So, it's Sunday!!


Next part has 3/4 already betaed, so it really should come soon

On to feedback!
ken_r, Maria is a fun character to develop, that's for sure. She has the most practical view of the group, probably along with Kyle. Though writing her interacting with Dave -who is also a practical person most of the time- was hard, it was worth to see where it would lead

Michelle in Yonkers, Dave is a tricky character, I guess. Had he stumbled onto the Skins, for instance, how things would have gone? What would Nicholas tell this very resourceful man about the dangers of these hybrids? In his position, Dave knows he holds too much power, and does not like to act only knowing one half of the story. He could be betting for the wrong side. So he saw this whole spying thing as a necessary step, because he already knew he was getting into something big, that turned out to be huge.
Granted, we don't know what he's going to earn in the long term, but we also don't know what's he's going to lose that made him do everything he did.
xmag, Dave's past has a lot to do with... well, Dave's present, and why he does what he does. We know bits and pieces of Dave's past that goes hand in hand with Jake's past, but keep in mind there was still a time before they knew each other that could play an important role in Dave's character as well.
tequathisy, I think Maria was in full battle mode from the moment she realized she was half an hour late, so she took that defensive posture from the start. Had she been on time and with a full stomach, maybe things would have gone a lot calmer... But then again, she was so fired up by the time she had stopped telling Dave what Max had told her... who knows...
thetvgeneral, ::waves:: Don't worry girl, RL comes first, but once you're back, I'll have a couple of things for your beta skills

Timelord31, I *wish* all that was left was the party and Max's interview... it would make my life soooooo easy...

nibbles, Isabel dreamwalking Dave while Max is at his interview is an interesting possibility... hhhmmm... but there's still a lot to go down before Saturday's dawn arrives

starcrazed, the funny thing is, I've never seen Maria as anything but as a strong character, at least since she started to date Michael. Because no one with a weak character would stand him -not do I see him caring for someone that is not as... eerrrr... strong headed as himself- so this Maria for me is just the way I've always perceived her, especially since she was sucked into the alien abyss

Let us hope Danielle's cuisine is of Maria's taste... or Michael is going to have a heart attack! hihihihi
garcia88, welcome to the story!! So, why did you start reading? Any fav parts so far?? Tell me everything!

Thank you all for your patience and sticking to the story despite the long delays

XXXIII
Heartbeat
cont.
Beep… Beep… Beeeeeeep.
Max kept staring at the microwave long after it had loudly announced that the time was up and he could take the contents out. The beeping had distracted him, bringing half-made memories of an event he couldn’t truly recall. It had sounded like a heartbeat. It had sounded as if a heart was actually stopping, with all the dramatic sound effects that movies used to accompany such scenes. Had his heart sounded like that when it had stopped at Pierce’s hands?
How fragile it seemed now. A heartbeat.
“Max?”
Liz’s voice coming from the other room startled him out of his reverie, making him jump a bit; the lamp over his head brightening for a moment, then flickering for a couple of seconds. He looked up, glaring at it.
“Are you all right?”
This time his wife came through the kitchen door with a bowl in hand. She had been finishing the last touches to the decoration along with Isabel and Kyle in the living room. He was supposed to bring in the melted cheese so they could mix it with nachos.
“Yeah, yeah… I was just… waiting for it…” he absently pointed out behind him with his left hand, in the general direction of the microwave. Though the three of them could melt it by just passing their hands over it, it actually tasted better heating it in a conventional way.
“You were sort of… spacing out for a minute there,” Liz said, smiling a little as if afraid he wouldn’t take that in a good way. She was feeling a whole lot more from his side of the connection since he had woken up in Jake’s lab early that day.
Max shrugged, a bit uncomfortable. “It was just… Jake said…” he looked at his hands, at his feet, at the counter, anywhere but Liz’s eyes. He didn’t want her to know what he had talked about with Jake. Besides, death was not exactly a subject he wanted to bring up when everyone was trying to be festive and cheerful.
Finally, he turned to look at the microwave, his own heartbeat strangely loud in his own ears. “He said something that didn’t make sense,” he told her before she had any time to press.
She sat down in one of the seats around the small kitchen table, expectant and a bit fearful. He leaned on the counter beside the microwave, working up the courage to look her in the eye.
“He said that my heart stopped for 28 seconds… when I was in that white… that white room,” he swallowed a bit forcefully, Liz’s eyes widening a bit. “But how could that be? Michael didn’t get the Seal. And I… I don’t even remember it.”
No, he had a very vivid memory of his death when he had tried to heal Clayton Wheeler, but there was no darkness, no void, when he thought about Pierce. There was a myriad of nightmarish feelings, for sure, but none of them was a perfect match.
“Max…” Liz said, forgetting the bowl on the table as she went to him, knowing full well that this had a lot more to do with Max’s fears than the puzzle the Seal presented. As she embraced him, a loud electrical touch made them both wince, though neither let go.
“We really have to stop doing that,” Max teasingly said, trying to lighten the mood. Honestly, he had been having electrical shocks with everyone and almost everything metal since leaving Jake’s lab. It was starting to be annoying.
“Are you really okay?” Liz’s whispered worry was hardly heard. She was hugging him, her head on his chest.
They had left Jake’s office more than forty five minutes ago, calling Ray and arriving at the hut with Liz’s shopping and Maria’s gift fifteen minutes later. They both had agreed that they wouldn’t tell anyone about Jake’s talk until later that day. Maria’s birthday party came first. Besides, Michael would kill them otherwise.
“I’m really fine,” Max said soothingly, his eyes drifting to the lamp for a second, his arms protectively around her small body. Truth be told, he felt weird. Not a bad kind of weird exactly, but weird all the same. He had never made a light bulb flicker before just by being startled. He had never noticed before so many details as he was doing now. It was as if he were… overcharged, and over-alert, bustling with electricity and seeing connections he hadn’t seen before.
Suddenly, things were… clearer.
“You know, Max, just because your heart stopped, it doesn’t mean that your brain stopped, too,” Liz’s clear voice came through, getting him back to the topic at hand. “You know, you weren’t really dead. The Seal had no reason to go.”
How did this Seal work, anyway? It hadn’t gone to Tess, who should have been the direct heiress to the throne… or Isabel, who would have a blood-tie claim to the crown, at least by human standards… No, it had gone to Michael, but by doing so, it had distorted Michael’s own personality. If the Seal would determine their characters, why hadn’t Max’s changed when he had lost it? Clearer or not, his mind couldn’t really come up with a reasonable explanation to the puzzle at hand.
“Do you know why you… fell asleep?”
“I was… tired,” Max answered, shrugging a little bit, not really knowing what to say. He had barely gotten any sleep the whole week, and he had gone through a roller coaster of memories and emotions back in Jake’s lab, but… This had been an unusual sleep.
Only once had he truly felt such tiredness that he had fallen asleep into a black dreamless state almost immediately: The day he had healed those children in Phoenix. Michael had told him in a rather curt way, to never scare him like that again. Max had felt guilty enough never to try that stunt a second time. Liz had later told him that he couldn’t keep doing it because maybe he was messing with a grand scheme of things, but Max already knew he couldn’t keep messing with Michael’s, Isabel’s and Tess’ lives. It just wasn’t fair, and the desire to go back and heal even just one more child had faded away.
He couldn’t recall much about that night. He had a vague memory of Michael urging him to go through a window and landing hard on the ground. Sounds of heavy footsteps running at his side echoed in his mind, and Michael’s voice, calling his name and saying things Max hadn’t been able to focus on. The last thing he remembered was Michael helping him into the back seat, worriedly asking him if he was all right.
Then it was all black. The next thing he knew was Isabel opening the door, the chill of the night biting at his skin. He had been so cold… He had crashed in his bed barely registering Isabel’s questions and Michael’s answers. It had been late, probably close to 4 a.m. In four more hours Isabel would wake him up and asked him if he was feeling well enough to make an appearance at breakfast.
He had felt better, but certainly drained. His powers were gone, but that fact was of no consequence while he and Isabel watched the news, silently worrying about who would truly understand what a silver handprint meant. It would be more than 12 hours before he felt close to normal, and just a fraction of his powers were back. Two days before he got them all back, and two days more before he could use them at full potential.
So, no… that sleep and the one he had experienced barely two hours ago had nothing in common. He had come out of this sleep with so much energy, and he wasn’t able to fully control it. But it felt… good. He felt so rested…
His eyes turned to the door above Liz’s head, suddenly aware of Isabel’s presence getting near. As if on cue, she entered the kitchen, a smile still on her face about some joke Kyle must have made.
Their eyes met, and Isabel automatically knew something was… amiss. Her smile vanished. Liz disentangled herself from Max, her back still to Isabel’s, and Max’s eyes widened a little, as if in warning to Isabel. Don’t ask anything right now, they said, and Isabel’s smile was back in an instant, right in time to meet Liz’s eyes.
“Michael’s coming,” she said, “so we better hurry.”
Max felt Liz’s heart beating faster as excitement flowed through their connection. Maria was coming, and Liz’s anticipation at what Maria would think spiked through. He really, truly hoped that Michael’s surprise would go as planned. Liz moved to the microwave without wasting any more time.
“I’ve got the cheese, you bring more glasses,” she said hurriedly as she disappeared into the living room.
“Is something wrong?” Isabel almost whispered, her smile forgotten once more.
“No, no… nothing… We had a talk with Jake, but nothing that can’t wait for later,” Max said as he turned around to fetch the glasses.
“Max, did something happen?” Isabel asked, this time moving beside him to help him get all the glasses. “Around 10 o’clock?”
Max froze in place, and then turned to look at her. “Did you feel it?”
“I felt something, something that had to do with you… Like… I don’t know… as if for an instant you just hadn’t been there.” Isabel frowned at her own words, not being able to put together what she had felt. “That was it, wasn’t it? Whatever happened, had to do with that,” Isabel said as she saw recognition in her brother’s eyes.
“We’ll talk about it, Iz, I promise.”
A car parking outside made both siblings look at the window at the same time. “But if we’re not out there, Michael’s gonna kill us,” Max said, half jokingly, half seriously, although Isabel didn’t move to leave. “It’s nothing bad,” he assured her, and oddly enough he thought of his mother, sitting on a park bench while he was telling her the exact same words, “it’s nothing dangerous. We’re fine.”
She reluctantly let it go, and took the lead out into the living room with three glasses, leaving him with another set of three. Isabel had felt it, whatever “it” was, and that scared Max a little. Liz had said that their connection had been low the past days and he hadn’t even noticed. What if something more was happening?
As he hurriedly settled the glasses on the table, Liz all but ran to stand behind the door and greet her best friend in the world. He smiled. This whole thing was meant not only to make Maria happy, but to give them all a few hours to try to relax. Because later… Later there was a lot to talk about.
The light above him flickered for an instant, and Max frowned. Was he really that out of control? As he was staring at the lamp on the ceiling, the lamps on the living room flickered too. But he barely had time to register that, as the logs in the chimney spontaneously combusted. As he turned around to look at them –thinking he was really losing it- he realized it had been his sister lighting a fire, making the room atmosphere cozy.
And suddenly he felt Michael. Just as clearly as he had known Isabel was going to come into the kitchen five minutes earlier, Max was dead certain that Michael was just behind that door, and man, was he charged. He was the reason the lamps had flickered, Max unexpectedly concluded, though he had no hope that the incident with the kitchen lamp had been anyone else but himself.
They heard Maria’s giggles coming from outside, and that made Michael’s energy skyrocket. Michael was nervous, Max knew, but before that door finally opened, Max wondered what Michael had been doing all morning long that would warrant such bottled up force.
By the side-glance that Isabel gave Max, he was fairly sure his sister was feeling something as well.
What the heck have you been doing, Michael? Max thought for a second, and for a moment, he had a very vivid image of two facts: One, the compound was intact after Maria’s interview. And two, now Michael was free to let all his tension go… and that might prove devastating for the lonely hut.
* * *