
Title: Chasing the Son
Author: Karen
Disclaimer: The characters of "Roswell" belong to Jason Katims, Melinda Metz, WB, and UPN. They are not mine and no infringement is intended.
Pairings/Couples/Category: CC – ALL
Rating: Mature
Summary: This is the story of what happened to the gang during the 17 years between Max giving up Nate and Nate finding out about his heritage. This is the seventh in the series.
Author's Note: No next-generation characters in this one. Excellent banner by the very talented LongTimeFan. Thanks, sweetie!
Part One
Roswell, NM – February 2004
The room was as Max Evans remembered it, though he hadn’t been in it in nearly two years. The walls were brick, the windows draped in a dark blue printed fabric. A corkboard filled with out-of-date memos and an old calendar hung above the desk; the dresser stood where it always had. Looking at the dresser, Max had a memory flash of Kyle Valenti opening the top drawer in search of a glimpse into her private life.
The secrets of femininity, so close. Who knows what I may discover?
Max smiled gently at the memory, his gaze drifting to the window. A dragon chased across one of the panes, and outside of the window sat an unused chaise lounge, weathered and beaten. He looked out at the rooftop, which was now unkempt, leaves cluttering the corners, and mused about how many nights he’d climbed the iron fire escape. Some of those nights had led to good things. Other nights had not been so pleasant.
Before he could wallow in the bad memories, the door flung open and Liz entered, carrying a couple of shopping bags. Even though it was cloudy and threatening rain outside, his whole world turned sunny in that one instant; he simply glowed from head to toe.
“How did it go?” he asked, going to take the bags from her hands and laying them on the bed.
“Not bad,” she said, kicking off her shoes. “Wasn’t as painful as I thought it would be.” Immediately she cringed at the off-the-cuff use of the word. “I mean, I knew it wouldn’t be painful, I just meant that the crowds weren’t so bad.”
She turned away from him, pretending to dig in the shopping bags and he felt a tug of regret. Again. He would always regret his decision. He would always regret having put her through all that he had. Liz knew how he felt, that’s why she was so self-conscious of the words she’d chosen. He knew she meant no harm but if he’d been sent on the task she’d just completed, it would definitely have been painful for him.
Feeling the need to bandage the verbal wound, he cleared his throat lightly. “So, what did you buy?”
Liz turned a smile in his direction and reached into the bag. She came out with a tiny white lacy dress with pink flowers embroidered on it, a pair of ruffled socks and a set of pale pink shoes.
“That’s adorable,” Max said, trying to infuse some enthusiasm into his voice. He took a seat on the bed as he watched her start to remove the price tags from the gifts. “I think Maria will really like that.”
“You think?” she asked, though he got the idea she was being rhetorical. No one knew Maria better than Liz.
“I’m sure of it,” he encouraged with a grin. “Want me to help you wrap?”
“I got a gift bag,” Liz said, biting through the plastic tie holding the price tag to the dress.
Max rummaged in the bag and came out with the gift bag and some tissue, which he expertly inserted into the gift bag. Liz placed the shoes and socks in the bottom of the bag, then folded the dress and placed it on top.
“Well, that was quick,” Max said, glancing at the clock on her nightstand. With a devilish grin, he took her around the waist and pulled her forward so that she was standing between his knees. “Seems to me like we have a little extra time on our hands.”
Liz giggled. “What did you have in mind?”
Max looked over his shoulder at the bed. “High school fantasy,” he confessed.
“Uh huh. So, in high school, you had a fantasy about my bed?”
“Not just your bed, but you in your bed.”
“Alone?”
“Preferably not.”
She was smiling as she leaned down to kiss him. Without breaking contact, she deftly straddled him, wrapped her arms around his shoulders. After a few moments, she pulled away and looked over his shoulder at her old comforter.
“We never did make love in my bed, did we?” she asked, her brow furrowed slightly, trying to remember.
“Nope. Trust me – I would recall that.”
Liz met Max’s eyes, then she gave an amused snort.
“Where are your parents?” he whispered, his eyes traveling down her throat, past the necklace he’d given her the week before for Valentines Day, to the plunging V of her neckline. The lace edge of her bra was peeking out at him, enticing him, teasing him.
“Out,” she answered simply, before pressing her lips to his and pushing him backward onto the bed.
Before he could mouth the warning, she raised her hand toward the door, which closed obediently, the lock clicking softly into place.
Liz Parker had become Liz Parker-Evans two weeks before she’d left to attend Harvard on the east coast. In all of the uncertainty that had become Max’s existence, there was one thing of which he’d always been sure – he loved Liz and wanted to spend the rest of his life with her. After graduation, she’d received word that Harvard was willing to accept her application, despite her less than stellar interview that previous winter. Max hadn’t been so fortunate.
On a tireless quest to find his son, Max had let everything in his life slip – familial relationships, his relationship with Liz, and his grades. Once at the top of his class and regarded as one of the brighter students at Roswell High, Max found himself in the position of barely graduating with his class. No place like Harvard wouldn’t give him a second glance. On paper, he looked like a troubled, lazy young man and in truth he wasn’t certain he even wanted to go to college.
But Liz was going and that was a problem. Max couldn’t stand to have her so far away. It wasn’t that he didn’t trust her to take care of herself or that he was afraid of some alien being harming her. It was that he would simply die without seeing her every day. He proposed to her in July and in the middle of August they eloped. To Vegas. Which only proved that you might be able to change the details of the future, but the big picture seemed to remain the same.
So Max followed Liz to Boston, where she went to college and he started working for the Oceanographic Institute. At present, he was guiding tours through the museum – it wasn’t his dream job, but it gave him enough money to help support them while Liz went to school. He didn’t want her to have to worry about working while she needed to study.
“Oh, God,” Liz moaned, her face flushed, her eyes closed in bliss. “Oh my God!”
Max, breathless, broke into a wide grin as he watched her. He simply loved her more every day.
After a quick shower together, then jumped into their rental car and headed toward the other side of town. Due to the President’s Day holiday, they’d been able to steal away for the weekend to return to Roswell. It was a special occasion after all, with a new baby entering the world.
“Is this the place?” Max asked from behind the wheel, glancing at the paper he had half-crushed in his hand.
“Looks like it,” Liz said as he pulled the car to the curb.
He looked at the paper again, confirmed the addresses, then they started to get out of the car. Before they could, though, he stopped and pulled Liz back into her seat.
“What?” she giggled.
“I left something behind,” he said sheepishly, lowering his hand to her neck to erase the hickey he’d placed there an hour before.
Liz laughed, gave him a quick kiss, then grabbed the gift bag and climbed out of the car. On the sidewalk, he took her hand in his as they strolled to the door of the apartment building. There was a slight nip in the air and her fingers felt cool in his.
“You going to be okay with this?” she asked, her voice cautious.
Max had been wondering how long it was going to be before she asked. Baby Zan had been gone a little over a year when Maria had announced she was pregnant. She and Michael had decided to have the baby and the fact that they didn’t feel a need to hide it only drove home to Max that maybe he’d made a mistake in giving up his son.
The cold hard truth was that there hadn’t been an ambush from anywhere. Not from the FBI or any other faction of the government. Not from any other alien life form, if there were indeed any others left on the planet. In fact, life had turned a bit dull in that regard. No one had come to knock down their door and haul them away. It was highly possible Zan could have stayed with them, that Max could have been the father he’d wanted to be.
The thought haunted him every day.
Liz was looking at him with troubled eyes and he realized he’d never answered her.
“I’m fine,” he said, trying to smile. “I’m happy for them.”
“Me, too,” she grinned, opening the door to the building.
Michael greeted them at the apartment door, looking tired but happy and proud. Max mused that his friend would never out-right tell anyone how he felt, but he didn’t need to – it was all over his face.
“Congratulations, Michael,” Liz said, reaching up to give him a hug.
“Thanks, Liz,” he mumbled as she moved past him and into the living room.
Max reached out and shook Michael’s hand. “Congratulations, papa.”
Michael chuckled as he pushed the door closed. “Come in and meet her. We’re in the living room.”
The living room was full of people, or so it seemed since it was such a small space. Maria was on the couch, Isabel was sitting on the ottoman and Liz was standing at the end of the sofa, already holding the new born baby. Max’s heart lurched in his chest, just seeing her smiling down at the infant. In his heart, he knew that someday she’d want children of her own, and he just couldn’t deny her, all the while his conscience was telling him it was wrong to give up Tess’s child but keep those that he would make with Liz.
“Hi, Max,” Isabel said as she squeezed him tightly. He hugged her in return, if a bit mechanically, his thoughts still on Liz and the new bundle of joy.
“She’s so tiny!” Liz exclaimed.
Maria adjusted her weight on the couch. “She didn’t feel tiny,” she said. “She weighs over eight pounds. She must take after her father.”
Michael shot her a glance, then went to the kitchen to retrieve drinks for everyone.
“I guess this means we’ll have to get married now,” Maria sighed, as if it was something she’d resigned herself to.
“Oh, come on,” Liz baited. “You know you’ve always wanted to marry Michael.”
“As opposed to marrying someone I actually like?”
Isabel and Liz both laughed lightly – Maria and Michael’s bantering had not diminished over the years – but Max couldn’t join them. His eyes were still fixed on Liz and the squirming bundle in her arms.
As if sensing he was transfixed, Liz crossed the living room to stand before him. Swallowing hard, his eyes drifted down to the baby, who was flailing aimlessly with her arms.
“Max, do you want to hold her?” Liz asked gently.
Sensing Maria’s eyes on him and not wanting to offend the new mother, Max reached out and took the baby in his arms. She was warm and pink and smelled like baby powder. On her head, a wisp of blond hair. For one moment, she seemed to open her eyes fully and meet his with instinctual recognition. Max blinked in surprise.
“Max,” Maria said. “Meet Alyssa.”
tbc
*borrowed some lines from Blind Date