Posted: Wed Nov 29, 2006 10:40 am
Author's Note: I promise you all they are leaving Roswell! I know you all are anxious for them to get up to Canada (believe me, I am too!) but Liz and Maria need some serious girl talk. I also wanted to thank everybody that nominated this fic. I had no idea that many people had nominated it until Scottie said she had seen it on the Awards thread. Thank you all so much! You have no idea how much that means, faithful readers! I've strung you all along for *years* with this fic and you still remain loyal. Thank you so so much. Okay, next part...
------------------------------------------------------------------------
There was too much to say and too little time. Even if she had an entire week Liz doubted she’d be able to explain everything to Maria. The range of emotions she’d gone through with Max in a span of two weeks, even two days, was more than she’d experienced in her entire life. But in the short time they had she tried to tell Maria as much as she could. She glossed briefly over the initial attraction and intrigue; she touched on Max’s initial deception and his desperate confession on the side of the highway in Canada. She told Maria about her failed attempts to leave him after their two nights together and the heated arguments that followed both. Then there was their two day holiday in New Pine Creek and subsequent getaway, their journey to Moon, Montana and then to Corvallis, Oregon. Liz related how the truth was finally revealed to her and how she’d only truly accepted it following a frat party in which she’d almost hooked up with Max’s former best friend. Maria listened to it all with wide eyes, interrupting only every now and then to inquire details about what the ice fisherman in Canada had looked like and what they did for showers while on the road if they didn’t stop at hotels. They were insignificant things to Liz, but details that clearly mattered to Maria.
“So is he really as amazing in bed as you claimed he was? Or was that all just part of your lie too?” she inquired with a mischievous grin, getting down to the real details one could truly only discuss with a best friend. Liz closed her eyes and recalled their night together in Corvallis. He’d been distraught after his encounter with Matt and had poured all that pent up emotion and passion into her. It was sorrow and grief, but it was about need to. Needing her and loving her, whether he realized it or not. Amazing didn’t even sum it up, yet that’s all Liz could say.
“Yeah, he’s pretty amazing.” She could only shake her head and laugh. “But that’s not – I mean we don’t – he’s got this thing about having sex,” Liz sputtered in exasperation.
“Another thing? Boy, this space boy comes with some baggage, huh?” Maria whistled.
“You’re being ridiculously good about all this, you know?” Liz couldn’t help but comment on how rational Maria was being about all this earth-shattering information. She had taken Max’s revelation right in stride. The best friend Liz remembered in high school would have run screaming from the room at such a revelation. Either that or she would have had Liz committed.
“Well, I’m telling you, part of me still thinks you and your boy are just tripped out on some massive hallucinogens,” Maria laughed, “and when I stop and think about all of it – it’s all just so ridiculous! He has magical healing powers and he came out of an incubation pod in the desert? I mean, come on,” she snorted.
“But?” Liz knew there was more coming and indeed Maria’s eyes softened as she spoke the next words.
“But when he was telling me,” she shrugged, “I couldn’t not believe him. It is ridiculous, but it is…who he is. I believe that.” Liz smiled at the simple words and reached out to hug her friend, but before she could even get her arms around her, Maria threw her hands up and returned to girl talk. “So this no having sex thing?”
“He doesn’t think it’s safe since he’s - ”
“ - a completely different life form?” Maria completed Liz’s sentence. “He might have a point there.”
“But he’s not!” Liz argued. “He’s a human being! I swear, he’s just…like a different more evolved species.”
“A different species of human?” Maria could hardly say the sentence and keep a straight face. Laughter, Liz noted, seemed to be Maria’s main coping mechanism with all this.
“I’m serious, Maria,” Liz replied with a straight face.
“Serious about what? Max being a different species? I would be too if I slept with him.”
“But that’s the thing, Maria, interspecies breeding - ” Liz seemed suddenly impassioned, but Maria halted her.
“Whoa!! You’re talking about breeding!” she declared and held up her hand as if to stop Liz in her tracks.
“I mean from a biological perspective,” Liz sighed in exasperation, reminding Maria of the science phenom she had once been. “My point is it’s relatively safe. I mean, our children would be sterile, but - ”
“Whoa! You’re talking about children!” Maria interrupted again.
“I’m just saying from a scientific viewpoint,” Liz sighed and then gave a hapless shrug of the shoulders.
“You’ve given this a lot of thought, huh?” Maria chuckled, but it only made Liz sink lower to the bed. It was like beating a dead horse with Max. He was steadfast in his resolution not to put her in any danger. “I probably would too,” Maria mused. “It would kill me to go home with that every night and not get any.”
“Maria!” Liz’s mouth fell open at the blatant remark. It had been years since she and Maria had gabbed like this about boys. The last time they had they were still using euphemisms like ‘second base’ and ‘going all the way’. Gone were the days of such innocence, Liz realized.
“He’s like an…Adonis, Liz. You don’t have to be humble. Half the population of Roswell has been
drooling over him since you guys came to town,” Maria reported with all the candor she knew.
“He’d die if he knew we were having this conversation, you know that?” Liz just imagined poor Max downstairs readying the bike for their imminent departure, completely unaware of the fact that she and Maria were discussing his good looks and sexual prowess just up the stairs.
“Oh, he’s completely oblivious, that’s obvious,” Maria scoffed, “which naturally only makes him hotter.”
“Should I be worried?” Liz teased as she raised herself up off the bed and looked to her friend, who continued to shoot compliments Max’s way.
“Oh, please. Serious dark-haired mystery man from an exotic place? So not my type,” Maria dismissed with a wave of her hand. “Hot, but just not for me.” Laughter filled the room as Liz and Maria reminisced about past crushes, former boyfriends, and present hook-ups. Liz couldn’t help the laughter she tried to stifle when she referenced the odd pairing that was Kyle Valenti and her best friend. Even Maria confessed that their getting together was based more around mutual loneliness than any real attraction.
“Whatever makes you happy.” The smile fell from Liz’s face as she said the words, suddenly growing serious. “I really mean that. I might be out of touch for a while after we leave, but whatever happens,” she brushed the hair out of her face and smiled, “just try and follow your heart.”
“You know you sound like Grandma Claudia when you say that?” Maria reflected and Liz could only smile at the comparison. Her dad’s mother had been an incredible woman. She was strong and independent, honest about who she was and what she stood for.
“I never really knew what she meant when she talked about all that,” Liz confessed. “I never really believed it either. She’d sit me down and tell me all this stuff about finding your soul mate and following your heart no matter what the consequences. It all sounded so…big, so much bigger than anything I’d ever be involved in,” Liz sighed, recalling just a few of Grandma Claudia’s famous life lessons. Most of them came right before she had passed away, not long after the shooting that had changed her granddaughter forever.
Liz had still been recovering from her surgeries and was somewhat housebound when her grandmother came to visit for the last time, her social life reduced to movie marathons and Scrabble games with her mom. Grandma Claudia’s arrival offered a temporary respite from such monotony. Like always, she tried to impart on Liz all the wisdom she had learned in her travels, but she could see the dramatic change in Liz even then. Her granddaughter, always so excited about life, was an empty and bitter shell of the girl she had once been. Liz couldn’t help but feel a twinge of sadness now at the recollection of that last visit with her grandmother. If she could only meet Max, she would see that all her advice had not gone unheeded. She would see her granddaughter had indeed trusted her heart, she had found her soul mate, that other person that made her whole.
“Well Kyle’s definitely not the be all and end all,” Maria finally spoke, jarring Liz from her daze, “but it’s definitely nice to have someone to have fun with.”
“Grandma always said that too,” Liz reflected, “everybody wants to find their soulmate. I just got lucky and found him early,” she mused, all the while thinking that if not for a stupid coyote in the road she could have found him sooner. “And speaking of,” she looked to the doorway and rolled off of her bed. “I should probably bring my stuff down.”
“I can’t believe you have to go,” Maria just sounded dazed as she remained on the bed. “I mean I understand and I believe it, it just sucks,” she folded her hands in her lap.
“It’ll be okay,” Liz assured, but it felt like a lie coming out of her mouth. She didn’t know when she’d be back, she didn’t know if she could even keep in touch with Maria while she was on the road.
“Well, let me help,” Maria hoisted herself off Liz’s bed and began helping her sort through the bag that Max had already packed for her. Liz was already swapping out sweaters and switching the jeans Max had just tossed in the pile. She was pulling out clothes she hadn’t worn since high school, plain fleeces and button down shirts, non-distinguishing clothes that screamed of normalcy. She knew that was what they needed on the road, to blend. “I think the last time you wore that was the tenth grade when it snowed,” Maria motioned to a sweater set Liz added to the stack of clothes. She couldn’t pack too much onto the back of Max’s little racing bike and she found herself eagerly looking forward to the car they would be buying in the future. It took both her and Maria to zip up the bag and she wondered what Max would think of the considerably larger bag.
“Is it time?” Maria sounded miserably as she watched her friend take one last lingering look at the bedroom. Liz nodded her head, a shimmer of tears she hadn’t expected suddenly blurring her vision. Maria gave her friend a squeeze. “Hey, you and Max on the road! It’s going to be fun,” she pulled her close, “like that dumb Chris O’Donnell movie we watched when we were ten.”
“The one with Drew Barrymore?” Liz sniffled and Maria just nodded her head, “she tried to kill herself at the end, Maria.”
“Well, without that part obviously,” Maria parried Liz’s attempt to be depressing. “The point is it’s romantic and exciting and you should definitely not worry about us back here. Those alien hunters come, I’ll knock ‘em dead,” Maria assured with a smile and a simulated punch and Liz managed a laugh.
“You stay away from them, okay?” Liz poked her friend in the chest protectively. ”Please.”
“You too,” Maria poked her right back. The two stood in front of the door like it was some kind of threshold, a barrier neither of them wanted to cross. “It’s go time?” Maria asked and taking in a deep breath, Liz reached for the door handle.
“Yeah, it’s go time.”
------------------------------------------------------------------------
There was too much to say and too little time. Even if she had an entire week Liz doubted she’d be able to explain everything to Maria. The range of emotions she’d gone through with Max in a span of two weeks, even two days, was more than she’d experienced in her entire life. But in the short time they had she tried to tell Maria as much as she could. She glossed briefly over the initial attraction and intrigue; she touched on Max’s initial deception and his desperate confession on the side of the highway in Canada. She told Maria about her failed attempts to leave him after their two nights together and the heated arguments that followed both. Then there was their two day holiday in New Pine Creek and subsequent getaway, their journey to Moon, Montana and then to Corvallis, Oregon. Liz related how the truth was finally revealed to her and how she’d only truly accepted it following a frat party in which she’d almost hooked up with Max’s former best friend. Maria listened to it all with wide eyes, interrupting only every now and then to inquire details about what the ice fisherman in Canada had looked like and what they did for showers while on the road if they didn’t stop at hotels. They were insignificant things to Liz, but details that clearly mattered to Maria.
“So is he really as amazing in bed as you claimed he was? Or was that all just part of your lie too?” she inquired with a mischievous grin, getting down to the real details one could truly only discuss with a best friend. Liz closed her eyes and recalled their night together in Corvallis. He’d been distraught after his encounter with Matt and had poured all that pent up emotion and passion into her. It was sorrow and grief, but it was about need to. Needing her and loving her, whether he realized it or not. Amazing didn’t even sum it up, yet that’s all Liz could say.
“Yeah, he’s pretty amazing.” She could only shake her head and laugh. “But that’s not – I mean we don’t – he’s got this thing about having sex,” Liz sputtered in exasperation.
“Another thing? Boy, this space boy comes with some baggage, huh?” Maria whistled.
“You’re being ridiculously good about all this, you know?” Liz couldn’t help but comment on how rational Maria was being about all this earth-shattering information. She had taken Max’s revelation right in stride. The best friend Liz remembered in high school would have run screaming from the room at such a revelation. Either that or she would have had Liz committed.
“Well, I’m telling you, part of me still thinks you and your boy are just tripped out on some massive hallucinogens,” Maria laughed, “and when I stop and think about all of it – it’s all just so ridiculous! He has magical healing powers and he came out of an incubation pod in the desert? I mean, come on,” she snorted.
“But?” Liz knew there was more coming and indeed Maria’s eyes softened as she spoke the next words.
“But when he was telling me,” she shrugged, “I couldn’t not believe him. It is ridiculous, but it is…who he is. I believe that.” Liz smiled at the simple words and reached out to hug her friend, but before she could even get her arms around her, Maria threw her hands up and returned to girl talk. “So this no having sex thing?”
“He doesn’t think it’s safe since he’s - ”
“ - a completely different life form?” Maria completed Liz’s sentence. “He might have a point there.”
“But he’s not!” Liz argued. “He’s a human being! I swear, he’s just…like a different more evolved species.”
“A different species of human?” Maria could hardly say the sentence and keep a straight face. Laughter, Liz noted, seemed to be Maria’s main coping mechanism with all this.
“I’m serious, Maria,” Liz replied with a straight face.
“Serious about what? Max being a different species? I would be too if I slept with him.”
“But that’s the thing, Maria, interspecies breeding - ” Liz seemed suddenly impassioned, but Maria halted her.
“Whoa!! You’re talking about breeding!” she declared and held up her hand as if to stop Liz in her tracks.
“I mean from a biological perspective,” Liz sighed in exasperation, reminding Maria of the science phenom she had once been. “My point is it’s relatively safe. I mean, our children would be sterile, but - ”
“Whoa! You’re talking about children!” Maria interrupted again.
“I’m just saying from a scientific viewpoint,” Liz sighed and then gave a hapless shrug of the shoulders.
“You’ve given this a lot of thought, huh?” Maria chuckled, but it only made Liz sink lower to the bed. It was like beating a dead horse with Max. He was steadfast in his resolution not to put her in any danger. “I probably would too,” Maria mused. “It would kill me to go home with that every night and not get any.”
“Maria!” Liz’s mouth fell open at the blatant remark. It had been years since she and Maria had gabbed like this about boys. The last time they had they were still using euphemisms like ‘second base’ and ‘going all the way’. Gone were the days of such innocence, Liz realized.
“He’s like an…Adonis, Liz. You don’t have to be humble. Half the population of Roswell has been
drooling over him since you guys came to town,” Maria reported with all the candor she knew.
“He’d die if he knew we were having this conversation, you know that?” Liz just imagined poor Max downstairs readying the bike for their imminent departure, completely unaware of the fact that she and Maria were discussing his good looks and sexual prowess just up the stairs.
“Oh, he’s completely oblivious, that’s obvious,” Maria scoffed, “which naturally only makes him hotter.”
“Should I be worried?” Liz teased as she raised herself up off the bed and looked to her friend, who continued to shoot compliments Max’s way.
“Oh, please. Serious dark-haired mystery man from an exotic place? So not my type,” Maria dismissed with a wave of her hand. “Hot, but just not for me.” Laughter filled the room as Liz and Maria reminisced about past crushes, former boyfriends, and present hook-ups. Liz couldn’t help the laughter she tried to stifle when she referenced the odd pairing that was Kyle Valenti and her best friend. Even Maria confessed that their getting together was based more around mutual loneliness than any real attraction.
“Whatever makes you happy.” The smile fell from Liz’s face as she said the words, suddenly growing serious. “I really mean that. I might be out of touch for a while after we leave, but whatever happens,” she brushed the hair out of her face and smiled, “just try and follow your heart.”
“You know you sound like Grandma Claudia when you say that?” Maria reflected and Liz could only smile at the comparison. Her dad’s mother had been an incredible woman. She was strong and independent, honest about who she was and what she stood for.
“I never really knew what she meant when she talked about all that,” Liz confessed. “I never really believed it either. She’d sit me down and tell me all this stuff about finding your soul mate and following your heart no matter what the consequences. It all sounded so…big, so much bigger than anything I’d ever be involved in,” Liz sighed, recalling just a few of Grandma Claudia’s famous life lessons. Most of them came right before she had passed away, not long after the shooting that had changed her granddaughter forever.
Liz had still been recovering from her surgeries and was somewhat housebound when her grandmother came to visit for the last time, her social life reduced to movie marathons and Scrabble games with her mom. Grandma Claudia’s arrival offered a temporary respite from such monotony. Like always, she tried to impart on Liz all the wisdom she had learned in her travels, but she could see the dramatic change in Liz even then. Her granddaughter, always so excited about life, was an empty and bitter shell of the girl she had once been. Liz couldn’t help but feel a twinge of sadness now at the recollection of that last visit with her grandmother. If she could only meet Max, she would see that all her advice had not gone unheeded. She would see her granddaughter had indeed trusted her heart, she had found her soul mate, that other person that made her whole.
“Well Kyle’s definitely not the be all and end all,” Maria finally spoke, jarring Liz from her daze, “but it’s definitely nice to have someone to have fun with.”
“Grandma always said that too,” Liz reflected, “everybody wants to find their soulmate. I just got lucky and found him early,” she mused, all the while thinking that if not for a stupid coyote in the road she could have found him sooner. “And speaking of,” she looked to the doorway and rolled off of her bed. “I should probably bring my stuff down.”
“I can’t believe you have to go,” Maria just sounded dazed as she remained on the bed. “I mean I understand and I believe it, it just sucks,” she folded her hands in her lap.
“It’ll be okay,” Liz assured, but it felt like a lie coming out of her mouth. She didn’t know when she’d be back, she didn’t know if she could even keep in touch with Maria while she was on the road.
“Well, let me help,” Maria hoisted herself off Liz’s bed and began helping her sort through the bag that Max had already packed for her. Liz was already swapping out sweaters and switching the jeans Max had just tossed in the pile. She was pulling out clothes she hadn’t worn since high school, plain fleeces and button down shirts, non-distinguishing clothes that screamed of normalcy. She knew that was what they needed on the road, to blend. “I think the last time you wore that was the tenth grade when it snowed,” Maria motioned to a sweater set Liz added to the stack of clothes. She couldn’t pack too much onto the back of Max’s little racing bike and she found herself eagerly looking forward to the car they would be buying in the future. It took both her and Maria to zip up the bag and she wondered what Max would think of the considerably larger bag.
“Is it time?” Maria sounded miserably as she watched her friend take one last lingering look at the bedroom. Liz nodded her head, a shimmer of tears she hadn’t expected suddenly blurring her vision. Maria gave her friend a squeeze. “Hey, you and Max on the road! It’s going to be fun,” she pulled her close, “like that dumb Chris O’Donnell movie we watched when we were ten.”
“The one with Drew Barrymore?” Liz sniffled and Maria just nodded her head, “she tried to kill herself at the end, Maria.”
“Well, without that part obviously,” Maria parried Liz’s attempt to be depressing. “The point is it’s romantic and exciting and you should definitely not worry about us back here. Those alien hunters come, I’ll knock ‘em dead,” Maria assured with a smile and a simulated punch and Liz managed a laugh.
“You stay away from them, okay?” Liz poked her friend in the chest protectively. ”Please.”
“You too,” Maria poked her right back. The two stood in front of the door like it was some kind of threshold, a barrier neither of them wanted to cross. “It’s go time?” Maria asked and taking in a deep breath, Liz reached for the door handle.
“Yeah, it’s go time.”