A Parker Family Christmas (M/L, CC, Adult)- AN 10/02 (WIP)

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OrangeSky
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Re: A Parker Family Christmas (M/L, CC, Adult)- Ch37 Pg15 1/10

Post by OrangeSky »

Turns out I won a few things over at Roswell Heaven for this story. Wow! :D

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1st Runner-Up Best Vision of Tess
1st Runner-Up Buddha Boy Award (Funniest Scene)
1st Runner-Up Blind Date w/o Aliens (Best Original Premise in an AU w/o Aliens fic)

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2nd Runner-Up Healing Stones Award (Character Most in Need of a Hug) for Isabel

I am mucho, mucho honored.
Alli
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Dean: Damn cops.
Sam: They were just doing their job.
Dean: No, they were doing our job, only they don't know it so they suck at it.
User avatar
OrangeSky
Addicted Roswellian
Posts: 221
Joined: Mon Aug 14, 2006 7:04 pm
Location: Somewhere left of center
Contact:

Re: A Parker Family Christmas (M/L, CC, Adult)- Ch37 Pg5 1/10

Post by OrangeSky »

Disclaimer: The songs used in the chapter to follow are not mine. They’re property of the Beatles and the Four Tops. No infringement intended, guys. Thank you for rocking my world.

The long awaited chapter 38 is here. Enjoy.

Chapter 38: State of Grace

R.J. Conners was having a good day.

This was not particularly out of the ordinary for him because R.J. was the kind of man who was often blessed with good days. Still, today was shaping up to be an especially good one. He’d slept like a rock the night before, dug into a fabulous breakfast courtesy of Tess, run onto the field next to his best friend and to top it all off, he’d played his best game of baseball since coming to Michigan.

And now…now he got to have dinner with Kyle’s dad Jeff. As far as R.J. was concerned, nothing got better than that.

R.J. loved Jeff Parker. This was also something that wasn’t particularly out of the ordinary. Nearly everyone who met the man fell in love with him in a matter of minutes. There was just something about him. The moment they’d met, in the winter of R.J. and Kyle’s freshman year, R.J. had felt at ease with Jeff. To R.J., Jeff was like an older version of Kyle, but with a different physical makeup and slightly tweaked mannerisms and habits. And he liked seeing the two of them interact with one another. The Parkers were a deliciously uncommon family.

R.J. pushed open the door and left the locker room for the hallway on the other side. He was met by a smiling Jeff and Tess and the moment they saw him, they rushed to him.

“That was a brilliant double play in the sixth, son.”

Jeff and R.J. embraced warmly and as they pulled away from one another, R.J. said, “Thanks, but that was mostly Kyle. If he hadn’t been able to get to the ball, I wouldn’t have had the out to turn.”

“Stop fishing. You know you’re amazing,” Tess scoffed and playfully tweaked R.J.’s nose in the space between the index and middle fingers of her right hand. He let her, and grinned as she moved his nose softly back and forth.

R.J. said, “I only let you do that because you feed me. I hope you know that.” With his nostrils squeezed together, it sounded like he was nursing a cold.

“And I only feed you because without you, Kyle wouldn’t have a double play partner that could keep up with him.”

“Ouch. You know you love me. Come on…admit it. You’re dying to.” If R.J. was attempting to be charming, the end result was less than effective. R.J. was a charming man, but even he sounded like a geek with a stopped up nose.

“R.J.? Here’s a tip.” Jeff, Tess and R.J. all turned their heads to look at the locker room door that Kyle was exiting. Tess still had her fingers wrapped around R.J.’s nose and it made for a rather comical picture to Kyle, who could barely keep his laugh in. “When trying to pick up on a gorgeous woman, it’s best not to sound as though you need a decongestant.”

“Hey! There’s no way I’m hitting on her. You know that. This isn’t even close to my best material.”

“Tess, make sure we pick up some decongestant for R.J. tonight, okay?” Kyle grinned and pinched R.J.’s cheek. “He always forgets to take care of himself when he’s sick.”

“Get off.” R.J. slapped both of their hands away from his face and scrunched his face up, drawing in air quickly through his nose. He glared at Tess. “You pinch hard.”

Tess laughed softly. “Baby.”

“Hi dad.” Kyle turned to his dad and opened up his arms. The two men embraced each other and Jeff put his open hand on the back of his son’s head. “Thanks for coming.”

They pulled away from each other and Jeff rested his hands on his son’s shoulders. Father leaned in toward son and Jeff said, “In the sixteen seasons prior to this one, I have never once missed your opening day. What on earth would make you believe that I would miss this one?” Jeff moved back slightly and softly patted his son’s cheek with an open palm. “That was a brilliant play in the sixth, by the way. And that catch above your head in the fourth? For a moment there, I was afraid your arm wasn’t long enough.”

Kyle grinned and scratched the back of his neck, his stomach twisting a little in pride. His father had never been shy with compliments, but the frequency of them didn’t make them any easier to take. Because to Kyle – to all the Parker kids, really – there was no other person in the world who had quite the same ability to make them feel special. “I guess it was just long enough.”

“Okay, who’s hungry?”

R.J. stuck his stomach out and patted it with a grimace. “Ooo…me. Nothing like a game against Ohio State to make me famished.”

Tess shook her head a little and waved her hands through the air dramatically. “Quick…let’s feed him. If we don’t he’ll just go on and on and on and on and-”

“I think they get the point, Tess.”

Tess patted him on the cheek condescendingly and Kyle laughed, quick and loud. Jeff wrapped an arm around R.J. and pulled the younger man to him, squeezing his shoulder. R.J. stumbled a little and the two of them started walking just behind a laughing Tess and Kyle and away from the locker room. Kyle had his arm around Tess’ waist and she around his and she dropped her head onto his shoulder. Anyone could see they were happy. R.J. found himself wishing he had that sort of certainty in his life.

“So, Kyle tells us that you’re not sure if you want to be drafted.”

R.J. turned his head to look at Jeff and said, “It would be an honor, don’t get me wrong, and one I’ve played for for a long time, but…”

“Even though you’re amazed someone would give you that honor, you’re not sure it’s what you want?”

“Yeah…something like that. I love baseball, I always have…I just…I don’t know.”

Jeff studied R.J. for a moment. Jeff took note of the way R.J.’s eyes were moving back and forth, at the younger man’s slightly hunched shoulders and furrowed eyebrows. R.J. was rubbing the tips of his fingers together with increasingly harder pressure and Jeff said, “Fear is an elusive thing, isn’t it?”

R.J. stopped briefly and stared at Jeff and Jeff could be mistaken, but he almost saw a smile in R.J.’s eyes. R.J. sighed and said, “You’re really good, you know that?”

Jeff smiled but said nothing and the two stood there as Kyle and Tess started to get further and further away.

“I know I’m good, but how good am I? I’ve never played as well as I have here, and I wonder if that’s all because of Kyle sometimes. And then I start to think, well, maybe Kyle and I could be drafted by the same team and I wouldn’t have to find out how good I am, but that’s not all that likely. And then I start to wonder…are there other people more deserving than me? People who don’t question the fact that they love the game and go out there and give everything their best, even though they aren’t as good as, well, someone like me? Do they deserve the uniform and the contract more? And if I do decide to get drafted and say I have a long career…is that all I’ll ever be?”

“Is that all you are now?”

They started to walk again. “Sometimes I think all I’ve ever been is an athlete.”

“Only because you’ve fooled yourself into thinking that. No one is ever just one thing. It’s one of the truly wonderful things about being human. What else do you love?”

“Them.” R.J. indicated a happy, laughing Kyle and Tess in front of him. “I read a lot. Books on history, mainly. I like to draw. I’m not all that good at it, but I think it relaxes me.” He sighed. “My little sister, and that look she always has on her face when I come home. I love that she still gets excited when I walk through the door. Uh…a lot of things, I guess.”

Jeff nodded. “Yes…I suspected as much. I think the more aware you are of the things you love, the more aware you are of yourself.”

“What do you love?”

Jeff’s answer was immediate. “My kids.” He smiled. “My kids.”

“That was an obvious answer.”

“Well, they can’t help it, the loveable buggers. The moment each of them was born my heart expanded and adapted in a way I would never have been able to comprehend before. They have done amazing things for me, just by being alive. So it’s only natural they would occupy the most central part of my heart. But I love many, many things, R.J.” He paused and thought a moment, tilting his head just slightly to the side. “On Robert Frost’s tombstone, it says ‘He had a lover’s quarrel with the world’. I think that’s a lovely truth.”

“But how do you balance it all?”

Jeff made a small hmm sound and said, “I don’t think it’s really about that. When you love something you make room for it. And the other things you love make room for it too. Your heart’s always big enough to allow something new in.”

“So say I’m drafted and say I have a nice, long career…is that all I’ll ever be? Is that how people will see me the rest of my life?”

“Does it matter?”

“I don’t know.”

Far in front of them, Kyle and Tess had reached the car and were waiting patiently, leaning against the doors. Jeff smiled as he saw them and said, “What matters, really, is how happy you are with who you are. And that’s easy to say, but not so easy to realize. Here’s what I think: listen to your heart, R.J. No matter what, it has your best interests at hand. And no one knows it like you.”

R.J. thought for a long time before saying, “Thank you. I think I know what to do now.”

“I’m glad I could help, even if just in a small way.”

“I take back what I said. You’re not really good at this. You’re frickin’ amazing.”

Jeff laughed.

They reached the car and Jeff said, “It would be very interesting if you both went to the same team.”

“Not likely to happen.”

“What’s not likely to happen?” Kyle asked as he and Tess moved from their spots against the car doors.

“The two of us getting drafted together.”

“Since we’re probably both going in the same round, you’re right.”

Jeff smiled. “Oh, you never know. The universe is funny that way.”

They got in the car and Tess suddenly turned to R.J. and asked, “Hey, R.J.? What did you say to the player who was on second base in the third inning?”

“The one Kyle and I picked off?” She nodded. “We might have mentioned that someone of his size probably shouldn’t have been trying to steal a base. And then we may have asked where his girlfriend was, since she seemed to have just reappeared at that moment, wiping her mouth with a napkin.”

“You said that?”

“Well, I believe we used far more graphic terminology than that.”

She shook her head. “I pity any team that wants to take the both of you.”

-:-:-:-

Alex whistled happily as he moved around the kitchen of the apartment he shared with his girlfriend and his twin sister. He pulled pans out of cabinets and food out of the fridge and all in all, was in the middle of making a huge mess when he turned and saw Isabel, leaning on the doorframe as she watched him. She smiled, tossed her blonde hair and crossed her arms and he grinned at her from his place in front of the sink.

“Like what you see, huh?” He lifted his eyebrows up and down quickly in a mock-lascivious fashion, pouting his lips.

Isabel laughed deeply, unintentionally throwing her head back. “Oh…you know it.”

Alex adopted a fake French accent that oozed out the sides of his mouth with sleaze. “But of course. What female can resist the sexual power of Alexander Parker?”

“Me, for one.” Liz breezed past Isabel and into the kitchen, grinning as she nudged her brother out of the way with her elbow. Alex nudged her right back and Liz stumbled a little with a grin.

“This is true, ma cher. But you have moi at a disadvantage. Tu es ma soeur.”

“Hey…that accent is really getting good.” Liz hopped up on the counter and crossed her legs at the ankles, flexing her feet in her rainbow-striped socks.

Alex smiled brightly. “Thanks! I’ve been working on it. How was the skeeze factor?”

“I don’t know.” Liz looked at Isabel. “What do you think, girlfriend of Alex? Is he skeezy enough for you?”

Isabel lifted herself from the doorway and walked over to the twins, holding her right thumb and pointer finger apart by about an inch. “Just…enough, I think.” She stood in front of Alex and he wrapped his arms around her and brought his face down to kiss her.

“So what’s the mess in here all about, Al?” Liz gestured around the kitchen and Alex drew back from Isabel to look at his sister.

“Today is a day of celebration, so…I thought we should have a big breakfast.”

“No, no…I get that. What I’m trying to get is why you’re about to make breakfast when you can’t cook to save your life.”

Alex pouted, a little wounded. “Hey…a guy can try, can’t he?”

“Not when it comes to our stomachs, honey.” Isabel patted him on the chest and Alex’s arms tightened a little around her. “Sorry. The thought was nice, though.”

Liz groaned. “Oh…I can’t wait to finally have this thing off.” She flung her left, cast-covered arm in the air. The orange cast was much dingier than it had been the first day, and it was covered with writing and pictures in black and blue permanent marker. Maria had inscribed lyrics from the song “Someone to Watch Over Me” – one of Liz’s mother’s favorite songs – all along the base of the cast so that they circled her arm. Every so often when Liz looked down at her cast, she would confuse Maria’s handwriting for her mom’s.

“Yeah, well…at least yours is on your arm. Do you have any idea how hard it is to be a rock god with a blue cast on your leg?” Alex lifted his pajama pant leg a little and flung his right leg, but succeeded only in kicking the cabinet door behind him.

Isabel moved back from Alex as he jumped away from the cabinet out of shock and laughed. “See honey? You and the kitchen don’t mix.”

Liz laughed and leaned her head against the refrigerator as Alex sighed, resigned to his fate. “Okay…message coming in loud and clear. Anything I can do to help?”

Liz scoffed. “Well, yeah. We need great tunes to cook to. Who else would we trust music choice to but a rock god?”

“Okay, I shall take on your challenge.” Alex moved away from the counter and rotated so that he was standing in front of Liz. He put a finger in her face and said, “But only because you finally admitted the truth and called me a god.”

Liz snapped at his finger with a grin and he pulled it back quickly before poking her in the forehead. Liz shoved him in the butt with the toes of her left foot and Alex laughed as he stumbled a little across the kitchen floor. He hobbled out of the kitchen and Liz hopped down off the counter. “So…what do you want to make?”

“Uh…” Isabel swiveled her head and looked around the kitchen at Alex’s mess. “How about omelets? Looks like we have all the stuff for it.”

“With a side of home fries, maybe? Do we have any potatoes?”

The two girls searched through the Alex-made clutter on the kitchen counters and Isabel came up with something brownish in a plastic produce bag. Holding it up in the air, she gave the bag a wary look and said, “I think I found the potatoes.”

Liz stopped searching and looked up at Isabel. She wrinkled her nose. “Tell me those aren’t them.”

“Okay, they aren’t them.”

Liz rolled her eyes and smiled a little. “We have to have other potatoes. I swear I bought some just the other day.” Liz opened a few other cabinets, searching each one for other, not so hideous potatoes. “Aha!” She pulled back out of the cabinet and triumphantly held up a bag of potatoes. “I knew we had to have more.”

Isabel said, “Oh thank God” and tossed the bag of potatoes that once were into the kitchen garbage can. “Remind me to empty that trash before we leave today.”

“You got it.” Liz turned toward the kitchen doorway and shouted, “Hey Alex…how’re the tunes comin’?”

The air in the apartment was suddenly filled with music and John Lennon’s voice came floating into the kitchen.

Oh yeah, I'll tell you something,
I think you'll understand.
When I'll say that something
I want to hold your hand,
I want to hold your hand,
I want to hold your hand.


“Does that answer your question, Lizzy?”

“Oh yeah.”

Oh please, say to me
You'll let me be your man


Alex suddenly appeared over Isabel’s shoulder, just as she was chopping up mushrooms. He sang in her ear and startled her a little but she laughed immediately after and kissed him on the cheek. “Does that answer your question?”

And please, say to me
You'll let me hold your hand.
Now let me hold your hand,
I want to hold your hand.


“Oh yeah.”

And when I touch you I feel happy inside.
It's such a feeling that my love
I can't hide, I can't hide, I can't hide.


Liz and Isabel danced around the kitchen and each other, singing as they beat eggs and chopped vegetables. Alex tried his best to dance but it was a mostly futile attempt, what with the cast on his leg.

Yeah, you've got that something,
I think you'll understand.
When I'll say that something
I want to hold your hand,
I want to hold your hand,
I want to hold your hand.

And when I touch you I feel happy inside.
It's such a feeling that my love
I can't hide, I can't hide, I can't hide.

Yeh, you've got that something,
I think you'll understand.
When I'll feel that something
I want to hold your hand,
I want to hold your hand,
I want to hold your hand.


After the Beatles came Fats Domino with Ain’t That a Shame and after that The Go-Gos and We Got the Beat. Alex knew his music mixes, that was for sure.

Liz gave the home fries a final shake and flip in the frying pan and pulled them off the stove, singing along to the newest song on the stereo, I Can’t Help Myself. The Four Tops. Another solid Alex choice.

Sugar pie honey bunch
You know that I love you
I can’t help myself
I love you and nobody else


Liz twirled past Isabel and headed through the doorway and toward the table. Isabel slid the last of the omelets from the frying pan and onto the plate in her left hand and headed in the same direction as Liz. She joined in the singing and plopped each omelet down on a plate, one by one.

When you snap your fingers or wink your eye
I come runnin’ to you
I’m tied to your apron strings
And there’s nothin’ that I can do


Alex hobbled around the table and filled glasses with orange juice as he sang. He bobbed his head and when Liz came up next to him and shimmied with her back to him, he shimmied right back, laughing.

Sugar pie honey bunch
I’m weaker than a man should be
I can’t help myself
I’m a fool in love you see


They sat as the song ended and Alex reached for the remote to turn the volume on the stereo down. He stared down at his plate and smiled. “Look at this gorgeous food. Am I a lucky man or what?”

“Or what.”

“You know Liz, every once in a while a simple you’re welcome will suffice. Am I really asking for so much? I complement you on your cooking skills and all you can give me is…”

Liz and Isabel spared a glance and a grin at one another as Alex rambled with a smile twitching the corners of his mouth.

“Alex?”
“Alex?”

Alex looked at the two of them, startled out of his own speech. “Yes?”

“You’re welcome.”
“You’re welcome.”

-:-:-:-

“How long does it take to get a cast off?” An anxious Isabel stood from her plastic hospital chair with a jerk and started to pace.

Liz and Alex exchanged an amused glance and Liz said, “You know, Iz…considering you’re not the one getting your cast off, you’re awfully nervous.”

Isabel paused her pacing and said, “Yeah, well…the last time I was in a hospital the two of you were having a hard time not being hurt and unconscious and all that.”

Liz flipped her head and looked at Alex, who was seated next to her. “The lady has a point.”

“True.” He looked at Isabel, cocking his head to the side. “You know Isabel, that wasn’t our first time in the hospital.”

Isabel seemed to consider that for a bit. “I’m almost afraid to ask, but okay…I’ll bite. How many times have you been in the hospital?”

“Me? Or Liz?”

“You…Liz…the both of you.”

“Six times.”
“Six times.”

Isabel paused. “You really do do everything together, don’t you?”

Liz shifted and scratched her right knee. “Technically, we’ve only been in the hospital at the same time three times. So it’s actually a much lower average than normal for us. Only fifty percent.”

“Can you blame us? I mean…what would you do if your older brother dared you to climb the roof of the main winery building?”

Isabel blinked. “Stay on the ground like a sane person?”

Liz’s cell phone rang just then and she scrambled to pick it up. “Hello?”

Hey!

Liz pulled the phone away from her ear with a smile on her face and said, “It’s Maria!”

“Hi Maria!”
“Hi Maria!”

“Alex and Izzy say hi.”

Put me on speaker.

Liz did, and held the phone out further toward the center of the room.

Hi guys!

“Hi Maria! How are you?”

Good, good. By the way, are you aware that Hallmark carries exactly no Castoff Day cards? It’s a tragedy. I mean, where’s the diversity?

“Well…maybe Hallmark hasn’t caught on yet to Parker Family Castoff Day celebrations.”

It’s a tragedy, I tell you. So…are they gone yet?

Alex sighed and said, “Unfortunately no, Maria. We remain plaster encased for the time being.” Alex swung his leg back and forth, knocking into Liz’s leg. She jumped and gave him a dirty look. He simply grinned.

What’s taking so long?

“Doctor Brauer had a few emergency patients come in, so he needed to see them first. A little boy cracked his head open, a man accidentally speared his arm with a slat from his fence…that sort of thing.”

Maria scoffed. Please…it’s just a head wound. It could have waited. Don’t they know it’s Castoff Day? She laughed softly, enjoying the absurdity of her own joke.

“Well, Alex tried to tell them but it really came out more like a whine.”

“Hey!”

Isabel smiled and stopped her pacing when she heard Maria laugh heartily from her end of the phone.

“Listen Maria…we should probably get off the phone. The hospital staff is sorta strict about that kind of thing.”

Okay guys. Call me when the mean doctor finally gets off his lazy ass and cuts your casts off so we can celebrate.

“Of course.”

Maria, Liz, Alex and Isabel exchanged I love yous and goodbyes and hung up the phone and after just a few seconds, Isabel resumed her pacing. Liz and Alex exchanged a look and Alex said, “So the waiting is driving you nuts, huh?”

Isabel spared him a glance laced in irritation.

Sensing some sort of coming carnage, Liz said, “Iz…why don’t you get out of here?”

Isabel scrunched her forehead. “You don’t want me here?”

Liz laughed shortly, realizing her mistake. “Sorry, I didn’t mean that. Of course we want you here. No…I meant why don’t you leave the room? Wander around, burn off some energy. Go take a walk past the nursery and coo over the babies. We promise we’ll call when Doctor Brauer comes back.”

“You sure?”

“We’re sure.”
“We’re sure.”

Alex made a shooing motion with his hand. “Go… enjoy yourself…spread your wings…fly. Send us a postcard when you get where you’re going.”

Isabel leveled him with a look that was only half as severe as it could have been and Alex blew her a kiss with a grin. She smiled, walked out the doorway and let her fingers trail along the silver-toned handle as she finally released her hold on the door.

Isabel walked slowly down the hospital hallway, her hands in her pockets and her eyes wandering every which way. A few nurses in cartoon scrubs walked by her, followed by an orderly in gray scrubs, pushing a young girl in a wheelchair. She was smiling and bobbing her head as she sang the second verse to the song Dear Liza. The orderly -- a very tall, large black man -- was grinning as he sang with her. He followed the tradition of the song and sang every other line in his deep, rich, off-key baritone. When he sang “With what shall I mend it, dear Liza, dear Liza? With what shall I mend it, dear Liza with what?” the little girl turned her head and giggled as she admonished him with the next line.

“With some stra-aw, dear Henry, dear Henry, dear Henry. With some stra-aw dear Henry, dear Henry some straw.”

They were lovely.

Isabel smiled at their backs and kept walking. She spied a sign at the end of the hallway that pointed out the direction to the nursery and she decided she’d head in that direction. With all the bad things hospitals had a talent for attracting, they were also responsible for attracting what Isabel considered to be one of the best things: the bringing of new life into the world.

Isabel didn’t hate hospitals and they certainly didn’t unnerve her – no one who spent their free time as a teenager cheering up sick kids in hospitals could ever feel that way – but she hated the standing around and waiting. When she was in a hospital she always felt the urge to do something. So she was glad Liz and Alex had told her to leave them be and try to burn off her un-burnoffable energy. She’d wanted an excuse to wander.

Isabel spotted the hospital gift shop up ahead and decided to take a detour. She wanted to see the babies, freshly scrubbed and new, but she’d get there eventually. No reason to rush. She walked over to the wall with the racks of magazines and her eyes wandered from the latest issue of InStyle to the Red Hot Chili Peppers on the cover of Rolling Stone to This Old House with a picture of a garden wall but her eyes stopped when she reached a familiar face.

She paid for the magazine and stared at the smiling face of Jeff as she entered the hallway and headed back toward Alex and Liz. She paid little mind to where she was going or who she might run into and she was forced to apologize more than once for her inattention. Eventually she reached the room and opened the door.

“Great timing, Iz. We were just about to call you.”

Isabel looked up at Liz and noticed the doctor was now standing in the room with them. He was an older man of average height with a small potbelly and glasses. He had stark white hair and ruddy skin and Isabel imagined him on the floor on his knees, happily playing with his grandchildren.

“Hi Doctor Brauer.”

“Hello again, Isabel. You’re just in time to look at the x-rays with us.” Doctor Brauer flipped the switch on a wall-mounted light box and stuck the x-rays up under the box’s top lip, pinning them in place. He examined them a moment then said, “Well, it all looks good to me. How would you like to get those casts cut off?”

“Yes please!”
“Yes please!”

The doctor chuckled and said, “Oh, I love twins. They make life so much more interesting.”

Alex and Liz looked at each other and grinned.

“Doctor Brauer?”

“Yes, Liz?”

She grinned. “What would you say if I told you we had older brothers who were twins too?”

“Really?” She nodded. “Well, then I’d say your parents must have the stamina of oxen.” He laughed and turned from them, reaching for a saw that wasn’t there. “That’s strange.” He scratched his head and removed his glass for a moment. “Looks like someone moved the saw. I’ll be right back.”

As he left, Alex looked at Isabel and asked, “So you visited the gift shop, huh?” At Isabel’s confused reaction, he added, “You’re holding a magazine.”

“Oh…right.” She moved the magazine so she was once again looking at the front cover. “I was looking at the magazines when I saw this.” She looked up and flipped the magazine around so that Alex and Liz could see the front cover. “Did you know dad was going to be on the cover of Forbes?”

Isabel handed Liz the magazine when the shorter woman reached for it and Liz held the magazine in the space between her and Alex. They studied the picture of their dad for a few moments. He was standing in front of the tasting room’s intricately carved wooden double doors with his sleeves rolled up and his arms crossed across his chest. Jeff was looking right through the camera mid grin, as if the photographer had said something terribly funny and waited until just before Jeff laughed before snapping the picture. The title of the article was printed in red, just below his arms.

State of Grace.

He looked joyful.

He looked like himself.

The door swung open and Isabel, Alex and Liz turned their eyes from the magazine to Doctor Brauer, who was now standing in the doorway holding a saw. “Alright…who’s first?”

-:-:-:-

Jim Valenti had had a long day.

It wasn’t always this way. Sometimes it was all he could do to not let the day run away from him. But then, it was the nature of his job. Being a sheriff meant that some days all he did was pick up drunks and have them sleep it off in a cell and on others, he had call after call after call, all different.

Today had been a drunk day.

He sighed as he opened his front door and pulled his jacket off, hanging it on the wall-mounted coat rack. He loosened his tie and walked into the kitchen, pulling a beer out of the fridge and twisting the cap off before leaning back against the counter just to the right of the fridge. He took his time, sipping the beer slowly, enjoying the tang of it as it slid down his throat. It was the smallest of pleasures but after a shift like he’d had, a shift that he’d wanted to end as soon as it had begun, it was just enough. It was just enough to make the irritations and unpleasantness of the day fade.

A soft sound filtered in through the open doorway of the kitchen and Jim paused with the bottle partway up to his mouth. The melodic sound stopped and started in varying degrees with moments of silence followed by bright, strong notes. Jim knew who it was. It was Maria, working on a new song.

Jim moved from the counter and walked toward the sound, down the hallway and toward the family room. He paused in the doorway and watched as she sat on the floor cross-legged, leaning over a guitar resting on her right thigh. She tucked a strand of hair behind her left ear and wrote on the piece of paper sitting on the floor in front of her with a pencil. When she was done she put the pencil in her teeth and shifted to start playing again. The melody was slow and sweet and held just the smallest hint of longing. Maria stopped after about a minute, scrunching up her nose. She was obviously unsatisfied with something.

“It’s beautiful.”

She removed the pencil from her teeth and tucked it behind her right ear. “It’s not working, and I can’t figure out why.” She looked up at him. “But thank you.”

“I wish I had your kind of talent. I’m not really good at anything.” Jim scratched his head and shrugged, smiling a little self-deprecatingly. “I can’t even sing country songs in the shower on key.”

Maria sat back on her bottom, twisting the guitar in her lap up just a little. She held her guitar with her hands crossing the point where the neck met the body and she tilted her head a little to the side as she considered his words. “I don’t know about that. You keep people safe everyday. That’s a talent. I’m not sure I could do that.”

Jim walked further into the room, tapping the partially full bottle of beer against his thigh. Jim was not a man of words. It always felt to him that he didn’t know the right thing to say at the right time, and this whole situation with Maria was still a little uncomfortable to him. He didn’t know exactly the right way to act around her. He had married her mom, sure, but that didn’t mean he had an automatic window into Maria’s mind. “This is…uh…”

Perhaps Maria sensed the awkwardness in the room too, because she finished his sentence. “Awkward?”

He sighed a little in relief. He was glad he wasn’t the only one who sensed that. “Yeah.”

“Why?” She had a mischievous smile on her face. “Because you were the one who had to tell my mom about what I did to Tommy Jenkins when I was nine?”

He let out a small smile. “In part.”

Maria analyzed him for a minute and saw that there was something else there, something concealed beneath the surface of his face. Maria didn’t think it was necessarily intentional. It seemed more like an unconscious action to her. “Jim?” His eyes met hers and he lifted his eyebrows in response. “What’s the real reason?”

Jim looked at her a bit. Maria looked right back at him, patiently waiting for an answer as the tips of the fingers of her left hand absentmindedly stroked the strings of the guitar in her lap. After a while he sighed and sat down on the arm of the dark green couch, setting his beer bottle down on the nearby coffee table on top of a stack of magazines. “I’ve known you your entire life. I was there when you took your first steps. I caught you before you fell. Did you know that?”

Maria nodded. She did know that. She knew that story well. Her mom had told it to her many times, sometimes as she tucked little Maria into bed, sometimes as Maria put on her backpack and headed off to school. Amy had often reminded Maria that even though there were certain people in her life that might let her down, there were always other people willing to catch her. Jim was one of those people.

He wasn’t the sort of man who drew attention to himself, like Jeff did and Nancy had, but he was solid and honest and true; the kind of man who was always there. In Maria’s bright, colorful memories he was always the one in the back, asking nothing and silently watching over everything, making sure that everyone was okay.

“I’ve known you for a long time. I’ve watched you grow up. You said it…I was the one who had to tell your mom you punched Tommy Jenkins in the face that day.” Maria laughed at that. “And I was also there the day your dad left.

“I’m not good with words or advice or anything like that. That’s always been Jeff’s area. Even when we were kids people asked for his counsel.” He sighed a little and said, “I guess what I’m trying to say is that…even though I’ve known you since you were a baby, this situation is really new for all of us and…I just want to make sure that you know I’m…here…for you too, not just your mom.”

“He’s my dad, yeah…but he’s also the man who had an uncanny knack for breaking my mom’s heart, again…and again…and again.” She flipped the guitar a little so the back was resting on her thighs then leaned over it, resting her palms on the floor. “He was a handsome, charismatic man who spent most of the time he was with us wishing he was somewhere else.

“You love my mom, Jim. That’s more than my father ever managed to do. You’re a good, kind man and you make her happy. That’s something she deserved to have a long time ago. So…thank you.”

Jim nodded, humbled by the kindness and sincerity of her words. He pointed at the guitar resting in her lap and said, “That’s Nancy’s old guitar, isn’t it?”

Maria looked down at her lap and said, “Yeah, it’s NiNi’s. Pop gave it to me at lunch a few weeks ago. He said she wanted me to have it.”

Jim looked at the guitar fondly. “I remember when she was teaching all of you to play. You were all so small.” He laughed softly. “I was sure your arms weren’t going to fit around the thing.”

Maria laughed. “They didn’t. None of our arms did.”

“But you all learned.”

“NiNi was a great teacher. She was always incredibly patient.”

Jim scratched behind his left ear. “Well, she had four children. Five if we include you. I imagine she had to be patient.”

“I miss her so much sometimes.”

“Well, she’s not far.” He stood from the arm of the sofa and walked over to Maria, looking down at the guitar. “She left a piece of herself with all of us, I think. When someone matters to you, that’s just what happens. Nancy will never really be gone.”

The expression in Maria’s eyes changed and a slow smile began to spread over her face. “Jim…I think you just fixed my song for me.” She pulled the pencil from behind her ear and quickly started to write on the piece of paper on the floor in front of her.

A slightly confused Jim said, “You’re welcome” and smiled as Maria looked up briefly and gave him a wide grin. He wasn’t exactly sure what he had done, but apparently it was something good.

He walked across the family room but spared Maria one final glance over his shoulder before he left the room. She was still writing like mad, a smile on her face. She looked a lot like her mother right then, caught up as she was in something she loved.

His day suddenly felt like it hadn’t been nearly so long or tedious.

-:-:-:-

“I have no idea what I’m going to do.”

“You mind clarifying that?” Michael poked his head out of the kitchen and looked at Max, who was scrubbing his face with his hands. Max had just woken up and was sitting at the table in his pajamas and bare feet, yawning and bleary-eyed.

“I’m talking about when we graduate. I have no idea what I’m going to do when we graduate.”

Michael narrowed his eyes a little, as if he was thinking the answer was obvious. “You’re going to New York.”

Max nodded but said, “Beyond that, Mike. I have no idea what to do with my degree.” He dropped his head onto his arms, looking down at the surface of the table.

Michael stepped out of the kitchen and said, “Well…what do you love?”

Max lifted his head up. “Your sister.”

Michael smiled. “Have you talked to anyone about that?”

Max grinned. “About loving your sister? Call me old-fashioned, but I think that’s between me and Liz.”

Michael snorted and sat down across from Max at the table. “I swear, sometimes you’re more difficult to have a conversation with than Alex.”

“Is that an insult? I can’t tell.”

Michael laughed, short and quick. “That’s because you look like death. Did you sleep at all last night?”

“Uh…” Max scrunched his face up and unfocused his eyes briefly as he mulled over Michael’s question. “I think I got about twenty minutes somewhere between two and three AM.” At Michael’s surprised look, Max added, “No, it wasn’t that bad. I was just…in and out all night. Restless.”

“Why?”

“We’re getting closer and closer to graduation and everyone I’ve talked to knows exactly what they’re going to do. I, on the other hand, have absolutely no clue at all.”

“Hmm. Well, have you told anyone that? Talked to someone?”

“I’m talking to you.”

“Someone with more experience than me, Max. I’ve known what I was going to do since I was a kid.” Max shook his head, partially, Michael thought, to try to chase away the cobwebs floating around in his head. “Look…call dad. If nothing else, he always knows how to make you feel better.” Michael stood, clapped Max on the shoulder and walked back to his bedroom.

Max watched Michael walk away from over his left shoulder, keeping his eyes fixed on his best friend’s back until he was out of sight. He tapped his fingers on the table and dropped his chin into his left hand as he stared at the phone, seated on its docking station across the room. He watched the red light blink every so often, letting Max know there was a saved message on the machine. It was from Kyle. Michael had called his twin brother after Kyle’s win against Ohio State and this was Kyle’s return call. Michael had smiled as he listened then immediately pressed the button to save the message when it was done.

Max got up from the table and walked over to the phone. He pressed the play button on the answering machine and stood there, scratching the back of his neck as he listened.

Saved…message. Thursday…eight…twenty-four…PM.

Hey Mike, thanks for the call. Looks like you called me just as I was leaving the field. But you’re always the first, so…


Kyle laughed.

Sorry I didn’t call sooner. Dad flew in and we’ve been out at dinner. You know how we say that dad always seems to be in the right place at the right time? Yeah, it was another one of those times.

Kyle paused and switched gears, obviously knowing he only had so much time before the machine cut him off.

Interesting you mention that play in the second inning. No one else did. But as I was reaching for that ball, I knew there was no way I was going to catch it. No way. But…I did. I guess you’re right…some part of what I do is just what I already know. Eliminate the thinking and the guesswork and the anticipation and it always comes down to what I already know. So I’m probably telling you something you already know, but you’re right Mike…my brain didn’t make that catch. I did.

Kyle laughed again.

Damn…you’re too smart for your own good sometimes. But there’s something about it, isn’t there? Eliminating the thinking and just doing?

Kyle paused a moment. This was the part of the message Max didn’t really understand. Most of the message sounded exactly like any other message from Kyle, but this part didn’t make any sense at all to Max. But it didn’t matter if Max understood it, really. The message wasn’t for him. Michael…well, Michael seemed to understand it completely. Had Michael saved the message for the cryptic words or had he saved it for the entirety of his brother’s voice?

Chaos and peace. That’s always the last thing I think of before I take the field. But…I think you knew that too. Buddha once said that whatever words we utter should be chosen with care, for people will hear them and be influenced by them for good or ill.

Chaos and peace.


Kyle paused again and Max heard a sound in the background.

Alright…Tess is calling me back to the table. I love you. And thanks for the call.

There was silence for about a second before the answering machine chimed in.

End of…messages.

Max stood in front of the phone a while longer, scratching the back of his head. Michael came out of his room a bit later, dressed and ready for class. Max turned and asked, “Psychology class?”

“Yeah.” Michael picked his jacket up off the back of one of the dining room chairs and slipped it on.

“How’s that going?” Max walked into the kitchen and pulled a bowl down from the cabinet.

“Eh…it’s not as bad as I thought it was going to be. I’ll see you later tonight.” Michael picked up his backpack and headed toward the front door.

“Later.”

“And call dad.”

-:-:-:-

Michael looked down at his notebook as he took notes on the lecture. He shifted in his seat, listening as Professor Rinter went on about environmental factors in human development. He was only about half-listening and doodled in the margins of his paper when the professor started to elaborate on a topic Michael had already written down the facts for. Professor Rinter had a habit of droning on, and his voice had a way of making Michael sleepy. Still, the class was more interesting than he’d thought it would be and he figured that at the very least, he could learn something and bring it back to Parker Vineyards.

The talking ceased and Michael lifted his eyes from his paper as the professor said, “Yes, Mr. Herring?”

A man with pale skin and short, curly blonde hair lowered his hand and said, “I was wondering what effect birth order had on the psychological development of a child.”

Michael looked at the other student briefly before turning his head to Professor Rinter, who lifted his eyebrows quickly then sat down on the edge of his desk. “Well, that’s debatable. Some psychologists feel that birth order is important and some feel that it’s far too inaccurate to include as a valid factor in development. Birth order really lies in the realm of pop psychology.” The entire class continued to stare at him and he added, “Over time, it has been discovered that birth order isn’t always accurate. There are many cases I could site, in fact, where the children in a family don’t follow the rules of birth order for development. But there are also many cases I could site who do.

“What it really comes down to, Mr. Herring, is that birth order may have an effect, but it probably doesn’t. It’s much more likely that other factors are far greater influences on development, like how old the parents are or how involved the extended family is.”

“Let’s say it does have an effect. What would that look like?”

Proffer Rinter shifted on his desk and crossed his arms. “Well, it tends to follow a similar pattern. Oldest children are the most responsible, and the ones who feel it’s their job to take care of their family. Second children tend to be team players…they do well in team sports. They learn early to help out, and they’re probably the most easy-going. Third children tend to be mediators. They’re interested in everyone getting along and they tend to take the world on their shoulders sometimes, just to make people happy. The youngest child is the sweet, carefree one. They do well socially and often feel that they can take risks.

“But keep in mind that any of these roles can be switched around, due to other factors.”

“Like what?” That was another student, a girl with long brown hair and a little upturned nose.

“Like…great loss, for instance. Death of a parent or child can reverse birth order positions. Also, if one or more of the children are mentally or physically handicapped in some way that could effect birth order positions as well.” The students were silent but nodded their heads and the professor said, “Does that answer your question? Good.”

Michael looked back down at his notebook as Professor Rinter continued where he’d left off in his lecture and glanced at the doodles along the margin. There was a number one, a two, a three and a four, block style with shading, and underneath the numbers he’d written a name.

One. Michael.

Two. Kyle.

Three. Liz.

Four. Alex.

He stared at those names a while, so long the letters began to look wrong to him.

One. Michael. The responsible one.

Two. Kyle. The team player.

Three. Liz. The mediator.

Four. Alex. The social butterfly.

Michael lost all thought of following the professor’s lecture. Alex and Liz had switched positions. Birth order may have been one of the softer areas of psychology, but the names and numbers were screaming at him from his paper.

One. Michael.

Two. Kyle.

Three. Liz.

Four. Alex.

One who felt the need to protect everyone they loved, one who understood when to compromise but always fought until the end, one with the weight of the world on her shoulders who never once asked why me and one who had an uncanny gift of making anyone, anywhere, smile.

Michael repeated two of the phrases over and over in his mind, adding a different emphasis every time.

The weight of the world on her shoulders.

An uncanny gift of laughter.

The weight of the world on her shoulders.

An uncanny gift of laughter.

The weight of the world on her shoulders.

An uncanny gift.

When did Liz and Alex switch?

Michael glanced up at the professor briefly then looked back down at his notebook.

The weight of the world on her shoulders.

Michael sighed, shut his eyes and dropped his head down into his hand. She’d done it for them because they needed it but they hadn’t taken the time to tell her what it meant. They hadn’t taken the time to tell her they appreciated her. They hadn’t thanked her for any of it. She had thanked them countless times but they hadn’t thanked her once. At least, he didn’t think he had. He was grateful for her more and more all the time, but had he ever told her that?

Michael wasn’t the kind of guy who said so much as did, but did Liz understand that? All of a sudden, he wasn’t so sure. He wasn’t sure that his actions translated to words for her and the very thought of it was making him anxious. He wanted to be out of his classroom and on his way to figuring out if he’d actually done something wrong at all.

And Michael couldn’t help but think that as observant as he was sometimes, there were other times when he just might be considered the densest man in the entire state of Illinois.

He really hoped he wasn’t.
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Re: A Parker Family Christmas (M/L, CC, Adult)- AN Pg16 7/10

Post by OrangeSky »

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kay_b- Thank you Kay, and I'm glad you found your way to my little story. And just so you know, I don't think your feedback was short. Plus, in my mind, any feedback at all rocks, so... I'm glad my fic has touched you, and thanks again.
LizMichael 4 Ever- You are a very brave person to read it all in such a short period of time. I'm not sure I could do it. :lol: Being that with this next chapter we're up to...oh...447 pages in word. Yikes! Thank you for sticking with it and me. I appreciate it. :D
Say- I don't think I've ever paused when I was reading feedback before, but I did with yours. Words are powerful things, you proved that. And thank you for bugging me. :lol:

To all lurkers...hello!

Look! It's here! Thank you for all you guys (and girls, if that endearment bothers you in any way) do for me. If my words affect you in any way, then yours affect me ten times more. Not an exaggeration, I assure you.

I don't own Forbes, but that's probably incredibly obvious to you. None the less I must say it, and so here I am, saying it.

And here's chapter 39. Enjoy.

Chapter 39: As I Am

“I can walk like a normal person now!” Alex let out a massive sigh and spread his arms wide, accepting the January day.

Liz clutched the sides of her head, as though in extreme pain. “So…many…insults. Brain…in…overload.”

“Shut up.” Alex laughed and shoved her softly, making Liz stagger a bit to her left. She laughed and shoved him right back. Alex lost his footing just a bit and slipped across an icy patch of New York sidewalk.

Having just left the hospital, the threesome was in search of a place to eat. This was due mostly to Alex, who had declared as soon as they exited the hospital that he was a growing boy and needed nourishment.

“So, seriously…why aren’t you guys more surprised to see him on the cover of Forbes?”

Liz and Alex threw each other a look behind Isabel’s head. It was easy to forget that Isabel hadn’t grown up with them, and so wasn’t acquainted with the idea of seeing her dad on the cover of a magazine or on a broadcast of a major news network or throwing out the first pitch in a Major League Baseball game. It was something they simply glossed over because their dad, famous in his own right, never put much emphasis on celebrity. They’d have to make an effort in the future to remember that much of this was new to her.

“Well…it’s something we’re used to, Iz.” Liz took the magazine from Isabel, and the taller girl followed the movement with her head.

“Yeah.” Alex wrapped an arm around his girlfriend’s shoulders, pressing her body into his side. “Dad being famous doesn’t really faze us. Never really did. By the way…I really, really like being able to hold you like this.”

Isabel laughed and rolled her eyes at him. “You are such a dork.”

“True. But I’m your dork. And that’s the best part.”

Liz chuckled lightly and shook her head. “It was about time he was on the cover again, though. When was his last cover? Seven years ago, right?” Liz looked down at the cover of the magazine in her hands and barely missed running directly into a man walking the opposite direction on the sidewalk.

Alex looked over at his sister as she regained her bearings and said, “Sounds about right.”

Liz studied the photo in her hands as the three stopped in front of a restaurant. “He looks good. It’s a very flattering shot of him. I would have done something different with the lighting, though.” She chewed her bottom lip as she studied the photo with narrowed eyes, focusing on aspects of the image others would have completely glossed over. After a minute or so, she looked up at the storefront then back to her companions, jerking her head once at the window to her back. “How about here?”

They all agreed it looked to be a fine place to eat and entered, immediately opening their jackets in the warmth of the restaurant. They picked a table and sat and as they waited to be served, Liz opened the copy of Forbes in front of her to the article on Papa Parker, bypassing an article on common mistakes in managing a 401K and an article on hot jobs in a shrinking marketplace.

Isabel had been so startled by the magazine’s existence that she hadn’t actually gotten around to cracking it open. She was interested to see what someone else had to say about the Parker patriarch; she was interested to see how someone else saw him without the bias of family. So she urged Liz to read it aloud.

When Liz did, Isabel sat with rapt attention. It struck Liz that Isabel couldn’t take in enough information. She seemed almost starved for it. The weight of that settled on Liz, right in the middle of her chest. “State of grace…or how one man made an empire out of a little thing called family.” Liz chuckled lightly.

“Totally suits dad.” Alex leaned back in the booth and stretched his legs out in front of him, bumping his legs into Liz in the process. “Hey…I bumped into you, and I didn’t hurt you! I am no longer a walking catastrophe.”

“I wouldn’t be too quick to claim that, Al.”

Alex paused. “I could be insulted, but since I think that’s actually an accurate assessment on your part, based largely on observable fact, I choose not to be.”

“Good choice.”

“Thank you.”

“Can we get back to the article? I really want to hear it.”

Alex made a motion of zipping his lips, locking them and throwing away the key and sat back once again in the booth, stretching his arms across the back of the black leather.

Liz gave Alex a look and lowered her eyes once more to the magazine on the table in front of her. She laid her right hand flat on the tabletop and her left hand on the slick pages of the magazine as her clean, even California accent lit up each word.

-:-:-:-

Michael opened the front door to the apartment and blew in, quick as a whirlwind. A curious Max popped his head out of the kitchen and watched as his friend ran around the apartment frantically, searching for something.

Max spoke slowly, a little wary. “Hey Mike…how was class?”

Michael grunted out a few words, one of which sounded something close to ‘fine’ but kept up his search, not sparing Max so much as a simple glance.

Max moved into the living room and watched his friend as he pulled up couch cushions, opened drawers, and lifted chairs. “Mike…are you okay?”

“Yeah…of course.”

Michael was clearly distracted and Max watched as Michael disappeared into his bedroom. Max would have followed Michael but quickly got a sense from the sounds emanating from the other man’s bedroom that if he had, he probably would have been struck by something in no time. So Max chose to keep his distance, waiting for Michael in the living room.

After a few minutes Michael reappeared, a small bag in his hand. He pulled his coat on roughly and threw his cell phone, wallet and keys into the bag.

“Mike, seriously…you okay?”

Michael looked up, surprised to meet the eyes of a best friend that looked very, very worried. Michael stuttered a little as he spoke and fidgeted just a bit, but inside he felt remarkably sure about his actions. “Uh…no, not really.” When it looked as though Max was about to say something in response, Michael added, “Uh…but…I will be. There’s something I have to do.”

“Is there anything I can do?”

Michael smiled at the sentiment. “Uh, not really…no.” He changed gears and motioned toward the front door of their apartment. “There’s someone I need to go see. But…thank you for the offer.”

Max simply nodded. He didn’t want to let it go, but Michael wasn’t being particularly receptive. His mind was clearly somewhere else.

Michael was halfway out the door when he said, “Look…I know I’m a little scattered, but…” He trailed off and looked out the door briefly before he looked back at Max. “I’ll see you when I get back.”

Michael had been gone for about a minute by the time his words registered with Max. When Max finally found his bearings, he was speaking to a closed door. “What?”

-:-:-:-

A knock sounded on Jeff’s door and he looked up as it opened. Paolo stood in the doorway, holding a few folders underneath his left arm. Jeff paused in his work and settled back in his chair, twiddling the pen in his right hand between his fingers. “What’s up, Paolo?”

Paolo held up the folders, motioning to them with his head. “Some papers for you to sign.”

“Well, don’t delay the suspense.” Jeff waved him over and Paolo handed over the folders.

Paolo sat down in a chair on the other side of Jeff’s desk, angling his long body so that his right leg was draped over the right arm of the chair and his back was tucked against the corner of the chair where the left arm and back met. His eyes trailed along the walls of his employer’s office. The sections of the walls closest to the door were lined on each side with bookshelves, filled to the bursting with volumes of all shapes and sizes and at least two dozen pictures in frames. There was one shelf filled with awards, honors and the like, though Paolo knew there were far more than what was on the shelves of Jeff’s office. The rest of them had a home in the vineyard, in a place where all the employees could see them. Had Jeff been a lesser man, Paolo would have seen it as a bit of a boast. But Jeff was Jeff and so that meant that the placement of the awards had been Jeff’s way of saying that he would have never been given them without them, without the support of all who worked for him.

Paolo remembered coming into this office as a boy. It had been Jeff’s father’s office then, and Paolo had trailed behind his own father as the elder Marquez had handed over his own armful of documents to sign. There had been no computer on the desk then, and the bookshelves hadn’t been as full as they were now. The couch was different and many of the pictures had changed. But the wall color had not changed and neither had the desk, nor had the utter selflessness of the man sitting behind it. As Paolo watched Jeff sign another paper, the Hispanic man found himself wondering if Jeff’s sense of generosity and compassion were inherited traits, or if he had been taught long, long ago on his father’s knee, as Paolo had been taught the way of creating wine.

Jeff was on his tenth paper when he suddenly stopped, a wry smile on his face. He didn’t look up, keeping his eyes on the papers in front of him. “You’re staring, friend.”

“I was just wondering something.”

Jeff lifted his eyebrows and let out a sound that indicated he was paying attention but kept his head down, focused on signing his fourteenth document.

“Do you know how many women are abused in their lifetime?”

That caught Jeff’s attention and his head snapped up to catch the eyes of a very serious Paolo. “Far too many, I imagine.” He set his pen down and narrowed his eyes just a touch. “Paolo…what’s this about?”

Paolo sighed and straightened his body, abandoning his formerly frivolous position. “Not what. Who.”

“Alright then, who?”

“Angela Johnson.” Angela was one of their tasting room workers. She had a flawless work ethic and their customers really seemed to respond to her, and Paolo had been considering promoting her. And Jeff knew that, but Polo still couldn’t keep himself from adding, “One of our tasting room workers.”

Jeff sighed and began to rub his temples, suddenly very, very tired. “You’re sure?”

“She hasn’t confirmed it herself, but I’ve noticed a few things recently. She seems much more skittish and she doesn’t smile as much as is normal for her. I also caught an argument between Angela and her husband one night when he was picking her up from work and he seemed aggressive. I didn’t want to say anything unless I was pretty sure, but yesterday her friend Tiffany came by to see me and she confirmed what I’ve been noticing. And Tiffany said she’s been noticing some bruising off and on for the past few months or so.”

Jeff was silent, his eyes closed as he rubbed the back of his neck. Paolo allowed him his silence, turning his attention to the gentle hum of the computer on Jeff’s desk. It wasn’t doing a very good job of distracting him, though. In a short while the silence became too much for him, and Paolo spoke once more, mostly to avoid the stifling, uncertain feeling it gave him. “We have to do something.”

Jeff lifted his head and opened his eyes. “I agree.”

“Any ideas how?”

“I have a few. I think I need to speak with Tiffany first. If she confirms it to me, then I’ll speak to Angela. And after her, Jim.” He sighed and looked at the pictures on his wall to the right, his eyes centering on one of his wife Nancy, smiling in front of Yosemite Falls. He stared at her soft smile and kind eyes and wished he could hold her. The urge was so strong, he almost felt his breath catch at the very idea of it. “This will not be an easy road.”

“No.”

Jeff turned his head away from the pictures at Paolo’s soft reply. He quickly finished signing the few papers in front of him and handed the group of folders back to Paolo, who took them and stood immediately.

“So you want to see Tiffany then?”

Jeff nodded.

Paolo turned away, slapping the side of his thigh with the folders in his hand, but hesitated at the door. With his back turned, he said, “I really hope we’re wrong.”

“Me too.”

“I didn’t know how to bring this to you.” He turned around and Jeff studied the lines of the other man’s mouth, the heavy weight of his brow. He looked almost ashamed. “Would you think less of me if I told you I almost didn’t?”

He almost seemed a small boy, asking permission for forgiveness from a beloved older brother. “Of course not.”

Paolo looked down at the floor beneath him. He was having a hard time meeting Jeff’s eyes. “I just…didn’t want to believe it.” He looked back up. “It’s harder to see it when it seems so obvious. Or maybe it isn’t, and we just get better at fooling ourselves, thinking it’s a mirage.” Paolo laid the palm of his hand flat against the cool wood of Jeff’s office door, and almost wished it wouldn’t give way under his hand. But he knew if he pushed it, it would open.

“You’re not the sort of person who delights in the suffering of others, Paolo. You like to trust people. You faltered because there’s still a part of you that thinks there must be another reason, that a person couldn’t do that to another person, that a man couldn’t do that to his wife. If that’s one of your worst faults, well then…consider yourself blessed, friend.”

Paolo nodded and turned, putting his hand as lightly on the doorknob as he could.

“Disbelief is not the same as inaction, Paolo.”

Paolo turned to catch Jeff’s eye. He nodded once more, his words all gone.

About thirty minutes later, a knock sounded for the second time that day on Jeff Parker’s home office door. He stood from his chair and bade the person enter. The door opened slowly, with a hint of trepidation, and Jeff smiled a little to himself. From behind the door stepped Tiffany Winters, a small woman with extremely pale skin and big eyes the color of a growing storm.

“Hi Tiffany.” Jeff smiled at her and she smiled back, which was far more like her. If anything, timidity didn’t suit her.

“Hi Jeff.” Her words came out with a rush of air and she allowed herself to be led to one of the chairs opposite Jeff’s desk.

Jeff settled into his chair and when he noticed Tiffany seemed to be at ease, asked, “So would it be safe to assume we’re on the same page?”

She nodded. “I just want her to be safe.”

“I think we’re very much in agreement on that, Tiffany.”

So Tiffany told Jeff what she knew, what she had seen. It took her longer than she’d thought it would, but when all was said and done, she felt much better. She knew the feeling was a little selfish, that none of this was about her, but holding a secret that razor-sharp has a habit of slicing up your insides, making you ache long into the night. So she was glad for Jeff, as many who meet him are. Because simply by being who he was, he had once again put another person at ease. He had solved another’s worry. And all he’d done, really, was open a door and invite her in.

Jeff sat there and listened. He heard it all, took it all in, but he didn’t want to. He didn’t want to hear that there were people in the world who hurt others for nothing but their own selfish gain. He knew it was true, certainly. He wasn’t a foolish man. He wasn’t blind. He knew those people, people with fists and ugly words and hate, existed. He had worked very hard to protect his children against them, especially Liz. He’d held his little girl in the hospital just after she was born and whispered words into her ear. He’d told her a story of strength, of independence. He’d sung songs of courage and engraved words of love and hope on her heart. The deck had been stacked against her from the beginning. He had just wanted to even the score, as best he could. He’d wanted that for all of his children.

And he’d done what he promised. He’d taught his children to be strong, caring, giving people. His wish for them had been fulfilled. It was the wish he had for Angela, the one he felt floating softly in the air around him, that he couldn’t see the end of. The idea of that saddened him. Though Jeff would try, he wasn’t sure he could really solve this problem, not the way it needed to be. He had a feeling that much of the solving should have happened years ago.

Sometimes, that’s simply the way things go.

Even the best men in the world have unfulfilled wishes.

When Tiffany was long gone, when Jeff thought he might finally be able to pick his stomach up from the floor, his red cell phone rang. He smiled to himself, long before he even picked the phone up and checked the Caller ID. It didn’t matter which one of his children it was, any one of them would serve to lighten his load.

Jeff looked down at the Caller ID and noted the area code. Chicago. “So…which one of my sons is this? Should I guess?” A soft laugh came from the other end of the phone and Jeff smiled as he settled down into his leather chair, allowing the worn softness of it to melt into his skin. “Hello Max.”

-:-:-:-

Max didn’t really know what to do with himself. He’d somehow muddled his way through his marketing class, even though his mind wasn’t into considering product placement or market research. He’d remembered to stop for lunch and had picked up a sandwich, but he couldn’t remember what was on it or even if the bread was white or wheat. And he’d been an hour through studying for a major test when he discovered that he’d been studying the wrong subject.

He really needed to figure this whole…”future thing” out, or it was going to drive him nuts.

He wished he had the certainty that seemed to come with a Parker childhood. Every one of the Parkers knew exactly what they wanted to become, knew exactly where they wanted to carve out their niche in the world. He envied them their ease, the safety that came with their lives. Because though he was a part of it now, a part of this family, he still felt a little one the outside, a little adrift. He knew it wouldn’t always be this way, he wouldn’t always feel this way, but the uncertainty was hard to live with. Max liked certainty.

He thought about it a long time before he actually did it. He wasn’t sure why. Jeff Parker was the easiest person in the world to talk to. He held the phone in his hand and stared at the keypad for a while, then bounced it up and down lightly, making a game of whether he could catch the handset first with just a few fingers then with his eyes closed. He dropped the phone several times.

Max put the phone down on the table and walked over to the windows. He looked down at the snow covered Chicago streets below and watched a few students walk by, backpacks pulled tight against their backs. He wondered where Michael was, if he was okay. He wondered if Isabel was feeling the same sense of uncertainty he was. He wondered if Alex was finding the transition from Boston to New York easy and he wondered how Kyle’s practice was going. He wondered if Maria had finished that song she’d been working on when he and Michael left and he wondered whether Tess liked her internship or not. Mostly though, he longed to feel Liz’s hair between his fingers. He longed to be soothed by the warmth of her voice, calmed by the weight of her smile. He wished she was there, standing in the middle of the living room. He didn’t want her to tell him what to do, he just wanted her.

She was getting her cast off today. She’d reminded him when they spoke last night, but it wasn’t something he would have forgotten. That orange plaster was a reminder of what she’d been through, what they’d all been through, and he’d be glad to see it gone. But on the other hand, he was the smallest bit fond of it. The cast had protected her broken arm for a month, and he’d become used to its presence. Liz, no doubt, wanted it gone.

Max dialed her phone number, but got her voicemail. He left her a message, all the while wishing he could hear the real highs and lows, inflections and intonations of her voice, instead of a digital copy meant for anyone. He missed her.

Max juggled the phone in his hand again and settled down on the couch. He turned the TV on to a hockey game, but didn’t really watch it. He knew all along that he was going to take Michael’s advice and call their dad, so he wasn’t really sure why he was delaying it. All he knew was that he was very confused, and he wasn’t sure if this time, Jeff Parker would know what to say. But then, Max hadn’t had the luxury of growing under his care. It was natural for him to show doubt.

Before long the phone was up to his ear and it was ringing and Max was sinking down into the faded blue couch beneath him, his eyes on one of the Chicago Blackhawks players, who was skating his hardest toward the other end of the ice.

So…which one of my sons is this? Should I guess?

Max laughed softly, but didn’t respond.

Hello Max.

Max could have been wrong, and he probably was, but he heard relief in the tone of the other man’s voice. “Hi.”

How’s the cold Chicago winter treating you?

Max laughed and stared out at the white mass beyond his living room windows. “White everywhere you look. Or gray. Sometimes brown. No green. I miss green. I miss Napa.”

It’s a hard place to leave. I’ll tell you this: Napa misses you too.

Max knew his dad wasn’t really talking about a place, but he couldn’t resist asking. “Can a place really miss you?” On TV, one of the Blackhawks players took a shot on goal and missed wide.

Of course it can. Places keep memories too. He paused. Go ahead, Max. Give me your trouble.

“What makes you think I’m having trouble with something?”

Max could almost hear the smile in Papa Parker’s voice. I was young once too.

“You’re still young, dad.” Jeff Parker was possibly the youngest person Max knew. He had an old soul and a youthful spirit. Max wondered if he’d been born that way. He suspected he had.

So is it the not being near Liz thing? Or is it the uncertain future thing? Or…is it a residual parental thing? Or…maybe you just miss me.

Max smiled. “Number two. But one and four are valid too.” Was Max surprised that he knew? No, not really.

Okay…start talking.

“I’m going to graduate with a degree in business, but I have no idea what I want to do with it. Michael’s known for ages who he wanted to be, Liz too. Kyle seems like such a no-brainer. Alex struggled but when he decided, he was so sure. He just knew. Maria knows, Tess knows…I feel like I’m the only one who doesn’t. I see all of my classmates deciding and I…There’s no answer. I have no answer. And it scares me.”

I think you’re being too hard on yourself, kid.

“Am I?”

You are. You’re not being fair to yourself.

Max furrowed his brow. “What do you mean?”

You compare yourself to Michael, to Liz and Kyle and Alex and you expect that your life has to settle itself just the way theirs has. But part of what makes you who you are is your background. And you’re disregarding it.

Max said nothing and watched the TV, letting his eyes track the players absentmindedly. His childhood hadn’t been a good one. He’d spent most of his life, in fact, trying to forget the details. He hadn’t wanted the memories, and had thrown them away as quickly as he could. Should he have tried to store them away instead?

You grew up in a very restrictive environment, Max. You weren’t given freedom of expression like they were. You have a lot of catching up to do, a lot of life to explore. You need to give yourself time to do that.

“And how do I do that?”

I don’t think there’s any right answer to that question, Max. But I have faith in you. I know you’ll figure it all out. You just have to let your journey happen. And you need to trust yourself, trust your instincts. You know…the most interesting people I know had no idea who they wanted to be, what they wanted to do with their lives, when they were your age.

“It’ll happen? I’ll figure it out?” There was a sweet innocence to Max’s questions. But in some ways, he was a stunted little boy who desperately needed encouragement.

Count on it. It’ll happen one day, probably when your head is turned the other way. It’s like Lennon said. Life is what happens to you while you’re busy making other plans. Don’t be afraid to let your life happen, Max. Because it will. And one day, you’ll wonder why you ever worried about it at all.

“Thanks.” A Blackhawks player scored a goal and the team went wild, hugging each other. “So…funny thing…I met with a man in the financial office the other day to try to work out my situation and he told me I didn’t have one, that everything had already been paid for. Do you happen to know anything about that?”

Of course I do.

Max had expected him to be evasive in that playful, sweet way he had, not come right out and admit it. So he was a bit shocked. “You paid for school. Why?”

Because Max…in all the ways that matter, you are one of mine. And I would not see you falter, I would not see you suffer, if I did not have to. Call it parental prerogative.

“What does it feel like, always having the right thing to say?”

Jeff didn’t respond to that. Max read it as modesty. There’s someone I want you to meet. His name is Joseph Mears, and he’s been a good friend of mine for a long time.

“Do you have friends everywhere?”

I am a very, very blessed man, kid. Hold on for a second, okay? I’m going to give him a call.

Max nodded, though Jeff couldn’t see him, and focused on the game on the TV in front of him. The Blackhawks were losing. Again. Not a major shock. Max cringed when one of the Blackhawks was slammed hard into the boards and came up limping, blood beginning a slow drip down his chin. Max made a mental note to cross professional hockey player off his list of possibilities.

Okay Max, it’s all set. Are you doing anything?

Max started. “What…now?”

Joe said now’s as good a time as any. He’s not busy.

“Okay…I’ll grab my shoes.”

I think you’ll like Joe, Max. He’s not the most traditional of guys, but he has great stories and he’s incredibly interesting. He’s led a remarkable life.

Soon Max was off through the front door of his apartment, bundled against the cold with directions to Joe’s house tucked in the right pocket of his black coat. In the thirty-seven minutes it would take until he was at Joe’s house, he would reach his hand into his pocket and touch the paper more than a dozen times, running his fingers over it gently, assuring himself it was still there. He would listen to the cab driver but he wouldn’t hear him, and he would check his phone several times to see if Liz had called him yet. She hadn’t, but he would figure that she was still in the hospital, getting her cast off. Sometimes he would wonder if he was going to get a call from Michael, explaining what was going on, but that wouldn’t happen either.

No, Max was all alone in that cab, all alone with his thoughts and his anxiety and his hammering heart.

Max wasn’t great at meeting new people. He just never felt comfortable, and he knew Isabel was the same way, though he was better at hiding his insecurity. He figured it probably came from those awful parties his parents held when he was a kid, where he and Isabel were paraded around as mini versions of their parents, trained animals expected to perform for the crowd.

That was part of why his initial meeting with Michael had gone so well. Michael may have pulled Max out of the way of a drunk’s fist, but he hadn’t expected anything to come out of it. Michael had done it because Max reminded him of Liz in some ways and because Michael was a good person who hated to see others hurt. Max had been at ease with him from the start. This was mostly because Michael didn’t require Max to carry on conversations about his future. Michael, for his part, had been at ease with Max because the other man never felt the need to fill their time with unnecessary talking, and Michael loved his quiet time. No matter how others seemed to see them, together, Max and Michael made sense.

Using Michael as a buffer had been helpful for Max in the past. And right now, he really wished he had that buffer.

-:-:-:-

Michael stood outside Liz’s apartment door. He heard laughter inside and was calmed by the sounds of joy coming from Liz, Alex and Isabel, but he couldn’t seem to bring himself to knock. He had rushed through his apartment, rushed through the airport, rushed from the plane, rushed to get a cab, rushed to be here, but now that he was here, within a few feet of the resolution he so wanted, he couldn’t seem to lift his arm to knock. So he stood outside the apartment door, the light from a hallway fixture slashing across his feet, and listened.

His ears pricked up at Alex’s distinct laugh, and Michael heard his brother yell something that sounded like a comeback but it was difficult to tell, with the muffling of the door and the wave of laughter. Michael wanted to know what the joke had been, what insult had been flung at Alex, and he shifted his weight a little.

But still, he did not lift his arm. He did not move to knock.

Michael’s bag was at his feet, his hands in his pockets as he stared the door down. He had not removed his hat, and he was starting to feel sweat perk up on his hairline in the heated hallway. It was as if the New York cold he’d stepped out of minutes before did not exist, had been a memory from long ago. But just as Michael could not bring himself to knock, he could not move to remove his hat or coat, and so he sweltered, in the dimly lit hallway of his sister’s apartment building.

And then his arm was raising and he heard his own fist knocking and he heard footsteps on the other side of the door making their way toward him. So maybe he wasn’t as incapable of moving as he thought.

The door opened and Michael saw the small face of his sister peek out through the crack and he smiled, because she was Liz and he was Michael and that was explanation enough. Liz didn’t look surprised to see him and Michael would have wondered at that, if he weren’t so happy to see her sweet, smiling face.

“Look, ma! No cast!” Liz held up her left arm and did a Vanna White impersonation, pulling the sleeve of her shirt down and modeling around the newly-freed arm with her right hand.

Michael smiled but gave no other response and Liz took that as a fairly strong cue.

“You here for me?”

Michael nodded and picked up his bag from the floor.

“Let me get my coat.” Liz slipped back inside. When she returned less than a minute later, she had on her black wool pea coat and a cream knit cap. She took Michael’s bag from him and tossed it inside the apartment door then shut the door behind her. She made a motion with her head and Michael followed her down the hallway and to the elevator, his hands still in his pockets.

When the elevator dropped from floor five to floor four, Liz said, “So you need to talk to me?”

Michael turned and nodded. He leaned against the back of the elevator, on his left side, and looked at her a moment. Liz was leaning against the back of the elevator, her feet pushed together and flat against the elevator floor. Her brown braids were sticking out from under her cap and she had her hands in the pockets of her coat, pushed together and thrust forward. It made the bottom of her coat look almost bell-shaped. And for a moment, she looked very much like the little girl she once was.

“I’ve missed you.” She said it to the elevator doors before she turned her head and smiled at him. “But then, I always do.”

His sister’s smile had always had the power to calm him. He smiled. “I’ve missed you too.”

The elevator settled below them and the doors opened with a ding. Liz righted herself from the back of the elevator and Michael followed her lead. They walked through the apartment building’s front door and out onto the cold, windy, New York sidewalk. Liz waited for her brother to catch up to her and when he’d finally fallen in step, said, “So what’s bothering you?”

“Me.” There didn’t seem to be a more appropriate answer.

“Uh oh…what’d you do this time?” Liz said it comically, with a smile on her face, but Michael couldn’t match her smile with one of his own. “Michael?”

He sighed and pulled his hat down a little further over his ears. He didn’t miss the irony that what he had just done was something Liz did when she fidgeted. “More like what didn’t I do. Or say, I guess.”

“Explain.”

Michael looked over at Liz. One of the tails of her scarf got caught in a particularly large gust of wind and she tried in vain to flatten it down with her left hand. He sighed again but the action brought him no relief. “I take you for granted.”

Liz stopped in her tracks in the middle of the sidewalk but Michael didn’t notice and kept walking. “Come again?”

Michael turned around. He was about ten steps away from her and he raised his voice over the wind. “I take you for granted.”

Liz batted down the end of her scarf impatiently and walked toward him. “No you don’t, Michael.”

He nodded his head emphatically. “Yes, I do.”

Since he was obviously very insistent, Liz decided to change her tactic. “Where’s this coming from?”

Michael turned and started to walk on and Liz followed him. Michael seemed to be leading the both of them toward a children’s playground across the street. “I was in psychology class this morning and my teacher said a few things and…it made sense.”

Liz was really glad it made sense to Michael because this wasn’t making any sense at all to her. “You hate psychology.”

As they walked through the black, wrought iron gate, Michael turned is head and gave her a wry smile. “I know.”

Michael stopped at the edge of the play sand. Liz spared him a glance but kept walking. She hopped from the concrete onto the play sand then hopped on alternate feet. Right, left. Right, left. Right, left. When she reached the swing set she turned quickly and plopped down into the rubber seat, kicking off from the ground quickly. She started to pump her legs, pushing herself higher and higher with each successive swing. Michael watched her, his hands in his pockets, his nose freezing from the cold air.

He knew what she was doing. He knew that Liz was waiting for him to elaborate on what was going on, what was bothering him so much. Because Liz didn’t really get it, and he knew that too. How could she?

Liz kept eye contact with him from her swing, giving him a thoughtful look as she went back and forth through the air. Her braids flopped behind her when she came toward him and Michael drew in a quick breath through his nose, wrinkling it against the cold air as he walked toward her. He stopped beside her swing and she watched him from it, her head turned to the side, her eyes never leaving his.

Michael leaned against the metal center bar of the swing set. “You go out of your way to make my life easier, and I don’t say thank you.” Liz stopped swinging and dug her toes into the sand below her feet to halt her body. “Mom died and you were the only girl and so we made you…” He dropped his body into the swing next to hers. “It wasn’t fair.”

“Is that what you think?”

He spoke to the air in front of him, his words forming icicles and fog. “It’s what I know. You gave up part of your childhood for us and we never thanked you for it.”

“That’s not…technically true.”

Michael turned his head sharply to look at Liz and found her swaying gently forward and back in her swing. “Kyle or Alex?”

“Both.” Liz leaned her head against one of the metal chains, continuing to sway. Her feet made quiet scraping sounds in the sand below.

Now Michael really felt like an ass. So he was the only one who hadn’t apologized? He mumbled under his breath. “Great.” He looked at her feet as they scraped the sand in long, even strokes. “When?”

Liz turned abruptly in her swing toward her brother, so that the metal chains on either side of her swing twisted and crossed above her. She braced her hands further up on the chains, crossing her ankles but keeping her toes on the ground, to prevent the swing from unraveling. “Do you remember that summer Kyle spent with his traveling baseball team? When he decided he wanted to, as he put it, ‘attempt to follow the path of Buddha’?” Michael nodded. “He told me the night he got back after his fifth game.”

Kyle and Michael had been fifteen that summer. Fifteen. They were twenty-two now. Michael sighed internally. “What about Alex?”

“Three years ago, on mom’s birthday.” She leaned her head against the right chain.

Michael nodded and looked down at his feet.

“But like I said, that’s only technically when they said thank you. They said it way before then. Just like you said it way before now.”

Michael flipped his head up and looked over at Liz, his eyes tired. “What are you talking about?”

Liz started to swing slowly toward Michael then away, her feet not leaving the ground once. “Did you ever notice that dad doesn’t call us twins? I mean…he refers to it in passing, like when he talks about the twin thing, but he never says ‘Michael, where’s your twin brother?’ or ‘Alex, where’s your twin sister?’. Even when someone asks him about us, it’s never the first thing he says. Or the second or the third or the fourth or the fifth. He never brings it up. Or, he rarely brings it up. He’s always used our names.”

Michael turned in his swing so that he mirrored Liz. He heard the sound of metal on metal above him and he gripped tight onto the chains, letting the muscles in his arms hang loose. “I never really noticed, but he does seem to do that.”

“Dad wanted us to see ourselves as individuals. He knew that most of the people who came into our lives would latch onto the novelty of two sets of twins born into one family, and he didn’t want that for us. He wanted us to know that we were four separate people with four completely distinct minds, four completely distinct personalities, who just…happened to have something really spectacular in common.”

“Did he tell you that?”

She shook her head and scrunched up her nose. “Not in so many words. And never outright.” She smiled. “You have to admit…it is clever, the way he did it. Encouraging us no matter what we wanted to try, positively emphasizing our differences when we did the same activity…the man is wily when he wants to be.”

Michael’s admission was quiet. “Dad told me once that he loved how different we were, that even if he’d tried, he would never have been able to come up with four people as remarkable as us. His words.”

“So I guess the question I have for you is that if dad sees how different we are, if he went out of his way to tell you how much he loved that, if Jim and Amy and Paolo see us for who we are…why do you keep insisting that you have to react in a situation the same way Kyle would?”

He furrowed his brow. “I don’t.”

“You’re feeling guilty right now because you think Kyle ‘noticed’ before you did. Long before you did, at that.” She employed annoying little air quotes and then shook her head at him, as if telling him that sometimes, she just didn’t get him. In reality, it was something a far stretch more complicated than that.

“It’s not that, it’s-”

“I know you, Michael Andrew. Sometimes I think you forget that.” Her admonition was gentle and quiet, but Michael still felt a sting hit the middle of his chest. She stopped herself in the swing and sat still in it, her toes digging below her into the sand. “I know what the very worst moments of your life have been…and I know the best. I know your happiness doesn’t always show on the outside and I know that the way you smile at Maria has changed over the years, but it’s always been warm. I don’t know if Kyle sees that or not. But that’s the thing about coming from a big family, Michael. There are plenty of people who see you for who you are, even if they all see you in different ways.

“Mike…what’s the last thing you say to me before we hang up the phone?”

Easy answer. “I love you.”

Liz nodded. “And what’s the last thing you say to me when we’re at home in Napa and we’re heading off to bed?”

“I love you.”

“And what do you say when you’re exasperated with me?”

He laughed softly and rolled his eyes. “I love you.”

“Exactly.” She started to sway a bit in her swing then and one of the tails of her striped scarf brushed gently against the side of her face as the wind tossed it. “You tell me you love me constantly, and most of your I Love Yous aren’t verbal. Maybe if I were someone else, someone who didn’t know you so well, maybe I’d expect every single I Love You to come from your mouth. But I’m not anyone else, I’m Liz. I know you.”

Michael shook his head. “I know I’m different from Kyle, Liz. I just… It doesn’t matter what you expect from me. I should tell you more often how much you matter. And I don’t. What kind of brother does that make me?”

Liz groaned a little in exasperation. “You’re just not getting it, Michael. You do tell me. All the time. An I Love You is in every silly little gift you send me through the mail, in every piece of advice, in every repacked suitcase, and in every single stack of pancakes.”

“I Love You is not the same as Thank You. I should have thanked you.”

“That’s exactly what I Love You means, Michael. It is a Thank You, an expression of gratitude. Sometimes it means thank you for making me laugh and sometimes it means thank you for holding my hand. Sometimes it means I’m really glad I know you and sometimes it means thank you for picking up your phone at two in the morning. You’ve thanked me every single day for as long as I can remember. So you don’t say it the way Kyle does. So what? You’re not Kyle. I wouldn’t want you to be, anyway. I love you just as you are.”

Liz lifted her feet from the ground and her swing twisted, snapping her around. The swing made its way slowly back into its starting position and Liz lifted her feet in the air, just barely missing hitting the metal support bar with her toes. When the swing stopped she began to swing again, gently leaning back as she went forward and leaning in as she went back. She wasn’t swinging very high, but that was hardly the point. She just wanted to give Michael his time to think it over.

With his swing still twisted, Michael ran over Liz’s words in his mind. She wasn’t lying – Liz rarely lied, especially when making a point – but still he had a hard time seeing the truth in the foundation of her words. It was as though his mind was full of fog and no matter what, he couldn’t see the reality on the other side. Had he been wrong this whole time yet not really wrong at all? Was that even possible? Maybe Michael really was the densest man in the entire state of Illinois, just not the way he had supposed.

He watched Liz swing contentedly, a small smile on her face, and smiled just a little too. No, he wasn’t dense, not really. He’d just committed a very human mistake, that’s all. He’d simply forgotten that people who love you see you, even when you have a hard time seeing yourself.

She swung past him and he called out, “Bet you I can swing higher than you.”

She gave him a look, stopped her swing abruptly, and said, “Yeah…right. I’ll beat you anytime. I’m more aerodynamic.”

“Yeah, well I’m heavier. Better momentum.”

“We’ll just see about that.” She put her feet on the ground and waited for Michael to do the same. He snapped his swing around and stuck his feet in the ground to keep it from snapping back. “Anytime you’re ready, Mike.”

He gave her a soft glare, one with a smile behind it, and started to walk his swing backward, so that he was standing with the swing still on his bottom. He stood, with legs extended, and waited for Liz to walk back. “Anytime, princess.”

She laughed and followed his lead. When they were standing side by side, hands high up on the chains of their swings, she said, “You know who you need to see next?”

“Dad?”

“Nope. Maria.” And then Liz was off, swinging hard.

“Hey! You’re such a cheater!” He laughed as he jumped off the ground and began to swing hard. Liz giggled back in response. At some point their swings began to match up and they were swinging hard, side by side. Michael turned his head and said, “I think I will go see her.”

“Good. You need it.”

“And you don’t need to see Max?”

“No, I do…but Jacob has a major shoot tomorrow.”

“How’s that going?”

“Great.” She grinned at him.

“Good.”

They swung on in silence and Liz started to get a little higher than Michael. Liz’s braids were tossed back and forth much quicker now and Michael could feel the cold wind rushing up through the bottom of his pants. They both shivered a little as the cold air slapped them in the faces, but they were having too much fun to slow down.

When Liz swung by Michael, he shouted at her, “I Love You!”

But Liz knew that what Michael really meant was “Thank you for listening to me”.

When Liz swung by the other way, she shouted, “I Love You!” right back.

But Michael knew that what she really meant was “I’m really glad you’re my brother”.
Alli
Image
Dean: Damn cops.
Sam: They were just doing their job.
Dean: No, they were doing our job, only they don't know it so they suck at it.
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OrangeSky
Addicted Roswellian
Posts: 221
Joined: Mon Aug 14, 2006 7:04 pm
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Re: A Parker Family Christmas (M/L, CC, Adult)- AN Pg 8 10/02

Post by OrangeSky »

I appreciate it guys.

Here's the newest update: I got a new laptop which preceeded to stop working five days after I received it. So now they have to build me a whole new one, and that'll take at least another couple of weeks.

*sigh*

I just can't win these last couple of months. :?
Alli
Image
Dean: Damn cops.
Sam: They were just doing their job.
Dean: No, they were doing our job, only they don't know it so they suck at it.
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