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Title: Through the Darkness to the Light
Category: M/L AU w/Aliens ...awesome
Rated: TEEN
Disclaimer: Nothing is mine except the stuff that is (which excludes the stuff that isn't i.e. Max Evans, Liz Parker etc).
Summary: Liz Parker and Max Evans have known each other since childhood, but Liz never noticed anything...extraterrestrial about him until today. What happens when Liz Parker starts to investigate Max Evans?
Author and her note: Crusty Nut, but you guys can call me Christina. All I have to say is that it's about time (after about seven years of obsession) that I take it to the author's arena. I will now understand the plight of the author. Oh the pressure! That and, be kind, rewind.

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Part One
The bells chimed as she walked through the doors to the patio dining area. Liz Parker was doing best what she did best, and that was serve the greatest greasy, alien themed food her little town had to offer, and that just happened to be at her parents' Crashdown Café. Her white tennis shoes practically tap danced to her next customer in waiting.
“Hi, welcome to the Crashdown, my name is Liz and I’ll be your waitress. Can I start you off with something to drink?” she asked as she glanced up from her order pad.
She was in a good mood for no particular reason today. Perhaps it was because she woke up ten minutes before her alarm unceremoniously woke her up. Or perhaps it was because when she stepped outside of the café that morning on her way to school, the air hit her face in just the right way at just the right temperature. Whatever the reason, she was happy to take this order and she wasn’t about to ask why.
“I’ll have an…alien blast?” the customer half ordered and half asked. “Wow, I guess you guys have to get pretty creative.”
“Yeah. Well, you know, if you can’t beat them…” she trailed off and shrugged uselessly as she chuckled. “I’ll just go get your drink and I’ll be back to take your order.”
She’d never seen him around before. He seemed no older than twenty-five and was the desert from head to toe; sandy colored hair and a tan that spoke of lengthy periods of time spent in the sun. There was no question he was gorgeous, but what this brown-eyed desert fox was doing in Roswell, New Mexico of all places was a true mystery. But being the charming waitress she was, she intended to find out just what his story was.
Honestly, Roswell wasn’t the worst place to live. In fact, Liz loved Roswell, but she was pretty sure it was an acquired taste and the only reason people came to visit was the ’47 Crash. But no matter how hokey that was, at least it brought in good tips. This guy, however, was definitely not there for anything having to do with big-eyed E.T’s. Liz wished she could find one of those big-eyed E.T’s and have it on display at her parent’s café. That’d really wrack in the big bucks. Crashdown Café as a chain, I can just see it now. She laughed a little too loudly at the thought and received a few strange looks from other patrons, although none were her own so she wasn’t too worried.
She filled the glass with water and was making her way through the cafe and back outside. Barely through the door, her eye caught a little girl spinning in circles uncomfortably far from the sidewalk or any family. Liz rushed the water to the man’s table as she immediately left in the direction of the girl. If she had seen the car coming a second sooner she would have been sprinting, but as it was, there was no way she was going to get there in time; it was either the girl, or both of them.
The only sound to be heard was a collective gasp from the café patrons who had followed Liz with their eyes, the inhuman yelp from Liz, and the callous screeching of tires.
Her hands were over her mouth, but only for a second as she ran in front of the car searching for the tiny body. Because of the impact and the small size of the girl, her body had been thrown at least seven feet from the car. Rushing forward and falling to her knees, the only visible injuries she could see were minor. Yes, there was blood, but it didn’t look like more than a bad fall, so why wasn’t she moving? And then Liz was moved. Someone gently nudged her away but to her it was a shove, a slap, a punch in the stomach. She fell back hopelessly and just stared at the face that she could tell was losing life by the second. Where were these girls’ parents? Didn’t they care? Didn’t they see the color draining from her? She was six, maybe seven years old with curly blonde ringlet ponytails, like some perfect porcelain doll. The overalls she wore, circa 1992, reminded Liz of her own childhood and, painfully, how this sweet, spinning angel might not have one of her own.
“Liz, we need an ambulance. Go!” She faintly recognized the voice but was only focused on making sure the girl was okay, but she realized that an ambulance was the only way to make sure of that. She snapped out of her daze and took in what was happening; Max Evans, who worked at the UFO Center, was telling her to go make herself useful. “LIZ! Go! Call 911, I’ll watch her until they get here, but go!”
“Oh my God! I’m so sorry!” she exclaimed and immediately jumped up from her spot on the asphalt. As she ran across the street and onto the sidewalk someone, or rather, their arm stopped her. She shoved the arm out of her way violently. She HAD to get help, and fast.
“Liz, LIZ! It’s okay, I’ve already called the ambulance, and they should be here any second.” It was Mr. Desert himself, but the mystery was less than a priority and she made a beeline back to the girl. As she rounded the corner of the car again however, she saw something she could not explain. For a split second, she saw Max Evans, biology lab partner, UFO Center employee, cherry coke drinker holding his hand, or something above this little girl, and it was glowing. For the umpteenth time that day, she gasped. The glowing stopped and Max whipped his head up instantly. She swore at that moment he looked worried, but she tucked that thought away as she heard the ambulance sirens. When she turned back, Max was gone, and before she could begin to think about that, the paramedics took over the scene.
Liz found out that the girl’s name was Anna Garnet; she was wearing an I.D. bracelet. Miraculously, she was not only alive, but Liz was informed she would be just fine in a few days thanks to the quick response. This was much more than a miracle to Liz because when she was kneeling next to the little girl, she was barely breathing and completely unconscious. And although Liz had previously noted that there had been some blood and bad scratches, they were now minimal at best. This little girl, this Anna, looked nothing like she should having been hit by a car.
And where was Max Evans?[/b]