Alex feeling like a third-wheel a lot of the time, but she couldn’t help but be grateful for knowing he was there for her.

“That’s probably a good idea,” Alex said, checking his watch. “You and Isabel have got to be worn out anyhow. He glanced over at the yellow quartz sitting on his sister’s lap. “What do you think it means that she didn’t recognize your… rock thingy?”

Tess shrugged, sighing. “I don’t know what anything means anymore. But I’m not too surprised. I told you it’s mine.”

“So she didn’t feel… pulled to it the way you do?” Kyle pressed.

Tess bit her lip, considering Isabel’s reaction. “She was kind of weird about it. She could definitely feel the energy from it, she said she did, but…”

“But she wasn’t wrestling you to the ground trying to keep it for herself,” Kyle filled in.

Tess blushed a little. “Right.”

Alex let out a dry laugh. Tess had had that quartz since the day they’d found her. She’d been clinging to it for dear life and no one could get her to even put it down for months. She’d taken it to school with her for years, keeping it in her backpack and checking on it throughout the day. Nowadays she kept it in the drawer of her nightstand, only carrying it around when things got tense.

The thought pulled Alex back to the present. With that Trilling guy out there, things might very well get tense. Still, he and Kyle had decided not to worry too much about him until they knew what they might be up against. He shook his head as if to clear it. He didn’t want to think about this unless he had to. “So what’s the plan?”

Tess frowned, knowing something was up but not sure what. “She’s going to talk to Max tonight, and probably Maria—”

“Maria knows too?”

“Are you surprised by that? She’s been friends with them forever.”

Alex nodded appraisingly. “That’s true.”

“And then we’re going to have to set up someplace to meet tomorrow,” Tess continued. “Probably tomorrow night, all of us getting together at school might look weird.”

Kyle let out a guffaw. “You think?”

“Especially if we have to get Liz Parker away from Michael Guerin,” Tess said.

“Well, Liz doesn’t necessarily have to be there, does she?” Alex asked almost nervously.

Tess laughed, knowing he was probably worried about running into her after his last encounter with her. “No, she doesn’t have to be there, but I think she deserves to as much as anyone else. She’s just been pulled into this world against her will. It’s not fair to leave her in the dark about things.”

“So that’s… three, four, five… seven people.” Alex let out a low whistle. “We’re really getting ourselves into something here, Tessa. You sure you’re ready for this?”

Tess took a slow, deep breath, as if contemplating it. “I’m not sure, really. But if you’d seen Isabel… how she was, I mean.” She shrugged. “They’re good people, Alex. I know opening up to so many people will be a risk, but there’s no turning back now, is there?”

Alex shrugged, and he was surprised at how tense he was. “No, I guess not.”

“We should talk to Liz,” Kyle said, causing Tess to turn to look at him. “Maybe we could meet in the Crashdown after it closes tomorrow.”

“Yeah, definitely. That‘s a good idea,” Alex agreed, nodding emphatically.

Now Tess knew that something was wrong. “Why the Crashdown? What’s going on?”

Alex glanced over his shoulder as he turned off of the highway, “Oh nothing, Tessa. We’ve just got some tracks to cover.”

The deliberately absent way he said it worried her, though. What exactly were Alex and Kyle hiding from her?

*************

Morning came far too early for Maria’s tastes, and she grumbled when her alarm went off. Who knew that witnessing could be so exhausting? When she’d approached Jeff Parker at the Crashdown the day before she hadn’t expected having a uniform thrust into her hands ten minutes after she’d said she might be interested in the job. Apparently Mr. Parker had been desperate, though, so she’d given in and suited up.

So far she wasn’t impressed by the work atmosphere. Knock that off my list of lifetime careers, she thought sardonically as she tested the water in the shower before jumping in. She’d never realized how incredibly disgusting the remains of a meal could be. She shuddered at the memory of Table Five, which had been occupied half the night by a couple with three miniature hellions they were trying to pass off as children.

Rolling her neck under the stream of hot water, she sighed. Watching Max ogling after Liz Parker was even more annoying when she wasn’t sitting across from him with the opportunity of snapping him out of it. The weird thing, though, was that Liz had been doing a little bit of ogling herself.

Now, Maria knew that Max was a pretty good-looking guy, but he’d never been noticed by anyone much, and that was fine with her. Not that she was against Max and Isabel being accepted by other people, it was just going to take some getting used to. Like, a lot of getting used to. Maybe it wasn’t Maria’s secret personally, but she’d always been a part of it, and it had shaped so much of her life, just the idea of change was a little scary. And she wasn’t just talking about herself—she knew the risks involved in this as well as anyone. The more people involved, the more dangerous things got, that’s all there was to it.

Which was why she was going to make it clear to Liz Parker that telling that sad-excuse-for-a-teenage-miscreant Michael Guerin about Max and Isabel’s origins was completely out of the question. Max had told her as much, Maria was sure, but she was going to make it clear.

Just thinking about Michael had Maria’s nose wrinkling in distaste. She didn’t exactly have delicate feelings, or delicate taste, even, but Guerin was like an abomination waiting to happen. She’d always thought he was kind of annoying, even from afar, but actually trying to talk to him? Impossible. Maybe Liz did have some kind of character to her, if she could put up with that guy for so long, and the thought made Maria smirk.

She whisked out of the shower and dressed quickly, glancing at the clock and suppressing as groan. She’d just call Max and tell him she’d take the Jetta this morning. She didn’t want to make him late. As she reached for the phone, though, it rung, surprising her so much she nearly jumped out of her skin.

When she recovered from her shock she took a deep breath and picked up the cordless. “Hello?”

Who in their right mind called people at seven forty-five in the morning?

She had hardly finished saying the word, though, when a calm, strangely subdued voice asked simply, “Do you believe in aliens?”

Maria pulled away from the phone instinctively, a heavy feeling in her stomach—until she remembered that she lived in the alien capital of the world, and prank calls like this weren’t exactly uncommon. “What is this the Roswell version of Scream? Get a life,” she snapped, before hanging up the phone and throwing it onto her bed. She didn’t have time for this.

She cursed when she realized that she still had to call Max, but before she could even retrieve the phone, her mom’s voice was calling from the living room. “Maria honey, Max and Isabel are out front, are you ready?”

“Uh… yeah. I’ll be right there.”

So much for breakfast, she thought, and sighed. And lunch, technically, unless she got desperate enough to buy something from the cafeteria, which wasn’t likely to happen.

She shoved her jacket on and grabbed her backpack, wincing as she realized that she’d forgotten to do her English homework.

In a last, futile protest against the morning, and maybe more than that, what the day might bring, she stomped heavily towards the jeep, sitting down with hardly more than a groan of greeting to Max and Isabel, before leaning back in her seat and watching the houses as Max drove.

She was too busy praying that nothing anywhere between the scale of aggravating and life-changing would happen that day, that she didn’t even notice the nervous glances Max and Isabel were exchanging, or the way they were looking at her, just waiting for the right moment to drop the bomb.
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cardinalgirl
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Post by cardinalgirl »

AN: A triple thanks to Annie for betaing, Cam for her wonderful support, and Ethan for poking and prodding me along the way. Still hoping I'm not in over my head with all of this...


Part 11

Max was staring at his textbook, the illustrations of the simplistic lab they were supposed to be doing, but he could hardly concentrate enough to read the instructions. He felt a frisson of frustration in the back of his mind, but even that wasn't enough to get him to concentrate. He'd done this lab on his own more than once, as a kid, using his Jr. Wizard Chemistry set. He thought he'd be able to do it on autopilot at least, but he couldn't even seem to pull that off. He picked up the lab analysis sheet they'd have to fill out, and tried to look at that instead, but still all he could even think about was what Isabel had revealed to him the night before, when she'd gotten back from her clandestine meeting. Tess Whitman was one of them.

On the one hand, he'd been relieved. Hearing that Alex might have seen him healing Liz was one of the worst moments Max had ever had in his life. He'd been sure that he'd put himself and Isabel, and maybe Maria and Liz in danger, but if Alex already knew about aliens, then it shouldn't be a problem.

Still, he was more than a little wary. He couldn’t help it, it was his nature. While he wanted to believe that joining forces with the Whitmans and their friend Kyle Valenti would be a good thing, part of him just wanted to go back to a week before when he’d been able to hide in his own world with just Isabel and Maria, not that he would ever take back healing Liz. Ever.

“Could you pass me the Iodine? Max?”

Hearing his name, Max turned from the paper he was looking at, feeling like he was being forcibly pulled out of a daze. He felt his ears start to burn as he realized that he’d practically forgotten that Liz was sitting next to him. If that wasn’t a tribute to how exhausted these last couple days had left him, nothing was. It was the first time he could remember where he’d been in a class with Liz and hadn’t been able to pay attention. A corner of his mouth went up in an embarrassed smile as he realized that he shouldn’t start advertising that fact.

“The, uh, Iodine, Max?” Liz asked again, obviously stifling a yawn. He felt an immediate stab of guilt. As strange as these last couple days had been for him, and as emotionally wearing they'd been, at least Max had been prepared for all this, or at least, more prepared than Liz. But here she was, getting through the day with as much grace as ever, while he could hardly focus.

“Sorry, here,” he said, handing her the small bottle that was on his side of the desk. He realized then that she’d done pretty much the whole experiment already. Another flash of guilt hit him. “Liz, I’m sorry I’m not more help today. It’s just-”

She turned to him abruptly, cutting him off, her eyes much clearer than he’d noticed moments before. “It’s been a long week,” she finished for him, her look clearly dismissing the apology he was offering her. She turned back to the lab in front of her, but glanced at him sidelong, sending him an almost teasing smile. “Believe me, Max, covering for you on a science experiment is the least I can do.”

He was almost afraid to believe the moment was real. Okay, so he’d been lab-partners with Liz for a couple years now, even back in middle school. Still, while she’d always been nice, it had always been pretty much entirely about the labs themselves, nothing personal. He watched as she jotted quick observations on the lab analysis sheet, hardly watching as the potato started to absorb the iodine. A smile flickered over his face. “You look like you’ve done this before,” he said, teasing her in his own turn.

She blushed slightly. “Yeah, well… I am kind of a science nerd, you know?”

He feigned shock. “You? Liz Parker, top of the class for as long as I can remember, a science nerd? I never would have guessed it.”

She rolled her eyes, but she was smiling widely, “I’m an only child, what else am I supposed to do with my time?” she asked, laughingly.

“Well, you’ve got the diner. And… Michael.”

He watched as Liz stiffened, swallowing uncomfortably. “Right. Michael.”

The light mood between them vanished as quickly as that. Max knew how close Liz was with Michael, and he could only imagine how hard it must be for her to suddenly have to hide things from him. He cleared his throat, lowering his voice even more as he spoke, even though class was usually pretty noisy on lab days, so they weren’t likely to be heard anyhow. “I hope all of this isn’t… causing problems between you. I know that if I had to keep a secret like this from Isabel and Maria it would be hard to say the least.”

Liz glanced over at him, but only momentarily, and he caught the flash of guilt in her eyes. Of course she had to be feeling guilty over something like this. He would be. She lifted one shoulder in a shrug. “Things are just… complicated with Michael. I mean, we grew up together. He knows everything there is to know about me.”

Max sighed, again letting his guilt get to him. “Liz, if it weren’t such a dangerous secret… I mean, I would never have brought you into it if I hadn’t been forced to.” He took a breath, intent on continuing his explanation, but she cut him off.

“Max, do you trust me?”

The question seemed to come out of nowhere, but he nodded. “Of course.” He had to, anyhow.

“Then please, don’t worry about Michael. I can handle him. I promise.”

Max nodded his acceptance, and took a breath, deciding that it was as good a time as any to put in Isabel’s request. “Hey… I was actually supposed to ask you something.”

Liz glanced at him, raising an eyebrow. “Like what?”

He hesitated, knowing that it was an odd request, even though he had good reason to make it. “We were wondering if we could meet in the Crashdown after hours tonight?”

Liz swallowed quickly, turning to him and smoothing a piece of hair behind her ears, which he’d noticed was something she did when she was nervous. “The Crashdown? Max, I don’t know, I’d have to ask my dad and…” her voice trailed off as he touched a blank piece of paper in her open binder, nudged the molecules slightly to form a message that she could read on it. We need to plant a bullet hole, the sheriff’s suspicious.

As she looked up at him, surprise in her eyes, he let the message fade away again. “I wouldn’t ask you if it wasn’t necessary, Liz. Do you think you could get your parents and Michael out of the way?”

She blinked. “Michael?”

Max blushed, turning towards away from her slightly. “I’ve noticed that he hangs around some nights. I just meant…”

“Oh, right,” she said. Something in her voice sounded a little off, but he couldn’t begin to wonder why as she spoke again. “Who’s ‘we,’ Max? Just you and Maria and Isabel?”

“Well… and you of course. If, I mean, if you wanted to…”

“Yeah,” she nodded, interrupting him. “Of course. And that’s it, right? The four of us?”

“Well…” Max said slowly, “That’s the thing.” He took a deep breath, knowing that there was a better time and place to be doing this than in a noisy classroom, but at least their raucous classmates provided a bit of cover for them. Leaning closer to where Liz sat, he swallowed. “There’s another one of us. Me and Isabel… there’s someone else.”

Liz pulled back sharply, almost falling off of her lab stool, and sending the bottle of iodine off the edge of the table with her elbow. The shock on her face was evident, and Max instantly regretted telling her the way he did.

Despite the noise, their teacher, Ms. Hardy managed to hear the sound of breaking glass from the iodine bottle, and she looked towards them sharply, Max and Liz sending her simultaneously sheepish looks as she walked towards them. She surveyed the small mess, and shook her head. “Clean this mess up. A little less talking and a little more lab work, please.”

“Right. Sorry,” Liz muttered, hopping off her stool and reaching for the paper-towel dispenser on the wall as Ms. Hardy returned to the front of the class.

“Liz, I’m sorry,” Max said as he rushed to help Liz clean up the few pieces of glass and the small amount of liquid. There was no time for further explanation, though, as half the students were now watching them. Max was about to apologize to her again when there was a knock on the door. His eyes widened and a string of dread threaded its way through his system as he watched Jim Valenti push the door open. The Sheriff said something to Ms. Hardy, and she turned towards them.

“Liz, you’ll have to leave that to Max. The Sheriff needs a word with you, please.”

*************

“This really shouldn’t take more than a few minutes, Miss Parker.”

Liz swallowed nervously as she was lead down the hall towards the counseling office. She really shouldn’t be nervous, of course. She’d known Sheriff Valenti since she was around eight, when he and her father had started their infamous two-man show, ParkerValentine. Still, he was the Sheriff. She tried to remember what he’d asked her when she’d first been questioned at the Crashdown after the shooting, but everything from that day had blurred together in her mind, all she knew was that she’d said over and over that she’d spilled ketchup on her uniform.

“Sheriff is this about what happened at the Crashdown?” she asked, swallowing dryly. “I’ve already told you everything I know about it, I told you that earlier.”

“I apologize for this, but we have an issue about the incident that needs to be resolved. Step on in here for me for a moment, won’t you?” he asked as he pushed open a door to one of the smaller offices.

Liz’s heart froze at what he said. She thought of what Max had said, about the bullet hole, and prayed that they wouldn’t be asking her about that. She stared at the Sheriff as she entered the room, and was still looking at him when someone inside the office started speaking.

“There she is! The miraculously healed Elizabeth Parker herself. Any more brushes with death lately, Miss Parker?”

Liz’s head snapped around to stare at the man who was speaking in such an over-animated voice. He was a short man, in his early to mid-thirties, with unkempt hair and thick-rimmed glasses. It took her a moment to remember the man. He’d been a customer at the diner a few days before. The day of the shooting. He’d been there with some woman she hadn’t recognized, even asked her about the Roswell Crash and whether or not her family lived around there.

Liz felt her throat closing up even more than beforehand when she glanced at the Sheriff. “I don’t understand. What’s going on here?”

The Sheriff cleared his throat and she thought she saw him rolling his eyes, before he gave a light sigh. “Mr. Trilling here believes that he saw you get shot in the stomach the other day, Liz.”

“Well obviously he was mistaken,” Liz said, glaring at the strange little man in front of her. Her voice had come out much harder than she’d hoped, and Liz gave herself a mental pat on the back. There was nothing a geek like this could do that would be much of a problem for Max or Michael or the others, so long as she played it cool. All physical evidence showed that of course she hadn’t been shot the other day. He had no proof that she had.

“Of course we know that’s true, Miss Parker,” the Sheriff said, sounding slightly annoyed and a little embarrassed now. “However Mr. Trilling has been rather persistent. He’s convinced that if you lifted up your shirt there we’d see some kind of iridescent handprint from somebody who ran up and ‘healed’ you.”

Liz turned her shocked look to the Sheriff, trying her best to make it look more confused than surprised. There was no possible way that this man knew about the handprint on her stomach. No one had seen it other than herself, Max, and Michael.

Unless she was being spied on. Liz felt like she was going to be sick. She turned a helpless look at the Sheriff, and he sighed.

“Liz, would you mind showing us?”

She swallowed, her mind scrambling. She’d noticed that morning that the handprint had begun to fade, but she had no idea how much of it was left now. “Sheriff, I really don’t feel comfortable…”

The Sheriff gave her something akin to a pleading look. If the situation weren’t so deathly terrifying, Liz would have laughed. This man had really annoyed Jim Valenti to desperation. “Liz, I’m sorry, but I’m afraid I’m going to have to ask you to reconsider. Mr. Trilling has signed an agreement that he won’t bother you after this if he’s incorrect. Please.”

Liz swallowed again, clearing her throat and pushing her hair behind her ears. “My dad’s really not going to be happy about this,” she said, eyeing the Sheriff carefully, and refusing to look at the Trilling guy.

“I understand that, Miss Parker. But this can all be over with really quickly. Please.”

“She’s just stalling because she knows it’s true,” Trilling said, and the eager gleam in his eyes was making Liz feel ill. “She’s hiding something, can’t you feel it?”

Liz rolled her eyes, her own annoyance and fear channeling into anger now. “Oh please,” she said hotly, glaring at Larry again, which got him to shut up. “Fine. Whatever,” she said pulling her shirt up to just below her bra, in a rough, quick motion, her heart turning into a quick flutter as she remembered again that she didn’t know whether the handprint was gone or not. She wouldn’t look down, though. It was too much.

The Sheriff cleared his throat. “Thank you Miss Parker, that’s enough,” he said, and as she lowered her shirt again, he turned to Trilling. “There you go, Mr. Trilling. No handprint, no mark of any kind.”

Liz felt her legs start to shake from the relief, but she took a deep breath, and focused on the indignant feelings within her. “Are you happy now?” she snapped at the Sci-fi geek. This wasn’t the Sheriff’s fault, she knew. He had to get rid of this guy so he could get to actually doing his job.

“That’s-not possible,” Trilling stuttered. “I saw-”

But the Sheriff stopped him. “Mr. Trilling, you made an agreement and your theory turned out to be incorrect. I’d advise you to stop speaking until Miss Parker is out of the room, or I’ll have to take you in on assault charges. Understand? Liz, you can go.”

Liz nodded, still not quite able to control her heartbeat. “Thank you, Sheriff.”

She didn’t go back to her Biology class, though, and she charged her way to the girls restroom. She needed to talk to Michael. And to Max. Both of them if possible, but she needed to catch her breath first. She didn’t know how this Trilling guy knew about the handprint on her stomach, of if he’d seen Max that day or anything, but they’d have to find out, and soon.

In the restroom she splashed some cold water from the faucet on her face, and stood up to face her reflection in the mirror as she dabbed at it with a paper towel from the dispenser. She’d almost thought that this thing with Max would be no big deal. She’d eventually tell him about Michael, and they’d all be together and life would go on as normal. Or, as normal as things got when you were one of the only people alive that knew that aliens existed. But things were spinning out of control, and fast. First Max says that there’s another one of them out there somewhere, and then some out-of-town Sci-fi freak is asking questions about her. It was too much, too fast, and she didn’t know how they would be able to deal with it.

She took a deep breath, reminding herself that the Sheriff had stopped Trilling, that she basically had grounds to put a restraining order out on him if he tried anything against her again, but for some reason the idea didn’t make her feel much better. She’d seen that unnerving gleam in the man’s eyes, after all. No matter what the Sheriff had said, this wasn’t over. Not by a long shot.

*************

“Max? What’s wrong? You look like you’ve seen a ghost.”

Max had been heading down hallway after hallway, hardly seeing a thing, all his thoughts concentrated on one thing, finding Liz. Maria’s voice pulled him out of his daze, though, and he was startled at finding her in stride beside him.

“Have you seen Liz? Since lunch started?” he asked quickly.

Maria gave a low, annoyed growl. “What, so now I have to stalk her and watch her every move? I thought that was your job. Besides, I thought she was in class with you.”

Max turned his almost-panicked eyes on her. “Maria, please. This is serious. The Sheriff pulled her out of class, probably for more questioning about the shooting.”

Maria’s eye’s widened, and he could see the quick flash of guilt in her eyes over her quip. “Oh, I… No, I haven’t seen her.”

Just as she was finishing saying that, though, Liz appeared, emerging from a girls’ restroom. She saw them as she looked up, and headed towards them, and Max rushed towards her as well, leaving Maria little choice but to follow. “Liz? Are you okay?” If she was out already, then it must not have been anything too important. Right?

She lifted a slightly shaky hand and brushed some hair behind her ear. “Yeah, Max, I’m fine. Um… I should really go find Michael before he starts wondering where I am.”

He caught her arm lightly as she was about to pass him. “But Liz, the Sheriff?”
She shook her head. “We don’t have to worry about the Sheriff, Max,” she said, but something in her eyes belied her reassurance. “We’ll talk tonight, okay?”

Max nodded, watching as she turned to leave, saying goodbye to Maria, who mumbled something back. When Liz was gone, though, she turned to him, eyebrows raised. “Tonight? Have a hot date?” There was something strange in her voice, but Max couldn’t put his finger on what it was.

“Date? No. We’re having a meeting.”

“We? Who’s we?”

Max shrugged. “Everybody.”

Maria pulled back slightly. “And what, I wasn’t invited?”

At the insulted sound in her voice he shook himself out of thinking about Liz and what she could have meant. “What? Maria, of course you’re invited.”

“So it’s just that Liz gets to find out about everything before I do now?” she demanded.

He stared at her, confused. “No, it wasn’t like that. What’s gotten into you?”

“I’m just… I don’t know. I’m just…” Maria wrapped her arms even tighter around herself. “Never mind. It doesn’t matter.”

He sighed. Max had known Maria for years, for as long as he could remember, but somehow in the last few days he’d started to feel like he didn’t really know her at all. “It was just that you didn’t seem like you wanted to be bothered this morning, and I had to ask Liz if we could meet at the Crashdown, after hours.” He leaned in closer to her, and spoke quietly, though the halls were practically empty, as everyone had headed out to the quad. “We need to plant a bullet somewhere, just so nobody asks questions.”

Maria took a deep breath, trying her best to calm herself down. “And then… it’ll be over? Things can just go back to normal, right?” She watched him for a moment, but he hesitated, thinking about the truth about Tess, and all that it would mean. “Max?” she prodded.

In response, he cleared his throat uncomfortably. “There’s something else you need to know.”
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AN: Okay, so Annie got this back to me a couple days ago, so this time the delay was my own fault. Well, that and the fault of an amazing HP fic, which I couldn't pull myself away from even long enough to post this. :oops:

Thanks for not giving up on me just yet.


Part 12

Maria tried to swallow. She stared at Max, listening to his words but almost sure she was misunderstanding him. She felt like the world was falling out from under her feet. Why was Max not more upset about all of this? “How did-how did you not know about her?” she heard herself asking, and a part of her was impressed that she could even speak.

Max shrugged. “I have no idea. Isabel said that maybe it’s because we were just too focused on keeping ourselves safe, hidden. We were too busy watching our own backs to see if anyone else was watching theirs.”

Maria took a deep breath, forcing down the temptation to panic. She was good at panicking, but now was probably not the time. “So… there’s three of you.”

Max nodded, and his voice was lightly strained. “I guess so.”

“If that’s right, Max… do you think there could be more? I mean—”

“I don’t know,” he cut her off, running a hand through his hair. “I mean, I don’t think so, but I don’t know. I don’t know anything.”

It was then that Maria realized how tired Max looked, and she felt a rush of concern, followed by a sizeable amount of guilt. She’d been telling herself the past two days that all of her feelings and resentments had been in defense of her two friends, that she’d been upset for them. Now, though, as she saw how exhausted Max was, she knew that she’d been thinking almost entirely of herself, and what it meant that Max had exposed himself to his dream girl. She hadn’t been paying attention to Max’s needs, or Isabel’s, for that matter. It was their lives on the line here. She was just the support group, and she hadn’t been doing her job.

No wonder she was suddenly the last to know about everything. She hadn’t been kept out of the loop, she’d been keeping herself out.

She cleared her throat as they continued down the hall. “Max, do you really think you want to do this tonight? You need some sleep. You... you need to relax.”

With his eyes, Max thanked her for the thought, but he shrugged. “Everybody’s already planning on coming. Do you think you can make it? I mean, you didn’t have anything planned, did you?”

She felt another twist of guilt at the uncertainty in his voice. “Max, of course I’ll be there. This is me you’re talking to.”

Max nodded, but he was still hesitant. “I know. But I would understand if you didn’t want to come. You didn’t ask for any of this, either.”

“Max, I may not be a Czechoslovakian, but you and Isabel are all I know. I mean, think about it. If you want me to be there, I’ll be there.”

He nodded again, but there was gratitude in his eyes this time. “Thank you.”

Maria grinned mischievously. “Who knows? Maybe I’ll even try being nice to your goody-two-shoes Parker.”

Max groaned. “Could you start by not calling her that?” he pleaded.

Maria only laughed lightly, though. “Okay, okay, I’ll be good. Besides, I got to know her a little yesterday at the Crashdown, and despite the fact that she hangs out with that miscreant Michael Guerin, and that her dad’s something akin to a slavedriver… she seems… kind of… nice.” She was practically grimacing by the time she said the last word, since up until a few days ago Liz Parker, Max’s obsession had been nothing but an annoyance to her, but she knew Max needed her support on this, if even a little bit.

Max almost laughed out loud at the discomfort on Maria’s face, and the rare sound made her slight distress worth it. “Thank you, Maria,” Max said again, smiling this time. “I’m sure it took a lot for you to admit that.”

Maria just rolled her eyes, but she couldn’t quite keep herself from smiling, at least slightly, and she pulled on his arm, more than ready to change the subject. “C’mon, Max, let’s go out to the quad. Lunch is half over and I’m still starving.”

*************

Larry Trilling was escorted off of school grounds by Valenti, but he’d hardly parted ways with the Sheriff when he pulled out his cell phone. He took a scrap of paper out of his pants pocket and dialed the numbers he’d scrawled there the day before. After a few rings, the call was picked up, and a cool, detached voice spoke to him, catching him off guard.

“Mr. Trilling.”

Larry almost dropped the phone, he was so surprised. “How-how did you know it was me? Do you have some kind of surveillance on me? ‘Cause I didn’t sign up for that.”

The man on the other end of the line gave a short mirthless laugh. “Just a simple top-secret machine called Caller-ID, Mr. Trilling.” And then, after a pause, “I thought I made it clear that you were not to contact me, that I would instead be in touch with you when I found it necessary, and not before.”

“Forget it,” Larry interrupted the lecture, even though the other man’s voice gave him chills. “Just forget it. I was wrong about the girl, it’s over.”

“What do you mean you were wrong?” the man on the other end demanded. “And let me remind you that from here on out, I will be the one to decide when and how it is ‘over’ as you say.”

“But there was no handprint on the girl’s stomach, where I thought I saw her get shot,” Larry said, nervously.

“Thought you saw? Either you saw it or you didn’t. Up to this point you have lead me to believe that you knew exactly what you saw. Are you now telling me that you’ve been wasting my time?”

“No,” Larry said, automatically. “I mean, I-I don’t know. But you said there would be a handprint where she was healed, and I just made a fool of myself in front of her and the Sheriff when I—”

“Are you saying that you risked exposing a possible subject to the local authorities?” The voice on the other line raised a few decibels, and Larry shook, despite the fact that the man he was talking to was not even in the same state as himself.

“You told me to investigate the handprint,” Larry said, pathetically.

“I told you to remain discreet,” the voice countered, coldly. “Mr. Trilling, if you weren’t an eyewitness to the alleged event, I would have you killed simply for your stupidity.” The sarcasm in the voice was palpable, and Larry knew that the man behind it didn't really have that option available to him under the circumstances, but he still shivered as the voice continued. “As it stands, you are not to take any action whatsoever until you receive further instruction. I will be sending a much more reliable source to your location, and you are to follow his orders when he arrives.”

“But… how am I supposed to find this guy when he gets here?” Larry asked, feeling doubly insulted that not only were his methods being put to question, he was being sent a baby-sitter also.

“He’ll find you, Mr. Trilling. Don’t worry, you’ll know him when the time comes. And Mr. Trilling? If you make a mistake like this again, I will not be as forgiving. Remember that.”

Larry was about to respond, but it was too late, the man had hung up. He swore, jamming the phone back in his pocket. He had a feeling he was going to be in Roswell much longer than planned.


*************

“I can’t believe your dad actually agreed to this,” Michael said, throwing a dishtowel he’d been using to wipe down the grill away from him. His shift was over, and he was tired, but he’d been stalling leaving for almost ten minutes. “Using the diner after hours?”

“Well, I sort of implied that it was a study group,” Liz admitted, hesitantly. “And I explained that since there were so many people it would just be easier down here than in the apartment.”

Michael raised an eyebrow at that. “So what, now you’re lying to your dad? That’s how it starts, Liz. This is dangerous, I can’t believe you don’t see that.”

“No, Michael, having a guy walking around who knows more about you guys than you do, that’s dangerous,” Liz argued, sure to keep her voice down so that Maria, and the few others who were still out front wouldn’t hear. “Besides, I’ve lied for you a hundred times.”

Michael let out a rush of air, deflated, as he thought of the countless times Liz had thought up some story for why Michael needed to sleep on their living room couch for the night. “That’s different,” he said, quietly, his voice a little hollow.

“You’re right,” Liz said, her face pained as she realized how callous she’d been. “I’m sorry, Michael, I shouldn’t have said that.” As Michael shrugged it off, though, Liz swallowed, and steeled herself again. “I still think you should stay. You need to talk to them, Michael. I mean, what you’re doing, cutting them off, that’s dangerous too. I know you don’t know anything more than they do, but maybe if the four of you worked together—”

“Whoa, whoa, four?” Michael interrupted. “What are you talking about, Liz?”

Liz’s mouth dropped open. “Oh my gosh. I can’t believe I didn’t tell you. I guess everything with the Sheriff just pushed it out of my head. I’m so sorry, Michael. I swear I just forgot—”

“Liz!” he cut in, barking her name and almost making her jump. “Just tell me already.”

Liz glanced around the large kitchen for a moment, her eyes scanning the walls, as if she was worried they could hear her. “There’s another one of you,” she said quietly, the moment before her eyes traveled back to Michael’s. “Max didn’t get a chance to tell me who it is, but somehow they found out that there’s someone else.”

Michael stared at her, his face a blank wall, and he blinked. Inside, though, he felt his heart thump faster. Somehow, he hadn’t been at all surprised when Liz had said that there were four of them—and the fact that he hadn’t scared him like nothing ever had before. To hear the number confirmed… it made him want to run away and ask questions all at the same time.

Michael had always had a sort of secret dream that if he was an alien, someday, his people—his family—would remember him and come looking for him. Someday they would save him. Now that “his people” were in reach, though, he didn’t know if he could do it. He didn’t know if he could expose himself, even to them. Who knew about this fourth person anyhow? And Max and Isabel Evans? They had a good house, good parents, good grades… good everything. He had next to nothing, and almost none of what he did have could be described as good.

“Michael, are you even listening to me?” Liz cut into his thoughts. She was looking at him curiously, and watching him with a confused expression.

“Yeah, four aliens, got it,” Michael said in an automatic voice.

“Michael, doesn’t this change anything at all? Don’t you think that maybe the four of you were supposed to find each other? That you were meant to be together?”

“But I don’t know that,” Michael argued. “And I’m not going to risk it.”

“Risk it?” Liz asked, a slightly incredulous note in her voice. “It’s not like I’m asking you to hand yourself over to the government, Michael. Max and Isabel are teenagers exactly like you.”

Michael ran a hand through his hair. “That doesn’t mean that I should automatically trust them, Liz.”

Liz groaned in frustration. “Max Evans saved my life, Michael.”

“Yeah, you keep saying that,” Michael growled in annoyance.

“That’s because you keep acting like it doesn’t matter!” Liz shouted, surprising both of them.

Michael realized in shock that Liz’s whole body was shaking, and she was suddenly on the verge of tears.

“Just because you weren’t there, just because you didn’t see it, doesn’t mean it didn’t happen, Michael,” she said, wrapping her arms around her stomach and speaking quietly. “And even though Max saved me, I was shot. I—” her voice broke off harshly. “I’ve never been more terrified in all my life,” she finished, so quietly that he could barely hear her.

Michael felt like a lead weight had been dropped in his stomach. It was true, that he’d been avoiding thinking about the fact that Liz had almost died. It seemed unreal to him, so he’d simply ignored it. Seeing her reliving it in her memories, though, and seeing how scared she’d been, twisted something inside of him. His throat was thick and he cleared it gruffly. “Liz…”

But she shook her head, as if she wasn’t done talking. “And you,” she said, running a hand past her face and whisking a spare tear away, “you think that I’m doing all of this for me,” she said, letting him see how much that hurt her. “You think that I’m trying to get you to talk to Max and Isabel because… I don’t know, because I want to win them over or something, but you’re wrong. I’m doing it because you need them, Michael.”

She took a deep breath, closing her eyes for a moment, as if gathering her strength before continuing. “As long as I’ve known you, you’ve spent your entire life watching your back, not trusting anybody, and you don’t deserve that, Michael. You don’t. You deserve people who know you and care about you and who will protect you as much as you’ve protected me my entire life.”

Michael sucked in a breath of air, not sure if he was more affected by the impassioned speech Liz had just given, or by the fact that it was about him.

“I just-I know you’re scared, Michael, I do, and you have every reason to be. But Max and Isabel, they are in the exact same boat as you are, and I really think that you would be stronger together.”

“Yeah, well what if they don’t think that?” Michael said, almost without thinking. “What if they don’t trust me, Liz? What if they don’t want screwball Michael Guerin in their secret club meetings?” he asked scornfully.

“Michael, that’s ridiculous.”

“Is it? You’re the only person I’ve ever known who doesn’t look at me like I’m some pathetic, foster-care reject. Just because my DNA’s screwed up like theirs doesn’t mean we’re gonna be automatic friends.”

Liz was silent at that, but after a moment she sighed. “You could at least try.”

They stood watching each other in something akin to a staredown, until Michael finally turned away. “Liz, would they trust you to tell me about them if I wasn’t one of them?” he asked, pointedly.

Liz hesitated, and finally swallowed uneasily. “I don’t know, Michael.”

“Even if you gave them your word that I would be able to keep the secret?”

Liz shrugged, feeling completely deflated. “I don’t know,” she mumbled again.

Michael stood up from where he’d been leaning on the counter. “You ask them tonight. Ask Max if he trusts you enough to tell me his secret.”

“Michael!” Liz said, startled. “You can’t put me in a position like that.”

“If he says yes,” he continued, as if she hadn’t said anything, “then you win, and I’ll tell them everything, and the circle will be complete. Okay?”

“And if he says no?” Liz asked after a moment, carefully. “I don’t know how much longer I can lie to him—to them—about you,” she fumbled.

Michael shrugged. “If he says no then I’m going to need more time to think, Liz.”

Liz sighed, glancing at the clock on the wall. It was just about time to close up, and for the meeting to begin. She didn’t have the time or the energy to argue anymore. “Fine,” she said, finally. “I’ll see what he says.”

Michael nodded in acceptance, and silent appreciation, and they turned to head out to the diner.

There were a few patrons left in the booths, but not many, and it was obvious to everyone that it was closing time, especially as Maria was busy pushing a broom around the floor, putting chairs up in the center section as she went.

When he saw Liz push through the doors into the diner, Max smiled at her and stood up from the booth where he’d been sitting. His smile faltered, though, as he caught sight of Michael.

“Hi Liz. Hi, Michael,” he said, slightly uneasily as they came closer to him. Michael felt a frisson of annoyance as Max gave Liz a questioning look.

“Hi, Max,” Liz smiled, obviously trying to quell his doubts, but Michael remained silent.

“Are you, uh… ready for the study group, Liz? Or is tonight a bad night?”

Michael rolled his eyes. “Don’t worry, I was just leaving. Bye Liz,” he muttered, as he headed to the front of the Crashdown. He heard Liz saying goodbye to him, and turned to give her a half wave, but he kept moving, and as he turned to face forward again he slammed into a petite little blonde who was just coming in the door with some other people.

“Ah, dammit,” he muttered as he saw that he’d practically bowled over Tess Whitman, knocking her and everything she’d been holding to the floor. “Sorry,” he said, leaning down to pick up a few things for her—a notebook, a cell phone and…

“What is this?” Michael asked, before he could stop himself. He was staring at the yellow quartz-like stone in his hand. It seemed strangely warm to him, like it had some kind of energy to it all its own.

“Uh-nothing,” Tess said, almost frantic, and grabbing the stone away from him quickly. “Just a rock. My brother and I, we collect rocks.”

“Where’d you get it?” Michael pressed, knowing that he shouldn’t, but feeling an inexplicable need to know where exactly the rock had come from.

“I… I don’t even know,” Tess said, looking almost panicked. “I’ve had it since I was a kid. I guess I just... picked it up somewhere.”

Michael shook his head, finally pulling his eyes away from the stone, which he’d been watching since he picked up. “I’m sorry,” he muttered again, and pushed himself past Alex Whitman and Kyle Valenti and out onto Main Street.

For a moment he just stood there, breathing in the cold night air, letting it wash over him and calm his heart down. He’d never seen that rock before, and he had no idea what it was, but it didn’t take a genius to figure out what it meant. There was no doubt about it—Tess Whitman was the fourth alien.
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cardinalgirl
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AN: Thanks to Annie, the marvelous, and thanks to Japan for clearing up some of my writers' block! :wink:


Part 13

“What was that about?” Max asked softly, but Liz hardly heard him. She was still watching in the direction Michael had left, and where Kyle Valenti and Tess and Alex Whitman were now standing.

“So I guess this is… this is who we’ve been waiting for,” she said finally, ignoring his earlier question. No wonder Alex had cornered her in the halls the other day.

“Yeah,” Max acknowledged, as his attention shifted to the three newcomers as well.

There was still one couple in the corner booth in the front, who seemed oblivious to the fact that the diner was obviously closed, despite the fact that the chairs in the center tables were already upturned, and Maria was spending an inordinate amount of time mopping up the spot directly in front of them. It wasn’t uncommon for a table or two to be occupied past closing time, and most nights Liz would have asked Maria to leave them be, but tonight she was more than ready for this meeting to happen, and to be over with.

Isabel had settled herself into the booth next to where Max was standing, their normal booth, and she smiled hesitantly at Tess. She looked… nervous. Not as nervous as Max, or anyone else, for that matter, but a nervous Isabel Evans was still something of a peculiarity. She wasn’t called the Ice Princess just because she was cold—it was also because she was hard, unmovable. Or, maybe not.

“Okay, DeLuca, we get it,” a voice from across the room cut into her thoughts. A disgruntled Eric Emerson pulled a sophomore—Liz couldn’t remember her name—out of the booth as he threw some money on the table. “No tip,” he added over his shoulder, and Liz saw Maria roll her eyes. She’d have to mention something about customer-employee ethics, but not tonight.

“Finally,” Maria mumbled, quickly bussing the dirty dishes into a waiting tub and off to the kitchen. As they waited for her to return, Liz ran her eyes over the small group in front of her, feeling a mixture of frustration and sorrow as she realized again that Michael needed to be here.

“So…” Max finally started, when Maria pushed back into the room. “I guess this is everybody.” He glanced at his sister for confirmation, and who looked at Tess before looking back at him and nodding.

Kyle glanced over at Liz from where he stood beside his girlfriend. “So Evans here really patched you up out here right in the middle of the lunch hour?”

Liz blanched ever so slightly, as her mind replayed being shot, the burning sensation that seemed to be burning the life right out of her. “Yeah… yeah he did.”

“And you saw me do it,” Max added, shifting his gaze to Alex, his face unreadable.

Alex shrugged, looking uncomfortable, which all of them pretty much seemed to be, and shook his head slightly. “I didn’t actually see it, I just… well basically I had a hunch, what with knowing Tess like I do.”

Liz sucked in a breath of air. So it was Tess that was the fourth alien. It explained why Alex had been so in earnest the other day, but she just didn’t understand how—

“And sorry about the whole cross-examination in the halls yesterday,” Alex said, addressing her and cutting off her thought.

“Oh…” Liz mumbled as she focused on what he was saying. “Right. It’s not a problem.” She could understand where he was coming from, anyhow. She was still running interference for Michael, after all, though she knew she probably shouldn’t be.

“So you’re the same as them?” Maria cut in suddenly, arms crossed and looking at Tess with a mixture of curiosity and nerves. She sounded as if she’d barely been able to contain the question as long as she had.

Tess looked at Maria for a moment, and then nodded. “As far as we can tell we’re the same. I was found wandering the highway as a six-year-old, just like Max and Isabel.”

“And you’re not,” Liz said, directing her question to Alex before she could stop herself.

Alex raised an eyebrow at her skeptical tone of voice. “No, I’m not.”

“But then why did you both come to Roswell Elementary at the same time?” she demanded. It didn’t make sense for Alex to lie, especially now, but she distinctly remembered Alex and Tess being introduced to their first grade class, together.

“Oh that,” Alex said, suddenly grinning. “Mom and Dad had me going to the little Catholic private school down on Wentley, St. Benedicts? But none of its classes are coed, and Tess refused to go into a classroom without me.” He pulled an arm around his sister’s small frame fondly. “Tessa here saved me from years of having my ears boxed by strange women in habits.”

That earned a laugh not only from Kyle and Tess, who rolled her eyes, but also from Max and Maria. Liz smiled herself, as she realized that that made sense enough for her.

“So it looks like we’re in this together,” Max said finally, looking around the group, with an odd look in his eyes—Liz thought it might be wonder. She remembered how nervous he’d been when he’d shared his secret with her, and her heart constricted slightly as she thought of how amazing it must be for him to suddenly have an entire room full of people who knew his secret and were okay with it. Okay, not that seven people really filled up the room, but still.

Liz glanced over at Isabel. Isabel didn’t look amazed. She looked more like she waiting to wake up. Liz didn’t blame her. She didn’t know Isabel very well, but just the fact that she was… who she was, meant that there was more to her than the haughty, spoiled girl she came off as. There had to be.

“Together,” Tess nodded, sending a smile around the group. She seemed to be taking things much better than either of the Evans twins. Then again, by the look of Alex and Kyle, standing protectively on either side of her, Liz wasn’t surprised that Tess felt a little more secure about her existence than Max or Isabel.

“I guess we should get down to business then,” Alex said, and for the second time in two days, Liz saw Alex Whitman snap into a persona she’d never seen from him before. At school Alex was a dork, and that was pretty much it. He had a knack for corny lines, and was well-known for his computer prowess. Alex was star-quality geek, and proud of it.

He wasn’t joking around tonight, though. Tonight he was on a mission, you could see it in his eyes.

“Get down to business?” Maria asked, scoffing at his serious tone. Obviously she hadn’t noticed Alex’s eyes the way Liz had. “I thought the hard part was over. We’re all aliens and/or alien-lovers. That’s it, right?” She looked around the room expectantly, but no one else was following her cue.

“Liz, where were you standing, exactly?” Kyle asked, after a slightly awkward moment.

“Standing when?” Maria cut in before she could answer. Max and Isabel must have forgotten to tell her about the cover-up part of the evening, but Maria looked suspicious, as if she guessed what was coming.

“I was… right over here,” Liz said a little numbly, moving to where she’d stood, right behind the break in the counter.

“And where was the gunman?”

Liz almost smiled. He was sounding so much like his dad.

“He was standing over here, right at this booth,” Max said helpfully, moving to the location.

Kyle looked back and forth between the two of them, carefully. Maria, Liz noticed, had fallen silent.

“Okay, so… there were too many witnesses to try to plant something in the ceiling or the ground… we need something in the same basic line of trajectory as Liz.” He glanced at Alex. “A little help here?”

Alex had been watching everything with the rest of them, but at that he jerked into action. “Oh, right, right.” He fished around in his pocket, pulling out a small item, a pen or something, that he tossed to Kyle.

“Thanks,” Kyle muttered, before moving closer to Max. “So if the shooter was here,” he muttered, taking Max’s place, “and Liz was shot… there…” he muttered, pushing a button on the little item—a laser pen, as it turned out to be—and directing it at Liz’s midsection. “Any idea where this guy’s arm was, exactly?” Kyle asked.

Max shook his head, looking sorry. “I didn’t really notice.”

“Alex?” Kyle prodded hopefully.

Alex frowned in concentration. “A little higher maybe?”

Finally Maria pushed away from where she was leaning and headed over to where Max and Kyle were. “The one guy was here,” she said almost impatiently, moving Kyle into position as she spoke, “And the second guy tried to grab the gun from him, and it ended up…” she took hold of Kyle’s hands and pushed them down a bit, aiming the laser pen again. “There.”

Kyle glanced at her, an almost amused expression on his face, and she scowled at him. “What, what? You wanted to know where the guy’s arm was, what?”

Kyle didn’t answer, just shook his head a little. “Okay, so. From this distance let’s say we have about a foot of leeway in any direction…” he said, as he twisted his hand around in various positions. “Any bright ideas anyone?”

Isabel, Tess and Alex who had previously been standing away from the others moved closer so they could get a better view of the scene. Liz swallowed and pulled at her collar a little, feeling self-conscious as six pairs of eyes studied her and the area behind her, looking for a spot where a bullet might have been missed in the earlier investigation.

And then Tess pointed. “The door.”

The door to the kitchen was indeed behind her, but Liz was sure—

“Someone would have noticed it in the door,” Kyle voiced Liz’s own thought patiently, but Tess shook her head.

“No, no. I mean the gap between the door and the frame… from the hinges. See that? It’s a pretty wide gap.”

Liz turned around, not sure exactly what she was talking about, but Tess was right, the door was loosely hinged, and there was a gap between the door and the frame, probably wide enough for a bullet to pass through.

Kyle twisted his hand to aim the laser at the gap, cottoning on to the idea. “And if the bullet got lodged in the doorframe, between the frame and the door itself, it could’ve been missed.” He smiled at Tess, who grinned at him in return.

“So… So it’ll work?” Isabel asked, her voice a little shaky. It was the first time she’d spoken since entering the Crashdown that night, and it was clear that she’d been a jumble of thoughts all night.

“Easy,” Tess said, crossing the room to the door. She placed her hand over the gap where the laser was aimed, and there was a brief light, and then she backed away.

Kyle came over to examine the result, since he was undoubtedly the most familiar with firearms of any of them, and took a deep breath, letting it out in a rush. “Well, it’s not perfect… kind of unlikely… but it’s enough for Dad.”

“You think so?” Liz heard her voice crack slightly. Her throat was dry… she needed sleep.

Kyle nodded. “No problem. I’ll just tell him tomorrow that you stopped me at school and said you’d found the bullet… he’ll probably have someone in here to take a picture of it and extract the bullet, but it should keep—” he cleared his throat, “should clear everything up.”

“Thank you for this,” Max said, coming forward to shake hands with Kyle, and also Alex and Tess. “All of you. Thank you.”

Tess gave him a bracing smile, and Alex shrugged. “We’re all in this together, wasn’t that the idea?”

Max smiled briefly, and was about to answer, when he glanced at the counter, where Tess had put down a yellow quartz of some kind that she’d been holding onto earlier. Liz thought maybe Max had mentioned being interested in geology once in one of their science classes, but she wasn’t sure. “Whose is this?” he asked, interestedly, as he reached for the stone. Tess looked like she was about to object—

And then something weird happened. The lights of the Crash had been dimmed, like they usually were at night, but they suddenly flared brightly, more brightly than Liz had ever seen before, actually. Before anyone could react, though, the room was brought back to darkness, and Liz had to blink in order to readjust her eyes. The lights were back to normal, as if their little power surge hadn’t happened at all.

At least, she thought it was the lights. But it must have been. Because what she’d almost thought she’d seen… that wasn’t possible.

The light couldn’t possibly have been coming from—

“It’s mine,” Tess said, pulling the stone from Max’s hand quickly, though she tried to look casual about it.

“Is everybody okay?” Max asked, clearly also a little suspicious about the power surge. He glanced around the room, but everyone seemed fine, and so he looked back at Tess. “What is that thing?”

“It’s from our home,” Isabel said in a dry voice. “She showed it to me earlier. I just… I’m sorry, there was so much going on…”

“It’s okay, Iz. I just—what do you mean it’s from our home?”

Tess shrugged, rubbing the stone in her hand. “I’ve had it for as long as I can remember.”

Alex cleared his throat. “She was holding onto that thing when we found her in the desert. Mom and Dad thought it was some security item or something… she used to hold it day in and day out.”

“It has… this energy,” Tess mumbled, her cheeks flushing. “I know how weird that sounds, but—”

“No,” Max said, shaking his head. “No… I felt it.”

“So did I,” Isabel acknowledged, her voice sounding a little stronger than before.

“It’s… just a rock, though,” Tess shrugged. “Nothing special.”

Unless it flashfloods rooms with light, Liz couldn’t stop a voice in her head from saying. It was completely illogical, and yet…

“I think that’s enough for tonight,” Alex said after a minute. He glanced at Liz and then at Max. “You guys both look like you could use a good night’s sleep.”

Liz didn’t have the energy to argue, and Max looked as if he didn’t, either. Tess and Isabel were gathering their jackets, and Kyle and Alex were almost to the door before Liz remembered that she wasn’t done quite yet.

“Wait,” she called out, louder than she’d meant to, and everyone turned, staring at her inquiringly. “Max… Max, I need to ask. I probably shouldn’t, but I just… I don’t know how much longer I can do this,” she said, thankful that at least that part of it wasn’t a lie. She didn’t want to live stuck in between two lives, especially when it made so much sense to connect them.

Max was watching her, waiting for her to continue. Maria wasn’t quite as patient. “Out with it, Liz. It’s late.”

Liz swallowed, but kept her eyes on Max’s. His look was trusting, and it bit into her—at this point she didn’t deserve his trust, not really. She had shared his secret, even if it was justified. “Max… I know I said earlier that I could deal with everything… with Michael… but I just feel like—” she cut herself off. Why was he still looking at her like that? He must have guessed by now what she was saying.

“I just… I don’t know if I can do all of this—” she waved a hand around at the group, “without… telling him.”

Everyone other than Max sucked in a breath at that, startled. Liz understood. They didn’t know that she understood; they thought she’d just fallen into this secret, but she understood all too well.

“We can’t just tell people,” Isabel said, and all of a sudden her calm façade from all night was gone, and everything about her seemed… raw. She wasn’t even angry, though she used anger. “We can’t just tell anyone we want to, it doesn’t work that way,” she continued, visibly shaking.

Maria stepped forward, arms folded. “Okay, Max, I tried, but if she’s going to try and tell that Neanderthal everything about you guys…”

“Maria,” Max cut in, finally taking his eyes away from Liz to shake his head at his friend. “She has a point.”

“A point isn’t good enough, Max, and you know that.”

“He’s my best friend,” Liz said, weakly. “I can’t… I can’t lose him over something like this.”

“Over our lives?” Isabel asked, her voice at a ridiculous pitch.

Max turned to her. “Isabel, maybe—”

But Isabel shook her head, her entire focus on her brother. “No, Max, No. Too much has already changed too quickly. We can’t just let someone else in, Max. The rules… it’s against the rules… Max, I just don‘t know if I could take it…”

As Liz saw Isabel Evans all but breaking down in front of Max, she felt the last of her hopes slipping away. Max glanced between the two of them, looking helpless.

Finally he cleared his throat. “Okay,” he said softly, hugging his sister and rubbing her back soothingly. “Okay.”

As Max turned to Liz and she saw the apologetic look in his eyes, she felt as if the last of her energy, the last of her will was draining from her, and it was all she could do not to break down in tears herself.

“Liz… I’m sorry. I just… I don’t think right now is… a good time.”

She stared at him, hardly even seeing him. A part of her vaguely noticed Tess, Alex and Kyle retreating and exiting the diner, but Liz was concentrating standing still, on staying upright.

“Liz?” Max asked, worriedly, when she didn’t answer him, but she couldn’t speak, so she just nodded. She was practically shivering, she was so exhausted.

Max reached out and gave her arm a consolatory squeeze before turning away with Maria and Isabel. When everyone was gone, Liz pooled the last of her energy to turn off the lights and make it up the stairs.

Her last thought, before she fell asleep, was that Michael would never forgive her for this.
Last edited by cardinalgirl on Tue Oct 11, 2005 9:48 pm, edited 2 times in total.
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Post by cardinalgirl »

Part 14

Liz was more or less refreshed by the time she got to school the next day. She’d slept well, since she’d been so exhausted, and it had helped a lot. That didn’t mean that she was looking forward to the day, though. She was wondering if there was a way she could skip third period entirely—it was the only class she had with Michael, and the only place where she wouldn’t be able to avoid him. Not that she wanted to avoid him… but she did want to postpone the inevitable, namely, the fact that she wasn’t going to be his go-between anymore.

She wasn’t going to tell him about last night. Well, he already knew that they were covering up the bullet, and even if he didn’t, he would, since it was going to be in the newspaper come tomorrow. She would “accidentally” find the bullet hole later today, and show it to her dad, who would tell the sheriff, and it would be taken care of.

She wasn’t going to tell him about the light-surge thing, though… partially because there was no way to be sure of what she’d seen—“unlikely” didn’t begin to explain it—and partially because she’d decided that enough was enough. If Michael was curious about what was going on with the rest of the group, then he could step up and ask questions himself. And she knew he would be curious. No matter how spooked this whole thing had him, there was no way it would change the fact that Michael had been trying to figure out who he was for as long as she could remember. He’d always wondered what his purpose for being was , and as long as she stayed strong, that curiosity would be the key to connecting him with the rest of the group.

She also wouldn’t tell him about Tess. Telling him about Max and Isabel had been imperative—otherwise he would have never known that there were others like him—but now that he was refusing to tell anyone his own secret, the fact that she was betraying everyone else’s trust was beginning to get to her. Michael would just have to figure out who the fourth alien was on his own.

“So how the hell is Tess Whitman the fourth alien?” Michael’s low voice cut into her thoughts, as he fell into step behind her in the halls. “I thought she and Alex are twins, right?”

Liz spun towards him, mouth falling open in surprise. “Michael! How did you… I never said…”

“That rock thing she had was freaky. Where did she get that?”

Liz worked her mouth, but no sound came out. She was so thrown-off by what Michael was asking, she didn’t even know what to think, and the only logical explanation to how he would know any of this sent her a jolt of indignation.

“Were you spying on us?” she sputtered, finally.

Michael reared back, looking offended. “Spying on you? What is this, the third grade? And what if I was, anyhow? Were you going to hide it all from me?”

“Hide what from you?” Liz said, ignoring the part of her that knew she would have kept things from him.

Michael seemed to catch the flicker of guilt in her eyes, though. “They weren’t going to let you tell me anyhow.”

“So you were spying on us!” Liz said, pulling to a full stop in the middle of the hallway.

“I didn’t have to spy to know that, Liz,” he threw back. “I told you it was going to happen, remember?”

“How did you know about all of the rest of it, then?” Liz said, feeling slightly defeated, but still not willing to back down completely.

Michael stared at her in disbelief, with anger close under the surface. Finally he started speaking in a low, quick voice. “She dropped the rock when she was coming into the Crash, and I picked it up for her. I felt it, okay? Thanks for trusting me, though,” he added the last on sarcastically, before turning away from her. Feeling her heart tense as she realized how upset Michael must be with her now, she put a hand on his arm to stop him, but he shrugged her off harshly, stalking off before she could get a single word of apology out.

*************

Michael took a deep breath and let it out slowly, forcing his clenched fist to ease as he did so. If he wasn’t careful the whole freaking school would know about his extra-terrestrial origins. He’d never been good at controlling his powers, and school wasn’t the place he wanted that piece of information to come out. In an attempt to release some of his energy the good old-fashioned way, he slammed his fist into a nearby locker, startling the person who was coming around the corner into jumping back.

Michael glanced up, and almost laughed. Max Evans had stopped in his tracks and was staring at him, wide-eyed. They watched each other for almost a full minute, Michael’s look daring and Max’s wary.

Finally Max spoke. “Something the matter, Michael?” He was trying to sound friendly, which grated on Michael’s nerves like nothing else could have.

Michael sent Max something between a smile and a smirk, only too tight to be friendly. “Nothing I want to talk to you about.”

“Did I… do something?” Max asked carefully. He was eyeing Michael like he would a ticking bomb.

Michael snorted. “Not a thing.”

He didn’t break eye contact, though, and watched as Max debated on a plan of action. “Is there something I can do for you, Michael?”

“Nothing,” Michael said, and was just about to leave when he turned back. “Actually, yeah. There is one thing. You could start by giving on up trying to get Liz to lie to me for you.”

Max stiffened ever so slightly, but Michael saw it. “I don’t know what you’re talking about,” Max said quietly.

Michael advanced on him, then, standing directly in front of the other boy and fixing him in his sight. “Let me make it simple, then. Liz’s priority is to me first. It always has been and it always will be.”

Max finally shifted his gaze down, but his voice was steady as he spoke. “I think that’s for Liz to decide.”

Michael couldn’t explain how that hit him in the gut, the calm assurance in Max’s voice, as if he already knew which way Liz would pick, but he choked down on the idea, ignoring it. “What, you think she’s going to choose you over me?” he demanded, fixing his glare on Max as if that would do anything.

“I don’t think Liz wants to have to choose at all,” Max said simply, surprising Michael and killing some of his anger.

He shrugged and walked away, digging his hands into the pockets of his jacket as Max watched him go. Michael knew, of course, that Max had always been an okay guy—he’d never been the type to sneer at Michael for his shabby clothes or less-than-stunning social skills. Actually, he’d never been the type to sneer at all, which meant that the real reason Michael was refusing to tell Max about himself was that he was jealous. He hated the idea of that, but it was getting to the point where he couldn’t ignore it anymore. He didn’t want to have to share Liz with anyone, but it also wasn’t fair of him to make her choose, and he couldn’t risk what would happen when she didn’t choose him.

*************

By fourth period, Liz still didn’t know how she was going to fix things with Michael. She didn’t even know if things could be fixed with Michael at the moment, but she couldn’t stop thinking about it. After all, that’s what Liz was good at, fixing things. Fixing her dad’s tie in the morning, fixing the stubborn grinder on the coffee machine at the Crashdown, fixing up alibis for Michael when he couldn’t stand to be at school or home. Most things, if you gave them some attention and thought, could be fixed. It was a big part of why she liked science—science was logical and straightforward, and fixed so many problems.

At the moment, though, as the class was having an atypical second lab in one week, Liz was enjoying another part of why she liked science so much. As she copied down weights and measurements, thoughts of Michael and everything else faded away. The only thing that entered into her conscious at all was Max. Max, who seemed to be all but ignoring her.

Liz set down her pencil, and watched as Max worked steadily for a few moments, as quietly and unobtrusively as she’d known him to work before the shooting—or in other words, nothing like he’d been since the shooting.

It took several moments for Max to realize that she was watching him, and when he gave her a curious look, she raised an eyebrow. Maybe Michael she couldn’t fix, but Max… over the last week, Liz had somehow gotten the idea into her head that she was the only person equipped to handle Max.

“What’s up?” she asked, as he continued to look at her questioningly.

Max glanced aside before meeting her eyes. “I’m just… working on my half of the lab.” He shrugged, and started back at his work, but Liz wouldn’t let him get away with that.

“Max… you’ve been quiet all period. What’s going on?”

Max stiffened ever so slightly, but finally laid down his pencil and let go of the pretense of working intently on his school assignment. He let out a quick breath, before speaking in such a low, clipped voice that Liz had to strain to hear him.

“Have you said anything to Michael?”

Liz pulled back, astonished, and a little offended. “I… no. I didn’t tell him anything.” He was watching her, as if to ascertain whether or not she was telling the truth, and she sat up a little straighter as she went on. “Actually he’s not speaking to me right now because of it.”

Max pressed his eyes shut, almost in a grimace. “Liz, I didn’t mean for that to sound accusatory…”

“And yet you succeeded,” she said, before she could stop herself, and then she bit down on her lip as she realized that Max had every right to be suspicious. “I said that I could handle Michael,” was all she said after that.

Max sighed. “I’m sorry, Liz. It’s not that I don’t trust you, it’s just that Michael just sort of…”

“Ambushed you in the halls?” Max looked up, surprised, but Liz gave him a wisp of a smile. “I’m not really surprised. Listen, Max, I know he can be difficult, but whatever he said to you, I promise that his bark is worse than his bite.”

Max gave a thoughtful nod. “I kind of got that impression.” Max sighed, looking as if he was going over the scene again in his head. “He seemed really upset about the whole thing, Liz. I’m just sorry that I put you in such a difficult position. I know that when you get involved with… us… things can get complicated, and—”

“Max,” she interrupted him, covering his hand with her own without thinking, which made him start, “Don’t apologize to me about putting me in a difficult position. If I weren’t in this difficult position, I wouldn’t be here at all.” She gave him a significant look, and he glanced at her hand over his, and then away.

Blushing, Liz took her hand away, and pushed her hair behind her ears. “I can handle Michael,” she said again, and her voice was confident enough that she almost believed it herself.

*************

Tess woke up slowly the next morning, feeling more content than she had in ages. Besides the fact that the bullet in the Crashdown was being taken care of, and that she was no longer the only alien on the planet, she’d had the most wonderful dream. She couldn’t remember it exactly, but she could never remember having felt so very… well, she wasn’t sure how to put how she felt. She’d really never experienced this before. Most days, if a dream was really good, it made her feel warm, happy, loved.

This made her feel alive. In a strange, familiar way that she’d missed, and as she stretched her arms over her head, her eyes barely open, she smiled to herself, and let out a happy sigh.

“Max.”
Last edited by cardinalgirl on Fri May 19, 2006 7:07 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Post by cardinalgirl »

Part 15

Tess’ eyes flew open wide when she realized what name she’d said. She searched her name frantically for what that dream had been about, but it seemed the harder she tried to remember it, the more vague it became. She couldn’t remember anything, actually, and especially not anything that had to do with Max Evans.

She hadn’t even seen Max since the other day in the Crashdown, things had just been too hectic, but she supposed it wasn’t too weird that Isabel’s moony-eyed brother would show up in one of her dreams, considering she did just find out that Isabel and Max were like her.

Still, the way she’d said his name… that was her Kyle voice. More specifically, that was her If-I-were-stuck-on-a-desert-island-and-could-only-bring-one-person-with-me-it-would-be-you-Kyle voice. But Max Evans… Tess laughed, feeling the apprehension of the last few moments lifting away from her. Max Evans! That was just absurd. She rolled out of bed, running a hand through her blonde curls, and as she passed by the mirror on her wall, she gave her reflection a “not gonna happen” look.

When she got downstairs she saw Alex waiting for her by the front door, which was odd, most mornings she was ready to go before he was even up and out of bed. “Did I sleep in?” she asked, as she was walking into the kitchen to grab herself a yogurt and an apple to take for lunch.

“No,” Alex grumbled, annoyed, as he followed her. “Some moron called my cell at six-thirty in the morning. I couldn’t get back to sleep.”

Tess frowned at the weirdness of the situation. “Who was it?”

“That’s the worst part. It was a prank call. Some freak asking me if I believe in aliens. All Caller-ID said was ‘new number.’”

The wrinkle in Tess’ forehead deepened. “That’s weird. The exact same thing happened to Kyle when I was on the phone with him last night. He got call-waiting and said it was some weird guy asking about aliens.” She shrugged, rolling her eyes. “Must be going around. The things stupid people do with their time.”

“Yeah, no kidding.”

Tess was relieved that when they swung in front of the Valenti house that her heart gave a familiar flutter when her goofy, ridiculously handsome boyfriend came out and towards them at a light jog. It settled once and for all the matter that her dream had been nothing more than a byproduct of finding out that yes, there actually was a male on the planet that was the same species as herself. It didn’t change the things that mattered, though.

The moment Kyle was in the backseat he was brandishing something in front of Alex and Tess’ eyes, a triumphant look on his face. “You guys see this morning’s paper?”

Alex held a hand out to steady the waving newspaper and held it so that both he and Tess could see.

“VANISHING” BULLET FOUND IN CRASHDOWN CAFE

“Nice,” Alex commented, and Tess smiled at Kyle as he took the paper back and Alex put the car in gear.

“Did I tell you it would work, or did I tell you?” Kyle asked, grinning, before reading aloud, “‘Claims that a ‘magic’ or ‘vanishing’ bullet was fired in the Crashdown Café in the September 19th incident when a customer argument got out of hand were put to rest yesterday as Jeff Parker, the Crashdown’s owner reported to the Sheriff’s department that the bullet had been found in a crevice behind a door. Investigations have started in locating the gunman, but as no injuries were sustained during the incident, Parker is not currently pressing charges.’ That should settle things for that Trilling guy, huh Alex?”

Alex shook his head quickly, and sent a warning look at Kyle in the rearview mirror, but Tess’ suspicions had already been raised.

“What Trilling guy?” she asked rounding on her brother, and then her boyfriend.

Kyle, realizing his mistake, turned his eyes from her. “Um… nothing. Nobody.”

Tess rolled her eyes. “You are so pathetic sometimes,” she said, flatly. “I thought the whole bullet thing was just a precautionary thing. Alex?” she prodded.

Alex glanced at her sidelong, and had no choice but to answer her. “There was this guy freaking out about the bullet. He thought it was alien-related. Wanted to get to the bottom of it.”

“He was driving Dad crazy, trying to get him to look into it more,” Kyle offered a little weakly from the backseat.

Tess’ mouth hung open in surprise. “And neither one of you thought you should tell me?” she asked, not sure if she was hurt or angry. “Don’t you think maybe I had a right to know?”

“He was a loon, Tessa. A crazy alien-addict. Nobody would have taken him seriously anyhow.”

“Obviously you two took him a little seriously,” Tess argued, giving her brother a stern look. She wasn’t sure if she was actually angry or just surprised at what she was hearing.

“Look, he was just a pest,” Kyle said from the back seat. “He was driving Dad crazy with phone calls about this bullet.”

“And that’s it?” she questioned, looking back and forth between Kyle and Alex’s faces carefully. “You think this will convince him?”

Alex nodded. “Absolutely.” He quirked a grin at her, but she had a feeling he wasn’t quite as sure as pretended to be, and all his reassurances that everything was going to be okay didn’t settle the uneasy feeling in her stomach.

*************

Maria couldn’t stop herself from glancing towards the back of the classroom for the third time in the last ten minutes. Math had never been her favorite subject, though she wasn’t half bad at it, really—it was science that she just couldn’t seem to master—but today she could hardly focus on the problems in front of her. As her eyes strayed once again to the corner where Michael Guerin sat, she had to suppress a groan.

He was dressed in his usual, a black t-shirt and black jeans, and obviously wasn’t even pretending to bother with his schoolwork. Instead, he was sprawled out in his desk-chair, one leg protruding halfway into the aisle, and he was sketching something intently. She wasn’t surprised when Max had told her and Isabel that Michael might be trouble. Apparently he’d threatened Maxwell the day before. Not that Max had said it like that, but that’s what it had sounded like to her.

He was just so… objectionable. His hair, his less-than-stunning sense of style, his attitude, his bad manners, all of it got under her skin. And now he was digging around trying to figure out his little science buddy was hiding from him. The two of them were a little odd, if you asked her. They’d been friends since elementary school, even though to all appearances they had absolutely nothing in common. Still, as far back as she bothered to remember, she had memories of dainty little Liz Parker being followed around by a brooding, skulky shadow called Michael Guerin. There was a time when they didn’t even speak to anybody else, not that anyone in particular wanted to talk to them—well, other than Max, possibly—and while Liz had come out of her shell for the most part in high school, Michael still treated every living thing but Liz Parker like they were the enemy or something. He was always sending out these vibes… like warnings, to stay away.

He wasn’t the type you wanted nosing around, in any case. Max had said that Liz was taking care of it, and maybe she was, but she still had a bad feeling about Michael. He seemed like the territorial type, and if he saw Liz as part of his territory, that could be trouble for Max and Isabel. Maria wasn’t about to interfere with Liz’s “taking care of it,” but that didn’t mean she couldn’t try to figure exactly how much of a threat Mr. Guerin was going to be towards her friends. She was working with him, after all.

She pulled her planner out to double-check her schedule at the Crashdown for the day, but the moment she caught sight of the date she froze, and in a flash all thoughts of Michael Guerin were gone. Her entire body went tense and a familiar feeling of dread overtook her. With all the recent drama going on in the Czechoslovakian side of things, she’d completely overlooked the fact that it was already the baleful last week of the month.

She wondered momentarily if she could somehow get Isabel to invite her over for the weekend, but even the thought of all the explanations and excuses it would take seemed exhausting. Frankly, this was part of her life that Max and Isabel would never fully understand, no matter how they tried. Besides, she couldn’t do that to her mom again. Last time she’d found her at two in the morning, sobbing at the kitchen table. Why they’d ever thought this arrangement was in everyone’s best interest was beyond her. For Maria, and for her mom as well, she knew, this was nothing more than a monthly date with their own miniature hell.

*************

“Isabel. Hey, Isabel.”

Isabel didn’t bother with trying to figure out who the voice was from, the tone—that strange combination of almost-swaggering and almost-desperate that seemed to define the entire male population of West Roswell—told her enough.

She was pulled out of her ruminations by a hand catching on her arm, half-turning her around, where she was surprised to see that her out-of-breath captor was none other than Alex Whitman, who gave her a grin in return for her own affronted face.

At the sight of Alex, her heart sped up ever so slightly. A good part of her knew that she could trust him now, that he wasn’t out to reveal her secret to the world, but old fears die hard. They were still on the school grounds, though, and on the school grounds, Isabel Evans was queen. Alex Whitman, on the other hand, was practically a nonentity.

“Please remove your hand,” she said, glancing disdainfully at where it still rested on her arm.

“Oh, oh. Sorry,” Alex said, pulling his hand away quickly, and then he did something that Isabel somehow hadn’t expected him to do. He launched into a short, rehearsed, prologue that Isabel was all too familiar with. “Listen, I was just thinking that maybe if you don’t have anything going on this weekend, there’s this retrospective film festival going on at the—”

“Wait a minute, wait,” Isabel interrupted, holding up a hand. “Are you seriously trying to ask me out on a date?”

Alex paused, looking confused, as if she didn’t have every right in the world to be glaring at him the way she currently was. “Well, ‘date’ is a strong word. I just thought that maybe in light of recent events and revelations that we might want to get to know each other better. You know, maybe hang out…” he trailed off as she continued to glare.

She couldn’t believe it. She honestly could not believe it. Whenever he’d spoken to her before, it had always seemed like he was making some kind of power play, looking at her as if he could see straight through her, and here he was, begging for a date just like every other pathetic lowlife at school. And that meant that she ruled the game now.

She gave him a look up and down, and then squared off with him, speaking in a low voice. “Look, Alex, we are not pals,” she said, sneering the word as if it was something distasteful. “We are not chums, we’re not buddies, we’re not mates. We’re barely even allies, and that’s not by choice. And if you think that just because you know something about me, just because you’re one of precisely three guys who know my secret, including my brother, does not mean that I’m just going to fall into your arms as soon you ask me to. As far as I’m concerned, you’re still Alex Whitman, Grade-A Nothing.”

Alex was silent for a moment before letting out a low whistle and nodding, a kind of wooden understanding crossing his face. “And you’re still Isabel Evans, Coldest Queen of the Comets. Right. Gotcha.” She watched him suspiciously for a moment, knowing that he wasn’t done, and he wasn’t. “You know, I just thought… maybe we could be friends.”

“Isabel Evans doesn’t need friends,” she said quickly, and then froze, realizing her slight mistake.

Alex seemed to catch the third-person reference also, and it changed his whole demeanor. He raised an eyebrow, clearing his throat. He almost looked amused. “Well, if, uh, Isabel Evans thinks she doesn’t need friends, then I’m sure Isabel Evans knows what she’s talking about, doesn’t she?” He gave her a mock salute. “See you around, Iz.”

Isabel stood stock-still for almost a full minute, watching him walk away, working her mouth noiselessly before she caught herself and bit her lips together. She didn’t understand how it had happened, but Alex had already regained the upper hand on her. She knew now that she didn’t need to worry about his exposing her to the public or any nonsense like that, but she was also sure of something else. Despite what she’d thought earlier, somehow the rules in their little game hadn’t changed at all.

*************

Liz was just buttoning her uniform for her afternoon shift at the Crashdown when the phone on her dresser rang. She contemplated not answering it, since she was already almost late, but with one hand still working the buttons on her uniform, she reached out and picked up the phone with the other. She opened her mouth to say hello but was cut off.

“Do you believe in aliens?”

Liz’s jaw dropped, possibly for the first time in her life, and she sucked in a breath. “Who is this?” she asked, hoping her voice sounded more affronted than scared.

And then there was an audible sigh on the other end of the line, and the voice was much more pleasant when it went on. “Finally. Most people hang up before I can explain myself.”

Liz paused, wondering if she should hang up herself, but before she did, the voice went on.

“You see, I’m a psychology student at Las Cruces University, and I’m doing a study as to how life in Roswell affects whether or not people are open to the possibility of extra-terrestrial life, but I wanted to find out people’s initial reactions, which is why I started out that way.”

“What are you finding so far?” Liz asked, intrigued despite herself. Psychology was one of the more iffy subjects so far as she was concerned, but there was science to it, and that couldn’t be denied.

“Well, as I said, most people hang up on me immediately, which leads me to surmise that they believe it to be simply a prank call, which then leads me to surmise that the question is so ludicrous to people that they can’t even seriously consider the possibility, which leads me to surmise—”

“That’s an awful lot of surmising,” Liz broke in, with a doubtful voice.

“Well, this is actually my first semester as a psych student,” he admitted in an embarrassed voice that brought a smile to her face. “Listen,” he said, his voice turning to a wheedling tone, “since you’ve pretty much got my life history here, would you mind taking a little survey? I know it’s probably the least favorite question in the English language,” he said, rushing the last part as a disclaimer.

“Well…” Liz hesitated. It was true, she didn’t really want to take the time to bother, but he did have a nice voice, and she knew that the main reason these types of studies turned out faulty was because the people truly capable of providing a well-rounded response just hung up most of the time. “How many questions do you have?” she asked, glancing at the clock on her dresser.

“Just four, ma’am,” he said, hopefully.

Liz shook her head, smiling. “Okay, then, but make it fast.”

“Okay, then,” he said, and she could hear the grin in his voice. “To repeat the first question, do you believe in aliens?”

Liz swallowed at the slightly sour taste that question brought up, despite the circumstances, and tried to smile. “I think there’s no reason to assume that aliens don’t exist,” she said, thankfully sounding casual, even to herself.

“Alrighty, that sounds fair. Now, for number two. Do you think it’s possible that there are aliens walking among us on Earth?”

Liz paused, suddenly unsure again if this was the right thing to do or not. “I… think that’s a pretty silly idea,” she said at last, “but I guess nothing’s impossible.”

“Do you frequently watch movies featuring aliens or alien invasions?”

Liz laughed at that one. “Not really, no.”

“And last one,” the coaxing voice on the other end of the line said. “Do you believe that alien life on Earth would be a threat to national security, to be dealt with in a no-mercy, no-questions-asked regime?”

Liz’s mouth went dry as unbidden images of Michael, Max, Isabel and Tess being dragged away by some sort of secret government agency. She felt sick.

“Ma’am?”

Liz swallowed. “I don’t think that sounds very just,” she said quietly. “Now if you’ll excuse me, I’m late to work.”

“No problem. Thank you for your time, Ms. Parker.”

Liz clicked the “Off” button on the wireless and tossed it onto her bed. Sitting down heavily, she closed her eyes and leaned her elbows on her knees, letting her head rest in her hands for a moment as she tried to rub the unseen images away from her eyes. It wasn’t after several deep breaths that she was hit with a sick realization.

Not only had she never told the man on the phone her name, her private line had never, ever been listed in the phone book.

What had she just done?
Last edited by cardinalgirl on Tue Oct 10, 2006 6:55 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Post by cardinalgirl »

Many thanks to Annie, as always! :D

Part 16

Liz headed downstairs on wobbly legs. Part of her was busy reminding herself that she hadn’t actually given out any information on the phone. The questions had all been either opinion or hypothesis, and there was a chance—though slim—that he really was just an inept Psych student and he’d gotten her number from some school roster or something.

Not that she was anywhere near convincing herself that that was a likely possibility. But still.

She couldn’t deny that she felt a rush of relief when she saw Max sitting in his usual booth, sitting with a textbook in front of him and a half empty glass of the Crashdown’s special-dyed green Sprite next to him. It wasn’t like Max was a permanent fixture in the Crashdown Café, but he did come in most days, and it was nice seeing him there.

Liz felt a slight blush as she remembered their connection from the other day, where she’d gotten the distinct impression that he came to the diner specifically to see her.

Her heart warmed a bit more as she noticed Alex sitting at the counter. He gave her a smile and a wave when he saw her, which made Liz smile back. She would never admit it out loud, or even to herself for that matter, but being the sole consort to Michael’s secrets had put a lot of pressure on her. She’d felt responsible enough for him when he was just her basically parentless best friend, and when she’d learned about his true origins the task had seemed to double, despite the fact that they’d never had any problems keeping things hidden.

That didn’t mean she regretted it, or that she’d even think of trading her friendship with Michael for anything—she wouldn’t. But it was nice to know that for once she could actually talk about alien-related things with someone who wasn’t an alien. Not that she knew Alex or even Kyle very well just yet, and she wasn’t even sure if Maria wanted to get to know her, really, but there was the possibility, at least.

She glanced nervously at towards the kitchen. She really was late for her shift, but the sooner she told someone about this, the better, whatever it was.

She noticed Max trying not to look at her as she walked over towards his booth, and smiled despite herself. Quiet as he was, somehow she’d never imagined him to be the bashful type. Her smile faded as she slipped into the booth across from him, though, as she thought of what she had to tell him.

He looked up at her in surprise. Not quite deer-in-the-headlights, but close.

“Liz.”

“Hi, Max.”

He swallowed slightly. “Hi. What’s up?”

She hesitated. She’d known Michael’s secret for three years, and never had to come to him like this, but now after only knowing about Max and Isabel a few days, here she was, her stomach churning with worry.

She cleared her throat. “Max… I think I might have done something stupid.”

Max straightened in his seat, immediate concern on his face. “You mean…” he glanced back at the kitchen, “Michael…?” he guessed.

Liz shook her head emphatically, annoyed despite herself. Not necessarily at Max, but at Michael’s stubbornness, too. “No, no it’s got nothing to do with him,” she said quickly, and went on to tell brief him on the bizarre phone conversation she’d just had.

When she’d finished, Max looked as if he didn’t know quite what to tell her. “You’re sure you didn’t say your name?”

She nodded. “Positive. Really, Max, I don’t know if this is anything at all. He didn’t ask me anything specific to the other day, or anything at all, really. I just felt like I should tell you just in case…”

Max nodded, and rubbed a hand over his face quickly, which she’d noticed him doing occasionally when he looked as if he didn’t know exactly what to say. She realized for the first time that it wasn’t as if Max really knew what he was doing, either. They were all just going to have to figure this thing out as it came. He sighed. “I’ll ask around… see if anybody else has been getting calls like this or not. If other people at school have been getting them then we probably don’t have anything to worry about. If not… I guess all we can really do is—”

“Act natural,” Liz finished for him, nodding. “I know. I just—I’m sorry, Max. I should have just hung up on him. I don’t know what I was thinking, I just—”

Max laid a hand on her own, which were fretting with a napkin in front of her, and she paused, feeling a spark, as some of his quiet strength seemed to seep into her. “Liz, don’t apologize. None of this is your fault. Firstly, people make mistakes, and secondly, we don’t even know if this is a problem yet. Just relax, and we’ll take things one step at a time.”

Liz lifted her eyes from where their hands sat, joined, and looked up at Max, suddenly calm. She nodded. “You’re right. Thank you, Max. I should… I’m kind of late for my shift,” she said, nodding towards the back as she stood up, slowly pulling her hands from under his.

Max seemed embarrassed again as he pulled his own hand back, and nodded. “Anytime.”

Putting on her waitress face, with a special spark in her eye, she smiled at him. “Would you like a refill on your drink?”

*************

As Maria wiped down a recently-vacated spot at the counter, she wondered idly how Jeff Parker managed to keep the Crashdown going during school hours. There were one or two older waitresses she’d seen in passing, a woman named Janice and the crabby-faced one, Agnes, and she knew that Mr. Parker waited tables himself occasionally, but now that Liz was down here—late, but Maria wasn’t about to tattle on the boss’ daughter—she was flitting from one table to another quickly and easily, like a pro.

She bit down on her lip as a feeling she’d been fighting for days washed over her. Liz Parker didn’t know just how easy her life was. Sure, she’d had some troubles in school, kids could be cruel. But Maria would have traded all the school bullies in the world for the kind of life Liz had, her parents never far from reach, obviously happy with each other…

Maria shook the thought off, angry at herself. Her life wasn’t that bad. She wouldn’t trade anything in the world for her mother.

That wasn’t all, though. Max was her best friend, but there was no question as to whether or not he kept things from her. Max had always been a very private person, even around Maria herself, and he definitely wasn’t one to trust people without question, for obvious reasons. Still, after only a few short days of knowing the truth about him, Liz and Max were trading googly eyes back and forth with each other like it was nobody’s business.

Maria knew this was a big thing for him, having Liz know his secret, but at the same time, it worried her. He was letting himself go a little bit, which was good, Max needed to loosen the reigns on himself every now and again, but Isabel had been right, a lot was changing, fast, and they were going to need to watch themselves for a while.

“I don’t think that spot is going to get any cleaner, unless you plan on working your way clear through the varnish,” a voice broke into her thoughts. She looked up with an automatic glare, but Alex, who sat a few seats down, just offered her a smile. “Penny for your thoughts?” he asked, reaching into his pocket and sliding a copper coin across the bar towards her.

She picked it up doubtfully. “I know I haven’t worked here for very long, but I’m pretty sure that’s a lousy tip,” she said, smirking at him. Alex… he was probably a good guy.

Alex shrugged, grinning. It’s just this thing Tess and I started when we were kids.”

Maria nodded, the thought of him and Tess surprising her by making her smile. “So she’s really… and you’ve known. All this time.”

He shrugged again, nodding. “Since the day we found her. She couldn’t speak at first, so she connected to me without thinking about it, and that’s how we communicated until she picked up the language a couple of weeks later.”

“And your parents didn’t notice that?” Maria asked, frowning. She tried not to roll her eyes at herself. It wasn’t that she was a skeptic so much as… well, no, she was a skeptic.

Alex raised his eyebrows, but smiled easily. “What can I say, Tess is smart, always has been. She made it look like she was talking in my ear when she’d hold my hand and connect to me… What’s your story?” he asked, as if he were asking about the weather.

Some of the tension she’d been feeling earlier in the day had eased off, and Maria took a glance around the diner. Things had been slow all day, and with Liz the Wonder Waitress on the floor, things were well under control, so she leaned onto the counter, conspiratorial-like. “Max healed a cat in front of me when we were like, seven. He and I have been friends ever since. I kind of feel responsible for them, you know. I was always trying to protect them as kids… even though it’s not like I could really do anything.” She shrugged. “It sounds corny, but I guess I always felt like, I’m the only barrier between them and the people who might want to, I don’t know, hurt them. Or, at least I was.” Inadvertently, her eyes went to Liz again, but luckily Alex didn’t seem to notice.

“Yeah, I know what you mean,” he was agreeing with her. “You know, it explains some things, too.”

She looked back at him, raising an eyebrow. “What do you mean?”

“Well, you know, like when you punched Tommy Hilligan in the stomach that week in the fifth grade when he kept following Max around humming the theme to The Twilight Zone.”

Maria scrunched up her nose. “You remember that?”

“Are you kidding?” Alex asked, grinning. “That was the first school fight I ever saw. Plus, I’ll admit, bullies taken down a notch is kind of a subject near and dear to my heart.”

Maria smiled at the roundabout compliment, just as the bell over the door rang, announcing the arrival of a new customer. She and Alex both looked over in time to see Isabel and Tess, obviously back from shopping as they both carried a couple bags, chatting and smiling. They joined Max in his booth, Tess, curiously enough, choosing to sit next to him instead of opposite him as Isabel had done.

“What about Isabel?” Alex asked, nodding towards them. “You never seemed as close to her as you were Max.”

Maria shrugged. “She’s tougher than Max, by a lot. I guess she just never needed me the way he did.”

“So she’s harder to get close to,” he said, nodding almost as if he were verifying it to himself.

Something in his manner made her eyes narrow. “How close are you planning on getting to her? I mean, you’re not—wait, are you interested in her?” She guessed the answer by his lack of response, and rolled her eyes. “Typical male.” She’d thought maybe he’d be the type to notice something more about a girl than how long her legs were, but, no…

Alex shrugged, looking slightly miffed. “What?”

She shook her head. “Lemme just give you a heads-up, alright? You’ve got about as much chance of getting into her pants as you do, I don’t know, being killed by an evil alien.” She paused, catching sight of Tess, who was obviously trying to get her brother’s attention without having to shout at him across the restaurant. “Speaking of which, you’re being hailed.” She pulled a face. “And I just remembered that that’s part of my section.”

Alex didn’t answer her as he slid off his stool and headed for the booth where his sister sat, Maria not far behind him. She noticed him pause at the sight of Tess sitting next to Max, making the obvious choice for him to sit next to Isabel. Isabel barely masked a glare at him, and looked away, disinterestedly as Alex swallowed and sat down, as close to the edge of the seat—and as far away from Isabel—as he could manage. He gave Tess a questioning look, but she just shrugged at him, apparently not sure what the problem was.

“Hey, Max… Isabel,” he said, albeit uncomfortably.

“Hi,” Max offered, but Isabel obviously ignored him, shifting slightly away from him, even. Max gave Maria a questioning look, but she just shrugged, giving him her “I’ll explain later” look. “Would you guys like anything?” she asked, not bothering to fake a chirpy disposition for them as she pulled her order book out of the pocket of her silver Crashdown apron.

“I’m good with what I’ve got,” Max said, gesturing at the plate before him.

“Yeah, me too,” murmured Tess, glancing absently in Max’s direction, until Alex, brows furrowed, kicked her under the table, making her jump. She blinked at her brother a few times, then turned to Maria. “I mean, uh, I’ll have a cherry coke, please. With lime.”

Maria’s eyes narrowed at the little display between the two siblings, but as she didn’t know what to make of it, she turned to Alex, questioningly. He simply shook his head, still watching Tess uncertainly. The bell above the front entrance rang again, but Maria ignored it. “Isabel?” she tried.

“I’m not really hungry,” Isabel said, in a less-harsh voice than Maria was expecting, considering she was cold-shouldering Alex as best as she could try… then again, she had just been hanging out with Alex’s sister, so maybe she was trying to play nice. Or, at least indifferent. Which, for Isabel, was nice.

“Okay, so that’s one cherry coke with lime. That’s all?”

“How about a welcome home hug?”

At the sound of the voice behind her, she froze, dropping her pen and nearly losing grip of her order pad as well.

The room seemed to have gone silent as she turned slowly, and sure enough, there to greet her was a smug-looking Sean DeLuca.

He looked over her uniform, the skirt of which suddenly felt far, far too short to be wearing in public. “You know, M, this is really gonna put a damper on my fantasy of makin’ it with a Crashdown waitress.”

Maria recoiled at the thought. “Like one would even have you,” she made out, despite the confusion and shock that were still swirling their way through her.

He didn’t seem to hear her, though, and was looking past her. “Max Evans,” he said, his voice mildly—irritatingly—mocking. His eyes flitted over Tess and he snorted. “Seriously Max, what is it with you and blondes?” Before Maria could correct him on Tess’ status—or her own for that matter—Izzy finally spoke.

“Looks like Trouble walked back into Roswell.”

Automatically, Sean glanced across the table at the apparently sneering voice, and broke into a grin, his voice finally holding some real warmth. “Isabel Evans,” he said, looking her over appreciatively. “All grown up. I like it.”

A flare of annoyance hit Maria as Isabel almost blushed. “Shut up, Sean,” she said, through a satisfied smile. Alex and Tess were looking at each other confused in all the mess. Maria couldn’t blame them.

“Excuse us,” she said, giving the Whitmans a tight, apologetic smile. She heard Alex start to ask something as she clamped a hand around Sean’s arm and pulled him with her all the way to the break room. Tess’ soda would have to wait a minute.

“Hey, hey, lighten up, Ria,” he said, rubbing his arm when she finally let it go.

“Don’t call me that,” Maria snapped. Only Max was allowed to call her by her childhood nickname, and that was solely for the reason that he didn’t do it often. “What are you doing here?” He was supposed to be finishing up his sentence in an Albuquerque Correctional Facility. He had eighteen months to go. Her eyes went wide as an obligatory fear overpowered her annoyance for a moment. “You didn’t break out, did you?”

“Of course not!” he said, and she felt a tiny dart of guilt, knowing that she’d actually offended him. “Time off for good behavior. You forget that I’m actually a nice guy.”

She snorted. “Yeah, tell that to the guy you beat half to death.”

“I did not. He was milking it. Besides, he jumped me.”

“Because you stole his money,” she reminded him, her patience waning.

His face darkened. “I’ve told you, I won that money off a poker game. I thought at least you would believe me.”

“Right. You’re a saint.” She rolled her eyes and looked away, ignoring the small part of her that felt he was telling the truth. She decided to change the subject instead. “So where’s the hellion? Somewhere tormenting my mother, no doubt?” Her words were bitter. Every part of her was bitter when it came to Sean’s younger brother.

“Kevin’s at home,” he said, his look scolding her for what she’d said. “He’s got the flu or the chicken pox or something… Mom wouldn’t let him out of the house.”

“If only we could be so lucky every month,” Maria said, a sing-songy sarcasm in her voice.

“Cut that out,” Sean snapped. “Leave him alone. It’s not like it’s his fault we’ve got a screwed up family.”

“Isn’t it?” she demanded. She still didn’t get how their mothers could hate each other so much and still expect all the kiddies to get along. Okay, so she’d been friends with Sean when they were little, but that had been a long time ago.

“He’s just a kid, Maria.”

“If by ‘kid’ you mean ‘selfish, spoiled, unfeeling brat,’ then yeah, you’re right.”

Sean held up a hand. “Look, whatever. I didn’t come here to listen to this.”

“So why did you?”

There was definite hurt in his eyes now, but in true DeLuca style, Sean covered it with anger. “What do you expect? I’ve been locked up for two and a half years. I just wanted to see you, Ria. Is that so hard to believe?”

Her eyes flashed at him, but suddenly her throat was so tight she couldn’t even snap at him for calling her by that name again. She blinked hard a couple times, not willing to let him see tears if they came. It wasn’t that she hated Sean. She couldn’t, even if she wanted to. Things were just so complicated….

When she failed to answer him, though, Sean sighed in defeat, holding his hands up in surrender. “Okay, fine. Hold a grudge. Like that’s new for you.”

Maria wanted to be angry at that, but guilt was stabbing at her instead. Sean had wanted her to visit him during those two and a half years, but she’d never done it. She couldn’t bring herself to. Sean remembered the good years better than she did, and for some reason that made it harder to be around him than anyone else.

He had turned and was just about to push his way back into the diner, and probably right on out of Roswell, when she called to him, her voice almost a whisper.

“Sean.”

He stopped and turned to her, a guarded expression on his face.

She cleared her throat and was able to go a little louder. “You’re done, right?” She gave him a serious, almost pleading look.

“I’m on parole,” he started, but he knew that wasn’t what she was talking about, and he nodded. “Yeah, Maria, I’m done.” Done being a badass, done proving his parents right about him.

She nodded. “Good.”

He turned to leave, but paused again, turning only half towards her. “Listen, Ria, I talked to Aunt Amy already, but…” He wasn’t facing her, but she could see something dark passing over his face. “Look, Dad still thinks I’m the biggest mistake walking around New Mexico—”

“That man should talk,” Maria cut in, acidly.

“Anyhow, I don’t know how good things are going to be at home. I’m gonna give it a chance, but if it gets bad…” he shrugged. “Just don’t be surprised if I end up crashing on your couch sometime soon.”

Maria gave a curt nod, swallowing painfully. “Right.” She watched him go, something tightening in her chest as her eyes misted over again, despite herself. There were worse things than having a father walk out on you when you’re six years old. There was always the option of having a dad who stuck around, but thought you were worthless anyhow. She didn’t know why she was getting so upset on Sean’s behalf—that time of the month maybe?

Or maybe it was something deeper that she didn’t want to identify, a deep, buried yearning to protect her own kin, that had her burying her face in her hands, trying to stop her tears. Things were bad enough for Sean to be wanting out of the house after only a few days, and here she was pushing him away and treating him like dirt. What was wrong with her?

She was wiping the hot tears off her face and trying to slow her breathing when the door from the kitchen opened, and to her horror, an annoyed-looking Michael barreled into the small back room.

“Look, if you’re done chit-chatting with your boyfriend we’ve got an actual restaurant out here with custom—” he broke off suddenly, an uncomfortable look passing over his face as he got a good look at her and she attempted to get a handle on herself.

She tried her best to glare at him, but she wasn’t sure if it was working or not. And then, to her complete surprise, she saw a flash of something she never thought she’d see on Michael Guerin’s face—compassion. It was gone before she was sure it had been there, and Michael looked away from her. “Sorry,” he muttered, in a low voice, as he backed out of the room without another word.

Maria stood there, stunned out of her tears, with confusion locking her in place.

Was it possible that Parker had actually had it right all along? That there was something more to Michael than everybody assumed?

Maria went into the small bathroom to wash her face and fix up her makeup, and she tried not to roll her eyes at herself when she realized exactly how much she wanted the answer to those questions to be 'yes.'
Last edited by cardinalgirl on Fri Oct 06, 2006 6:47 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Post by cardinalgirl »

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This has been nommed for Best Unconventional/Unique Friendship between Michael and Liz. Thanks so much guys! It means a lot to me. ♥
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Post by cardinalgirl »

AN: Happy New Year's, All! :D


Part 17

"So who was that?" Alex asked, nodding towards the leather jacket guy, as he was passed by their booth on his way out, winking at Isabel in the process.

Max glanced at Isabel briefly, and if Alex hadn't been afraid of looking in her direction, he would have seen her shake her head slightly at her brother before he answered. "Maria's loser cousin Sean."

"That was Sean DeLuca? I thought they locked him up. I mean, isn't he dangerous or something?" Alex asked, before he could stop himself.

"Do you seriously believe everything you hear?" Isabel asked, some venom in her voice. "Sean's not dangerous, and he's not a loser, Max," she said, switching her annoyance to her brother at the end.

Alex wasn't sure which was more upsetting, the fact that Isabel was on friendly terms with a convicted criminal, or the way Tess kept sneaking looks at Max like he was her last meal. He thought about kicking her under the table again, but decided against it.

Max, on the other hand, had his eyes carefully on Liz, or at least that's who Alex was pretty sure he was eyeing. Isabel, needless to say, was doing everything she could to avoid looking at him, and was currently examining her perfectly-manicured nails. Alex couldn't help feeling a little invisible and a lot uncomfortable at the table.

"So how about that quiz in pre-calc today, huh?" he said a little too loudly. Max looked Alex politely, though uninterestedly, and Tess shot him a look. Yeah, like he was the Whitman acting weird today. "I don't think tests should be allowed in classes until at least October," he followed up lamely, and Tess rolled her eyes a little, while he heard a distinctive scoff from the beauty next to him. He opened his mouth say something else inane, now that he was on a roll, when Isabel cut in.

"Can you let me out, please? I'm gonna go try to catch up with Sean."

Alex's jaw dropped slightly at the fact that she'd actually spoken directly to him, and he turned to stare at her for a moment before she gave him a pointed look, reminding him he was supposed to be getting out of the way.

"Oh, yeah, sure. Sorry." He scrambled out of the booth as quickly as he could and Isabel slid over, pressing past him as she got out.

"Thanks for today, Tess, it was fun," she said, turning a genuine smile to Alex's sister, who returned it readily.

"It was great, we should do it more often," Tess agreed.

Isabel nodded, then gave her brother a short, "Bye, Max." She glanced at Alex, but didn't say anything, and he watched as she sauntered out of the diner.

"So what was that about?" he asked, once she was gone, and immediately felt his cheeks flush a little. Eager much, Whitman?

"What was what about?"

"Isabel and Sean?" he said, thankfully sounding more casual than he was.

"They kind of used to be a thing," Max said, a little distractedly. "I don't really know the details."

"Used to be a thing. As in, they're not now." Alex cringed inwardly. Did he not know how to shut up?

Max gave him an odd look. "He has been locked up for a while," he reminded.

"Right. Well, um, I think I'm gonna head on home… nice seeing you, Max." Max nodded at him, in a friendly way, though there was still something sort of shy in Max's demeanor, not that Alex could blame him. He'd been watching his back his whole life after all. "You coming, Tessa? Or were you gonna stick around?" He glanced around the restaurant for Maria, who still hadn't quite emerged from the backroom. "I don't think you'll be getting that soda anytime soon."

"Hm?" Tess said, and he barely stopped himself from rolling his eyes when he saw that she was once again watching Max, who was now pouring over his English book. "I mean yeah," she said, blinking as if to clear her head. "Yeah, right." She threw a couple dollars on the table for her as-yet-undelivered soda, and gave Max a small wave as she said goodbye to him, glancing at him once or twice as the pair of them left the diner.

"So you want to explain that a little?" he asked, as they settled into the Rabbit and he started pulling out of his spot.

"What, you freaking out when Isabel ran after Sean?" she giggled.

He scowled at her lightly. "No, the part where you were fawning all over Max Evans."

Tess gave a snort. "What are you talking about? I was doing nothing of the sort."

Alex threw her a disbelieving glance as he took a turn down Reed. "Yeah, right. I was sitting right there, Tess, I saw you. You were practically drooling over him."

Tess stared at him like he was crazy. "Are you kidding me? I've got a boyfriend, remember?"

"Yeah, I know, that's why it was creeping me out."

Tess shook her head, scoffing a little. "What is it with everyone thinking I have a thing for Max Evans all of a sudden?"

"What do you mean everyone?" Alex asked, interest piqued. He'd only just noticed it today.

"First Isabel thought I wanted to talk to her about Max the other day when I walked up to her, and then—” Tess cut herself off, eyes widening slightly for just a moment, before she shrugged. "Never mind."

"No, and then what, Tess?"

He saw her bite her lip out of the corner of his eye. The way she did when she didn't want to say something. "It was just this weird dream I had."

Alex was thankful for the stop sign that halted their progress right then, because if he hadn't already been on his way to stop, he might have run off the side of the road. "What, you're having Max dreams now?" he demanded, staring at his sister. The same sister whose PDA's with Kyle had been squicking him out just days before. It wasn't like her to pull such a 180° on people.

"Look, I don't even remember the dream, alright? I just think Max might've been in it. Can we just forget about this?" she pleaded, turning away from him a little.

Not sure how to feel about that, Alex let his foot off the break, going about their drive home. "What about Kyle?" he asked. He wasn't sure if it was any of his business, but Kyle was his best friend.

"This has nothing to do with Kyle," Tess said, a little hotly.

"I don't know that he'd agree with you there," he started carefully. "I mean, if you've got a thing for Max—”

"I do not have a thing for Max," Tess cut in. "What do you want me to say, Alex? I do not have a thing for Max, I do not have a thing for Max, I do not have a thing for Max."

Alex glanced at her with a frown. She seemed a little annoyed over the whole thing, and just a little desperate for him to believe her. He knew Tess could get away with a whopper of a lie if she wanted to, but she'd never used it against him before, and it wouldn't make sense for her to start now.

"Okay," he said, as he finally pulled up the curb outside their house. "You do not have a thing for Max."

*************

Michael pulled a new batch of Saturn Rings out of the fryer, then spun to flip the burgers on the grill. As he started to turn back to the Rings, he caught sight of Maria heading back into the main part of the diner.

He watched her for a moment, and she looked okay. He didn’t know who that guy was, he didn’t know what she’d been blubbering over, and really it didn’t matter, but something about that stubborn, angry look she gave him wouldn’t leave his mind.

He’d always nailed Maria as the shallow type. She was always buzzing around Max Evans like this buzzy little hummingbird, and he’d figured the guy just put up with it ‘cause he didn’t have the nerve to tell her to shove off. He had to admit it was pretty impressive that she’d known about Max and Isabel all along. She didn’t really seem like the type to take aliens in stride.

At least, real aliens. He grimaced slightly as he thought of her mom’s Alien-a-Go-Go. The murals in the Crashdown were bad enough, but Amy DeLuca’s shop made his entire heritage look like a joke. What would she think if she knew her daughter was in cahoots with two real live ET’s?

He winced as the smell of smoke hit his nose, and he pulled the remaining burgers off the grill, setting them onto plates that were sitting waiting with open buns and a side of fries each. “Table four, order up,” he barked automatically, and before he could pick up his train of thought, Maria came over and took the new plates, deliberately avoiding his gaze.

She looked instead at Max, an almost longing, but indecisive look on her face. Like she wanted to go over and confide in him, but knew it would be no use.

Michael felt an inexplicable prickle of annoyance when Max didn’t even notice her watching him. He was staring glumly at his textbook and when his eyes did leave the pages, it was only to seek out Liz.

And even though it annoyed him, Michael couldn’t blame him, really. Liz was… Liz.

But there was something about that Maria girl.

He caught sight of Alex and Tess Whitman leaving together, and felt an acute stab of jealousy.

He wasn’t supposed to be jealous. Life was crappy, and that’s the way it was. He was used to that.

But the fact that three of the four aliens had been adopted into happy, loving families, kind of stung. And it really annoyed him that it stung. It went against everything he’d raised himself to be—self-relient, detached, a stone wall.

But really, what were the odds? That Max and Isabel were picked up by the Evans, and Tess was picked up by the Whitmans, and Michael was the only one who ended up not being taken in by whoever picked him up.

The truth was, he didn’t even know who picked him up. The earliest he could remember was going home with Hank. Yeah. That was a highlight.

Max and Isabel even had each other. And a small part of him wondered if maybe they’d been sent in pairs… what if Tess was his—he couldn’t even bring himself to complete the thought. It was too much.

But he couldn’t bring himself to expose himself to them, either. Especially now, when he was already on the verge of losing Liz.

But now that he knew about the others, he couldn’t stop himself from wanting to know more. Of course he’d always wanted to know about his origins, but learning about the others, made it feel more vital somehow, like a deep yearning that wouldn’t go away.

If he could just look at that stone again. To think. He’d hiked in the desert dozens of times looking for some clue to his origins, and there Tess Whitman had been holding onto a little piece of his home all along.

Their home, he corrected himself. He wasn’t the only one of his kind anymore. He didn’t know what to think about that.

Not that it changed anything. He’d been right before, that the others didn’t want him as part of their group. Even his own kind didn’t want him.

He ground his teeth at the empty feeling clawing in his chest.

Nothing had changed. He was just as alone as he’d ever been, maybe even more so.

But as he tried to shake the feeling away, Maria caught his eye again.

Maybe he wasn’t the only one.

*************

When Isabel caught up to Sean he was halfway down the street, just about to get into his car.

“Hey,” she called, her voice a little shaky. She hadn’t seen him since he’d been sentenced a year and a half before, and while her little girl crush on him had been gone for years, she still remembered what it had felt like.

He turned towards her, a harsh look on his face, but the moment he saw who it was, it was gone. “Hey yourself.”

She remembered the first time she’d seen Sean. She’d been warned in advance that he was no good. Her parents had handled some of his earlier misdemeanor cases when he was a kid, but he’d always struck Isabel as a little sad under all his seeming indifference.

They’d always been kind of the same, always judged based on who people thought they were, rather than who they really were. She knew it kind of hurt Maria that Isabel had spent so much time with Sean over the years, but she couldn’t stop herself. It was refreshing; being around someone who understood what it was like, with people thinking they know everything about you, just by the way you look, or what they’d heard. He’d always been the delinquent from outside of town. She’d always been the Ice Queen.

Nobody bothered to learn anything about who they really were. It was people like Alex Whitman, assuming they understood who they were, who made life so hard for them.

She brushed off the tiny thought that maybe Alex had been a little right about her. She didn’t want it.

“I’m glad you’re home,” she said, almost wanting to hug him, but not sure how awkward it would be.

Sean gave a little snort. “I’m glad I’m in Roswell.” Technically he was from Hondo.

“Your parents?” she asked, letting the question hang in the air.

“I don’t wanna talk about my parents.”

Isabel nodded. It was understandable. She was one of the few who knew about the complications in Maria’s family circle, and they were pretty ugly.

“Hey, you wanna go somewhere? Maybe catch up at Señor Chow’s? You can get that burrito you like and put your nasty Tobasco all over it.”

She smiled. Sean was the only human she’d ever wanted to admit the truth about her origins to, though she never had, and even though she had a sneaking suspicion that he kind of saw her as a kid sister, thanks to her relation with Maria, the idea of spending some time with him sounded better than anything.

“I’d like that.”
Last edited by cardinalgirl on Wed Jan 17, 2007 1:59 am, edited 2 times in total.
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Post by cardinalgirl »

A/N: I know, I know, you're faint from shock. But I promise once you recover, this post will still be here. Don't know that any of you will be particularly pleased with me for this part, though.


Part 18

“He asked her if she believed in aliens?” Kyle said, looking at Max, surprised. “That’s the first thing he said?” Max and Maria had met by their table at lunch to fill them in on things.

“Uh, yeah. That’s what Liz said.”

“Why didn’t she just hang up the phone? That same crank call’s been going all over.”

Max raised an eyebrow. “It has?”

Alex nodded. “Kyle and I both got that call. Figured it was just a joke and hung up.”

“Yeah, Max… I got that call too,” Maria chimed in, giving him an odd look. “I would’ve told you that earlier if you’d given me the details.”

There was a weird note in her voice that made Kyle raise an eyebrow, but he didn’t think too much about it. If Deluca was gonna give Max back his best friends bracelet it didn’t have much to do with him.

“Well that’s great, actually,” Max said. “If this really is just a guy calling through the class roster then we probably don’t have anything to worry about. Do you think you guys can maybe ask around?”

Kyle shared a why-not shrug with Alex, and figured that was that, when Tess jumped in emphatically.

“We’ll do anything to help, Max. Anything we can.”

Something in her voice made Kyle sit up a little straighter. He looked over at her, and she was smiling at Max, a weird gleam in her eyes. Kyle glanced at Max, who looked a little surprised but also like he wasn’t reading much into it. “Uh, thanks, Tess. That’d be great.”

She smiled at him in a way that made Kyle feel a little queasy. “If there’s anything else we can do, Max,” she said, putting her hand over his where it was laying on the bright blue fiber-glass lunch table where he leaned.

Max jumped back to a standing position as if he’d been shocked by something, pulling his hand away as he went, looking a little uncomfortable now. He cast a confused glance at Kyle, who was doing all he could not to glare back at the guy. Clearly whatever the hell was going on was not due to Max’s incentive.

“I’ll… see you guys around.”

Kyle looked over at Alex, who was staring at Tess like he’d never seen her before, and gave him an I-don’t-get-it-either shrug, as she watched after Max’s retreating form.

Kyle looked away, his confusion starting to give way as hurt and anger started billowing up in him. When the hell had this started? And if Tess was going to start falling for another guy why didn’t she at least have the decency to tell him? He was just about to ask to talk to her for a second when her voice broke into his thoughts, chipper as ever as she addressed Alex.

“You know, I thought there was something weird about you guys both getting that call. Poor Liz, I bet she’s a little freaked out.”

She laid her hand on his leg, completely naturally, and this time it was Kyle jumping away from her touch, as he slid a good four inches away from her.

She pulled her hand back as if she’d been stung, and when he looked at her her eyes were full of confusion. “Kyle?”

“Tess what the hell is going on with you?” he said, his voice heated but quiet. Just because he was pissed didn’t mean he wanted to draw attention to her if he could help it.

“What do you mean?” she asked, perplexed. “What’s going on with you?”

“Excuse me if I don’t like seeing my girlfriend falling all over some other guy right in front of me,” he said, bitterly.

Tess’ eyes widened then, and she looked at Alex almost desperately. “What is he talking about, Alex?”

Alex was holding himself stiffly, obviously uncomfortable, and he gave a sigh. “You did it again, Tess. The Max thing.”

“What do you mean again?” Kyle demanded, as that little bit of information seemed to stab into him.

Tess looked back and forth between them in horror, and then she turned on Alex in a fury. “Alex Charles Whitman if this is a joke you two set up against me, then—”

“I don’t look like I’m laughing, do I?” Kyle broke her off, and when Tess looked back at him she looked like she was about to cry. “How long has this been going on?”

“How long has what? I was just trying to be nice to Max.”

He snorted. “Not like that you weren’t. Forget it. I’m heading to the weight room.”

He got up to leave, but Tess was right on his tail, stopping him. “Kyle wait. Look, whatever you thought just happened back there didn’t, okay? I don’t even know what’s going on right now—”

“Then why don’t you go figure it out with your other boyfriend? I‘ve got more important things to do,” he threw over his shoulder at her.

She gave a huff of frustration, maybe accented by a sob, he wasn’t sure, but he wasn’t about to turn around to find out, and she’d stopped following him.

He already felt a knife of guilt over the things he’d said, and he was probably overreacting, but dammit. Yesterday things were fine between them. Hell, yesterday they were in the running for most-likely-to-get-married. Then all of a sudden she finds out a guy she’s never looked twice at before is an alien and she’s gushing at him like a schoolgirl.

Not to mention the guy was from her freaking planet.

How do you compete with that?

*************

September 24th, journal entry #1

I’m Liz Parker and five days ago I died. Okay, so maybe that’s over-dramatizing things a bit. I mean, I didn’t actually die. My heart didn’t stop beating, there was no white light. But I was bleeding to death, and there was a bullet lodged in my stomach three inches below my ribs. There was no white light, but there was darkness. And I know that if Max Evans hadn’t been there to take that darkness away, that light would’ve been the next thing I would have seen.

Since that day, since that moment that Max healed me, brought me back to life from wherever I was going… my life has changed more than I ever thought possible. And that wasn’t because I, Liz Parker, had to face the fact that there were aliens on Earth. I already knew that, after all. And really, now that I think about it, finding out that Michael, my best friend, was an alien, was not life-changing for me. It shifted my paradigm, changed how I looked at the world and the universe, but not my life. Because even though I’ve learned to judge the things around me according to science, there is nothing in science that says that it is impossible for aliens to exist. Maybe one time thoughts like that were the norm, but not now, not for a long time. All I knew was that aliens didn’t exist in our solar system. But there’s plenty of space out there.

Getting back to my point, though. Finding out Michael was an alien was huge; it brought us closer as friends and has really bonded us, but Max Evans… Max saved my life. And in doing so, he’s given me a new lease on life.

And already things are spinning out of control. I don’t know where this next chapter of my life is taking me, and for all I know it could be dangerous. Even though a part of me is scared, though, I’m excited to see where it will take me.

I’m afraid that Michael is jealous of Max, of the friendship growing there. I wish that he could understand that Max will never change how I see him. I honestly don’t think that I could survive without Michael. I have no idea where I’d be without him. He’s been my best friend, the only person other than my parents who I could rely on completely, and has been as long as I’ve known him. He knows me better than anybody else could, and he’s always supported me. It’s always been the two of us. Michael and Lizzie against the world. But now… things have changed.

I’ve changed.

Max Evans has put a force on me. When he showed himself, his soul to me that day at school, he changed everything that I am. Suddenly, when I look into his eyes, I’m not who I used to be—little Lizzie Parker, waitress, best friend, Daddy’s girl. When I look into his eyes, I see myself as he sees me. And the amazing thing is, in his eyes… I’m beautiful.


“Liz?”

Liz blinked at her handwriting on the page, wondering if she’d just imagined that voice, but as she stared at what she’d written, the stage-whisper came again, calling her name.

Pulling herself up from the lawn chair where she sat on the balcony outside her room, Liz walked over to the brick-wall edge and peered over. There, in the alley next to the Crashdown, was Max Evans.

Her face was a mix of surprise and curiosity as she looked at him, and he smiled, nodding towards the iron ladder that served as a fire-escape. “Can I come up?”

Liz’s heart gave a nervous flip-flop, but she nodded, and waved him up. As he started up the ladder Liz turned to shove her journal—a gift from her grandmother—underneath a pillow, and by the time she turned around, Max was standing before her. He wasn’t even winded.

She sat down on the lawn chair, then stood up again, quickly, pulling and straightening her shirt. “Max, what are you—what’re you doing here?”

He looked a little uncertain of himself, running his hand along the brick surrounding wall of her patio absently. “I just wanted…” He stopped for a moment and the breath caught in her throat, and her heart was pounding in her ears as she thought of a hundred ways he could end that sentence. “I just wanted to tell you that we’ve been asking around, and from what we can tell it looks like only you, Alex, Kyle and Maria got that phone call.”

Liz felt her happy-nervous feelings dissolve, only to be replaced by nervous-nervous feelings, and a good dose of shame. “And I’m the only one who told him anything,” she said, angry at herself. Her cheeks were burning against the cool night air.

Without thinking she was suddenly directly in front of Max, her hand on his sleeve in an almost-pleading gesture. “Max, I am so, so sorry. I just—if anything happened to you after what you did to me—” her voice broke and she had to stop. She was feeling angry and stupid and embarrassed all at once.

“Hey, hey,” Max said, his voice soothing. He put a hand up to cover hers where it was, and touched her arm with his own, almost mirroring her position. The minute he did Liz sucked in a breath. It was like a circuit of energy was flowing through her from both sides. “None of this is your fault, Liz. For all we know, this will all blow over anyhow.”

Liz blinked away the tears that threatened, but she still felt guilt like a lead weight in her belly. “I know, Max, I just can’t believe I was so stupid. I mean after all this time—” Liz stopped herself, shutting her mouth so quickly that she bit her tongue and she could taste the blood in her mouth. What was wrong with her? She’d very nearly admitted to keeping Michael’s secret, which of course, would have blown it.

He was looking at her, concerned. “After all this time what?”

She turned away, pulling out of his touch and feeling the smallest bit colder when she did. “I just mean that you and Maria and Isabel have managed to keep this secret for so long,” she said, leaning on the brick wall and practically making it up as she went along. That’s why she’d turned away from him. She had a feeling if he’d seen her eyes he would have known she was lying. “Then here I go and I spoil it in less than a week.”

She heard him sigh. “Liz, I really didn’t come here to make you worry. I just thought you should know. I don’t want you blaming yourself over anything. I knew exactly what I was risking when I saved you. I wouldn’t take it back, Liz. No matter what happens.”

Liz felt herself start to smile. Somehow whenever he was around she felt like things were going to be okay? “So we’ll just wait and see what does happen.”

He had his hands in his pockets and raised his shoulders, slightly. “Yeah. Um, I should…” he glanced up at the sky, as if he could tell the time from the stars. “I guess I should go.”

Liz nodded from where she stood, fingering the iron railing of the ladder.

“Goodnight, Liz,” he said, softly, as he passed her, his eyes shining warm assurance at her.

“Goodnight, Max.” He touched her hand slightly as he hoisted himself over the wall and started down the ladder, and just as he was about to start down, she stopped him. “Max?”

He stalled, a little below her and looked up at her, and she felt like she could have fallen straight into those light brown eyes of his. “I just… thank you, for coming here. Thank you for trusting me, despite everything.”

One corner of his mouth lifted up in a smile. “I’ll always trust you, Liz,” he said, and with that he was down the ladder and heading up the alley, stopping at the street to turn back and give her half a wave.

She smiled back at him, but as she stepped back she sighed, thinking of Michael. She wasn’t entirely sure Max was right about what he’d said.

Liz flopped down on the lawn chair she kept on the roof, thinking at least there wasn’t anything she could do about any of it at the moment, but as soon as she started to comfort herself with that thought, something else jerked her back to a sitting position, and had her brow creasing in a frown.

She still had to tell Michael about the phone call.

*************

Michael was done cleaning the grill and he threw his cleaning rag onto the counter along with his apron. He punched out his timecard in the back room and was shoving his way into the main area of the diner—when he crashed headlong into Maria Deluca, knocking a half-empty sugar container out of her hands, which shattered when it hit the floor, breaking into a few pieces and spilling its contents.

“Dammit!” Maria shrieked, while Michael uttered a stronger epithet under his breath. “Thank you. Thank you so much. This is the last bloody thing I had to do tonight and now I’ll have to get the broom out and—”

“Woah,” Michael said holding a hand out to get her to stop talking. She was already crouching down to clean things up and glared at him as she spoke. “My bad,” he said, “I didn’t know anybody was here.”

Maria snorted. “That’s convenient. Look, I’m really tired right now, so if you could please just—”

“Hey,” Michael said, crouching down himself, a bit of an edge to his voice as annoyance battled something in between curiosity and something else he couldn’t quite define. “Look, I said my bad. I’ll take care of it.”

Her half-hurried movements stopped altogether and she looked up at him, the same flash of confusion in her eyes that he’d seen the day before, when he’d apologized for walking in on her crying. Dammit, why’d he have to go think of that? “Just, go ahead, go,” he said, his voice sounding gruff even to his own ears.

He kept his eyes on the pile of sugar on the ground and the pieces of broken glass he was picking up. Luckily he could put the pieces back together before Mr. Parker would ever notice.

He paused when he realized the blonde hadn’t moved, and was still staring at him. “What?” he snapped, finally looking at her.

She didn’t say anything for a long moment, and something in her clear blue eyes made him want to run faster and farther away than he’d ever had wanted in his life, but he couldn’t seem to move. He couldn’t even look away.

It was a damn scary feeling.

When she finally did speak, what she said confused him.

“You’re hurt.”

Michael reared back a little. “What?”

“Your hand. You cut it.”

He looked to where she gestured, and sure enough one of the shards of glass had left a slice along his left palm. As if seeing it also meant feeling it, he hissed at a sudden stinging sensation, and shook the hand out as if it would come off.

“Here, let me see,” she said, stopping his hand in mid-motion and bringing it close to her face so she could see it in the dim light. He could feel her breath on his hand, and the sensation was something he wasn’t expecting, and he pulled his hand away.

“Sorry,” she muttered, sounding annoyed. “Look, it’s not deep, but you should probably clean it. You don’t want it getting infected or anything.”

Then it was Michael’s turn to be surprised. What did she care if his whole arm fell off?

“Yeah, okay,” he said, not even noticing what he was saying. He got and took the pieces of glass behind the counter, to where the trash can was, then when he was out of Maria’s line of vision he reassembled the pieces and put it under the counter, grabbing the dustpan from it’s place there.

“Is there a first-aid kit here?”

He turned back to her. “A what?”

“A first-aid kit. For your hand.”

Michael’s mouth parted, and he fully expected himself to tell her to forget about it and go home. “In the bathroom in back.”

While she went to retrieve the kit, he cleaned the small pile of sugar up with a wave of his hand. It was about the only productive thing he could do with his powers, cleaning up spills. Came from years of practice in the diner.

When she came back with the kit, he half expected her to toss it to him and leave. He was surprised again, though, as she headed towards one of the booths. “Come here.”

His mouth opened in surprise. “I can—I mean, you don’t have to—”

“Just shut up and come here.”

Michael’s eyes narrowed at the order, but he complied, and laid his hand on the table when she asked him to.

He watched as she pulled out cotton balls and a bottle of hydrogen peroxide.

“What are you doing here so late, anyhow?” he asked, partially because being here with her was making him nervous, partly because he just might have been curious.

Maria sighed, rolling her eyes a bit. “Just not sure what I’ll find when I get home, I guess.”

He considered what he knew of her mom and snorted. “Like what, an alien marmalade pie?”

She was tipping the bottle onto a cotton ball, and she paused to fix him with a death stare, but seemed like she wasn’t in the mood to snark at him too harshly. “I don’t make assumptions about your homelife, okay? Gimme your hand.”

Michael’s jaw dropped slightly, but he assented in silence, and he held his breath as she held his hand steady in one of her smaller ones, and started dabbing at his cut with the other. His hand jerked slightly when it came in contact with the stinging, and she rubbed it with her thumb, soothingly, in what he was sure was a totally unconscious movement.

Which is maybe why it affected him so much.

“You do this often?” he asked suddenly, and she jumped a little, looking at him confused. “Patch people up?” he clarified, gesturing towards his hand. He wasn’t sure why he sounded so sarcastic, until he saw the defensive look in her eyes. Why the hell was he trying to pick a fight?

To distract himself from the feel of her hands. Or get her to take them away. Which she did, pulling away from him and leaning as far back as the booth would allow her then. The loathing look he was used to receiving from her was suddenly back then. “Fine. I try to do one nice thing, and—you know what? Forget it. Just forget it.”

She got out of the booth and flounced into the back area, probably to change, leaving him there, the first aid kit open before him. Moving dumbly, he closed it up, and waited for a moment for her to come back into the main area, not sure yet if he was going to apologize for whatever it was he’d just done. Not sure if it was even his fault.

After a few minutes, though, he heard her leaving through the alley exit, and he blew out a breath of relief. He felt like he’d narrowly avoided falling into some kind of a trap. What kind, though, he wasn’t sure, and part of him definitely didn’t want to know.
Last edited by cardinalgirl on Sun Jun 17, 2007 12:45 am, edited 1 time in total.
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