In which Michael spreads the news
Posted: Fri Nov 27, 2009 4:53 pm
As promised, I'm back with a new part. I apologise for taking so long, I hadn't intended for it to be November before I updated but that's how it worked out. I want to thank you all for the wonderful feedback and bumps you've given me since this fic, I love reading all your thoughts and comments - keep it up.
chanks_girl
destinyc
Alien_friend
Rowedog
keepsmiling7
Spacegirl23
*Blondie*
xmag
Emz80m
Tequathisy
AlysLuv
Cocogurl
begonia9508
vilandragirl
sarammlover
RoswellianBamaFan
DaleStateShorty
confusedfool
April
Wench on a leash
Eva
Zoi
RhondaAnn
Alien614
pijeechinadoll
POM
girl afraid
MariaDeluca285
Drogyn
Earth2Mama
CrashandBurn8321
somewhere87
Roswellian117
maxandlizforever
and my beta Michelle in LA
and here we go...
Crush – 11
Six years later
Michael
A certain part of my job as a sheriff’s deputy, one that I don’t particularly relish, is having to break news to people. Usually it’s bad news. Sometimes it’s good news. Sometimes I think it’s one but it turns out to be the other.
Sitting in my truck outside the Deluca-Valenti house, I don’t know how my news is going to be taken. And I guess, sitting here wondering isn’t going to get me any closer to the answer. I climb out of the truck and make my way to the front door. The only car parked out front is Maria’s.
I can hear music playing so I knock on the front door and press the bell. After thirty seconds I knock again but there’s still no answer and no sign of movement within so I decide to go around the back and try the backdoor.
It’s only when I’m walking around the side of the house that I realize the music is playing outside and not from inside the house.
The sight that greets me in the backyard stops me in my tracks.
Maria Deluca, small shorts and tight top, contorting her body into a weird position. Need I say more?
When did she grow hot?
She doesn’t see me right away, and so I decide to enjoy the show. There’s no harm in looking.
Eventually, she turns around and spots me. She gives a startled yelp and clutches her chest.
“Sorry,” I say. “I knocked and there was no answer so…”
“It’s ok. You just gave me a fright.” Maria hits the off button on the CD player and faces me. Her face is flushed, her skin has a sheen of sweat and she’s panting slightly.
I clamp down quickly on the dirty thoughts threatening to invade my mind.
“Kyle is at work and Jim is gone baby shopping with Mom,” Maria informs me.
“They’re going to buy the baby?” I joke. That was so lame.
Maria rolls her eyes at me. “They’re gone to buy some things that the baby will need when he’s born.”
I grin, she’s cute when she’s annoyed. “So you thought that you’d take advantage of the empty house to put on a show for the local perverts?”
She looks around at the neighboring houses and then back at me. “The only pervert I see around here is you.”
Touché.
“It’s yoga,” she explains. “I like doing it outside. Is that ok with you?”
I blatantly ogle her. “Fine.”
She rolls her eyes again but I can see that she’s trying not to smile. “What do you want?” she asks in an annoyed tone.
I scratch the back of my neck. “Actually, I have something to tell you. It’s about Liz.”
“Oh.” She picks up a bottle of water and takes a drink. After a moment she turns back to me. “What about her?” Her tone is neutral and I can’t get a read on how she’s going to take my news.
“She’s coming home for the summer,” I say. I try to gauge Maria’s reaction but she doesn’t give me one, so I continue. “She’s been offered an internship at the Metachem Plant. Doing something in the lab there, I’m not exactly sure what.”
“Oh,” she says again. “When?”
“She’s flying into Albuquerque on Friday. Mom and Dad are driving up to collect her. They’re going to stay the night with Mom’s family there and come home on Saturday.”
Maria nods but says nothing. I don’t think it’s because she doesn’t care. I guess her lack of reaction is because she doesn’t really know what her feelings towards Liz are. I understand that.
“She always asks about you, whenever I’m talking to her,” I say to Maria. I don’t know if that’s the right thing to say but I kind of feel it should be said. I know they’ve barely spoken since Liz left Roswell, and I find that very sad. They were inseparable for so long.
“Thanks for letting me know,” Maria says at last. “I should get back to this before I cool down completely.”
“Ok. I’ll see you around.” I’m tempted to stay a little longer, catch the show, but I think I should go.
I have somebody else to talk to.
“…And that concludes the tour of our offices. Welcome to the company, Tess.”
“Thank you Max,” she says with a bright smile. “This is so exciting. My first real job as a lawyer.” Then she laughs at herself. “That doesn’t make me sound very professional, does it?”
I can’t help but laugh. “I know the feeling — half the time I feel like I’m not supposed to be here. I’m terrified that a client is going to ask me a question and I’ll be exposed as a fraud.”
Tess smiles. “It’s good to know that there’s somebody else in the same boat as me.”
“We can start a support group,” I joke.
“Maybe we could have out first meeting tonight, after work. In a place where large amounts of alcohol can be consumed?” she suggests.
“Ms. Harding, I think this is the beginning of a beautiful friendship.”
“Maxwell,” Michael greets as he walks through the office doors and joins us.
“Michael, this is Tess Harding. This is her first day here. Tess, this is Michael Guerin, local law enforcement officer and a good friend of mine.”
“Nice to meet you,” Tess smiles and shakes his hands. “It’s always good to have friends in the local police department.”
I shake my head. “Not really. He just laughs when I get a ticket and tells me it’s my own fault.”
Tess feigns disappointment. “Damn. Well, I should go and do some work I guess. Thanks for the tour, Max.”
Michael and I watch appreciatively as she walks away. “Hot,” Michael comments.
“Dibs,” I warn.
“Got a minute?” he asks seriously.
“Sure.” I lead him into an empty conference room and close the door. He takes a seat at the oval table. “Is everything OK?” I ask. He seems to be a little on edge.
Michael waits until I sit down. “I just wanted to let you know that Liz is coming back to Roswell. She has a job at Metachem for the summer so she’ll be around until September.”
That’s what I like about Michael. He doesn’t beat about the bush. “When does she get in?”
“She’ll be home on Saturday.”
I nod my head. “Thanks for the heads-up.”
“Sure.”
“It’s fine,” I assure him. “It was a long time ago and I’m over it. If she stays out of my way, I’ll stay out of hers. I’m not going to have it out with her or anything. It’s in the past and that’s where I want to keep it.” A thought strikes me. “Isabel might be a different story.”
Michael groans. “Shit, I never thought of Isabel. Is there any chance that marriage and impending motherhood has softened her anger?”
I look at him and we both laugh at the ridiculousness of that question.
“Liz wants to apologize to you, in person,” Michael tells me, sobering up.
I don’t really know if I want her apology. It’s not going to do me any good, and it’s just going to dredge up things that I’d prefer to remain buried and forgotten. What happened with Liz was the worst chapter of my life and I don’t want to have to open it up again just to give her closure, or whatever it is she wants.
“Tell her that an apology isn’t necessary. I don’t need or want one. I don’t want to talk about it with her, either. I just want to forget it ever happened.”
“Ok. I’ll tell her.”
Michael stands up to leave, I call him back. “Tell her that it doesn’t mean I’m over it or that it’s all forgiven because it isn’t. It’s in the past and that’s where I want it to say. If Liz wants to do anything for me, tell her that she can stay out of my way. I don’t want to see her.”
Well this sucks.
I’m a college graduate. I’m an adult. I’m supposed to be starting a fabulous chapter in my life.
Instead, I’m pulling back on my beloved green Crashdown uniform to start my first shift in three years. I really thought my days of serving alien-themed food to annoying tourists and hungry locals were behind me. But obviously not. My bank account is severely in the red and I need cash input, like, immediately.
I tie the silver alien head apron around my waist, make sure that I have an order pad and pen, and then make my way out into the diner.
Just to complete my déjà vu, Michael Parker is sitting in my section. He grins when he sees me.
“Have I travelled back in time?” he asks as I approach his table.
“I’m just here to make a little money until I get a real job,” I tell him.
“So you’re going to stick around Roswell? I thought you wanted out of here?”
I shrug my shoulders, trying not to appear like I’m sulking. All my friends are either in Las Cruces or somewhere else. A group of them went to San Francisco together to work for the summer. I had originally intended to go with them but it didn’t work out. “Mom will be having the baby soon, and I want to be here for that.”
“I see. And the reason you’re back working in the Crashdown? It’s to get to see me everyday isn’t it?” he asks with a smile that would have melted sixteen-year-old me.
Fortunately, twenty-two-year-old me is no longer a slave to my ridiculous, juvenile crush. “I needed a job and it was either here or the cheese factory. And I was under the impression that as you have your own place now, you wouldn’t be around.”
“That’s right, I have joined the ranks of homeowners,” he says proudly. “It’s just a block over from your house.”
“There goes the neighborhood.”
“Speaking of your new place,” a voice says from behind me and Isabel Ramirez materializes beside the table. “When are you having your housewarming party?” She kisses Michael on the cheek and slides into the booth opposite him.
“My what?” Michael asks. “No way, I just got everything the way I like it. I don’t want a bunch of people coming in and messing it up and ruining...” he trails off and he finally finishes almost inaudibly “…my carpets.”
Isabel and I look at each other incredulously before laughing at Michael who has turned a very interesting shade of pink.
“Shut up.”
“You’re so cute,” Isabel teases, and reaches across the table to pinch his cheeks. There was a time when I hated Isabel Evans and would have been so jealous of her for that. Now I’m not. And it’s not because she has a ring on her finger and a bun in her oven that have nothing to do with Michael. I might be stuck in the same green uniform I wore when I was sixteen but thank the sweet lord that I’m not still stuck on Michael. I take their order and leave to tend to the other tables around me.
A few minutes later, I carry their plates over just in time to hear Isabel exclaim in a furious voice. “You better warn her not to come anywhere near me Michael. I’m pregnant and hormonal and I’ve been waiting six years to give her a piece of my mind.”
It doesn’t take much to figure out that they’re talking about Liz. They don’t notice me. Both of them are leaning on the table, giving me no room to put the plates down. So I just stand there and listen.
“Isabel, can you just not, please?” Michael pleads. “Liz has barely come home in six years because she’s too ashamed to face everyone. She knows what she did was stupid and wrong and selfish. Nobody knows that more than her. She’s not expecting to be welcomed home with open arms but she’s coming anyway because she wants to fix things.” He seems to have noticed my presence because he addresses the last part to me.
“How can she fix things for Max?” Isabel scoffs. “God, she nearly ruined him.”
Michael sighs. “Ok, I don’t mean fix things. I mean, she wants to fix her relationships with Mom and Dad and Maria and me. She wanted to apologize to Max but he’s told me that he doesn’t want to see her, and I’ll pass along the message. It’s going to be hard for her to come back here after all this time. Don’t go out of your way to make it harder, please Isabel.”
It looks like Isabel is going to argue with Michael, but after a moment she nods. “Fine, I won’t hunt her down and confront her and if we run into each other I’ll just look the other way. But I’m warning you Michael, if she tries to talk to me or explain her actions to me or justify what she did, I won’t hold back. So if she doesn’t want that, then it would just be best for her to stay the hell away from me.”
“I’ll let her know,” Michael agrees.
“Ok then. I’m going to pee,” Isabel announces and pushes away from the table.
I’m about to go back to work when Michael catches me gently by the arm. “What about you?” he asks.
“What about me?”
“Should I tell Liz to stay away from you too?”
Liz was like a sister to me for so many years, she was the closest and best friend I’ll ever have. I have missed her every day for the last six years. No matter how upset or angry or whatever else I felt towards her, I always missed her. I don’t think we can ever get back what we had, not after all this time. But what we had was so important to me and such a huge loss when it ended that I have to at least try to salvage something from it.
So I shake my head in response to Michael’s question. “Tell her that I’ll see her.”
chanks_girl
destinyc
Alien_friend
Rowedog
keepsmiling7
Spacegirl23
*Blondie*
xmag
Emz80m
Tequathisy
AlysLuv
Cocogurl
begonia9508
vilandragirl
sarammlover
RoswellianBamaFan
DaleStateShorty
confusedfool
April
Wench on a leash
Eva
Zoi
RhondaAnn
Alien614
pijeechinadoll
POM
girl afraid
MariaDeluca285
Drogyn
Earth2Mama
CrashandBurn8321
somewhere87
Roswellian117
maxandlizforever
and my beta Michelle in LA
and here we go...
Crush – 11
Six years later
Michael
A certain part of my job as a sheriff’s deputy, one that I don’t particularly relish, is having to break news to people. Usually it’s bad news. Sometimes it’s good news. Sometimes I think it’s one but it turns out to be the other.
Sitting in my truck outside the Deluca-Valenti house, I don’t know how my news is going to be taken. And I guess, sitting here wondering isn’t going to get me any closer to the answer. I climb out of the truck and make my way to the front door. The only car parked out front is Maria’s.
I can hear music playing so I knock on the front door and press the bell. After thirty seconds I knock again but there’s still no answer and no sign of movement within so I decide to go around the back and try the backdoor.
It’s only when I’m walking around the side of the house that I realize the music is playing outside and not from inside the house.
The sight that greets me in the backyard stops me in my tracks.
Maria Deluca, small shorts and tight top, contorting her body into a weird position. Need I say more?
When did she grow hot?
She doesn’t see me right away, and so I decide to enjoy the show. There’s no harm in looking.
Eventually, she turns around and spots me. She gives a startled yelp and clutches her chest.
“Sorry,” I say. “I knocked and there was no answer so…”
“It’s ok. You just gave me a fright.” Maria hits the off button on the CD player and faces me. Her face is flushed, her skin has a sheen of sweat and she’s panting slightly.
I clamp down quickly on the dirty thoughts threatening to invade my mind.
“Kyle is at work and Jim is gone baby shopping with Mom,” Maria informs me.
“They’re going to buy the baby?” I joke. That was so lame.
Maria rolls her eyes at me. “They’re gone to buy some things that the baby will need when he’s born.”
I grin, she’s cute when she’s annoyed. “So you thought that you’d take advantage of the empty house to put on a show for the local perverts?”
She looks around at the neighboring houses and then back at me. “The only pervert I see around here is you.”
Touché.
“It’s yoga,” she explains. “I like doing it outside. Is that ok with you?”
I blatantly ogle her. “Fine.”
She rolls her eyes again but I can see that she’s trying not to smile. “What do you want?” she asks in an annoyed tone.
I scratch the back of my neck. “Actually, I have something to tell you. It’s about Liz.”
“Oh.” She picks up a bottle of water and takes a drink. After a moment she turns back to me. “What about her?” Her tone is neutral and I can’t get a read on how she’s going to take my news.
“She’s coming home for the summer,” I say. I try to gauge Maria’s reaction but she doesn’t give me one, so I continue. “She’s been offered an internship at the Metachem Plant. Doing something in the lab there, I’m not exactly sure what.”
“Oh,” she says again. “When?”
“She’s flying into Albuquerque on Friday. Mom and Dad are driving up to collect her. They’re going to stay the night with Mom’s family there and come home on Saturday.”
Maria nods but says nothing. I don’t think it’s because she doesn’t care. I guess her lack of reaction is because she doesn’t really know what her feelings towards Liz are. I understand that.
“She always asks about you, whenever I’m talking to her,” I say to Maria. I don’t know if that’s the right thing to say but I kind of feel it should be said. I know they’ve barely spoken since Liz left Roswell, and I find that very sad. They were inseparable for so long.
“Thanks for letting me know,” Maria says at last. “I should get back to this before I cool down completely.”
“Ok. I’ll see you around.” I’m tempted to stay a little longer, catch the show, but I think I should go.
I have somebody else to talk to.
***
Max“…And that concludes the tour of our offices. Welcome to the company, Tess.”
“Thank you Max,” she says with a bright smile. “This is so exciting. My first real job as a lawyer.” Then she laughs at herself. “That doesn’t make me sound very professional, does it?”
I can’t help but laugh. “I know the feeling — half the time I feel like I’m not supposed to be here. I’m terrified that a client is going to ask me a question and I’ll be exposed as a fraud.”
Tess smiles. “It’s good to know that there’s somebody else in the same boat as me.”
“We can start a support group,” I joke.
“Maybe we could have out first meeting tonight, after work. In a place where large amounts of alcohol can be consumed?” she suggests.
“Ms. Harding, I think this is the beginning of a beautiful friendship.”
“Maxwell,” Michael greets as he walks through the office doors and joins us.
“Michael, this is Tess Harding. This is her first day here. Tess, this is Michael Guerin, local law enforcement officer and a good friend of mine.”
“Nice to meet you,” Tess smiles and shakes his hands. “It’s always good to have friends in the local police department.”
I shake my head. “Not really. He just laughs when I get a ticket and tells me it’s my own fault.”
Tess feigns disappointment. “Damn. Well, I should go and do some work I guess. Thanks for the tour, Max.”
Michael and I watch appreciatively as she walks away. “Hot,” Michael comments.
“Dibs,” I warn.
“Got a minute?” he asks seriously.
“Sure.” I lead him into an empty conference room and close the door. He takes a seat at the oval table. “Is everything OK?” I ask. He seems to be a little on edge.
Michael waits until I sit down. “I just wanted to let you know that Liz is coming back to Roswell. She has a job at Metachem for the summer so she’ll be around until September.”
That’s what I like about Michael. He doesn’t beat about the bush. “When does she get in?”
“She’ll be home on Saturday.”
I nod my head. “Thanks for the heads-up.”
“Sure.”
“It’s fine,” I assure him. “It was a long time ago and I’m over it. If she stays out of my way, I’ll stay out of hers. I’m not going to have it out with her or anything. It’s in the past and that’s where I want to keep it.” A thought strikes me. “Isabel might be a different story.”
Michael groans. “Shit, I never thought of Isabel. Is there any chance that marriage and impending motherhood has softened her anger?”
I look at him and we both laugh at the ridiculousness of that question.
“Liz wants to apologize to you, in person,” Michael tells me, sobering up.
I don’t really know if I want her apology. It’s not going to do me any good, and it’s just going to dredge up things that I’d prefer to remain buried and forgotten. What happened with Liz was the worst chapter of my life and I don’t want to have to open it up again just to give her closure, or whatever it is she wants.
“Tell her that an apology isn’t necessary. I don’t need or want one. I don’t want to talk about it with her, either. I just want to forget it ever happened.”
“Ok. I’ll tell her.”
Michael stands up to leave, I call him back. “Tell her that it doesn’t mean I’m over it or that it’s all forgiven because it isn’t. It’s in the past and that’s where I want it to say. If Liz wants to do anything for me, tell her that she can stay out of my way. I don’t want to see her.”
***
MariaWell this sucks.
I’m a college graduate. I’m an adult. I’m supposed to be starting a fabulous chapter in my life.
Instead, I’m pulling back on my beloved green Crashdown uniform to start my first shift in three years. I really thought my days of serving alien-themed food to annoying tourists and hungry locals were behind me. But obviously not. My bank account is severely in the red and I need cash input, like, immediately.
I tie the silver alien head apron around my waist, make sure that I have an order pad and pen, and then make my way out into the diner.
Just to complete my déjà vu, Michael Parker is sitting in my section. He grins when he sees me.
“Have I travelled back in time?” he asks as I approach his table.
“I’m just here to make a little money until I get a real job,” I tell him.
“So you’re going to stick around Roswell? I thought you wanted out of here?”
I shrug my shoulders, trying not to appear like I’m sulking. All my friends are either in Las Cruces or somewhere else. A group of them went to San Francisco together to work for the summer. I had originally intended to go with them but it didn’t work out. “Mom will be having the baby soon, and I want to be here for that.”
“I see. And the reason you’re back working in the Crashdown? It’s to get to see me everyday isn’t it?” he asks with a smile that would have melted sixteen-year-old me.
Fortunately, twenty-two-year-old me is no longer a slave to my ridiculous, juvenile crush. “I needed a job and it was either here or the cheese factory. And I was under the impression that as you have your own place now, you wouldn’t be around.”
“That’s right, I have joined the ranks of homeowners,” he says proudly. “It’s just a block over from your house.”
“There goes the neighborhood.”
“Speaking of your new place,” a voice says from behind me and Isabel Ramirez materializes beside the table. “When are you having your housewarming party?” She kisses Michael on the cheek and slides into the booth opposite him.
“My what?” Michael asks. “No way, I just got everything the way I like it. I don’t want a bunch of people coming in and messing it up and ruining...” he trails off and he finally finishes almost inaudibly “…my carpets.”
Isabel and I look at each other incredulously before laughing at Michael who has turned a very interesting shade of pink.
“Shut up.”
“You’re so cute,” Isabel teases, and reaches across the table to pinch his cheeks. There was a time when I hated Isabel Evans and would have been so jealous of her for that. Now I’m not. And it’s not because she has a ring on her finger and a bun in her oven that have nothing to do with Michael. I might be stuck in the same green uniform I wore when I was sixteen but thank the sweet lord that I’m not still stuck on Michael. I take their order and leave to tend to the other tables around me.
A few minutes later, I carry their plates over just in time to hear Isabel exclaim in a furious voice. “You better warn her not to come anywhere near me Michael. I’m pregnant and hormonal and I’ve been waiting six years to give her a piece of my mind.”
It doesn’t take much to figure out that they’re talking about Liz. They don’t notice me. Both of them are leaning on the table, giving me no room to put the plates down. So I just stand there and listen.
“Isabel, can you just not, please?” Michael pleads. “Liz has barely come home in six years because she’s too ashamed to face everyone. She knows what she did was stupid and wrong and selfish. Nobody knows that more than her. She’s not expecting to be welcomed home with open arms but she’s coming anyway because she wants to fix things.” He seems to have noticed my presence because he addresses the last part to me.
“How can she fix things for Max?” Isabel scoffs. “God, she nearly ruined him.”
Michael sighs. “Ok, I don’t mean fix things. I mean, she wants to fix her relationships with Mom and Dad and Maria and me. She wanted to apologize to Max but he’s told me that he doesn’t want to see her, and I’ll pass along the message. It’s going to be hard for her to come back here after all this time. Don’t go out of your way to make it harder, please Isabel.”
It looks like Isabel is going to argue with Michael, but after a moment she nods. “Fine, I won’t hunt her down and confront her and if we run into each other I’ll just look the other way. But I’m warning you Michael, if she tries to talk to me or explain her actions to me or justify what she did, I won’t hold back. So if she doesn’t want that, then it would just be best for her to stay the hell away from me.”
“I’ll let her know,” Michael agrees.
“Ok then. I’m going to pee,” Isabel announces and pushes away from the table.
I’m about to go back to work when Michael catches me gently by the arm. “What about you?” he asks.
“What about me?”
“Should I tell Liz to stay away from you too?”
Liz was like a sister to me for so many years, she was the closest and best friend I’ll ever have. I have missed her every day for the last six years. No matter how upset or angry or whatever else I felt towards her, I always missed her. I don’t think we can ever get back what we had, not after all this time. But what we had was so important to me and such a huge loss when it ended that I have to at least try to salvage something from it.
So I shake my head in response to Michael’s question. “Tell her that I’ll see her.”
***