Summer love isn't always easy (Ava POV,Teen) COMPLETE
Posted: Fri Jul 21, 2006 7:13 pm
Title: Summer love isn't always easy
Disclaimer: Ava and the other Roswell peeps aren't my property, yo.
Category: Abyss-ey, Ava POV. CC couples more in the background than usual, and two possible pairings of varying UC-ness
Rating: Teen. Warning for some mature language and situations, but not enough to push it into MATURE I think.
Summary: After saving Alex, dumping Tess and the baby light-years away, and reuniting long-lost lovers, what's left to do? ROAD TRIP TO THE BEACH of course! And Ava finds her heart torn in a way that she never quite expected.
Author's Note: Another odd little 'avante garde' story, this time for the summer Roswell Heaven challenge. This is also a sequel to 'Divergence', so if you're wondering what Rath and Ava are doing in Roswell, just what happened to Tess, how Alex's life was saved, and so on - the answers are there.
Part One
"Hey," Rath said as he charged through the front door. "Whatcha think of Corpus Christi?"
Like a lot of Rath's conversational openers, this one threw me for a long moment. "Umm... well, if a bunch of religious humans decide that they can hand out bread every sunday, and in some real way it becomes the meat off a guy who got offed nearly two thousand years ago, well... I don't exactly hold it against them, but I don't believe the same thing and frankly, I wouldn't be chowing down if I d..."
Rath was shaking his head by this point, apparently just as confused as I'd been. "What are you rambling on about?"
"Umm... 'Corpus Christi,' I repeated. Literally, 'Body of Christ' from the Latin. Presumably a reference to the theological doctrine that..."
"No, not anything literally from the Latin or theological," Rath insisted. "Corpus Christi, TEXAS." Just exactly as if that explained everything. "As in the beach!!"
Ohh. "You want to go to Texas?"
"I want to go to a beach, a real beach on the Ocean, and it looks like Texas is the closest. It was... um, Evans' idea I think, and possibly the smartest thing I've heard him say yet."
"Alright, lemme think about it." I went into the lounge and collapsed onto the futon.
By the way, I should probably mention at this point, that Rath and I aren't crashing in the abandoned house anymore, the one that you'd already be familiar with if you heard the tale of how we came to Roswell. Turns out there were some people in the neighborhood who complained about suspicious activity to Sheriff Blackwood, and since we really didn't want the high eye of the law looking for us, the two of us came partly out of hiding and became semi-respectable members of the Roswell, holding down jobs and paying rent on an apartment together. He's an attendant at a highway car wash, and I'm waiting tables at a honky-tony roadhouse. Interesting it ain't, but ya gotta get paid huh?
"Actually, leaving town and taking a break sounds like a good idea," I said before I realized I was going to. "But... well, you know, life at the beach doesn't exactly come cheap."
"You worry too much - it'll work out somehow," he said, chuckling slightly. "Aren't you the one who used to tell me that we don't need to take care of everything ourselves? We got the crew here in Roswell, and I think all of 'em are looking to cut out for a little before their senior year hits. From each according to their ability, huh?"
"It's a bad idea to quote the communists, especially now that they lost," I drawled. Rath just shrugged and started to ransack the kitchen cupboards looking for something tasty to eat in a hurry. "Well, I gotta getta work."
He looked up at that, one hand stuck inside a box of cracker-chips. "What, already??"
"Yeah, I got the evening shift tonight, oh joy. Buncha overweight drunks who think they can just slap my ass."
"I hope you give 'em another think comin'!" Rath exclaimed.
"Ehh, can't start fights with the regulars," I told him. "Isn't good for business. Besides - ain't a one of 'em who's actually managed to lay a hand on me. They just keep tryin' though." And, demonstrating my evasive tactics with a little shake from the hip at the end of the routine, I slipped out the door and headed off to work.
Work sucked that night. I won't speak of it.
The sun woke me up the next morning at around quarter to seven AM, which wasn't nearly enough sleep considering how late I'd gotten back from the bar, but what could you do? I got dressed in a casual outfit and walked over to a little all-night diner near the apartment. I'd have loved to go stop in at the Crashdown, but it's still too risky - a lot of people there know my face, and I'm not sure what would be worse - someone mistaking me for Tess, or somebody seeing the resemblance and figuring out that I'm *not* Tess. The only good part is that because Rath and I can't go to the Crashdown, a lot of the gang have stopped going there so much, so as not to cut us out, and have been hanging out at the places that Rath and I go to.
That was the case this time around. Alex and Isabel were sitting across from each other at the far end of a booth, with Kyle for some reason sitting with a chair pulled up to the edge of the booth instead of sitting beside either of them. As I walked up, I realized that I wouldn't be able to pull the same trick as Kyle - there was only just room for one chair there. "Hey, guys. Saving these seats for anybody?" I indicated the empty places in the booth."
"Umm, no, not really," Isabel said absently, staring with fixed attention at a sheaf of notebook paper she was holding in both hands. So I slipped in next to Alex, and we shared a friendly smile. Alex Whitman's my homeboy, yo. We got pretty close when he was hiding out with Rath 'n' me, and as far as I can tell the friendship hasn't suffered much now that he's been reunited with all of his friends - and, of course, with his smokin' alien honey. "Want some breakfast?" said alien honey asked, still looking at her papers.
"Um - no, I came by here to stick the place up. We're behind on the rent," I deadpanned as well as I could. Kyle snorted and Alex chuckled, but Isabel didn't even seem to notice. Well, breakfast was good, but it could wait. "So, Valenti - Corpus Christi, huh?"
"Yeah," he replied. "Rath said he was gonna tell you. Whatcha think?"
"Break's always appreciated, but the money is no-kidding-tight." I picked up the menu and, reminded of the budgetary issue, started scanning for less expensive but filling items. "Any idea where we'd be staying out there in Texas, as in a place to sleep and so on?"
"Umm... no, hadn'y really thought it through that far," Kyle admitted. "Cheap motel probably, or maybe try to find a campsite and pitch tents."
"We could try looking for space at a youth hostel or something," Alex suggested.
The waitress came by at that point and I ordered (toast and a small order of scrambled eggs,) and peered over at Isabel. "Just WHAT the heck are you frowning over at there, girl??"
"Hmm?" Isabel looked up at me and smiled nervously. I guess that out of all Alex's friends, Isabel and Michael are still the ones most nervous about me - which makes sense - when the rest of them were getting used to the fact that we were here in Roswell and had saved Alex's life, Isabel and Michael were off-world, babysitting a pregnant Tess and making sure that the Granilith didn't fall into the wrong hands. "Ohh, nothing much -- just notes on a few junior college courses that I might want to be taking in the fall. My enrollment window is coming up tomorrow, so I kinduv need to make up my mind, or give up my best chance at actually getting into the courses I want."
"Enrollment window?" Kyle asked.
"Yeah, the course enrollment system is all computerized, but it's not just a free-for-all over the internet," Alex explained. "They set up a window sequence so that only a few people are on the system at any one time - and so that certain people get a better chance of getting spots in the courses that they want. First the most senior students, randomized within the class rankings or something, and then the kids who were freshmen last year, and then the new students in the order that their applications were accepted. Isabel's actually pretty near the end of the line anyway, so it doesn't make a huge difference whether she enrolls now or once the entire queue has been gone through and the entire system opens up for people to make course changes... but she's so organized that she wants to make the most out of every opportunity." Isabel looked at him over the papers, but couldn't maintain a frustrated glare for more than about two seconds, and smiled affectionately at him.
"Well, that's nice I guess," I said. College courses weren't exactly my thing... even if I had the money and such to go out and get myself some institutional learnin'. Then again... maybe I'd better do something in the way of education, or I'd still be waiting tables when I'm forty and not pretty enough to get good tips anymore. Lonnie was always hot on getting back home, instead of learning to live in this world, but I think I've decided that I like Earth fine and want to stick around - always assuming that I have the choice. Hmm... so, was it time to figure out 'what do I want to do when I grow up' now?? "Erm, what about you, Alex? Been up to anything interesting??"
"Ehh, not really." Alex sighed. "Still doing the summer school thing - nearly caught up on all of the classes I missed on account of being presumed dead." Oh, right, he'd told me about that before. Even before Isabel and Michael got back, while Max and Liz and the others were off chasing down Lonnie and trying to figure out when they'd be making it back, Alex's parents had worked out the summer school deal. They're always encouraging him about the using his brain to the fullest thing - not really pushing hard enough that he resents it, but... well, Alex's dad is a smart guy too, from what I can tell, and he's done pretty well with that path, so I guess they just want to make sure their boy can keep up. That's cool, in my book.
We chatted more about the possibilities of the Texas beaches, and about small stuff that didn't really matter, and then Alex said he had to leave for classes. Isabel got up too, she usually drives him over to Roswell high, which is where they run summer school for the whole town. Kyle sat down opposite me when I sat back down in front of my little crusts of toast after they left. After sighing for a moment, I brought up one of the crusts and started nibbling on it.
"Still hungry, aren't you?" Kyle asked, and I looked up, feeling guilty though I'm not quite sure why. "Order something else, if you like, on me."
"No, come on..." The discussion I'd had with Rath the night before about charity and making our own way was still very much with me. "No way you're paying for food for me, I mean, isn't your family..."
"Oh, no, we're well back on our feet," Kyle said, and I realized that I was still thinking of the situation many months ago, when I first came to town. "Dad's got a job back, after all, and I'm still working all the hours that I can at the garage. Plus, we don't have a certain lying traitor to feed, so money is very much not a problem."
I was starting to feel like I might lose this battle of wills. "Well, if you just want to be generous and help a struggling girl out..." Kyle grinned, and I picked the menu up again. The sausages were starting to sound awfully good, and maybe a few pancakes.
By the time my second breakfast order showed up, Kyle was in the middle of a crazy story about a Valentine's day contest, and getting Max drunk on a single drop of whiskey, (well, a small sip or something anyway,) and the two of them breaking into Liz's bedroom. You've probably heard it over and over, but I really enjoyed the way Kyle talked, more than the plot itself. In fact, I was starting to decide that I just plain liked Kyle.
Kinda seemed that he 'just plain liked' me too, though I wasn't quite sure how to tell for certain. I'd heard a little bit second-hand of the odd relationship that he'd had with Tess himself, and he had to be still feeling rotten over the way she'd turned out. I think that he might have had a hard time trusting me, too, if I hadn't happened to be involved in Alex's apparent resurrection, which I guess kind of helps to cancel out the worst of what Tess did, or at least keeps me from looking guilty by association. (Not that I ever 'associated' with her much in the conventional sense, but I *am* associated with her in a conceptual way, because we share the same origins.)
Before I had either finished my pancakes or come to terms with what I was starting to feel for Kyle, some new familiar faces came in - Max, Liz, and Michael. Maria apparently was still on shift at the Crashdown, which made sense. To make room I moved aside to where Alex had been sitting before, and waved Kyle to come and replace me, so that we would be sitting side by side. Max and Liz took the opportunity to sit next to each other as well, and Kyle took the chair at the end of the table.
They had all been talking about Texas beaches before they came into the diner, and I felt myself getting swept up into the conversation. I'd never really had much of a chance to visit the ocean - well, I've been on the Jersey shores a few times, but not during summertime, and it was pretty depressing actually.
"It's actually off-season for Texas I think, which means that we might be able to find someplace nice and cheap," Liz said. "The downside of that is, well... the weather is probably going to be very hot and muggy, and there might be tropical thunderstorms or that kind of thing."
"Ehh, doesn't sound that bad," Kyle replied. "If we stay here, it'll probably be hot and bone-dry, without a single drop of rain. I don't think that the mugginess can be all that much worse. I've been in Georgia in August."
"Okay, who's Georgia, and was she a bleach blonde?" Michael joked. Kyle blushed slightly, and Liz slapped Michael down. Kyle clarified that he'd been talking about Georgia the state.
"Well, it sounds okay to me," I said. "Assuming that I can get the... aww, hang it. If Lester doesn't want to give me the time off, then I can find a new gig when I get back to Roswell."
"That's the spirit," Max said. "But I don't think anybody's likely to be losing jobs just for asking for some unpaid vacation time."
"Well, my folks might have a bit of a hard time covering for Maria, Michael, and I all at the same time," Liz pointed out. "But you're right. Any idea when we'd be trying to leave?"
"Hmm... why don't we say Sunday morning?" Kyle suggested. "Three days from now. Is that enough notice?"
"Sounds cool by me," Michael replied. "Hey, Ava, by the way. What is with that haircut Rath got a few days ago??"
"Umm... I dunno, maybe he just felt like a change," I said. "Why? Do you feel personally offended or something, your face attached to hair looking like that?"
Michael shrugged weakly. "Just seemed weird is all."
Then the waitress came to take new orders.
---------
As it turned out, the manager at work didn't much mind when I told him that I'd be needing six days off the next week, and the remaining days were mostly filled with preparations. It was a little weird to be getting ready to move again, for just a short trip this time and then back - after living in New York for so long, coming to Roswell first, then wandering around for months before coming back. But I was really looking forward to hitting the beach.
A few things are probably important enough to mention here. One is that Max and Michael invited me 'n' Rath over to watch while they tried talking on the little comm doohickey that Michael brought back from the alien planet. Neither of us really had that much to contribute - we'd never talked to alien authorities directly before, and... well, though there was supposed to be translation stuff built in, we all had a hard time understanding what was going on. Maybe nobody had warned the other people who were usually chatting on this frequency that a few people from Earth might 'log on.' Max was trying to ask a whole bunch about Tess and if anything was happening already about the baby. I understand him being more than a little anxious, especially considering what happened the last time he saw her, but - well, no news was forthcoming, this time. We gave up after about half an hour and played cards instead, since that was less frustrating. (Despite Rath's nearly constant attempts to use his powers to cheat.)
Isabel and Maria also invited me along for bikini shopping, which was another eye opener. Never really needed to wear a swimming suit before (see above under 'the beach',) and, well... It looks like Isabel is used to hanging out at the neighborhood community pool and driving the boys crazy in her little brightly colored outfits. I wondered if Alex would pitch a fit when he saw her in one of those getups. Probably not - he doesn't seem like a terribly insecure or jealous guy... after all that he and 'Bel have been through, he probably realizes that he doesn't need to worry about the fact that she makes other little boys drool. Maybe he'll just get excited - I have to admit the girl is defintely put together like a stretch of mountainous scenery. Lonnie was like that too, though she didn't show it off quite so much, for a bunch of reasons.
Maria wasn't quite as much the showoff, though she certainly was more used to the routine than me. Mostly she seemed to be more concerned with trying to help me out than in shopping for herself, which I appreciate. I kept an eye on the price tags, since I knew that this much, at least, I should pay out of my own pocket, and came away with two suits - a fairly casual pink set with a tankini top, and a more daring bikini in a stretchy black fabric. Get ready, boys - here comes Ava. Well, in a little while I'll be ready to let a guy see me like this, I hope.
We gathered on Sunday morning at the Evans' place. Nine people, several cars to choose from for a long trip... Maria's mom's little Volkswagon, Alex's old sedan, Kyle's sporty red thing, and the old van that Rath had picked up somewhere in Oklahoma. We hadn't planned for this beforehand. "Hmm," Max said, considering. "Well, trying to fit into two cars will mean less gas and less difficulty in convoying... think you can fit in five people and some luggage, Rath?"
"Sure man," he said laconically.
"I guess I'm the best choicefor car number two, then," Alex volunteered. I think that most of the gang still hasn't quite recovered from the fact that Max trashed his Jeep, back when he thought he'd be leaving Earth with Tess and the others, and probably not coming back. "How about me - Isabel..." She grinned and hugged Alex's arm when he picked her first, like there was any doubt that he'd want her with him, "and Michael and Maria?" Okay, that makes sense... keeping Rath and Michael away from each other. Those two still get on each other's nerves, maybe just because they don't really like seeing their face on somebody else... or maybe it's just a weird kind of sibling rivalry. Well, good enough in any case.
"So that leaves Rath, Kyle and I... Max and Liz in the van," I pointed out. "Works alright." We started packing up the cars - with the exception of Isabel and Maria, nobody had packed terribly much, and things worked out fairly well. Max and Isabel's parents came out to say goodbye to them, (probably just wanting to reassure each other that their kids would be back in less than a week, after Isabel disappeared for more than a month.) Then we saddled up into the cars and rode off into the east.
I took the first stretch sitting beside Rath in the shotgun position, though a part of me felt that I'd rather be elsewhere - wherever Kyle was, next to him, talking about nothing important and listening to his voice again. But Kyle was sitting in the back, where there was only room for one person to sit next to a pile of suitcases and other luggage. Two people could sit next to each other in the middle of the van, but big surprise - Max and Liz had taken those spots, and were whispering in hushed tones, with blushes and small smiles on their faces. I wondered for a moment what they were saying, but quickly decided that I really didn't want to know.
"Wait a second!" Rath exclaimed. "We shoulda took the south road outta town, not this way. Corpus Christi is east, but I think it's further to the south."
I fumbled around looking for a map for a little bit. "Hmm... probably yeah, but since we're several minutes out of town, it's not worth worrying about," I decided. "We can swing around southward at, umm, at Tatum."
"But that means driving for hours on little county roads, instead of taking the Interstate," Rath argued. "I'm turning back."
"285 isn't an Interstate anyway, just a state highway," Max called out from where he was sitting. I hadn't realized that he'd pay any attention to us, since he had his Lizzy-pooh. "We'll do okay this way I think - just route through Brownfield and San Angelo." I started looking for Brownfield on the map.
"Nuts to San Angelo," Rath argued. "I'm turning back." And he swung the van into a sudden u-turn, hard enough that it pressed me up against the door handle. We swung around just in time to see Alex and Maria waving as they passed us by - obviously having no intention at all of turning back just because we were.
"Come on, Rath," I said. "Just turn around again and follow them, okay?"
"No, come on, why not take the south route?" Liz asked. Max blinked a little in surprise that she was joining the conversation too. "I actually think Rath might be right, that it'll be faster even counting the time to get back to 285 south... but there's another thing. Convoying off to some distant place - we've been there and done that. For the two cars to travel seperate routes makes it seem a bit more fun. We have cell phones, so we can stay in touch, and rendezvous somewhere near San Antonio."
Rath laughed. "I have to say, I like the way you think, Liz. We'll beat 'em to Antoni." And he gunned the gas and we took off west, heading back into town.
"Umm... do you want to weigh in here before it's too late, Kyle?" Max asked, seeing that he didn't have much chance of arguing Rath out of this unless he could muster a full majority against him.
"I'm up for a race, I guess," Kyle said, and Max sighed. "Let's do it!"
"Okay." I looked through the maps again. "South route is simple, actually - keep on the south 285 until it hits I-10, then follow the ten east."
"Rock-n-roll," Rath growled, and hit the gas just a little harder.
"Watch out," Kyle complained. "Blackwood is mean if he catches you speeding."
-----------
"So she thought *you* had taken her journal?" I whispered. Kyle nodded. "What did she do?"
"Umm... well, she found me down at the ball diamond and asked all of these probing questions, like she was trying to be clever about it," Kyle answered. I'd taken over with the driving, not long after we passed the Texas state line, and we were nearly at Pecos and the I-20, not that that was the 'I' we wanted. "I still remember how cute she looked in the shirt she wore that day." Max grunted from behind him. "And... well, I'm not sure about the rest - I'm *pretty* sure that somebody broke into our house that night looking for the thing. Evans, would you happen to know anything about it?"
"Yeah, I admit, I came with Liz. Actually, it might have been my idea," Max said. "I don't think we were the only ones there that night either - Topolsky might have come, or sent a trained FBI burglar, to look for it too. Which is actually pretty funny, since it had never been there in the first place, right Kyle?"
"Yeah... *really* funny," Kyle grumped. "How the heck did Topolsky find out about any of it? Why did she care about the journal?"
"Alex told her that Liz and Maria had been on his case about the journal," Max said softly, as if part of his mind was back there in the memory from so long ago. "He didn't understand why Liz was so upset about losing it - this was before he knew what was going on - with us, and the whole thing, Kyle."
"Yeah, I figured," Kyle answered. "Considering how he reacted after you'd been in the hospital, Max - and that was later than the journal caper."
"Right." Max nodded. "But I think Topolsky suspected enough to read between the lines. If Liz had just found out about aliens, and Liz was really upset that her journal was missing, then it stands to reason that the journal might have written information and reactions talking about aliens. As far as how she suspected you, Kyle - that I don't know. Maybe it was just a case of you being the most likely suspect, since she'd broken up with you the week before."
"Oh, great," Kyle sighed.
"Wait a second - then who DID take the journal?" I asked. "Did Topolsky get ahold of it? Was that how you ended up in the White Room, Max? No... the timing definitely doesn't make sense that way."
Max smiled slightly. "Umm... I never found out who, exactly. Liz said that a friend returned it - I've tried to get more details, but she's always oddly quiet about it."
"Huh," Kyle muttered, and I appreciated the sentiment. The whole story seemed unresolved at that point - and even if Liz were liable to spill the dirt, we couldn't ask her right now, because she was snoozing in the back - she'd been so excited that she hadn't got much sleep last night, apparently.
"Out of curiosity," Rath asked, "just what was Michael up to around this point?"
Max jumped at the question. "Mostly taking art classes and drawing pictures of a geodesic dome - that's kinduv a long story though."
"Hmm." Rath considered that. "That probably didn't keep him TERRIBLY busy, though."
"Heh?" After a second, I realized what he was driving at. "Rath, are you trying to imply that *Michael* was the one who stole the diary?"
"Well, it's probably what I would have done in his place - not that that means a whole lot, but still I wonder," he said softly. "Probably as soon as he realized that she wrote stuff in it, and started to wonder if she'd said anything about Max saving her life. Or anything else interesting that had happened by that point. Sneak up into her room sometime when he knew she'd be elsewhere, swipe it without her ever knowing, and go through it when he had time. Then, Liz told you, Max, and you told Michael and Isabel at some point, right?" Max nodded.
"Then he realized that he'd kept it too long, and things were spinning a bit out of control, and he couldn't risk leaving it and waiting for her to find it again - for one thing, there was an off chance that she wouldn't be the first one to find it after all. So he came to her, gave it back, explained his reasons why, and got her to agree, while she was still relieved to have it back and to know that the secret hadn't been broken, that she'd never tell you that he was the thief. Maybe capitalized on the scare to get her to keep it more securely, just in case someone else really would come after it."
"Wow," Max breathed. "Well... that does pretty much fit the facts, and it's a better explanation than I've ever come up with for why she was so mysterious about her 'friend.'" He looked up at Rath. "We'd probably better keep quiet about this theory of yours, though."
"Oh, come on!! I want to try freaking Michael out a bit - he could do with a bit of a poke like that."
"Might be good for Guerin, at that," Kyle said.
"Well, I dunno." Max turned and stared out the window. I waited to see if he would comment further on the subject, but nothiing more seemed to be forthcoming.
"Well, that's nothing," I said, deciding to try subtly moving the topic of conversation onwards. "I remember the time that Zan and Lonnie got it in their head to try stealing a shipment of caviar... not to fence it or anything. I think Zan was curious to see what it would taste like, and Lonnie - she just wanted to screw whoever would end up holding the bag for it. Insurance company or whatever - she felt that whoever was dealing in expensive swag needed to have things go wrong as often as she could arrange it."
"A charming pair," Kyle commented.
"Yeah. So... they just go up to the truck as it's loading up, straight off the ship, down at the docks, and..." It took me a while to finish the story, which involved a very mean little miniature bulldog who was somehow able to distract Zan's attention from using his powers each time he barked, and ended up with Lonnie having to take a shower to clean several thousand dollar's worth of gourmet fish eggs out of her cleavage. That got Kyle started on some of the poorly planned stunts that he and his old jock friends had attempted. My favorite was the one where they tried to stick un-wash-off-able dye crystals into the showerheads of a rival team, and got caught in the locker room by an assistant coach and equipment manager for the other team.
"Rest stop," Rath said, pointing out the window to where a group of buildings stood, not far from the road. "Anybody need to hit the head? Or a cool drink??"
There was a moment's silence. "Um, no, I think I'm good," Kyle said softly. Max shook his head no.
"I'm okay for waiting til the next one," I pointed out. "Rath?" He kind of shrugged. "And if Liz needed anything, she'd probably be awake - no point in disturbing her just to ask. On we go."
And on we went.
----------
"Watch out for the cow!" Liz called out.
"The cow?" Max repeated.
"My mistake - the cowS, plural." Sure enough there were several cows that had wandered onto the highway well ahead of us. And just at that moment, another car failed to avoid one of them. "Ewww," Max muttered, and Liz made a squeak of dismay.
"Hey, what happened?" Rath called out from the back. "Was it gorey?" Nobody answered him.
"Can - can we get through, or should I pull over?" Max asked, slowing down and checking his mirrors to make sure that somebody who wasn't yet aware of the cows wasn't going to rear-end us at top speed.
"Umm... yeah, let's grab some shoulder," Liz decided. She was navigating for Max at this point - big surprise. And wouldn't something like cows have to come up just before we made it to the actual Interstate? Max pulled over to the edge, and we sat and waited to see what else would happen. Several other cars had stopped... everyone was staying clear of the place where one sporty car had sideswiped a brown cow's butt and gotten partly stuck to it. The results, as you can imagine, hadn't been great either for cow or car, though they could have been a lot worse. One big station wagon pulled up slowly to the other side of the road, and seemed to be trying to scare the cows away from there with loud horn honking. That just might work, though I wouldn't have tried it myself I think - what if the cows just got angry and started butting the station wagon??
"I'm going to call Maria," Liz said, pulling out her cell phone. "She's just going to go nuts over it - probably get disappointed that she didn't go by the cow road herself."
"Ask them where they are," Rath called - he was still taking the 'race' idea seriously, though most of the rest of us had completely forgotten about it. Probably he was worried that the cows would cost us too much time. However, by the time Liz had hung up the phone, Volvo-man had succeeded in clearing two of the cows back out to their field, and we had pulled back out into the road and passed the last, hurt, cow and left it well behind.
"Well, they're just talking a 'stretch your legs' break right now," Liz reported to Rath. "Haven't crossed south of route 191 yet."
"Heck, we only intersected 191 a little ways back," Kyle said, "and they must be a lot further east than we are."
"191's further north where they'll be crossing it," Max answered. "But yeah, they're making better time than I would have thought." He flicked a nervous eye back to Rath, and then put a little more pressure on the gas, just so nobody could say he wasn't making good time.
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As it turned out, we managed to beat Alex's car to the McDonalds in the town where our paths met, by something like fifteen minutes. There was much junk food and gigantic disposable tumblers full of ice and bubbly soda, and everybody played crazy games running around in the parking lot because it felt so good not to be sitting in a car anymore, and when we were getting ready to go again, Alex asked if anybody wanted to switch cars.
"Umm... I think I'm good where I am, err, assuming that everybody else is," Kyle mumbled. I'm pretty sure that he shot at least one brief look in my direction, and maybe I read too much into that. Well, I read *something* into it - not quite sure if it was too much. Myself... well, I wouldn't have minded taking Kyle with me and going over to Alex's car, but that depended on whether two people wanted to switch from there. Alex probably wouldn't want to leave his car, and I doubted Michael would have any great inclination to come over and spend a lot of time with Rath. Maybe the two girls would... would really want to spend that much time away from their boyfriends?? Yeah, that seemed pretty dubious on the face of it. Sure enough, all three of them, Michael Maria and Isabel, were none too eager to catch my eye, looking like they were only half paying attention. Okay, looks like we stick pat.
"Hey, Guerin?" Rath called. "How about we and our ladies swap?" And he grabbed my arm, not hard enough to hurt, but deliberately enough that I was too startled to speak for a little while. Several of the others seemed very surprised at the insinuation that I was Rath's 'lady', especially Alex, Michael, and Kyle, but nobody objected on my behalf. I almost wish that they had.
"Umm... er, sure, I guess that we can hang out in the van," Michael muttered. "That is... as long as you're okay with other people driving your..."
"Yeah, it's fine," Rath declared, tossing his keys at Kyle. He'd been the one driving for the last stretch before the rendezvous - nobody had been able to argue him out of it, and, well... we might have still beat the other car if Rath hadn't been speeding, but probably not by as wide a margin.
"Ava," Maria said, staring into my eyes like I was in a hostage crisis - which I guess, in a vague way, is what it felt like to me. "You cool with this?"
"C'mon," Rath said to me in a milder and much less arrogant tone. "We'll catch up with our boy Alex, and get to know his girl a bit better. What's wrong with that??"
Well, nothing in and of itself... except that it would leave Kyle and me seperated. But... but I wasn't at all sure that I wanted to make a big hairy deal of that yet. There'd be plenty more opportunities to hang out with Kyle and flirt with him, if I wished, once we got to the beach. (Flirting in swimsuits, even - that sounded like fun!) Spending some time with Rath, Alex, and Isabel certainly didn't sound bad in and of itself.
"Okay, sure, I'm up for it," I agreed. So that was how we got into the cars - I sat behind Alex, in the back left seat, and was oddly glad of the fact that there was a pile of three suitcases between my own self and Rath. Couldn't get a really good look at Alex, because of the position of course, but when Isabel turned around a bit I could see her face in a classic profile, diagonally across the passenger compartment.
Isabel wasted no time in getting directly to the somewhat embarassing question. "So, Ava... you're fond of young mister Valenti, yes??"
When you don't want to lie or admit the truth, a good tactic is to be slightly evasive and answer with another question. "Who, me?"
"Don't give me that," Isabel drawled. "I saw how you were hovering in his area for the frisbee football game. Hoping that he would forget his own rules and TACKLE you, perhaps?" Isabel laughed softly - a good-natured laugh, not mean or anything, but I felt myself blushing uncomfortably.
I don't think I was the only one who was far from happy with this line of conversation, because Rath unleashed one of the rudest-sounding grunts that I'd ever heard him utter. "So, Rath, err -- any pretty girl caught your eye lately? Or is there no-one else who meets your high standards, now that... umm, after Lonnie and yourself decided to cut mutually loose?"
Rath scowled impressively at Isabel, (though they couldn't really see each other, since he was sitting behind her,) and made this grunting noise, deep in his throat. "Bug off - don't you have some hunger drive to organize in your head?"
"Rath!" Alex exclaimed in an upset voice.
"Hunger drives are more a winter thing, actually," Isabel muttered under her breath, nearly at the same time.
"Okay, okay, I get it - that was uncalled for," Rath grumped. "Sorry."
"It's okay," Isabel said with slightly stilted grace. "Maybe I shouldn't have stuck my nose in so suddenly." She sighed. "So... I'm going on a trip, obviously." I looked up at her, curious where this conversational tack was leading, if anywhere. "And I've packed... indigo eyeliner."
"Huh?" Rath muttered.
"Yeah, I don't believe you OWN any Indigo makeup," I put in. "Wouldn't be a flattering shade on you." Isabel just smiled mysteriously.
After a few seconds, Alex jumped slightly in his seat - well, not really, but I could see the muscles of his shoulders and neck twitch with what seemed like an intuitive realization. "Alright. I'm going on a trip, and I've packed... an arc welder." This time Rath and I were both speechless. "Your turn, Ava," Alex prompted.
"Umm... okay," I muttered, not sure what to do. Well, follow through with the formula as best I could. "I'm going on a trip and I've packed... a black bikini." Isabel shook her head slightly. "What, I did!" Alex was shaking his head too. Then it occured to me - this was some kind of game, and what they had said were NOT the kinds of things that they'd really pack. Should I have made something up? "Okay, gimme a minute..."
"No, you only get one chance per go-round I'm afraid, Ava," Isabel said. "Rath??"
Conflicting emotions were fairly visible on Rath's blunt face. He was at least a little tempted to tell Izzie to stuff it, I guessed, but the urge to show me up and get the puzzle right before I could was too strong. "Okay, I'm going on a trip, and I've packed... a phaser pistol."
"Sorry, I don't think so," Alex said, and Rath's face fell from the expectation of triumph into frustration. We all turned our attention silently back to Isabel.
She closed her eyes in thought for a moment. "Well, I did pack an ink eraser."
Alex chuckled - apparently he didn't feel that she needed to repeat the entire routine this time. "Um, let's see... I'm pretty sure I brought an Apple washer."
I growled a little, realizing that it was now my turn... and suddenly, a possibly answer occured to me. Initials... both of Isabel's things had started with the letters I and then E, and Alex's latest, at least, with an A and then a W. (I couldn't remember Alex's first offhand.) IE for Isabel Evans, AW for Alex Whitman. Was that it?
And if so, how to deal with the fact that I'd never really assumed a last name, human-style?? Well, maybe be straightforward about it, as much as possible. "You know, that's a good thing Alex," I said, laughing. "Because I brought an Apple!" Alex laughed out loud, and Isabel was nodding.
"Yeah, that's the ticket!" she agreed.
"Okay, if somebody doesn't explain what the hell is going on here, I'm going to get seriously pissed off," Rath said. He looked pretty pissed already, actually.
"Umm, well it's..." I broke off in mid-phrase, leaning forward to Alex. "Is it okay if I give him a..."
"Hints are fine, I think, at this point," Alex agreed quickly. I think he really didn't want Rath getting pissed off at *him*. "I think you'll know how far to take it."
Alright, hmm... "It's a party game, basically. The rule for what you can say doesn't have anything to do with a real trip... it's obvious once you think of it, though."
Rath looked at me, and his frustration melted through into simple sourness. "Wonderful for you, then. Since it looks like I've already lost, I'm not trying any more. Stupid game in the first place."
"Come on, that's quitter t..." Isabel started, but I jumped in and interrupted her before she finished the phrase - Rath would hold it against her too much, even incomplete. (Would have been better if I'd caught her at the q in 'quitter,' but what canya do?) "Leave it alone, Isabel." If Rath had decided not to bother with the game, then none of us were going to accomplish anything helpful by trying to badger him into it. "How about we show 'em one of our old games, Rath?"
He smiled. "Okay. Would you rather... kiss Nicholas or spend three hours in the white room? Isabel?"
That hadn't been the diversion I had in mind, but Isabel only paled for a few seconds. "The room. Pierce may be scary, but he's not as gross as Nicholas." She considered. "Ava, would you rather kiss Nicholas - or what's left of the fake dead Alex that Rath made??"
"Eww!" That dead body was probably a mass of maggoty, festering slime out in the desert by now - and it had been roadkill in the first place. "Gimme a minute, that's a really tough call. I think Nicholas isn't quite as foul as THAT."
"That your final answer?" Isabel asked.
"Yeah. Okay, Alex, would you rather kiss your dead identical twin... or..." What the heck was I going to come up with that was even worse than Nicholas? "...Or sleepover with Tess for one weekend?"
"Hey, no fair bringing her into this," Alex complained... but I could hear the trace of laughter under his complaint, and knew that he wasn't really that upset.
And we drove on, dusty plains on either side of the highway.
TO BE CONTINUED...
Disclaimer: Ava and the other Roswell peeps aren't my property, yo.
Category: Abyss-ey, Ava POV. CC couples more in the background than usual, and two possible pairings of varying UC-ness
Rating: Teen. Warning for some mature language and situations, but not enough to push it into MATURE I think.
Summary: After saving Alex, dumping Tess and the baby light-years away, and reuniting long-lost lovers, what's left to do? ROAD TRIP TO THE BEACH of course! And Ava finds her heart torn in a way that she never quite expected.
Author's Note: Another odd little 'avante garde' story, this time for the summer Roswell Heaven challenge. This is also a sequel to 'Divergence', so if you're wondering what Rath and Ava are doing in Roswell, just what happened to Tess, how Alex's life was saved, and so on - the answers are there.
Part One
"Hey," Rath said as he charged through the front door. "Whatcha think of Corpus Christi?"
Like a lot of Rath's conversational openers, this one threw me for a long moment. "Umm... well, if a bunch of religious humans decide that they can hand out bread every sunday, and in some real way it becomes the meat off a guy who got offed nearly two thousand years ago, well... I don't exactly hold it against them, but I don't believe the same thing and frankly, I wouldn't be chowing down if I d..."
Rath was shaking his head by this point, apparently just as confused as I'd been. "What are you rambling on about?"
"Umm... 'Corpus Christi,' I repeated. Literally, 'Body of Christ' from the Latin. Presumably a reference to the theological doctrine that..."
"No, not anything literally from the Latin or theological," Rath insisted. "Corpus Christi, TEXAS." Just exactly as if that explained everything. "As in the beach!!"
Ohh. "You want to go to Texas?"
"I want to go to a beach, a real beach on the Ocean, and it looks like Texas is the closest. It was... um, Evans' idea I think, and possibly the smartest thing I've heard him say yet."
"Alright, lemme think about it." I went into the lounge and collapsed onto the futon.
By the way, I should probably mention at this point, that Rath and I aren't crashing in the abandoned house anymore, the one that you'd already be familiar with if you heard the tale of how we came to Roswell. Turns out there were some people in the neighborhood who complained about suspicious activity to Sheriff Blackwood, and since we really didn't want the high eye of the law looking for us, the two of us came partly out of hiding and became semi-respectable members of the Roswell, holding down jobs and paying rent on an apartment together. He's an attendant at a highway car wash, and I'm waiting tables at a honky-tony roadhouse. Interesting it ain't, but ya gotta get paid huh?
"Actually, leaving town and taking a break sounds like a good idea," I said before I realized I was going to. "But... well, you know, life at the beach doesn't exactly come cheap."
"You worry too much - it'll work out somehow," he said, chuckling slightly. "Aren't you the one who used to tell me that we don't need to take care of everything ourselves? We got the crew here in Roswell, and I think all of 'em are looking to cut out for a little before their senior year hits. From each according to their ability, huh?"
"It's a bad idea to quote the communists, especially now that they lost," I drawled. Rath just shrugged and started to ransack the kitchen cupboards looking for something tasty to eat in a hurry. "Well, I gotta getta work."
He looked up at that, one hand stuck inside a box of cracker-chips. "What, already??"
"Yeah, I got the evening shift tonight, oh joy. Buncha overweight drunks who think they can just slap my ass."
"I hope you give 'em another think comin'!" Rath exclaimed.
"Ehh, can't start fights with the regulars," I told him. "Isn't good for business. Besides - ain't a one of 'em who's actually managed to lay a hand on me. They just keep tryin' though." And, demonstrating my evasive tactics with a little shake from the hip at the end of the routine, I slipped out the door and headed off to work.
Work sucked that night. I won't speak of it.
The sun woke me up the next morning at around quarter to seven AM, which wasn't nearly enough sleep considering how late I'd gotten back from the bar, but what could you do? I got dressed in a casual outfit and walked over to a little all-night diner near the apartment. I'd have loved to go stop in at the Crashdown, but it's still too risky - a lot of people there know my face, and I'm not sure what would be worse - someone mistaking me for Tess, or somebody seeing the resemblance and figuring out that I'm *not* Tess. The only good part is that because Rath and I can't go to the Crashdown, a lot of the gang have stopped going there so much, so as not to cut us out, and have been hanging out at the places that Rath and I go to.
That was the case this time around. Alex and Isabel were sitting across from each other at the far end of a booth, with Kyle for some reason sitting with a chair pulled up to the edge of the booth instead of sitting beside either of them. As I walked up, I realized that I wouldn't be able to pull the same trick as Kyle - there was only just room for one chair there. "Hey, guys. Saving these seats for anybody?" I indicated the empty places in the booth."
"Umm, no, not really," Isabel said absently, staring with fixed attention at a sheaf of notebook paper she was holding in both hands. So I slipped in next to Alex, and we shared a friendly smile. Alex Whitman's my homeboy, yo. We got pretty close when he was hiding out with Rath 'n' me, and as far as I can tell the friendship hasn't suffered much now that he's been reunited with all of his friends - and, of course, with his smokin' alien honey. "Want some breakfast?" said alien honey asked, still looking at her papers.
"Um - no, I came by here to stick the place up. We're behind on the rent," I deadpanned as well as I could. Kyle snorted and Alex chuckled, but Isabel didn't even seem to notice. Well, breakfast was good, but it could wait. "So, Valenti - Corpus Christi, huh?"
"Yeah," he replied. "Rath said he was gonna tell you. Whatcha think?"
"Break's always appreciated, but the money is no-kidding-tight." I picked up the menu and, reminded of the budgetary issue, started scanning for less expensive but filling items. "Any idea where we'd be staying out there in Texas, as in a place to sleep and so on?"
"Umm... no, hadn'y really thought it through that far," Kyle admitted. "Cheap motel probably, or maybe try to find a campsite and pitch tents."
"We could try looking for space at a youth hostel or something," Alex suggested.
The waitress came by at that point and I ordered (toast and a small order of scrambled eggs,) and peered over at Isabel. "Just WHAT the heck are you frowning over at there, girl??"
"Hmm?" Isabel looked up at me and smiled nervously. I guess that out of all Alex's friends, Isabel and Michael are still the ones most nervous about me - which makes sense - when the rest of them were getting used to the fact that we were here in Roswell and had saved Alex's life, Isabel and Michael were off-world, babysitting a pregnant Tess and making sure that the Granilith didn't fall into the wrong hands. "Ohh, nothing much -- just notes on a few junior college courses that I might want to be taking in the fall. My enrollment window is coming up tomorrow, so I kinduv need to make up my mind, or give up my best chance at actually getting into the courses I want."
"Enrollment window?" Kyle asked.
"Yeah, the course enrollment system is all computerized, but it's not just a free-for-all over the internet," Alex explained. "They set up a window sequence so that only a few people are on the system at any one time - and so that certain people get a better chance of getting spots in the courses that they want. First the most senior students, randomized within the class rankings or something, and then the kids who were freshmen last year, and then the new students in the order that their applications were accepted. Isabel's actually pretty near the end of the line anyway, so it doesn't make a huge difference whether she enrolls now or once the entire queue has been gone through and the entire system opens up for people to make course changes... but she's so organized that she wants to make the most out of every opportunity." Isabel looked at him over the papers, but couldn't maintain a frustrated glare for more than about two seconds, and smiled affectionately at him.
"Well, that's nice I guess," I said. College courses weren't exactly my thing... even if I had the money and such to go out and get myself some institutional learnin'. Then again... maybe I'd better do something in the way of education, or I'd still be waiting tables when I'm forty and not pretty enough to get good tips anymore. Lonnie was always hot on getting back home, instead of learning to live in this world, but I think I've decided that I like Earth fine and want to stick around - always assuming that I have the choice. Hmm... so, was it time to figure out 'what do I want to do when I grow up' now?? "Erm, what about you, Alex? Been up to anything interesting??"
"Ehh, not really." Alex sighed. "Still doing the summer school thing - nearly caught up on all of the classes I missed on account of being presumed dead." Oh, right, he'd told me about that before. Even before Isabel and Michael got back, while Max and Liz and the others were off chasing down Lonnie and trying to figure out when they'd be making it back, Alex's parents had worked out the summer school deal. They're always encouraging him about the using his brain to the fullest thing - not really pushing hard enough that he resents it, but... well, Alex's dad is a smart guy too, from what I can tell, and he's done pretty well with that path, so I guess they just want to make sure their boy can keep up. That's cool, in my book.
We chatted more about the possibilities of the Texas beaches, and about small stuff that didn't really matter, and then Alex said he had to leave for classes. Isabel got up too, she usually drives him over to Roswell high, which is where they run summer school for the whole town. Kyle sat down opposite me when I sat back down in front of my little crusts of toast after they left. After sighing for a moment, I brought up one of the crusts and started nibbling on it.
"Still hungry, aren't you?" Kyle asked, and I looked up, feeling guilty though I'm not quite sure why. "Order something else, if you like, on me."
"No, come on..." The discussion I'd had with Rath the night before about charity and making our own way was still very much with me. "No way you're paying for food for me, I mean, isn't your family..."
"Oh, no, we're well back on our feet," Kyle said, and I realized that I was still thinking of the situation many months ago, when I first came to town. "Dad's got a job back, after all, and I'm still working all the hours that I can at the garage. Plus, we don't have a certain lying traitor to feed, so money is very much not a problem."
I was starting to feel like I might lose this battle of wills. "Well, if you just want to be generous and help a struggling girl out..." Kyle grinned, and I picked the menu up again. The sausages were starting to sound awfully good, and maybe a few pancakes.
By the time my second breakfast order showed up, Kyle was in the middle of a crazy story about a Valentine's day contest, and getting Max drunk on a single drop of whiskey, (well, a small sip or something anyway,) and the two of them breaking into Liz's bedroom. You've probably heard it over and over, but I really enjoyed the way Kyle talked, more than the plot itself. In fact, I was starting to decide that I just plain liked Kyle.
Kinda seemed that he 'just plain liked' me too, though I wasn't quite sure how to tell for certain. I'd heard a little bit second-hand of the odd relationship that he'd had with Tess himself, and he had to be still feeling rotten over the way she'd turned out. I think that he might have had a hard time trusting me, too, if I hadn't happened to be involved in Alex's apparent resurrection, which I guess kind of helps to cancel out the worst of what Tess did, or at least keeps me from looking guilty by association. (Not that I ever 'associated' with her much in the conventional sense, but I *am* associated with her in a conceptual way, because we share the same origins.)
Before I had either finished my pancakes or come to terms with what I was starting to feel for Kyle, some new familiar faces came in - Max, Liz, and Michael. Maria apparently was still on shift at the Crashdown, which made sense. To make room I moved aside to where Alex had been sitting before, and waved Kyle to come and replace me, so that we would be sitting side by side. Max and Liz took the opportunity to sit next to each other as well, and Kyle took the chair at the end of the table.
They had all been talking about Texas beaches before they came into the diner, and I felt myself getting swept up into the conversation. I'd never really had much of a chance to visit the ocean - well, I've been on the Jersey shores a few times, but not during summertime, and it was pretty depressing actually.
"It's actually off-season for Texas I think, which means that we might be able to find someplace nice and cheap," Liz said. "The downside of that is, well... the weather is probably going to be very hot and muggy, and there might be tropical thunderstorms or that kind of thing."
"Ehh, doesn't sound that bad," Kyle replied. "If we stay here, it'll probably be hot and bone-dry, without a single drop of rain. I don't think that the mugginess can be all that much worse. I've been in Georgia in August."
"Okay, who's Georgia, and was she a bleach blonde?" Michael joked. Kyle blushed slightly, and Liz slapped Michael down. Kyle clarified that he'd been talking about Georgia the state.
"Well, it sounds okay to me," I said. "Assuming that I can get the... aww, hang it. If Lester doesn't want to give me the time off, then I can find a new gig when I get back to Roswell."
"That's the spirit," Max said. "But I don't think anybody's likely to be losing jobs just for asking for some unpaid vacation time."
"Well, my folks might have a bit of a hard time covering for Maria, Michael, and I all at the same time," Liz pointed out. "But you're right. Any idea when we'd be trying to leave?"
"Hmm... why don't we say Sunday morning?" Kyle suggested. "Three days from now. Is that enough notice?"
"Sounds cool by me," Michael replied. "Hey, Ava, by the way. What is with that haircut Rath got a few days ago??"
"Umm... I dunno, maybe he just felt like a change," I said. "Why? Do you feel personally offended or something, your face attached to hair looking like that?"
Michael shrugged weakly. "Just seemed weird is all."
Then the waitress came to take new orders.
---------
As it turned out, the manager at work didn't much mind when I told him that I'd be needing six days off the next week, and the remaining days were mostly filled with preparations. It was a little weird to be getting ready to move again, for just a short trip this time and then back - after living in New York for so long, coming to Roswell first, then wandering around for months before coming back. But I was really looking forward to hitting the beach.
A few things are probably important enough to mention here. One is that Max and Michael invited me 'n' Rath over to watch while they tried talking on the little comm doohickey that Michael brought back from the alien planet. Neither of us really had that much to contribute - we'd never talked to alien authorities directly before, and... well, though there was supposed to be translation stuff built in, we all had a hard time understanding what was going on. Maybe nobody had warned the other people who were usually chatting on this frequency that a few people from Earth might 'log on.' Max was trying to ask a whole bunch about Tess and if anything was happening already about the baby. I understand him being more than a little anxious, especially considering what happened the last time he saw her, but - well, no news was forthcoming, this time. We gave up after about half an hour and played cards instead, since that was less frustrating. (Despite Rath's nearly constant attempts to use his powers to cheat.)
Isabel and Maria also invited me along for bikini shopping, which was another eye opener. Never really needed to wear a swimming suit before (see above under 'the beach',) and, well... It looks like Isabel is used to hanging out at the neighborhood community pool and driving the boys crazy in her little brightly colored outfits. I wondered if Alex would pitch a fit when he saw her in one of those getups. Probably not - he doesn't seem like a terribly insecure or jealous guy... after all that he and 'Bel have been through, he probably realizes that he doesn't need to worry about the fact that she makes other little boys drool. Maybe he'll just get excited - I have to admit the girl is defintely put together like a stretch of mountainous scenery. Lonnie was like that too, though she didn't show it off quite so much, for a bunch of reasons.
Maria wasn't quite as much the showoff, though she certainly was more used to the routine than me. Mostly she seemed to be more concerned with trying to help me out than in shopping for herself, which I appreciate. I kept an eye on the price tags, since I knew that this much, at least, I should pay out of my own pocket, and came away with two suits - a fairly casual pink set with a tankini top, and a more daring bikini in a stretchy black fabric. Get ready, boys - here comes Ava. Well, in a little while I'll be ready to let a guy see me like this, I hope.
We gathered on Sunday morning at the Evans' place. Nine people, several cars to choose from for a long trip... Maria's mom's little Volkswagon, Alex's old sedan, Kyle's sporty red thing, and the old van that Rath had picked up somewhere in Oklahoma. We hadn't planned for this beforehand. "Hmm," Max said, considering. "Well, trying to fit into two cars will mean less gas and less difficulty in convoying... think you can fit in five people and some luggage, Rath?"
"Sure man," he said laconically.
"I guess I'm the best choicefor car number two, then," Alex volunteered. I think that most of the gang still hasn't quite recovered from the fact that Max trashed his Jeep, back when he thought he'd be leaving Earth with Tess and the others, and probably not coming back. "How about me - Isabel..." She grinned and hugged Alex's arm when he picked her first, like there was any doubt that he'd want her with him, "and Michael and Maria?" Okay, that makes sense... keeping Rath and Michael away from each other. Those two still get on each other's nerves, maybe just because they don't really like seeing their face on somebody else... or maybe it's just a weird kind of sibling rivalry. Well, good enough in any case.
"So that leaves Rath, Kyle and I... Max and Liz in the van," I pointed out. "Works alright." We started packing up the cars - with the exception of Isabel and Maria, nobody had packed terribly much, and things worked out fairly well. Max and Isabel's parents came out to say goodbye to them, (probably just wanting to reassure each other that their kids would be back in less than a week, after Isabel disappeared for more than a month.) Then we saddled up into the cars and rode off into the east.
I took the first stretch sitting beside Rath in the shotgun position, though a part of me felt that I'd rather be elsewhere - wherever Kyle was, next to him, talking about nothing important and listening to his voice again. But Kyle was sitting in the back, where there was only room for one person to sit next to a pile of suitcases and other luggage. Two people could sit next to each other in the middle of the van, but big surprise - Max and Liz had taken those spots, and were whispering in hushed tones, with blushes and small smiles on their faces. I wondered for a moment what they were saying, but quickly decided that I really didn't want to know.
"Wait a second!" Rath exclaimed. "We shoulda took the south road outta town, not this way. Corpus Christi is east, but I think it's further to the south."
I fumbled around looking for a map for a little bit. "Hmm... probably yeah, but since we're several minutes out of town, it's not worth worrying about," I decided. "We can swing around southward at, umm, at Tatum."
"But that means driving for hours on little county roads, instead of taking the Interstate," Rath argued. "I'm turning back."
"285 isn't an Interstate anyway, just a state highway," Max called out from where he was sitting. I hadn't realized that he'd pay any attention to us, since he had his Lizzy-pooh. "We'll do okay this way I think - just route through Brownfield and San Angelo." I started looking for Brownfield on the map.
"Nuts to San Angelo," Rath argued. "I'm turning back." And he swung the van into a sudden u-turn, hard enough that it pressed me up against the door handle. We swung around just in time to see Alex and Maria waving as they passed us by - obviously having no intention at all of turning back just because we were.
"Come on, Rath," I said. "Just turn around again and follow them, okay?"
"No, come on, why not take the south route?" Liz asked. Max blinked a little in surprise that she was joining the conversation too. "I actually think Rath might be right, that it'll be faster even counting the time to get back to 285 south... but there's another thing. Convoying off to some distant place - we've been there and done that. For the two cars to travel seperate routes makes it seem a bit more fun. We have cell phones, so we can stay in touch, and rendezvous somewhere near San Antonio."
Rath laughed. "I have to say, I like the way you think, Liz. We'll beat 'em to Antoni." And he gunned the gas and we took off west, heading back into town.
"Umm... do you want to weigh in here before it's too late, Kyle?" Max asked, seeing that he didn't have much chance of arguing Rath out of this unless he could muster a full majority against him.
"I'm up for a race, I guess," Kyle said, and Max sighed. "Let's do it!"
"Okay." I looked through the maps again. "South route is simple, actually - keep on the south 285 until it hits I-10, then follow the ten east."
"Rock-n-roll," Rath growled, and hit the gas just a little harder.
"Watch out," Kyle complained. "Blackwood is mean if he catches you speeding."
-----------
"So she thought *you* had taken her journal?" I whispered. Kyle nodded. "What did she do?"
"Umm... well, she found me down at the ball diamond and asked all of these probing questions, like she was trying to be clever about it," Kyle answered. I'd taken over with the driving, not long after we passed the Texas state line, and we were nearly at Pecos and the I-20, not that that was the 'I' we wanted. "I still remember how cute she looked in the shirt she wore that day." Max grunted from behind him. "And... well, I'm not sure about the rest - I'm *pretty* sure that somebody broke into our house that night looking for the thing. Evans, would you happen to know anything about it?"
"Yeah, I admit, I came with Liz. Actually, it might have been my idea," Max said. "I don't think we were the only ones there that night either - Topolsky might have come, or sent a trained FBI burglar, to look for it too. Which is actually pretty funny, since it had never been there in the first place, right Kyle?"
"Yeah... *really* funny," Kyle grumped. "How the heck did Topolsky find out about any of it? Why did she care about the journal?"
"Alex told her that Liz and Maria had been on his case about the journal," Max said softly, as if part of his mind was back there in the memory from so long ago. "He didn't understand why Liz was so upset about losing it - this was before he knew what was going on - with us, and the whole thing, Kyle."
"Yeah, I figured," Kyle answered. "Considering how he reacted after you'd been in the hospital, Max - and that was later than the journal caper."
"Right." Max nodded. "But I think Topolsky suspected enough to read between the lines. If Liz had just found out about aliens, and Liz was really upset that her journal was missing, then it stands to reason that the journal might have written information and reactions talking about aliens. As far as how she suspected you, Kyle - that I don't know. Maybe it was just a case of you being the most likely suspect, since she'd broken up with you the week before."
"Oh, great," Kyle sighed.
"Wait a second - then who DID take the journal?" I asked. "Did Topolsky get ahold of it? Was that how you ended up in the White Room, Max? No... the timing definitely doesn't make sense that way."
Max smiled slightly. "Umm... I never found out who, exactly. Liz said that a friend returned it - I've tried to get more details, but she's always oddly quiet about it."
"Huh," Kyle muttered, and I appreciated the sentiment. The whole story seemed unresolved at that point - and even if Liz were liable to spill the dirt, we couldn't ask her right now, because she was snoozing in the back - she'd been so excited that she hadn't got much sleep last night, apparently.
"Out of curiosity," Rath asked, "just what was Michael up to around this point?"
Max jumped at the question. "Mostly taking art classes and drawing pictures of a geodesic dome - that's kinduv a long story though."
"Hmm." Rath considered that. "That probably didn't keep him TERRIBLY busy, though."
"Heh?" After a second, I realized what he was driving at. "Rath, are you trying to imply that *Michael* was the one who stole the diary?"
"Well, it's probably what I would have done in his place - not that that means a whole lot, but still I wonder," he said softly. "Probably as soon as he realized that she wrote stuff in it, and started to wonder if she'd said anything about Max saving her life. Or anything else interesting that had happened by that point. Sneak up into her room sometime when he knew she'd be elsewhere, swipe it without her ever knowing, and go through it when he had time. Then, Liz told you, Max, and you told Michael and Isabel at some point, right?" Max nodded.
"Then he realized that he'd kept it too long, and things were spinning a bit out of control, and he couldn't risk leaving it and waiting for her to find it again - for one thing, there was an off chance that she wouldn't be the first one to find it after all. So he came to her, gave it back, explained his reasons why, and got her to agree, while she was still relieved to have it back and to know that the secret hadn't been broken, that she'd never tell you that he was the thief. Maybe capitalized on the scare to get her to keep it more securely, just in case someone else really would come after it."
"Wow," Max breathed. "Well... that does pretty much fit the facts, and it's a better explanation than I've ever come up with for why she was so mysterious about her 'friend.'" He looked up at Rath. "We'd probably better keep quiet about this theory of yours, though."
"Oh, come on!! I want to try freaking Michael out a bit - he could do with a bit of a poke like that."
"Might be good for Guerin, at that," Kyle said.
"Well, I dunno." Max turned and stared out the window. I waited to see if he would comment further on the subject, but nothiing more seemed to be forthcoming.
"Well, that's nothing," I said, deciding to try subtly moving the topic of conversation onwards. "I remember the time that Zan and Lonnie got it in their head to try stealing a shipment of caviar... not to fence it or anything. I think Zan was curious to see what it would taste like, and Lonnie - she just wanted to screw whoever would end up holding the bag for it. Insurance company or whatever - she felt that whoever was dealing in expensive swag needed to have things go wrong as often as she could arrange it."
"A charming pair," Kyle commented.
"Yeah. So... they just go up to the truck as it's loading up, straight off the ship, down at the docks, and..." It took me a while to finish the story, which involved a very mean little miniature bulldog who was somehow able to distract Zan's attention from using his powers each time he barked, and ended up with Lonnie having to take a shower to clean several thousand dollar's worth of gourmet fish eggs out of her cleavage. That got Kyle started on some of the poorly planned stunts that he and his old jock friends had attempted. My favorite was the one where they tried to stick un-wash-off-able dye crystals into the showerheads of a rival team, and got caught in the locker room by an assistant coach and equipment manager for the other team.
"Rest stop," Rath said, pointing out the window to where a group of buildings stood, not far from the road. "Anybody need to hit the head? Or a cool drink??"
There was a moment's silence. "Um, no, I think I'm good," Kyle said softly. Max shook his head no.
"I'm okay for waiting til the next one," I pointed out. "Rath?" He kind of shrugged. "And if Liz needed anything, she'd probably be awake - no point in disturbing her just to ask. On we go."
And on we went.
----------
"Watch out for the cow!" Liz called out.
"The cow?" Max repeated.
"My mistake - the cowS, plural." Sure enough there were several cows that had wandered onto the highway well ahead of us. And just at that moment, another car failed to avoid one of them. "Ewww," Max muttered, and Liz made a squeak of dismay.
"Hey, what happened?" Rath called out from the back. "Was it gorey?" Nobody answered him.
"Can - can we get through, or should I pull over?" Max asked, slowing down and checking his mirrors to make sure that somebody who wasn't yet aware of the cows wasn't going to rear-end us at top speed.
"Umm... yeah, let's grab some shoulder," Liz decided. She was navigating for Max at this point - big surprise. And wouldn't something like cows have to come up just before we made it to the actual Interstate? Max pulled over to the edge, and we sat and waited to see what else would happen. Several other cars had stopped... everyone was staying clear of the place where one sporty car had sideswiped a brown cow's butt and gotten partly stuck to it. The results, as you can imagine, hadn't been great either for cow or car, though they could have been a lot worse. One big station wagon pulled up slowly to the other side of the road, and seemed to be trying to scare the cows away from there with loud horn honking. That just might work, though I wouldn't have tried it myself I think - what if the cows just got angry and started butting the station wagon??
"I'm going to call Maria," Liz said, pulling out her cell phone. "She's just going to go nuts over it - probably get disappointed that she didn't go by the cow road herself."
"Ask them where they are," Rath called - he was still taking the 'race' idea seriously, though most of the rest of us had completely forgotten about it. Probably he was worried that the cows would cost us too much time. However, by the time Liz had hung up the phone, Volvo-man had succeeded in clearing two of the cows back out to their field, and we had pulled back out into the road and passed the last, hurt, cow and left it well behind.
"Well, they're just talking a 'stretch your legs' break right now," Liz reported to Rath. "Haven't crossed south of route 191 yet."
"Heck, we only intersected 191 a little ways back," Kyle said, "and they must be a lot further east than we are."
"191's further north where they'll be crossing it," Max answered. "But yeah, they're making better time than I would have thought." He flicked a nervous eye back to Rath, and then put a little more pressure on the gas, just so nobody could say he wasn't making good time.
----------
As it turned out, we managed to beat Alex's car to the McDonalds in the town where our paths met, by something like fifteen minutes. There was much junk food and gigantic disposable tumblers full of ice and bubbly soda, and everybody played crazy games running around in the parking lot because it felt so good not to be sitting in a car anymore, and when we were getting ready to go again, Alex asked if anybody wanted to switch cars.
"Umm... I think I'm good where I am, err, assuming that everybody else is," Kyle mumbled. I'm pretty sure that he shot at least one brief look in my direction, and maybe I read too much into that. Well, I read *something* into it - not quite sure if it was too much. Myself... well, I wouldn't have minded taking Kyle with me and going over to Alex's car, but that depended on whether two people wanted to switch from there. Alex probably wouldn't want to leave his car, and I doubted Michael would have any great inclination to come over and spend a lot of time with Rath. Maybe the two girls would... would really want to spend that much time away from their boyfriends?? Yeah, that seemed pretty dubious on the face of it. Sure enough, all three of them, Michael Maria and Isabel, were none too eager to catch my eye, looking like they were only half paying attention. Okay, looks like we stick pat.
"Hey, Guerin?" Rath called. "How about we and our ladies swap?" And he grabbed my arm, not hard enough to hurt, but deliberately enough that I was too startled to speak for a little while. Several of the others seemed very surprised at the insinuation that I was Rath's 'lady', especially Alex, Michael, and Kyle, but nobody objected on my behalf. I almost wish that they had.
"Umm... er, sure, I guess that we can hang out in the van," Michael muttered. "That is... as long as you're okay with other people driving your..."
"Yeah, it's fine," Rath declared, tossing his keys at Kyle. He'd been the one driving for the last stretch before the rendezvous - nobody had been able to argue him out of it, and, well... we might have still beat the other car if Rath hadn't been speeding, but probably not by as wide a margin.
"Ava," Maria said, staring into my eyes like I was in a hostage crisis - which I guess, in a vague way, is what it felt like to me. "You cool with this?"
"C'mon," Rath said to me in a milder and much less arrogant tone. "We'll catch up with our boy Alex, and get to know his girl a bit better. What's wrong with that??"
Well, nothing in and of itself... except that it would leave Kyle and me seperated. But... but I wasn't at all sure that I wanted to make a big hairy deal of that yet. There'd be plenty more opportunities to hang out with Kyle and flirt with him, if I wished, once we got to the beach. (Flirting in swimsuits, even - that sounded like fun!) Spending some time with Rath, Alex, and Isabel certainly didn't sound bad in and of itself.
"Okay, sure, I'm up for it," I agreed. So that was how we got into the cars - I sat behind Alex, in the back left seat, and was oddly glad of the fact that there was a pile of three suitcases between my own self and Rath. Couldn't get a really good look at Alex, because of the position of course, but when Isabel turned around a bit I could see her face in a classic profile, diagonally across the passenger compartment.
Isabel wasted no time in getting directly to the somewhat embarassing question. "So, Ava... you're fond of young mister Valenti, yes??"
When you don't want to lie or admit the truth, a good tactic is to be slightly evasive and answer with another question. "Who, me?"
"Don't give me that," Isabel drawled. "I saw how you were hovering in his area for the frisbee football game. Hoping that he would forget his own rules and TACKLE you, perhaps?" Isabel laughed softly - a good-natured laugh, not mean or anything, but I felt myself blushing uncomfortably.
I don't think I was the only one who was far from happy with this line of conversation, because Rath unleashed one of the rudest-sounding grunts that I'd ever heard him utter. "So, Rath, err -- any pretty girl caught your eye lately? Or is there no-one else who meets your high standards, now that... umm, after Lonnie and yourself decided to cut mutually loose?"
Rath scowled impressively at Isabel, (though they couldn't really see each other, since he was sitting behind her,) and made this grunting noise, deep in his throat. "Bug off - don't you have some hunger drive to organize in your head?"
"Rath!" Alex exclaimed in an upset voice.
"Hunger drives are more a winter thing, actually," Isabel muttered under her breath, nearly at the same time.
"Okay, okay, I get it - that was uncalled for," Rath grumped. "Sorry."
"It's okay," Isabel said with slightly stilted grace. "Maybe I shouldn't have stuck my nose in so suddenly." She sighed. "So... I'm going on a trip, obviously." I looked up at her, curious where this conversational tack was leading, if anywhere. "And I've packed... indigo eyeliner."
"Huh?" Rath muttered.
"Yeah, I don't believe you OWN any Indigo makeup," I put in. "Wouldn't be a flattering shade on you." Isabel just smiled mysteriously.
After a few seconds, Alex jumped slightly in his seat - well, not really, but I could see the muscles of his shoulders and neck twitch with what seemed like an intuitive realization. "Alright. I'm going on a trip, and I've packed... an arc welder." This time Rath and I were both speechless. "Your turn, Ava," Alex prompted.
"Umm... okay," I muttered, not sure what to do. Well, follow through with the formula as best I could. "I'm going on a trip and I've packed... a black bikini." Isabel shook her head slightly. "What, I did!" Alex was shaking his head too. Then it occured to me - this was some kind of game, and what they had said were NOT the kinds of things that they'd really pack. Should I have made something up? "Okay, gimme a minute..."
"No, you only get one chance per go-round I'm afraid, Ava," Isabel said. "Rath??"
Conflicting emotions were fairly visible on Rath's blunt face. He was at least a little tempted to tell Izzie to stuff it, I guessed, but the urge to show me up and get the puzzle right before I could was too strong. "Okay, I'm going on a trip, and I've packed... a phaser pistol."
"Sorry, I don't think so," Alex said, and Rath's face fell from the expectation of triumph into frustration. We all turned our attention silently back to Isabel.
She closed her eyes in thought for a moment. "Well, I did pack an ink eraser."
Alex chuckled - apparently he didn't feel that she needed to repeat the entire routine this time. "Um, let's see... I'm pretty sure I brought an Apple washer."
I growled a little, realizing that it was now my turn... and suddenly, a possibly answer occured to me. Initials... both of Isabel's things had started with the letters I and then E, and Alex's latest, at least, with an A and then a W. (I couldn't remember Alex's first offhand.) IE for Isabel Evans, AW for Alex Whitman. Was that it?
And if so, how to deal with the fact that I'd never really assumed a last name, human-style?? Well, maybe be straightforward about it, as much as possible. "You know, that's a good thing Alex," I said, laughing. "Because I brought an Apple!" Alex laughed out loud, and Isabel was nodding.
"Yeah, that's the ticket!" she agreed.
"Okay, if somebody doesn't explain what the hell is going on here, I'm going to get seriously pissed off," Rath said. He looked pretty pissed already, actually.
"Umm, well it's..." I broke off in mid-phrase, leaning forward to Alex. "Is it okay if I give him a..."
"Hints are fine, I think, at this point," Alex agreed quickly. I think he really didn't want Rath getting pissed off at *him*. "I think you'll know how far to take it."
Alright, hmm... "It's a party game, basically. The rule for what you can say doesn't have anything to do with a real trip... it's obvious once you think of it, though."
Rath looked at me, and his frustration melted through into simple sourness. "Wonderful for you, then. Since it looks like I've already lost, I'm not trying any more. Stupid game in the first place."
"Come on, that's quitter t..." Isabel started, but I jumped in and interrupted her before she finished the phrase - Rath would hold it against her too much, even incomplete. (Would have been better if I'd caught her at the q in 'quitter,' but what canya do?) "Leave it alone, Isabel." If Rath had decided not to bother with the game, then none of us were going to accomplish anything helpful by trying to badger him into it. "How about we show 'em one of our old games, Rath?"
He smiled. "Okay. Would you rather... kiss Nicholas or spend three hours in the white room? Isabel?"
That hadn't been the diversion I had in mind, but Isabel only paled for a few seconds. "The room. Pierce may be scary, but he's not as gross as Nicholas." She considered. "Ava, would you rather kiss Nicholas - or what's left of the fake dead Alex that Rath made??"
"Eww!" That dead body was probably a mass of maggoty, festering slime out in the desert by now - and it had been roadkill in the first place. "Gimme a minute, that's a really tough call. I think Nicholas isn't quite as foul as THAT."
"That your final answer?" Isabel asked.
"Yeah. Okay, Alex, would you rather kiss your dead identical twin... or..." What the heck was I going to come up with that was even worse than Nicholas? "...Or sleepover with Tess for one weekend?"
"Hey, no fair bringing her into this," Alex complained... but I could hear the trace of laughter under his complaint, and knew that he wasn't really that upset.
And we drove on, dusty plains on either side of the highway.
TO BE CONTINUED...